Posted on 12/08/2010 6:53:25 PM PST by SamAdams76
You must be referring to The Cyrkle (you got Bobby Hebb right) that was pretty much a one-hit wonder in 1966. I'm too young to remember The Cyrkle's one big hit "Red Rubber Ball" when it came out, but I discovered it a few years ago on an oldies station and ever since, it's been a guilty pleasure on my iPod. It's a great slice of mid-60s pop. And if you like that song, you'll love the music of The Cowsills, who were actually the real life inspiration for The Partridge Family.
Instant Karma got him.
Written by Paul Simon, of all people.
I had a big problem trying to convince new friends back in the States that the Beatles were girls! LOL
Well it was definitely late in the game when Howard Cosell made the announcement, which would have made it sometime after 11PM Eastern time. Now that would have been one, maybe two hours earlier Texas time so your recollection of timeframe was probably accurate.
Yes, I meant to include that fact in the original post, thank you for reminding us. Lennon had just released a single called "Starting Over" that was rapidly climbing the charts at the time he was shot. It was a damn fine song too and there were at least three other quality songs on that "Double Fantasy" album (Woman, Watching The Wheels, Losing You). It appeared that Lennon was getting his act back together and so I think that added to the tragedy of his premature death. We can only imagine if that spurt of creativity would have been maintained through the 1980s.
Of course, Yoko had to have her unlistenable tracks included on the album as well but as we were on the eve of the compact disc revolution, it would have been so much easier to play his albums with her tracks filtered out.
Yea... that would have been 10 pm CST. Hard for me to believe that I would be heading to her house THAT late...
More likely... since I was a college kid taking finals... it was the next day. And, was the first time I was listening to the news.... on the car radio.
I know, for CERTAIN, that I was ON THE WAY TO her house... so, I hadn't been in the car that long. I guess... I COULD have taken a final that night.. and, was driving there late to deliver her present before I went home for Christmas break...
That would make sense.
really like this song.
Yes, I think I made mention of that a few times in this thread so I catch your drift. Still, the murder was a pretty significant news event when it happened and as it occurred at a transitional point in my life, I saw fit to make a thread out of it.
Oddly enough, my children see the Michael Jackson death as a significant news event in their lives even though I barely took notice of it - this despite the fact that Michael Jackson is more of my generation than theirs...
His murderer was trying to gain celebrity by killing it, and Harrison never spoke his name publicly, an action that I think appropriate enough to emulate. Lennon was, as are a number of young people, angry because the world wasn't as perfect as he thought it ought to be, and he did not grow old enough to realize why. I do not know, given the company he chose to keep, if he ever would have, but he was cheated of the chance by a sniveling, insignificant creep who deserves to die in oblivion and will.
The only reason is because it was 24/7 for days and days on the TV. Or even weeks.
I was living in DC and had just rejoiced in Reagan’s election. I had loved The Beatles all my life, especially John because of his creativity and playfulness with words. Whereas Paul was into show business and more Tin Pan Alley, John was far more poetic. Politically, the left latched onto him and used him and I drank the same liberal Kool-Aid every bit as much as he had up until Carter (I was 24 in 1980) but Carter cured me of liberalism. He left Britain due to its socialism and loved the U.S. Shortly before he was murdered, after watching a news report about NYC police he donated money to them to purchase bullet proof vests. Would that he had worn one.
"So come on Jack be nimble, Jack be quick
Jack Flash sat on a candle stick
'Cause fire is the devil's only friend.
As I watched him on the stage
My hands were clenched in fists of rage
No angel born in hell
Could break that satan's spell"
This part is referring to the Stones' concert at Altamont at which the Hells Angles provided "security" yet there was at least one death due to the violence (no "angle born in hell" refers to the Hells Angles and Jack Flash, as in "Jumping Jack Flash" refers to Jagger when The Stones took the stage as the last act).
An action that I agree with also. I too have never mentioned the name of Lennon's murderer, neither have I ever mentioned the name of the dirtbag who took a shot at President Reagan a few months later.
I agree that pop stars and other entertainers tend to get taken in by the third-rate intellectual crowd that you speak of. Sadly, only a few ever break free of that influence, due largely in part that highly paid entertainers tend to isolate themselves in a bubble and they lose all contact with regular people. Therefore they live in a virtual world that has little resemblance to reality.
I was getting dressed for class when I heard about Lennon’s shooting over the radio. I couldn’t believe it. I sat on the bed and listened to the DJ for while, trying to understand what had happened.
I’d seen the Beatles live once and saw Lennon and Ono at a fundraiser when I was in college. Though I had moved on to other groups, I was quite the Beatlemaniac when younger, so this was devastating news.
I was stunned and saddened for a long time. I think it was the first time I really wondered about other people and their sanity.
i was 15-year old... in the tenth grade... it was so sad... a lifelong friend and i went to the record store and i bought (Just Like) Starting Over in the 45 version... today i have listened to Instant Karma (my all-time favorite John Lennon song), Starting Over and Watching the Wheels... i was really too young to be a true Beatles fan in their hey day... but i did like much of their music... i am the youngest of 7 children, so was exposed to a lot of music before my time...
Yeah, it was The Cyrkle, pronounced "circle." They sang Red Rubber Ball that night of course. It was a good song.
A few things I do remember during that week though...
One prof. came into our class a few days later and deadpanned,"What's yellow and eats alone? Yoko Ono!"
But more I remember sitting with my dad at the old Whiting Hotel, having a drink with my dad on the Friday following the shooting. We were watching tributes to John Lennon, and my father turned to me and said, "He wrote some pretty good songs."
This from my father, who really did not like rock and roll, loved classical music. He was an accomplished and ethical attorney, who had also flown B-29's out of Guam during the Second World War, in bombing missions over Japan. I remember that time with my father more than anything.
Dad passed away a year later due to a stroke.
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