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Today In Rock History

April 25th . . . 1918 - Legendary jazz vocalist Ella Fitzgerald is born in Newport News, VA . . . 1923 - Blues guitarist Albert King is born . . . 1933 - Jerry Leiber is born in Baltimore. With Mike Stoller, he’s written witty rock hits like “Yakety Yak” and “Jailhouse Rock” . . . 1945 - Bjorn Ulvaeus of Abba is born in Gothenburg, Sweden . . . 1945 - Stu Cook (Creedence Clearwater Revival) is born this day . . . 1950 - Steve Ferrone, drummer with the Average White Band and Eric Clapton, is born in Brighton, England . . . 1956 - Elvis Presley reaches top of US chart with Heartbreak Hotel, his first No. 1 . . . 1961 - Elvis Presley makes his last stage appearance for nearly eight years at Bloch Arena in Hawaii . . . 1964 - The Beatles have an amazing 14 singles on the American chart . . . 1967 - The Beatles perform “All You Need Is Love” during a global satellite broadcast . . . 1974 - Jim Morrison’s widow, Pam, dies in Hollywood at the age of 27. Police suspect heroin use may have played a part in her death . . . 1977 - Elvis Presley makes his last-known recordings during a live concert at the Saginaw (Mich.) Civic Center . . . 1981 - Wings break up after Denny Laine leaves the band. Paul McCartney says he will carry on as a solo artist . . . 1987 - Crowded House had their biggest U.S. hit when “Don’t Dream It’s Over” peaked at #2; U2 replace Beastie Boys at top of US LP chart with The Joshua Tree . . . 1990 - The Fender Stratocaster on which Jimi Hendrix played “The Star-Spangled Banner” at Woodstock sells at a London auction for $295,000 . . . 1994 - The Eagles played the first of two shows where they recorded their ‘Hell Freezes Over’ album . . . 1994 - A judge sentences Beastie Boy Adam Horowitz to 200 hours’ community service after he beats up a TV cameraman during River Phoenix’s funeral . . . 1994 - A judge determines that Michael Bolton’s “Love Is a Wonderful Thing” sounds a little too similar to the Isley Brothers’ “Love Is a Wonderful Thing.” Ya think? . . . 1997 - Warren Haynes and Allen Woody quit the Allman Brothers Band to tend to their careers as Gov’t Mule . . . 1999 - Funk star Roger Troutman, 47, dies in a hospital in Dayton, Ohio, after being shot several times . . . 2000 - Eric Clapton is reunited on a TV stage in London with his former Derek & the Dominos keyboard player Bobby Whitlock, for their first performance together in 29 years . . . 2002 - Lisa “Left Eye” Lopes, the effervescent, sometimes volatile rapping member of the Grammy-winning R&B trio TLC, is killed in a car crash in Honduras . . . 2003 - The late jazz great Nina Simone is laid to rest in Carry-Le-Rouet, France . . . 2004 - Piano man Billy Joel drives his car into a house in Long Island. Nobody is seriously injured. It’s his third car crash in two years . . . 2007 - American singer Bobby “Boris” Pickett died of leukemia at the age of 69. He scored the Halloween anthem ‘The Monster Mash’ in 1962 . . .

Just in time for the Beavis & Butthead revival!! Woo-hoo!

A sneak peek at My Morning Jacket's new album....

I think I got a contact buzz just watching this....

RHT Pic 'o' the Week

RHT Pic 'o' the Week
Prosecution evidence leaked from the Barry Bonds trial

Randon Non-Rock Notes. Rock Notes, get it? I'm awesome.

Car wrecks! Woohoo!

Here's a baby rabbit eating a flower.

Best commercial on TV right now. You dang woodchucks!!

Quite simply, the greatest redneck car ramp jump ever. Period.

Slippery slide accidents are always money, aren't they?

Let's revisit this famous soccer bitch.

Yo. My man. Seriously, this is not the best way to get free ice cream.

Good boy.

I want this lamb! Oh, and this lamb!

Hey lady, watch where you're goin'.

Friday, October 24, 2008

Mustang Sally

Some songs puzzle me. It seems to me that there are some songs that come out of nowhere; they seem to be written by obscure songwriters, sung by largely unknown artists and yet leave colossal imprints on both pop culture and music history. These songs are more than just one-hit wonders, these songs are known and loved by all and yet few people know what they are actually about or what the lyrics really mean. Now I know that around RHT, not too many references get by the keen intellect of Shoe or DJ, but I still contend that there are some anomalies that even they may be forced to ponder. If not for song content at least sheer appeal and success of such unlikely tunes. Enter Exhibit A - "Mustang Sally"
Wikipedia says:
"Mustang Sally" is an R&B / straight-forward Blues song written and first recorded by Mack Rice in 1965. It gained greater popularity when it was covered by Wilson Pickett the following year.

I say "Mustang Sally" is a phenomenon. This has to be one of the most requested, most played, most karaoked songs in history. After Filo Beddoe began playing out, we quickly learned that any band without this cure-all song was sorely ill-equipped. It is requested at nearly every show we have ever played. Running second place only to "Play some Skynyrd!", yelling for a Mustang Sally cover is nearly automatic. What is it about this song that makes everyone like it? (I challenge anyone to find someone who doesn't like someone's version of this tune!)

More history reveals some interesting tidbits about the tune. The song was rescued by Wilson Pickett only a year after Sir Mack Rice released it in 1965. If you wonder what I mean by "rescued" check out Sir Mack's version here. Troubled soul legend Wilson Pickett managed to get this song to #6 on the R&B charts. Honestly, how many other songs would you be able to sing along with from the 1965 R&B charts? How many could you not only play, but actually have requested at a place called "Mudpuppies" in southern Ohio? But Mustang Sally has a magic . . . .

The song grew out of a joke involving a friend of his, a drummer and band leader for Della Reese, and time they spent together in New York City."The guys in the band were telling me that it was his birthday coming up," Rice said, "and they said Della was probably going to buy him a big Lincoln, because she always buys band leaders big cars and stuff for their birthdays. And I told him, and he said, 'That's not what I want, man, I want that Mustang.' "Rice was not impressed. "In Detroit, we drive Cadillacs and Lincolns," he said. "Big. I said, 'I know you don't want that little car, man.' And he kept on, man, he loved it, he said, 'That's the car I'm going to get.' "So Rice took to teasing him, calling him a Mustang Mama, and growing the joke into a song that was built around what he called "an old, back-in-the-day nursery rhyme." Here is how it begins: Little Sally Walker sitting in a saucer - "Ride, Sally, ride!"

So now that we know the story, its easy to see why this song is still going strong over forty years later, right? Right? Perhaps the secret is in the fact that Mack Rice was going to call the song "Mustang Mama" but the queen of soul herself, Aretha Franklin, told him "Mustang Sally" was a better choice?

Many claim "Mustang Sally" is the "Stairway to Heaven" of blues. During the 80s, many guitar store employees put up humorous "No Stairway to Heaven" signs to discourage the daily onslaught of noodlers playing the song. In that vein, John Lee Hooker's Boom Boom Room has had a sign on the stage for more than a decade that says, "No Mustang Sally."

Then we have the covers. Here is the partial list that Wikipedia provides as "notable" artists who have recorded the song:
The Chambers Brothers (1965; released 1997)
Wilson Pickett (1966)
The Kingsmen (1966)
The (Young) Rascals (1966)
Ken Boothe (1968)
The Mar-Keys (1969)
Silver Apples (1969; released 1998)
Muddy Waters (1974; released 1990)
Maurice Williams (1975)
Willie Mitchell (1977)
Magic Slim (1980)
Rufus Thomas (1980)
The Commitments (1991)
Buddy Guy (1991)
Sam & Dave (1995)
Fiona Day (1999)
Albert Collins (2000)
Los Lobos (2000), for the film Miss Congeniality
Solomon Burke (2004)
Bruce Springsteen (Live)
Chris Farrow Cent'anni Restaurant (2008)
Mike Huckabee Huckabee (2008)

I must note here that I find it interesting that Wikipedia considers Mike Huckabee a more "notable" artist than either ZZ Top or Eric Clapton, both of which have covered "Mustang Sally."
Nothing compares to the Wilson Pickett "original." Well, perhaps I shouldn't say nothing. How about sexy, but a little weirding-out chick Mustang Sally? Not for you? Try acoustic cowboy version complete with living room acoustics. Line dance Mustang Sally? At any rate, the song continues to kill all across the globe anytime those three familiar chords are fired up on the stage. In 2004, Rolling Stone named "Mustang Sally" as one of the top 500 songs of all time. This, my friends, is what we know. Why Sally insisted on speeding all over town, why she had flat-feet that were kept off the ground, and why this song endures as it does, remains a mystery. It's just one of those songs . . . .

4 comments:

  1. The Springsteen version is fantastic. Good stuff.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I personally have always enjoyed the one from the movie The Committments. Female backup singers in short dresses are a prerequisite. "Ride, Sally, ride!!" Always think of the space shuttle tragedy as well when I hear that song, for other, obvious reasons. DJ

    ReplyDelete
  3. I heard Paul Westerberg do a blistering version at The Newport awhile back. He followed it with "If I had a Hammer." I kid you not. Great stuff.

    ReplyDelete
  4. DJ, pretty sure you will smoke a turd in hell for that space shuttle comment. You know who I bet couldn't pull off the Mustang Sally cover? John Denver. Just thought I'd add that.

    ReplyDelete

RHT Greatest American Rocker: Elvis Presley

RHT Greatest American Rocker: Elvis Presley

RHT Greatest Guitarist: Jimi Hendrix

RHT Greatest Guitarist: Jimi Hendrix

RHT Greatest Artist of the 80's: Michael Jackson

RHT Greatest Artist of the 80's: Michael Jackson

RHT Greatest Album of the 70's: Dark Side of the Moon

RHT Greatest Album of the 70's: Dark Side of the Moon

RHT Greatest Album of the 80's: Back in Black

RHT Greatest Album of the 80's: Back in Black

RHT Most Iconic Guitar Of All-Time

RHT Most Iconic Guitar Of All-Time
The Gibson Les Paul

RHT Greatest Album of the 60's: Abbey Road

RHT Greatest Album of the 60's: Abbey Road

RHT Greatest Artist of the 90's: Nirvana

RHT Greatest Artist of the 90's: Nirvana

RHT Greatest Rock Voice: Freddie Mercury

RHT Greatest Rock Voice: Freddie Mercury

RHT Most Beautiful Woman in Music: Carrie Underwood

RHT Most Beautiful Woman in Music: Carrie Underwood

RHT Greatest Album Cover: Abbey Road

RHT Greatest Album Cover: Abbey Road

RHT Greatest Metal Song: Iron Man

RHT Greatest Metal Song: Iron Man

RHT Greatest Song: Stairway to Heaven

RHT Greatest Song: Stairway to Heaven

Time flies when you're havin' fun . . .

R.I.P. Delaney

I lost my little Scottish Terrier on Monday, September 8th to cancer. Her name was Delaney and she was a warrior. She was a rescue, and in her lifetime she'd been to hell and back. At the risk of sounding like a total wimp, it hurts like a son-of-a-bitch. If you're a dog lover like myself and want to see what she was all about, you can check out this link:

http://delaneywarrior.blogspot.com/

Man, I miss that little dog.

By the way, this link stays up as long as RHT is in existence.