Song of the Day #6,527: ‘Home to Us’ – Paul McCartney feat. Ringo Starr

Madonna isn’t the only legend with new music out after a long hiatus. Sir Paul McCartney, 83 years young, will drop his 21st studio album this July.

The Boys of Dungeon Lane, McCartney’s first album since 2020’s McCartney III, promises to be a nostalgic look back at his childhood memories of Liverpool. I’d never speculate that this will be the last McCartney album, but if it is, the subject matter is certainly appropriate.

Continue reading

Song of the Day #6,526: ‘I Feel So Free’ – Madonna

After a 14-album Madonna Deep Dive, I’m contractually bound to eagerly anticipate whatever the Queen of Pop is serving up next.

That turns out to be a sequel to 2005’s Confessions on a Dance Floor, the EDM album that earned her rave reviews and was heralded as a return to form. I placed it at #4 on my own ranked list of Madonna’s albums.

Confessions II, as it’s been dubbed, is due on July 3.

Continue reading

Song of the Day #6,525: ‘Drop Dead’ – Olivia Rodrigo

This week I’ll feature a handful of songs from some new or upcoming releases I’m excited to hear.

First up is Olivia Rodrigo, whose intriguingly titled third album — You Seem Pretty Sad for a Girl So in Love — is due out on June 12.

First single ‘Drop Dead’ is a pop song in the vein of her last album Guts (2023), but with less of that record’s rock edge. We’ll see if the rest of the album follows suit.

Continue reading

Song of the Day #6,524: ‘A Groovy Kind of Love’ – The Mindbenders

The week of May 17, 1966, found a quartet of classic songs I’ve already posted atop the Billboard Hot 100. They were, in order: The Mamas and the Papas’ ‘Monday Monday,’ Bob Dylan’s ‘Rainy Day Women #12 & 35,’ The Young Rascals’ ‘Good Lovin’,’ and Percy Sledge’s ‘When a Man Loves a Woman.’

That #2 position was the closest Dylan ever got to a chart-topping hit, and it was his second song to hit #2 following ‘Like a Rolling Stone.’

Continue reading

Song of the Day #6,523: ‘Moonglow and Theme from Picnic‘ – Morris Stoloff

Throwing back to the week of May 16, 1956, we find Elvis Presley and Perry Como atop the Billboard singles chart with ‘Heartbreak Hotel‘ and ‘Hot Diggity (Dog Ziggity Boom)‘,’ respectively.

At #3 that week was an instrumental medley by composer Morris Stoloff that combined the 1933 jazz standard ‘Moonglow’ with an instrumental version of the theme from the 1966 film Picnic, which starred William Holden and Kim Novak.

Continue reading