Song of the Day #5,813: ‘Big Me’ – Foo Fighters

I’m far more intrigued by the story of Foo Fighters’ debut album than I am by the album itself.

Six months after the suicide of Kurt Cobain, Nirvana drummer Dave Grohl channeled his grief into a six-day recording session, hoping to have some fun in the studio and take his mind off the loss of his friend.

He recorded songs he had written during his time with Nirvana but never shared with the band for fear of not stacking up to Cobain as a songwriter.

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Song of the Day #5,812: ‘You Oughta Know’ – Alanis Morissette

Over the next two weeks, I’ll look at 1995 albums that didn’t make my personal top ten, either because I’ve never heard them or I haven’t heard them enough to qualify.

Or, in today’s case, because the album isn’t a favorite but it’s too big to deny.

Alanis Morissette’s Jagged Little Pill was not only the top-selling album of 1995, it is the 14th top-selling album worldwide of all time, and the highest-selling debut album in history.

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Song of the Day #5,811: ‘Love Me Do’ – The Beatles

The week of May 30, 1964, saw the continued dominance of The Beatles on the Billboard Hot 100. Beatlemania was in full swing — this was the fourth #1 of an eventual six in a one-year period, still a record.

Before it topped the charts in the U.S., ‘Love Me Do’ was the band’s first single and first hit in England the previous November, peaking at #17.

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Song of the Day #5,810: ‘Little Things Mean a Lot’ – Kitty Kallen

Throwing back to the week of May 29, 1954, we find Kitty Kallen atop the Billboard charts with ‘Little Things Mean a Lot,’ a song written by Edith Lindeman and Carl Stutz. Kallen’s version was the most popular of several recordings of this song.

It was so popular, in fact, that it claimed the title as the #1 song for all of 1954. This week was the first of nine straight it would spend atop the chart.

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Song of the Day #5,809: ‘Philosophy (Live from Sessions at West 54th)’ – Ben Folds Five

Concluding a countdown of my favorite albums of 1995…

#1 – Ben Folds Five – Ben Folds Five

This is the third debut album in my top five, making a case for 1995 as a banner year for new talent.

Of all the acts I discovered in the 90s, none blew me away quite like this amusingly named trio out of Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Singer-songwriter Ben Folds on piano, drummer Darren Jesse, and bassist Robert Sledge quickly cemented their status as one of my favorite bands, largely on the strength of this wonderful album.

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