Song of the Day #5,447: ‘My Love’ – Paul McCartney and Wings

Throwing back to the week of June 2, 1973, we find Paul McCartney and Wings at the top of the Billboard Hot 100 with their song ‘My Love.’ The track would spend four weeks at #1 and 18 weeks in total on the chart. This was the first of six #1 tracks McCartney recorded with Wings.

This song sounds like it took McCartney about ten minutes to write, and not in the “genius strikes” sort of way. It’s a simple love ballad with an uninspired melody and pedestrian lyrics.

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Song of the Day #5,446: ‘It’s My Party’ – Lesley Gore

Today we throw back to the week of June 1, 1963, when Lesley Gore topped Billboard’s Hot 100 with ‘It’s My Party,’ the lead single from her debut album I’ll Cry if I Want To. The song spent two weeks at #1 and 13 total weeks on chart. Gore’s next three singles reached the top five, but this track was her last to reach #1.

‘It’s My Party’ was first recorded by British singer Helen Shapiro, but it wasn’t released until her album came out in October, months after Gore’s success with the song. Her version is a little slower and her voice is a little deeper, giving the illusion that you’re listening to the more popular version at a reduced speed.

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Song of the Day #5,445: ‘Give Up the Funk (Tear the Roof Off the Sucker)’ – Parliament

Concluding my look at the albums of 1975…

Wrapping up the latest Decades installment, here’s a track from the Parliament album Mothership Connection, the funk band’s fourth. This was their highest-charting album and featured their top-charting single in ‘Give Up the Funk (Tear the Roof Off the Sucker).’

As somebody who decidedly doesn’t have the funk, I appreciate this album more than I like it. It certainly has infectious grooves but it just isn’t my thing. That said, I enjoyed spending some time with the record and it made me wish it was more up my alley.

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Song of the Day #5,444: ‘Shining Star’ – Earth, Wind & Fire

Continuing my look at the albums of 1975…

The genre-hopping band Earth, Wind & Fire released its sixth studio album, the funk soul classic That’s the Way of the World, in early ’75. The album served as the soundtrack to a film of the same name in which the band portrayed a fictional act championed by a record producer played by Harvey Keitel.

The album made a much bigger impression than the movie, going triple platinum and reaching #1 on Billboard’s albums chart. It also gave the band its only #1 song on the Hot 100 in ‘Shining Star,’ today’s SOTD. I would have guessed that distinction belonged to ‘September’ or ‘Let’s Groove,’ but those songs reached only #8 and #3, respectively.

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Song of the Day #5,443: ‘Camellia’ – Daryl Hall & John Oates

Continuing my look at the albums of 1975…

During this installment of Decades, I’ve had the pleasure of diving into the back catalogs of some bands I know but don’t know well. I hoped that would be the case again for Daryl Hall & John Oates and their self-titled fourth studio album. Unfortunately, my predominant reaction to this one was a shrug.

The album starts strong with today’s SOTD, ‘Camellia,’ a single that didn’t catch on but deserved a bigger audience. Then comes ‘Sara Smile,’ a great song with one of the most baffling first lines in pop history (I mean, “Baby hair, with a woman’s eyes,” what?!). And third track ‘Alone Too Long’ is right in the duo’s sweet spot.

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