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1972 – Year Three (electric booga . . knee?)

1972 – Year Three (electric booga . . knee?)

Or the year that I discovered in my 20s.

On May 13th, 1972, the #1 song in America was The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face by Roberta Flack.  Not bad, and thankfully I missed A Horse with No Name, so there’s that.  One of my 1971 songs, American Pie, actually topped the chart early in this year.  Other notable events included the last Apollo mission to the moon, Nixon signing Title IX into law, and HBO starting to offer cable subscription services. [2024: Which David Zaslav is doing his level best to end.]

Stevie Wonder Talking Book album cover
Fantastic album I found way too late in life.

My first song for this year is Superstition by Stevie Wonder.  It was time to get some R&B up in this mix, and Stevie’s the best.  Turns out this song was offered to Jeff Beck, who turned it down but did play guitar on the album version.  (And then later covered it anyway.) Anyway, I was vaguely aware of Stevie growing up, but I didn’t really get into his work until relatively recently, say 20 years ago.  Before that, the only Stevie songs I really knew were Part Time Lover and That’s What Friends are For.  Ok, there were others, but these . . . less than stellar offerings from the mid-80’s cloud anything else that he did during my formative years.  Distance has granted me the wisdom to see the genius of Stevie.

Big Star #1 Record Album cover

Second on the docket is from yet another band that I didn’t really get until I was much older.  Big Star’s In the Street‘s biggest exposure came from Cheap Trick’s cover that they used for the theme song for That 70’s Show. It’s a great party song by a band that not enough people have heard of.  To be honest, this isn’t my favorite song on #1 Record; that honor would go to Thirteen.  But Thirteen‘s not what you would call a party song.  If you haven’t listened to any of Big Star’s stuff, do yourself a favor and check it out.

Your favorite band’s favorite band.

Nathan chose Snowblind by Black Sabbath, and Ziggy Stardust by David Bowie.  The first is not on my list of favorite Black Sabbath songs, but you can’t argue with Bowie. I might have held out for a different one of his, too, though.

Comments

6 responses to “1972 – Year Three (electric booga . . knee?)”

  1. Nathan Avatar
    Nathan

    Snowblind isn’t my favorite Sabbath song either. War Pigs, from 1970, is. But there was no way I was going to kick off my party playlist with a Black Sabbath song as one of the first two songs. Snowblind *is* the best Sabbath song from 1972.

    1. jimpax@gmail.com Avatar

      War Pigs also failed to crack 1970 for me. Personally, I would have put Iron Man or Paranoid ahead of War Pigs as well, though. Perhaps because I came to Black Sabbath late (college), they didn’t have the formative value to make it onto my list.

  2. Dave G. Avatar
    Dave G.

    I keep picking Stones songs, but this was a good run of years for them and I’m sure as hell not leaving Exile on Main Street off my list. So Tumbling Dice for sure, and then probably you’re looking at Tiny Dancer or Papa Was a Rolling Stone for the second slot. Or Me and Julio Down by the Schoolyard? Or even Billy Paul’s Me and Mrs. Jones, which I truly love. I dunno, this is hard.

  3. The Crank Avatar
    The Crank

    ’72 is the year of Foxtrot, so of course I will pick the longest song on the album: Supper’s Ready. Of course I didn’t really pay any attention to music in 1972, but since Foxtrot became a huge favorite of mine in college, it gets this nod.

    For a song I loved back in the relevant year: Paul Simon’s Mother and Child Reunion.

    1. jimpax@gmail.com Avatar

      Mother and Child Reunion is such a good pull. The reggae infusion and inclusion of Jimmy Cliff’s backup band and singers foreshadow his later collaborations on Graceland and Rhythm of the Saints.

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