Showing posts with label Bill Haley & the Comets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bill Haley & the Comets. Show all posts

July 25, 2019

Buchanan & Goodman ~ The Flying Saucer lyrics

~ 
We interrupt this record
To bring you a special bulletin
The reports of a flying saucer
Hovering over the city
Have been confirmed
The flying saucers are real

(Too real when I feel What my heart can't conceal)

That was The Clatters Recording, Too Real
We switch you now to our On the spot reporter downtown

(Come on, baby
Let's go downtown)

Take it away John Cameron Cameron

This is John Cameron Cameron downtown
Pardon me, madam
Would you tell our audience
What would you do if
The saucer were to land

(Duck back in the alley)

Thank you and now
The thin gentleman there

(What I'm gonna do
Is hard to tell)

And the gentleman
With the guitar
What would you do, sir

(Just take a walk
Down lonely street)

Thank you
We return you now...

This is Drak
Your outer space disc jockey
With a request for earth

(Earth angel, earth angel)

That was The Pelicans outer
Space recording, Earth
I've just been handed a bulletin
The flying saucer has just landed
We switch you again downtown

Here we are again
We have with us Professor
Sir Cedric Pentingmode
Of the British Institute
And the professor is approaching
The saucer to see if there's
Possibly any sign of life aboard

Well, I'm sure something
Are you there

(I hear you knocking
But you can't come in)

That was Laughing
Lewis' record, Knocking

This is John Cameron
Cameron on the spot
And now I believe we're
About to hear the words of
The first spaceman ever
To land on Earth

(Womp bop a loo bop
A lomp bam boom)

And now here are the ball scores
Four to three, six to two
And eight to one

The impact of seeing
The first spaceman has
This reporter reeling

(Here I go reeling
Uh-oh, uh-oh...)

That was The Clatters again
With their big one, Uh-Oh

This is John Cameron
Cameron again downtown
The spaceman has returned
To his ship and is taking off
We return you now to our studios

The flying saucer has gone
There is no threat of an invasion
However, the flying saucers
Are still around

(Still around)

We are not going
To interrupt this record
Yes, we are

The flying saucer
Has landed again
Washington, The Secretary
Of Defense has just said

(Ain't that a shame)

That was Skinny Dynamo's
Record, That's A Shame

This is John Cameron
Cameron, part two
Gathered around me are
Several of the spacemen
Tell us, have you come
To conquer the world

And now would you
Repeat that in English

(Don't want the world
To have and hold)

Hey, why don't you go back
Where you came from

(Don't be angry
And drive me away)

We return you now
To our studios

Here is a news item
From Washington
The President has just
Issued a statement to the
Spacemen and we quote

(You can do anything
But lay off of my
Blue suede shoes)

That was Pa Gherkins record, Shoes
We switch you again downtown

This is John Cameron
Cameron downtown
Professor Sir Cedric of
The British Institute
Tell us how were
The saucers able to land

Well, you see..

(The motor cooled down
The heat went down)

That was Huckle Berry's recording
The Moter Cooled Down

This is John Cameron
Cameron again
I believe the spaceman has
A final parting word

(See you later, alligator)

We return you now
To our studios

The spacemen have gone again
But look to the skies
The saucers will
Always be there

(Always be there)

Goodbye, earth peopleWriter/s: GOODMAN BUCHANAN
Publisher: DICKIE GOODMAN PRODUCTIONS LLC
      
       
       
Viewfinder links:       
        
Fats Domino  
Bill Haley         
The Platters  
Elvis Presley                
        
        
        
       
       
       
Styrous® ~  Monday, July 22, 2019        
        














April 13, 2018

Hank Williams articles/mentions

~
Hank Williams, Sr. ~ Move It on Over   
 
mentions:
Roy Acuff ~  
      Caruso of Mountain Music     
      With the Smoky Mountain Boys  
Fats Domino ~ Blueberry Hill  
Bill Haley ~  
      Bill Haley & His Comets        
      Rocks Around the Clock 
Hawkshaw Hawkins ~ Ling Ting Tong      
Del Shannon ~ Runaway   
       
       
Hank Williams - 1951 
photographer unknown      
      
       
       
       



















 

Glenn Ford articles/mentions

~ 
Glenn Ford ~ A man's man            

mentions:
Blackboard Jungle         
      
       
      
       
       
       
      
Glenn Ford  - 1941
publicity photo
        















Marshall Lytle Articles/mentions

~

Bill Haley ~  
        Rock Around the Clock   
        Rocks Around the Clock
        Rock Around the Clock 2     

     
 
 

  
photographer unknown

  
 
 
















Billy Williamson articles/mentions

~
William F. Williamson (February 9, 1925 – March 22, 1996) was the American steel guitar player for Bill Haley and His Saddlemen, and its successor group Bill Haley & His Comets, from 1949 to 1963.      


  
  
photographer unknown


Viewfinder links:     
       
Bill Haley ~
        Rock Around the Clock 
        Rocks Around the Clock
        Rock Around the Clock 2     

         
     

  















Leroy Anderson articles/mentions

~   

Bill Haley & His Comets        
Bill Haley Rocks Around the Clock 
       
     

   
     
         

        
photographer unknown
 
     
        
       
   
 
     











Johnny Grande articles/mentions

~
John A. "Johnny" Grande (January 14, 1930 – June 3, 2006) was a member of the Bill Haley backing band, The Comets.       

Viewfinder links:   
 
Bill Haley ~ 
        Rock Around the Clock  
        Rocks Around the Clock
        Rock Around the Clock 2     

 


 
photographer unknown
   
 


















Rock Around The Clock lyrics

~ 
One, two, three o'clock, four o'clock rock
Five, six, seven o'clock, eight o'clock rock
Nine, ten, eleven o'clock, twelve o'clock rock
We're gonna rock around the clock tonight

Put your glad rags on, join me, Hon
We'll have some fun when the clock strikes one
We're gonna rock around the clock tonight
We're gonna rock, rock, rock, 'til broad daylight
Wer're gonna rock, gonna rock around the clock tonight

When the clock strikes two, three and four
If the band slows down we'll yell for more
We're gonna rock around the clock tonight
We're gonna rock, rock, rock, 'til broad daylight
We're gonna rock, gonna rock around the clock tonight

[Instrumental Interlude]

When the chimes ring five, six, and seven
We'll be right in seventh heaven
We're gonna rock around the clock tonight
We're gonna rock, rock, rock, 'til broad daylight
We're gonna rock, gonna rock around the clock tonight

When it's eight, nine, ten, eleven too
I'll be goin' strong and so will you
We're gonna rock around the clock tonight
We're gonna rock, rock, rock, 'til broad daylight
We're gonna rock, gonna rock around the clock tonight

[
Instrumental Interlude]

When the clock strikes twelve, we'll cool off then
Start a'rockin' round the clock again
We're gonna rock around the clock tonight
We're gonna rock, rock, rock, 'til broad daylight
We're gonna rock, gonna rock around the clock tonight



Rock Around The Clock
(Max Freedman and
James E. Myers aka Jimmy DeKnight)      
  
 
Styrous® ~ Saturday, April 14, 2018    
  











April 12, 2017

Today in music history 1 ~ Bill Haley Rocks Around the Clock





On April 12, 1954, Bill Haley recorded Rock Around the Clock at Pythian Temple studios in New York City. Considered by many to be the song that put rock and roll on the map around the world. The song was used over the opening titles for the film Blackboard Jungle, which starred Glenn Ford and Sidney Poitier, and went on to be a world-wide No.1 and the biggest selling pop single with sales over 25 million.

Blackboard Jungle movie poster



Rock Around the Clock is a rock and roll song in the 12-bar blues format written by Max C. Freedman and James E. Myers (the latter under the pseudonym "Jimmy De Knight") in 1952. The best-known and most successful rendition was recorded by Bill Haley & His Comets in 1954 for American Decca. It was a number one single on both the US and UK charts and also re-entered the UK Singles Chart in the 1960s and 1970s.    

It was not the first rock and roll record, nor was it the first successful record of the genre (Bill Haley had American chart success with Crazy Man, Crazy in 1953, and in 1954, Shake, Rattle and Roll sung by Big Joe Turner reached No. 1 on the Billboard R&B chart). Haley's recording nevertheless became an anthem for rebellious 1950s youth and is widely considered to be the song that, more than any other, brought rock and roll into mainstream culture around the world. The song is ranked No. 158 on the Rolling Stone magazine's list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.    

Although first recorded by Italian-American band Sonny Dae and His Knights on March 20, 1954, the more famous version by Bill Haley & His Comets is not, strictly speaking, a cover version. Myers claimed the song had been written specifically for Haley but, for various reasons, Haley was unable to record it himself until April 12, 1954.   

The original full title of the song was We're Gonna Rock Around the Clock Tonight!. This was later shortened to (We're Gonna) Rock Around the Clock, though this form is generally only used on releases of the 1954 Bill Haley Decca Records recording; most other recordings of this song by Haley and others (including Sonny Dae) shorten this title further to Rock Around the Clock. Sources indicate Rock Around the Clock was written in 1953, but documents uncovered by historian Jim Dawson indicate it was in fact written in late 1952.    

The song was credited to Myers (as "Jimmy DeKnight") and Max C. Freedman, although its exact authorship is disputed, with many speculating that Freedman wrote the song on his own. There were several earlier songs of the title Rock Around the Clock (by Hal Singer and Wally Mercer), but they are unrelated to the Freedman/Myers song. In addition, it is sometimes erroneously stated that Rock Around the Clock is copied from a late-1940s Big Joe Turner recording, Around the Clock Blues. Aside from title similarity, however, the two songs bear little resemblance. There are many blues songs with the theme of partying or making love "round the clock", with various actions specified at various hours. The song also uses phrases from Red Wagon, by  Count Basie, first recorded in 1939.             

According to the Haley biographies Bill Haley by John Swenson and Rock Around the Clock by Dawson, the song was offered to Haley in the wake of his first national success Crazy Man, Crazy in 1953, after being copyrighted with the U.S. Library of Congress on March 31. Haley and his Comets began performing the song on stage (Comets bass player Marshall Lytle and drummer Dick Richards say the first performances were in Wildwood, New Jersey at Phil and Eddie's Surf Club), but Dave Miller, his producer, refused to allow Haley to record it for his Essex Records label (Swenson suggests a feud existed between Myers and Miller).    

Haley himself claimed to have taken the sheet music into the recording studio at least twice, with Miller ripping up the music each time. Nonetheless, rumors of a 1953 demo recording by Haley persist to this day, although surviving members of the Comets deny this, as did Haley himself (quoted in the Swenson biography); a late-1960s bootleg single of the Decca Records version of Rock Around the Clock, with Crazy Man, Crazy on the B-side and carrying the Essex label, occasionally turns up for sale with the claim that it is the demo version.       

Myers next offered the song to Sonny Dae and His Knights, a novelty all-white musical group led by Italian-American Paschal Vennitti. The group's subsequent recording, on the Arcade Records label (owned by Haley's manager, Jack Howard), was a regional success, although it sounded very different from what Haley would later record.

In tribute to the influence of the song and the movie that launched its popularity, the March 29, 2005 50th anniversary of the opening of Blackboard Jungle was marked by several large celebrations in the United States organized by promoter Martin Lewis under the blanket title "Rock Is Fifty".  

         
musicians on the Decca recording are :  
            
      
Net links:         
         
Blackboard Jungle         
Charts and certifications         
List of Billboard number-one singles of 1955           
             
     
Songs on YouTube: 
                
Bill Haley ~ Rock Around the Clock       
Sonny Dae and His Knights ~ Rock Around the Clock
Hank Williams ~ Move It On Over       
Count Basie Quartet ~ Red Wagon    
         
       
 
Rock on, Bill!
                 
         
Styrous® ~ Wednesday, April 12, 2017          






March 27, 2014

45 RPMs 4: Bill Haley ~ Rock Around the Clock



45 RPM
photo by Styrous®




There was an event 59 years ago I will never forget if I live to be a thousand: the opening of the film, Blackboard Jungle. From the instant of its sudden count-down (or should I say, count-up) start, I was transfixed as if I had been hit by a lightning bolt. What was this strange, throbbing and exciting sound that was bursting from the screen? It was a sound like none I'd ever heard before and I was struck senseless. I remember after the film was over I had no recollection of how it started (the action of the movie, that is; I had to see the film again to find out). I only remembered that I had heard something new, different, primal yet sophisticated and incredibly fantastic! It took a few minutes for me to come down from the ceiling to finally focus on the movie when the song ended. 










The music was, of course, Rock Around the Clock by Bill Haley and His Comets. Until that moment my entire pop music experience had been Mitch Miller, Johnnie Ray, Frank Sinatra, Vaughn Monroe, Patti Page, The Four Lads, Tony Bennett and on and on. The only thing that came even remotely close to what I was hearing was some of the big band jazz groups I'd heard at the Sweet's or on 78 RPM records that my mom and dad had. This was NOTHING like any of those. It was a completely new breed of music and it snagged me the instant I heard it!

The Rock and Roll Era is generally dated from the March 25th, 1955, premiere of the motion picture, "The Blackboard Jungle." This film’s use of Bill Haley and His Comets(We’re Gonna) Rock Around the Clock over its opening credits, caused a national sensation when teenagers started dancing in the aisles. I was one of them.

I had already been a collector of music by then with a library of 45's by the aforementioned artists. I immediately ran out and bought the 45 RPM of the song. In the years that followed, when I was at parties with friends and they played their 45's which sounded more like they were being played by cement trucks rather than phonograph players because of the peanut butter 'n jelly and who knows what embedded in the grooves, I never let anyone touch my 45's. If I liked a song, I would buy two copies of it and the crappiest pressing of it (45's didn't have great quality control back then) would go to the parties. Thus mine are almost as good as the day I bought them those 60 or so years ago.

So, back to the artist that created this sensation. Actually, it was a series of artists and events that did the deed but I'm layin' the blame on Haley as he is the one who hooked me, so to speak.

Bill Haley started out in country and western music with some blues influences. He was considered one of the top cowboy yodelers in America. I have some of his old 45's from that period on Essex records. After recording a country and western-styled version of Rocket 88, a rhythm and blues song, he changed musical direction to a new sound which came to be called rock and roll; a term coined by the American disc jockey James "Alan" Freed.

A new name was needed to fit the new musical style. A friend of Haley's, making note of the common alternative pronunciation of the name Halley's Comet to rhyme with Bailey, suggested that Haley call his band The Comets. This event is cited in the Haley biographies "Sound and Glory" by John Haley and John von Hoelle, "Bill Haley" by John Swenson and in "Still Rockin' Around The Clock", a memoir by Comets bass player, Marshall Lytle.


 
 
rehearsing at the 
Dominion Theatre, Camden, London,
in 1957 for their first British show. 
photo by Harry Hammond
(Keystone/Getty Images)


The new name was adopted in the fall of 1952. Members of the group at that time were Haley, Johnny Grande, Billy Williamson, and Marshall Lytle. Grande usually played piano on record, but switched to accordion for live shows as it was more portable than a piano and easier to deal with during musical numbers that involved a lot of dancing around. Soon after renaming the band, Haley hired his first drummer, Charlie Higler, though Higler was soon replaced by Dick Boccelli (a.k.a. Dick Richards). During this time and as late as the fall of 1955, Haley did not have a permanent lead guitar player, choosing to use session musicians on record and either playing lead guitar himself or having Williamson play steel solos.

In 1953 Haley scored his first national success with an original song called Crazy Man, Crazy, a phrase Haley said he heard from his teenage audience.  Crazy Man, Crazy was the first rock and roll song to be televised nationally when it was used on the soundtrack for a 1953 television play starring James Dean. This is one of the songs I have on Essex records.

Haley and His Comets then recorded Rock Around the Clock, Haley's biggest hit, and one of the most important records in rock and roll history. Sales of Rock Around the Clock started slowly but eventually sold an estimated 25 million copies (per the Guinness Book of World Records) and marked the arrival of a cultural shift. In 2010, Turner Classic Movies (TCM) listed the soundtrack of the movie on its list of the Top 15 Most Influential Movie Soundtracks of all time.



 photographer unknown




Over 400 titles were recorded and released by Bill Haley and his musicians over a period of forty years, The vocals were sometimes done by other artists, but the back up was Bill's Comets or one of his earlier country-western bands. Haley also recorded over a hundred titles on at least four different Latin American labels: Dimsa, Orfeon, Maya and Dim. Many were sung in Spanish, while others were instrumentals with a strong Spanish flair. Those records sold in the tens of millions thoughout Latin America and South American where "Bill Haley y sus Cometas" remained very popular during the 1960's




Rock Around The Clock lyrics:

One, two, three o'clock, four o'clock rock
Five, six, seven o'clock, eight o'clock rock
Nine, ten, eleven o'clock, twelve o'clock rock
We're gonna rock around the clock tonight

Put your glad rags on, join me, Hon
We'll have some fun when the clock strikes one
We're gonna rock around the clock tonight
We're gonna rock, rock, rock, 'til broad daylight
Wer're gonna rock, gonna rock around the clock tonight

When the clock strikes two, three and four
If the band slows down we'll yell for more
We're gonna rock around the clock tonight
We're gonna rock, rock, rock, 'til broad daylight
We're gonna rock, gonna rock around the clock tonight

[Instrumental Interlude]

When the chimes ring five, six, and seven
We'll be right in seventh heaven
We're gonna rock around the clock tonight
We're gonna rock, rock, rock, 'til broad daylight
We're gonna rock, gonna rock around the clock tonight

When it's eight, nine, ten, eleven too
I'll be goin' strong and so will you
We're gonna rock around the clock tonight
We're gonna rock, rock, rock, 'til broad daylight
We're gonna rock, gonna rock around the clock tonight

[Instrumental Interlude]

When the clock strikes twelve, we'll cool off then
Start a'rockin' round the clock again
We're gonna rock around the clock tonight
We're gonna rock, rock, rock, 'til broad daylight
We're gonna rock, gonna rock around the clock tonight

Rock Around The Clock
(Max Freedman and Jimmy DeKnigh)



There is a book about Haley titled, "Sound and Glory", by John W. Haley (Bill's son) and John von Hoelle. Published by: Dyne-American Publishing, 2070 Naamans Rd., Suite 103, Wilmington, DE. 19810, 1990.
There's WAY more information available on Wikipedia about Bill Haley and the Comets; it's really worth the time it to check it out.

 

Net links:

Rock Around the Clock on YouTube
Blackboard Jungle scenes on YouTube
Blackboard Jungle movie credits on IMDb



One, two, three o'clock . . .



Styrous® ~ Tuesday, March 25, 2014





December 27, 2013

45 RPMs Archive

~
I have over 20,000 vinyl LP albums I am selling (see link below); this archive of 45 RPM records is an extension of that collection. Each blog entry is about a 45 from my collection. Contact Styrous® for more information
       

3D Vinyl LPs & 45 RPMs           
Birth of the 45 rpm record ~ March 31, 1949       
The RCA Victor 45-EY-2 45 RPM record player  
45 RPMs 1: Big Black ~ Bulldozer       
45 RPMs 2: The Wild One ~ 1953 12" 45 EP                
45 RPMs 3: Adam & the Ants ~ Ant Music EP    
45 RPMs 4: Bill Haley ~ Rock Around the Clock   
45 RPMs 5: Cal Tjader ~ Huracán on 12" White Vinyl   
45 RPMs 6: Depeche Mode ~ Just Can't Get Enough 12" single  
45 RPMs 7: Glenn Danzig - Who Killed Marilyn?        
45 RPMs 8: PIL (Public Image Ltd.) ~ Metal Box      
45 RPMs 9: Depeche Mode ~ Master & Servant     
45 RPMs 10: A Tribute To James Dean   
45 RPMs 11: Chuck Berry ~ Maybellene    
45 RPMs 12: Prince ~ Raspberry Beret     
45 RPMs 13: The Crickets ~ That'll Be The Day @ 60      

45 RPMs 14: I'll Cry Tomorrow ~ Susan Hayward @ 100   
45 RPMs 15: Charles Laughton reads The Night of the Hunter  
45 RPMs 16: Yello ~ I Love You 7" in 3D                     
45 RPMs 17: Cat People & John Heard                                  
45 RPMs 25: Aretha Franklin & Whitney Houston ~ Now A Duet in Heaven
45 RPMs 26: Julie London ~ Cry Me a River  
45 RPMs 27: Clarence "Frogman" Henry ~ Ain't Got No Home    
45 RPMs 28: Bill Haley and the Comets ~ See You Later Alligator 
45 RPMs 29: Deutsch Amerikanische Freundschaft (DAF) ~ Der Räuber Und Der Prinz    
45 RPMs 30: The Platters ~ (You've Got) The Magic Touch  
45 RPMs 31: The Platters ~ Only You (And You Alone)  
45 RPMs 32: The Residents ~ (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction            
45 RPMs 33: Buddy Knox ~ Party Doll & My Baby's Gone    
45 RPMs 34: Bill Buchanan & Dickie Goodman ~ The Flying Saucer     
45 RPMs 35: Spın̈al Tap ~ Christmas With The Devil           
45 RPMs 36: Hawkshaw Hawkins ~ Ling Ting Tong a Honky Tonk song      
45 RPMs 37: Fats Domino ~ I'm Walkin'      
45 RPMs 38: Skatt Brothers ~ Don't Be Cruel (Disco Daze 4)      
45 RPMs 39: Elvis Presley ~ All Shook Up & Otis Blackwell      
45 RPMs 40: Giuseppe Verdi ~ Il Trovatore    
45 RPMs 41: "Fats" Domino ~ Blueberry Hill  
45 RPMs 42: Silvana Mangano ~ Anna soundtrack             
45 RPMs 43: Grace Jones ~ The Apple Stretching 12"45      
45 RPMs 44: Devo ~ (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction    
45 RPMs 45: Prince ~ Batdance    
45 RPMs 46: Gale Storm ~ I Hear You Knocking & My Little Margie      
45 RPMs 47: Joe Jackson ~ I'm the Man (45 RPM box set)          
45 RPMs 48: Patsy Cline ~ Walkin' After Midnight       
45 RPMs 49: The Supremes ~ I Hear a Symphony        
45 RPMs 50: Bert Kaempfert ~ Wonderland By Night        
45 RPMs 51: Ben E. King ~ Spanish Harlem      
45 RPMs 52: Ferlin Husky ~ Gone     
45 RPMs 53: Elvis Presley ~ Heartbreak Hotel      
45 RPMs 54: Don Cherry ~ Band of Gold      
45 RPMs 55:
Rick James ~ Super Freak 12" 45      
45 RPMs 56: Bobby "Boris" Pickett ~ Monster Mash       
45 RPMs 59: The Coasters ~ Yakety Yak         
45 RPMs 60: Frank Sinatra ~ Strangers in the Night                       
45 RPMs 62: Michael Damian ~ Rock On with 12"       
45 RPMs 63: The Coasters ~ Poison Ivy                         
45 RPMs 64: Tuxedomoon ~ Ninotchka                          
45 RPMs 65: Sammy Davis Jr. – Six Bridges To Cross & George Nader                          
45 RPMs 66: Lulu ~ To Sir With Love & Neil Diamond                           
45 RPMs 67: Jaye P. Morgan ~ Pepper-Hot Baby        
45 RPMs 68: Del Shannon ~ Runaway & Max Crook's Musitron              
45 RPMs 69: The Judds ~ Why Not Me?               
45 RPMs 70: Smiley Lewis ~ Shame, Shame, Shame               
45 RPMs 72: Carl Perkins ~ Blue Suede Shoes        
45 RPMs 73: Sam Cooke ~ You Send Me         
45 RPMs 74: Harry Belafonte ~ Banana Boat Song (Day O)         
45 RPMs 75: Red Buttons ~ Strange Things Are Happening             
45 RPMs 77: Aretha Franklin ~ Spanish Harlem            
45 RPMs 78: Enrico Caruso ~ Caruso Sings 45 (red vinyl)            
45 RPMs 79: Perry Como ~ Catch A Falling Star            
45 RPMs 80: Elvis Presley ~ Are You Lonesome To-night?            
45 RPMs 81: Madonna ~ La Isla Bonita             
45 RPMs 82: The Supremes ~ Come See About Me            
45 RPMs 83: The Supremes ~ Buttered Popcorn w/Florence Ballard           
45 RPMs 84: Crime ~ Hot wire My Heart       
45 RPMs 85: Gary Numan ~ Cars       
45 RPMs 86: Edith Piaf ~ Milord         
45 RPMs 87: Marianne Faithfull ~ Broken English 12" single           
45 RPMs 88: Prince & The Revolution ~ Kiss 12" single         
45 RPMs 89: The Rolling Stones ~ Harlem Shuffle 12" 45                 
45 RPMs 91: Tennessee Ernie Ford ~ Sixteen Tons         
45 RPMs 92: Prince ~ Sign O the Times                 
45 RPMs 93: Martine Bijl & Don McLean ~ Vincent