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june.
18...how much would you have paid to see led zeppelin's last show?may.
april.
28...way worse than cool hybrids, like zonies or tigons: the three worst/best celeb music crossoversmarch.
3...ok go- “this too shall pass”: ushering rube goldberg back into the spotlightfebruary.
9...smash mouth steals things. from steely dan.december.
24...robert goulet wants you to have a merry christmasnovember.
24..."thanksgiving time" - chris kattan & will ferrell as air supplyoctober.
28...top 11 saxophone moments of all timeseptember.
30...the search for the worst music on the internet or even the worldaugust.
30...call me beacon blues: review of steely dan live at the beacon theatrejuly.
31......and baoom goes the dynamite... main page.
Theme by nostrich.
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Single: “Bad Company”
Artist: Bad Company
Album: Bad Company
I’ll also note that Bad Company got its name from the 1972 film entitled - you guessed it - Bad Company. So for those of you keeping score at home, that’s “Bad Company” from Bad Company by Bad Company inspired by Bad Company.
A recent (less egregious) example of this phenomenon:
Single: “Wilco (The Song)”
Artist: Wilco
Album: Wilco (The Album)
But, BIG difference: Bad Company was the group’s debut album. Wilco (The Album) is Wilco’s seventh.
[Sidenote: I saw Wilco last month at the Hearst Greek Theatre.
a) What a venue.
b) What. A. Show.]
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The opposite of the above phenomenon:
Houses of the Holy is the 5th studio album by Led Zeppelin from 1973, and my 2nd favorite album of theirs (after II).
Guess what? The raw, rhythmically complex, country-esque hit single “Houses of the Holy”? Not on Houses of the Holy. The band decided it did not fit with the overall feel of the album, and so pushed it back to 1975 and included it on the album Physical Graffiti, which just so happens to contain the greatest song of Zeppelin’s catalogue: Kashmir (and no, Puff Daddy didn’t write it [and Godzilla sucked]).