I like the Hurra Torpedo version of TEotH.
Buffista Music 4: Needs More Cowbell!
There's a lady plays her fav'rite records/On the jukebox ev'ry day/All day long she plays the same old songs/And she believes the things that they say/She sings along with all the saddest songs/And she believes the stories are real/She lets the music dictate the way that she feels.
Turn around / Every now and then I want to plunge ice picks through both my ears / So I never have to hear this song again / Turn around...
Frank has no magic in his heart.
Or maybe I mean no bombast.
(I always get those two confused.)
I had the Bonnie Tyle album back for the first round of TEotH. the one with this image on the front or back cover [link] - I remember my mother and aunt being horrified.
TEotH FTW.
In high school a friend recorded TEotH over and over on a 90-minute tape. And used to make us all listen to it in the car.
I got sick of it pretty early.
Cheap Trick releases their new album on 8-track: [link]
Ah, you gotta love the Pride of Rockford.
Must be more careful.
I use slacker.com at work - I can actually request individual songs, and that's nice.
I have a "Soundtrack" channel that I've populated heavily with Howard Shore (Tolkien! Duh!) and John Barry and the like.
I have to be much more careful when "The End of All Things" from the "Return of the King" soundtrack comes on; I flash back to "Eagles!" and get all weepy, which is awkward when testing video games.
NO IT'S JUST ALLERGIES MOVE ALONG t /T-rex
How much do I love Angelo Badalamenti? "Mountains Falling" would be dance-worthy, methinks.
(I'm flashing back to the Olde Days of clubbing in Seattle, when Sunday nights at the old Vogue were fetish night; this song would totally fill the floor with beautiful women and hunky men in skin-tight latex, slowly grinding around. Rawr.)
A funny story from someone working at a record store: Constructive Criticism For The Music Industry