"Bad Boyfriend" by Garbage
"La belle et le bad boy" by MC Solaar (used in, I'm told, the SatC finale episode)
"Bad Man's World" by Jenny Lewis
"Bad Blood" by Neil Sedaka
Early ,'Objects In Space'
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.
I want that!
RT doing Black Crow (and RT doing Woodstock) headed to BRawk2 right now.
Allow me to suggest:
Michael Jackson - "Bad"
If you''re in an odd mood, you could also use Meatloaf, "Good Girls Go To Heaven (Bad Girls Go Everywhere)"
"Bad Things" - Jace Everett. I think I already put that up at B-rawk
Thank you. Didn't know the exact title, so I worked off the chorus. It's an instant earworm, but one I don't mind having.
Bad Wisdom - Suzanne Vega
Crow Jane - Skip James
From my iTunes list:
- Bad Motorcycle - The Storey Sisters
- I'm Bad Like Jesse James - John Lee Hooker
- Bad Businessman - Squirrel Nut Zippers
- Bad Girl - The Zakary Thaks (greatest band name ever?)
- Love's Gone Bad - Underdogs.
IOBadN, just in case you forgot how bad a high school (Jr. High?) band can be....
2001 A Space Odyssey titles school performance
This had me both laughing and cringing....
eta: OK, this was not a high-school band:
The Dish's Smearing Of Public School Orchestras
We stand corrected and ashamed. About that last MHB. A reader writes:
That recording was actually by The Portsmouth Sinfonia, "a real orchestra founded by a group of students at Portsmouth School of Art in Portsmouth, England, in 1970 -- however, the Sinfonia had an unusual entrance requirement. Players had to be either non-musicians, or if a musician, play an instrument that was entirely new to them."
Another writes:
I recognized it immediately because it was on Dead Parrot Society, a compilation album of British comedy dominated by Peter Cook and the boys of Monty Python.
Another:
Brian Eno was a member for a while and played the clarinet.
That's kinda' cool. Still sounds like a Jr. High band, though....
Hiya. This isn't usually a thread I follow, because my music love tends to be pretty shallow and fleeting. But there's a song that's been in my head all weekend, and I just can't remember enough about it to find it on YouTube and play it half a dozen time to get it out of my head.
(I worked in a CD store way back when, and I'm having flashbacks to customers coming in for a country CD by some guy singing about his lost love. Oh, and the cover might be brown. *sigh*)
Anyway. If someone can figure out the song from this bare-bones description, please, that would be wonderful.
It starts off with a rumble of thunder (but it’s not “This Corrosion,” although I’m not ruling out Sisters of Mercy). It’s very lush and has sort of sweeping melodic lines throughout, as well as the sound of rain. The last line of the chorus is something like “It’s true for you.” The vocalist is male with a fairly lyrical baritone voice.
I think it’s from the late ‘80s, to very early ‘90s—no later than ’91. And I can tell you a few other things it’s not:
London After Midnight – Sacrifice
The Same Deep Water as You – The Cure
Kingdom of Rain – The The
Anyone?
I'm famliar with two different "Bad Boy" songs, one by Miami Sound Machine and one by Inner Circle.
It isn't in the title, but the Shangri-Las explain the difference between "good," "bad," and "good-bad, but he's not evil" in "Give Him a Great Big Kiss."
"Bad Word (for a Good Thing)"-The Friggs (I think)