Back then, my uncle had a Galaxie 500. I have fond memories of hm playing Johny Cash's Greatest Hits on the 8-track wile driving down the highway at 100 mph in the Galaxie.
Ooh, Elton John's Greatest Hits was another 8-track we got from my Aunt. Always meant to reacquire that album.
My favorite 8 track was ELO.
Poor Croce - he died before he achieved national prominence, right?
I drove across the country with my best friend Alex (Boston to California) in '85 with an 8-track player in the car. We picked up Dick Clark's 25 Years of Rock and Roll in a thrift shop in Cheyenne, Wyoming and listened to "Tequila" all the way across the Rockies.
My biggest association with that 8-track player, though, would be Aerosmith. Toys in the Attic, bay-bee!
Also, Bachman-Turner Overdrive, a band that only makes sense on an 8-Track.
Poor Croce - he died before he achieved national prominence, right?
Oh no! He had a shit ton of hits before he died, and had his own summer TV show and all that.
You don't tug on Supermans's Cape
You don't speed into the wind
You don't pull the mask off an ol' Lone Ranger
And you don't mess around with Jim
Right, plus "Operator" and "Don't Mess Around With Jim" and they released "Time in a Bottle" posthumously and it was huge hit.
Oh no! He had a shit ton of hits before he died, and had his own summer TV show and all that.
It looks like he had great success in '72 and died in '73. Huh.
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tommy, I think you might be confusing Croce with Harry Chapin.
ETA: Then again, that might be just me. I was just reading Chapin's entry at Wikipedia, and found out he had several years between "Taxi" and "Cat's in the Cradle" and his death.
When I was a kid, late 70s, people two blocks over put a poster of Harry Chapin on their front door after he died and left it there for years.
Okay, he died in 1981, so I must be remembering junior high. Unless it was a poster of Croce, but I'm pretty sure it was Harry Chapin. Stupid memory fail.