Well it's 1969,okay. for x-daysofmusicsteemCreated with Sketch.

in x-daysofmusic •  6 years ago 

@Steevc nominated me a few days ago for this challenge set up by @backinblackdevil.

August 1969 doesn't really improve on the year before, according to Wikipedia: The Manson family did their murderous thing in LA while British troops were deployed in Northern Ireland after the Battle of the Bogside.
In music news, Woodstock Festival happened and the Beatles were photographed crossing a road in North London.
In space, Mariner 7 was checking out Mars, Americans had landed on the moon, and on another planet in another solar system, this was going down...


There's a CD of the music to The Clangers by the late, great, Vernon Elliott. If you haven't watched The Clangers (1969/72 episodes only, thank you) or Ivor The Engine, then you are excused for an hour or two while you edificate yourself.

Fairport Convention - Who Knows Where The Time Goes

From Unhalfbricking
Sandy Denny who wrote and sings this song is the female singer on Led Zep's 'Battle of Evermore'. She left Fairport Convention at the end of 1969, rejoined for a while in 1974 and they never had another female singer. This is a classic in the folk world and has been covered relentlessly. Fairport Convention also gave us Richard Thompson, we'll get to him another day.

Grateful Dead - St. Stephen

from Playboy After Dark
My all-time favourite Grateful Dead song from the rather odd 'Aoxomoxoa'. There's some classics ('China Cat Sunflower'), and some utterly incomprehensible waffle ('What's Become of The Baby'). This song has everything in one compact package. Beautiful Garcia guitar work, impenetrable lyrics, a slow bit, a fast bit, and the howl at the end of the first verse.

Creedence Clearwater Revival - Graveyard Train

From Bayou Country
For that mournful riff. Creedence were a studio creation of a New York boy and his brother. They didn't have a southern bone in their bodies but they conjured up the mythical south like no-one else before. What was also impressive was they had hits with political songs. When Fogerty finally won his lawsuit and started playing CCR songs again, it was a wonderful sight to see.

Blind Faith - Can't Find My Way Home

The comments on the YouTube page are amusing
I seem to have skipped Cream, but Blind Faith were an improvement on that band, due to the presence of Steve Winwood, who could push Clapton melodically and write a damn fine song, such as this one.

David Bowie - Space Oddity

From Love me 'Til Tuesday
The first pop video I remember, although I was only three so obviously not from the first time around. It was a couple more years before this became a hit, and got a different video that was nowhere near as disturbing. I think I remember this because I found it really freaky, in that it emphasises Major Tom's hallucinations and suicide. A nice cheery one to end on.

All the above videos are taken from YouTube, mostly courtesy of people who don't hold the rights.

The rules are to be interpreted as you like really, but are something like this:
Pick years from when you were born to now. It really doesn't have to be all of them
Feature some songs from one of those years in a post with some details about why you like them. You can write something about the year in general too.
Nominate another Steemian
Use the hashtag #x-daysofmusic

My days of music: 1967 - 1968

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Big vote just for the Clangers, and Ivor the Engine was great too! There was some interesting music going on around this time. Lots of experimentation, and not just on drugs. I guess a lot of the old acts don't have their own Youtube channels, but it is amazing that people get away with posting stuff they don't own. I got a takedown for a Supertramp cover I did, but others can post whole albums.

Looking at the summaries of the years, it's amazing how miserable the news was in 1970, and how awesome the music. That was often said about punk - that it rose out of the misery of the times (Australia wasn't miserable in the 70's and didn't have a punk movement).
I understand acts wanting to control how they are seen and protect their image and music, but they also need to understand that the hardcore collectors want to see everything! You, of course Steve, were obviously trying to take hard-earned steem from tramps - super or not... :)