Album of the Day 8/11/10
Every day, we count down the 1000 best albums of all time all the way to #1. Wednesday’s album is #902:
Dickie Goodman – Greatest Fables
Dickie Goodman invented sampling. Along with his partner Bill Buchanan, Goodman enjoyed a string of comedy hits in the mid-1950s that worked a bizarrely funny call-and-response between an announcer (usually the fictitious, bewildered “John Cameron Cameron”) and snippets of the pop hits of the day, the first and most famous of these being The Flying Saucer, a War of the Worlds parody. In shades of what the RIAA would do to unsuspecting downloaders fifty years later, the recording industry sued them for copyright infringement. Buchanan and Goodman responded that their creations were parodies and therefore exempt from prosection – and won the case. And responded with the even funnier Buchanan and Goodman On Trial. Goodman resurfaced, solo, in the 70s with the topical Energy Crisis, the blaxploitation soundtrack parody Superfly Meets Shaft and then his only platinum single, Mr. Jaws, in 1975. Goodman: “And what did you say when the shark touched you?
Olivia Newton-John: “Please, mister, please.”
And so on. This 1998 compilation has all the Buchanan and Goodman hits, including The Touchables (a spoof of late 50s tv detective shows) along with all of his solo singles including the very funny King Kong, from 1978, and an updated version of Flying Saucer by Goodman’s son Jon, utilizing more contemporary song samples. Dickie Goodman committed suicide in 1989. There are several download links for this out there: here’s a random one.
August 11, 2010 - Posted by theamyb | lists, Music, music, concert, rock music | best albums, best albums all time, best albums alltime, best albums ever, best albums list, best albums lucid culture, best music, best music ever, best rock albums all time, best rock albums alltime, best rock albums ever, bill buchanan dickie goodman, buchanan and goodman, buchanan and goodman flying saucer, comedy music, comedy rock, dickie goodman, dickie goodman greatest fables, dickie goodman greatest hits, dickie goodman mr. jaws, dickie goodman son, funniest albums all time, funniest albums alltime, funniest albums ever, funniest music all time, funniest music alltime, funniest music ever, funniest songs all time, funniest songs alltime, funniest songs ever, funny songs, greatest albums all time, greatest albums alltime, greatest albums ever, invented sampling, joke songs, jon goodman, mr. jaws song, musical comedy, novelty music, pop music, rock music, top albums all time, top albums alltime, top albums ever
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April, 2007 – Lucid Culture debuts as the online version of a somewhat notorious New York music and politics e-zine. After a brief flirtation with blogging about global politics, we begin covering the dark fringes of the New York rock scene that the indie rock blogosphere and the corporate media find too frightening, too smart or too unfashionable. “Great music that’s not trendy” becomes our mantra.
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