Showing posts with label Can't Help Thinking About Me. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Can't Help Thinking About Me. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 29, 2020

Purple Hearts – "Can't Help Thinking About Me" (1980)


I can’t help thinking ‘bout me!

I can’t help thinking ‘bout me!

I CAN’T HELP THINKING ‘BOUT ME!

David Bowie wrote today’s featured song and was the first to record it.  But I had never heard the David Bowie with The Lower Third version of “Can’t Help Thinking About Me” until a few weeks ago.

I’ve been familiar with the Purple Hearts’ cover of the song since 1980, the year that it was released.  I have to think that I heard it on the late, great “Mystic Eyes” radio program.  But when I went through the songs on the two dozen-plus cassette tapes of “Mystic Eyes” programs that I recorded off the air in 1980, “Can’t Help Thinking About Me” was nowhere to be found.


It’s a mystery.


*     *     *     *     *


Bowie’s recording of the song has grown on me since I first heard it on what may be my second favorite radio program of all time – “Chris Carter’s British Invasion,” which airs weekends on the Sirius/XM “Underground Garage” channel.  


Ringo Starr with Chris Carter

Carter is also the longtime host of “Breakfast with the Beatles,” which also airs on Sirius/XM. 


I just learned that Chris Carter the DJ is the same Chris Carter who was a founding member of Dramarama, whose 1991 Vinyl album was one of the first CDs I ever owned.  (“I Got Spies” was a silly song!)


Chris Carter the DJ shouldn’t be confused with Cris Carter the NFL Hall of Famer, who caught 1101 passes and scored 130 touchdowns in his 16-year NFL career.  


Cris Carter

Nor should he be confused with Chris Carson, who’s the Seattle Seahawks running back I decided to start over Jeff Wilson of the 49ers in my fantasy league championship game last weekend.  (BIG MISTAKE!)  


*     *     *     *     *


But I still prefer the Purple Hearts’ cover of the song – which may be the case simply because I’m more familiar with it.


I can point to one small thing the Purple Hearts did that represents a clear improvement over the original version.


The Purple Hearts don’t sing “I can’t help thinking about me.”  Instead, they sing “I can’t help thinking ’bout me.”


The Purple Hearts

Dropping the “a” from “about” makes the chorus work much better.  It’s a small thing, but a small thing – or a few small things – is often all it takes to turn something that’s pretty good into something great.


Click here to listen to the Purple Hearts’ cover of “Can’t Help Thinking About Me.”




Friday, December 25, 2020

David Bowie with The Lower Third – "Can't Help Thinking About Me" (1965)


I can’t help thinking about me!

I can’t help thinking about me!

I CAN’T HELP THINKING ABOUT ME!

(I know just how the singer feels.)


*     *     *     *     *


I know how much my loyal followers love it when the great and powerful wizard of 2 or 3 lines pulls back the curtain and reveals some of my secrets.  And that’s exactly what I’m going to do in today’s very special Christmas post.


Another great and powerful wizard

(Speaking of wizards, did you know that the Wizard of Oz’s real name was Oscar Zoroaster Phadrig Isaac Norman Henkle Emmannuel Ambroise Diggs?  I didn’t either.)


*     *     *     *     *


I can’t tell you how often I’ve been out and about, driving my car and minding my own business, when a 2 or 3 lines-worthy song comes on my Sirius/XM radio.  But by the time I get home, I’ve forgotten what that song was. 


If you’re the creator of a wildly popular music blog like me, I bet the same thing has happened to you. 


Recently, I came up with a fix for this problem.  I simply take a photo of my car’s multimedia screen, which shows the title of the record that’s playing and the name of the artist who recorded it.


For example:



(You worrywarts out there would probably say that taking my eye off the road and steering with my knees while I use both hands to take a photo is a suboptimal driving technique.  But I haven’t crashed yet!)


About once a week, I scroll through my photo folder and write down all the songs whose titles I’ve captured.  That way, I don’t forget them.


*     *     *     *     *


The only problem with my system is that it works too well.


It takes very little effort to snap a photo of every mildly noteworthy record I hear, so that’s exactly what I’ve been doing.


As a result, I have a list containing the names of 159 records . . . which is enough for roughly a year and a half of 2 or 3 lines posts. 


Of course, that’s assuming that I don’t add any new songs to the list over the next year and a half.  And we all know that ain’t happening.


*     *     *     *     *


Last Saturday morning, I drove to the local Dunkin’ Donuts for a large coffee and a maple-frosted donut – not as good as the legendary maple bars from Dude’s Daylight Donuts in Joplin, Missouri, but not bad – and then continued to my local farmers market.  After making my usual purchases, I drove back home. 


I was in the car for about an hour, but used my phone to take note of no fewer than a baker’s dozen of the records I heard while driving that morning.


Here’s that baker’s dozen:


“Baby I Love You” – Andy Kim


“That’s Why God Made the Radio” – Beach Boys


“Jerk It Out” – Caesars


“He’s a Whore” – Cheap Trick


“Can’t Help Thinking About Me” – David Bowie and the Lower Third


“Groovin’ Is Easy” – Electric Flag


“Oliver’s Army” – Elvis Costello


“Hot You’re Cool” – General Public


“Out of My League” – Harlequin Ghost



“Last Train to Trancentral” – The KLF


“Que Vida” – Arthur Lee and Love


“Everlasting Love” – Robert Knight


“Girlfriend in a Coma” – Smiths


There’s obviously no rhyme or reason to that collection of records – it’s about as motley a group of songs as I can imagine.


*     *     *     *     *


It’s possible that I’ll end up featuring two or three of those songs in future 2 or 3 lines posts, but you best believe that most of them will never see the light of day.


But I doubt that I’ll be able to stop myself from capturing ten times as many record titles as I’ll ever need.  After all, it doesn’t cost a thing to take a photo with a phone.  


And if I put the brakes on my picture-taking profligacy, the title of a record that would have made a dandy 2 or 3 lines post might slip my mind.


You don’t want to take a chance of that happening, do you?  (Horribile dictu!)


*     *     *     *     *


“Can’t Help Thinking About Me” is a notable record for more than one reason.


For one thing, it was the first David Bowie record to be released in the U. S. of A.


For another, it was the first record he released after abandoning his real name – David or Davy Jones – in order to avoid being confused with the Monkees’ Davy Jones.


The Lower Third was the fourth of the six groups that Bowie was a member of before achieving fame and fortune as a solo artist.


David Bowie with the Lower Third

I had never heard The Lower Third’s recording of “Can’t Help Thinking About Me” – which Bowie wrote – until that day I was driving home from the farmers market.


But I was very familiar with a 1980 cover of the song by the Purple Hearts, an English mod revival band.


I heard the Purple Hearts’ version of the song on Steven Lorber’s legendary “Mystic Eyes” radio program, which I’ve written about incessantly over the years.


Bowie’s original is good, but I like the Purple Hearts’ cover even better.  Is that because it is better, or because I’m more familiar with it?


Click here to listen to David Bowie and the Lower Third’s 1965 recording of “Can’t Help Thinking About Me.”


Click on the link below to buy the record from Amazon: