Showing posts with label Kinks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kinks. Show all posts

Friday, September 5, 2025

Kinks – "You Really Got Me" (1964)


You really got me now

You got me so I don’t know what I'm doin’


Last week, I went to the Great Frederick Fair in Frederick, Maryland with a daughter and three grandchildren who live there.


They came after school was over for the day, arriving at about 4:15.  Since seniors who entered the fair before 3:00 got in free, I showed up early and spent the money I had saved (and a little bit more) in the beer garden.


I could have killed the remaining time before my offspring arrived by visiting the barns where cows, pigs, sheep, and other livestock are exhibited.  But let’s face it – farm animals are pretty disgusting.  (I mean, pee-yew!)


Instead, I checked out the exhibits in the Household Building, which had the advantage of being located right next to the beer garden.


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The household item “departments” at the Great Frederick Fair include baked goods, food preservation, clothing items, needle arts, afghans and quilts, photography, and fine [sic] arts.  


Each department was further divided into divisions and classes.  Take a close look at the entry tag attached to this infant’s sweater and you will see that it was entered in Department P, Section 2, Class 3 – which is the category for crocheted sweaters for children up to six years of age.


Because that particular entry finished first in its class, its maker took home $4.  (That may sound pretty sweet, but the entry fee is also $4 – plus the entrant had to pay for the yarn and those cute little duck-shaped buttons.) 


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What would a county fair be without jams, jellies, canned vegetables, and other preserved foods:


Photography seemed to be a very popular household department.  It looked like just about everyone in Frederick County who owned a smartphone entered a photo this year:


My favorite among all the embroidered, needlepointed, knitted, and crocheted entries in Department Q ("Needle Arts") were these fabulous Mario Brothers:


There were more pies, cakes, cookies, breads, and other baked items (Department M) than you could shake a stick at, including this trompe l'oeil hamburger cake:


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There was a special household-item department for entries from children who were 10 years old and younger, and another one for middle- and high-school students.  The Great Frederick Fair applies the Danish system for judging entries in those two departments: “excellent” entries are awarded blue ribbons, while “good” entries get a red ribbon and “fair” entries take home a white ribbon.


The Danes are apparently forgiving folks, because even those whose entries fail to meet minimum standards get a green “participation” ribbon.  (Any judge who gives one of my grandkids a green ribbon is going to have some ’splaining to do!) 


I took this photo of to show you what a green ribbon looks like.  Only later did I notice that this particular participation ribbon was attached to some cookies that were purportedly baked by a four-year-old child.  Look closely at the buff-colored entry tag, which is partly obscured by the ribbon, and you'll see the “age 4” notation:


 

My favorite item among the children’s fine arts exhibits was this drawing of the late Raymond Burr, the actor who portrayed the titular character in the Perry Mason television show:


Perry Mason aired from 1957 to 1966.  I haven’t seen a Perry Mason episode in many years, but maybe the nine-year-old artiste who entered the drawing of Burr discovered the show on some obscure cable channel and became an aficionado of the character. 


Or maybe the kid’s grandfather – who is old enough to remember watching Perry Mason – is the one who actually drew the picture.


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If there were a Mount Rushmore for “British Invasion” artists, the four groups that most people would choose for inclusion on it would be the Beatles, Rolling Stones, Who, and Kinks.


The Kinks were probably the least popular of the four in the United States.  They had a dozen or so top-five hits in the UK during the “Golden Decade,” but never had a single climb higher than #6 on the Billboard “Hot 100.”    


I’ve decide to right that wrong by including “You Really Got Me” – which was a #1 hit in the UK, but topped out at #7 here – in this year’s group of inductees into the 2 OR 3 LINES “GOLDEN DECADE” HIT SINGLES HALL OF FAME.  


“You Really Got Me” was released in the U.S. in the summer of 1964 – roughly a year before the Stones released “Satisfaction” and the Who released “My Generation.”


Critics have described “You Really Got Me” as hard rock, garage rock, and proto-punk.  Whatever term you prefer, it’s certainly very different from what the Beatles were doing.  


The Beatles were still releasing records for 14-year-old girls in 1964.  Not the Kinks, baby – “You Really Got Me” is grownup stuff.


Click here to listen to “You Really Got Me.”


Click here to buy it from Amazon.



Friday, November 1, 2024

Kinks – "I'm Not Like Everybody Else" (1966)


I don’t want to walk about like everybody else

I don’t want to live my life like everybody else

I don’t want to stay confined like everybody else

’Cause I’m not like everybody else


They say that time flies when you’re having fun.


That’s true as far as it goes.  But as artist Mary Engelbreit has pointed out, time flies whether you’re having fun or not.


Ask anyone to tell you how long ago a long-ago event in their life took place, and I’ll bet you dollars to doughnuts that they underestimate the amount of time that has passed.  I know that I am constantly surprised to learn that something I think happened X years ago actually took place X + Y years ago.


I know for a fact that I posted the first 2 or 3 lines post exactly 15 years ago today.  But I find that hard to believe because the last 15 years seem to have flown by – whether I was having fun or not.  


Today we’re marking the birthday of my wildly successful little blog the same way we’ve marked it for a number of years now – by presenting an interview with 2 or 3 lines himself.


And who is conducting that interview?  No other than 2 or 3 lines!


So without further ado . . .


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Q:  Greetings and salutations on this very auspicious day.


A:  ’Sup, pimp? 


Q:  2 or 3 lines is 15 years old today.  Do you find that as hard to believe as I do?


A:  How would I know how hard you find it to believe that?  I’m not a f*cking mindreader.


Q:  Off to a great start, as usual.  You led off this post with four lines from the Kinks’ 1966 record, “I’m Not Like Everybody Else.”  Isn’t quoting four lines at the beginning of a 2 or 3 lines post inconsistent with the blog’s name?


A:  The name of my blog is 2 or 3 lines (and so much more), so I’ll admit that you have a point there.


Q:  In the early days of 2 or 3 lines you often quoted more than two or three lines ate the beginning of your posts – on occasion, you went way over two or three lines.


A:  That’s true enough.  But for at least the last ten years, I’ve stuck to the two or three lines – with very occasional exceptions.


Q:  Like today.


A:  Yes, like today.  But today is very special, after all – it is the 15th anniversary of the birth of 2 or 3 lines.  


Q:  Do you know what the traditional gift for a 15th anniversary is?


A:  It will come as no surprise to my bar trivia rivals that I just so happen to know what all the traditional wedding anniversary gifts are.  For example, I know that the traditional sixth anniversary gift is either candy or iron, while the traditional ninth anniversary gift is willow or pottery, and the 15th anniversary gift is crystal.


Q:  Willow?  Really?


A:  That’s what the Hallmark website says, and I trust Hallmark to know that sh*t.  By the way, the traditional 16th wedding anniversary gift is either silverware or wax.


Q:  Wax?  So I guess candles would be a suitable 16th anniversary gift?


A:  Yes, if you’re a cheapskate and you don’t mind your wife giving you the cold shoulder when you go to bed that night.  


Q:  I suppose most wives would prefer a nice silver coffee service to candles.


A:  No sh*t, Sherlock.


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Q:  Your choice of the featured song for today’s very special 15th-anniversary post is a very telling one.  You clearly believe that you’re not like everybody else.


A:  No sh*t, Sherlock..  


Q:  Someone recently told me about something you do that makes my point very nicely.  As I understand it, your weekly trivia contests consist of several rounds of five questions.  At the beginning of the game, the host discloses what general category each of those questions falls into, and each team is asked to pick one category from each round as its “bonus” category.  If a team answers its bonus question correctly, it gets extra points.  Do I have that right?


A:  You do.


Q:  The teams write down the numbers of their bonus categories just before the game begins and take that piece of paper to the game’s host, who records each team’s choices on his computer.  But I hear that’s not the way you communicate your choices.


A:  You hear correctly.


Q:  You stay at your table until the host finishes recording the bonus choices of all the other teams.  When he looks up from that task, you catch his eye and hold up fingers to identify which categories you are picking.  Can you explain to me why you do things that way instead of writing down your choices and walking them up to the host like everybody else does?


A:  Because my team is special – we don’t have to do things like everybody else.


Q:  Don’t you think that making your bonus choices that way is a bit of a dick move?


A:  I suppose you could say it’s a bit of a dick move.  But I don’t really think of it that way.


Q:  You don’t?  How so?


A:  I do a lot of things at trivia that you would probably characterize as dick moves – and most of them are a lot more obnoxious than this one.  I look at it this way: when you’re the best player on the best team, doesn’t that make you special?  


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Q:  Today’s featured song was released in 1966 as the B side to “Sunny Afternoon.”


A:  Which I believe belongs on the Mt. Rushmore of Kinks records.


Q.  “I’m Not Like Everybody Else” has been described as “a defiant anthem of non-conformity.”  But do you think the singer is happy being an outsider?  Do you think he wishes he wasn’t different from everybody else?


A:  Maybe it’s a the-grass-is-always-greener-on-the-other-side-of-the-fence situation.  Maybe outsiders feel isolated and alone and want to fit in with the crowd, while conformists need to feel like they’re individuals.


Q:  Which group do you fit in to?


A:  At heart, I’m a conformist – I usually don’t rock the boat.  I’m an oldest child, and oldest children try to please their parents.  I always got good grades and stayed out of trouble.  I went to law school because it was a safe thing to do.  I never used illegal drugs, and I waited until after I was married to have children.  But I don’t like thinking of myself as a conformist – it’s much more romantic to be a rebel.


Q:  Are you saying that the whole devil-may-care, let-it-all-hang-out persona you’ve created on 2 or 3 lines is phony?


A:  I am absolutely not saying that.  My persona is as real as it gets.  But it’s still just a persona.


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Click here to listen to “I’m Not Like Everybody Else.”


Click here to buy that recording from Amazon.


Friday, February 9, 2024

Romantics – "She's Got Everything" (1979)


I ain’t got a dime

But she don’t care


(You may believe that, pard, but I’ve got news for you – she cares . . . she cares A LOT!)


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I’m surprised that the Romantics’ “What I Like About You” didn’t crack the top 40 in the U.S. – I would have guessed it was a big hit.  


Maybe I remember it less from hearing it on the radio and more from seeing the Bud Light commercial it was used in.  (You can click here to see that commercial.)


“What I Like About You” and today’s featured song were both released on the group’s eponymous debut album in 1980. “She’s Got Everything” is the only cover on that album – it was written by Ray Davies and released by the Kinks as a B-side in 1968.


By the way, the Romantics had unbelievable hair:



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I first heard the Romantics’ version of “She’s Got Everything” on the February 16 version of Drew Carey’s February “Friday Night Freakout” show on the Sirius/XM “Underground Garage” channel.  


So why is it dated February 9?  Because sometimes 2 or 3 lines falls a bit behind schedule.  Don’t worry, boys and girls – we’ll catch up sooner or later!


Click here to listen to “She’s Got Everything” by the Romantics.


Click here to buy the record from Amazon.