Showing posts with label Peggy Santiglia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peggy Santiglia. Show all posts

Thursday, June 19, 2008

June 20, 2008 Earworm


I've read that Phil Spector once said that The Four Tops' "Bernadette", "is a black man singing Dylan" and when you listen to Levi Stubbs' delivery, you certainly get the point. With that in mind, I suggest that The Four Seasons' "Beggin'" has an italian man singing Stubbs singing Dylan. He doesn't sing the lyric as much as spit it out. While the rest of the guys provide their usual smooth groove, the mix puts them so far from the lead that they could be in another room if not on another record that just happened to be playing. Meanwhile, Frankie sounds as though he's out on the window ledge singing for his life while about a zillion percussion tricks chant "JUMP".

Bob Crewe was never known for subtlety with his productions and what "Beggin'" lacks in his usual bombast, is more than made up for with business. From the "miss mary mac" handclapping to the tea kettle on the edge of a nervous breakdown string line, everything practically screams "The sky is falling" and the usually steady Valli struggles to keep his balance. That it all comes - and stays - together so beautifully is a feather in the cap of not Charlie Callelo, Crewe's preferred arranger, but of Artie Schroek who should of one not only a Grammy but a Pritzker for keeping the whole thing from tumbling down. Co-writer Peggy (Santiglia) Farina, by the way, should have received an Oscar for best screenplay.

"Beggin'" peaked at #16 during the spring of '67, a busy time for all parties, was sandwiched between two top ten Four Seasons singles - "Tell It To The Rain" and "C'mon Marianne" - and competing with Valli's solo effort,"Can't Take My Eyes Off Of You". Something was bound to get lost in the shuffle and it's not surprising that something that sounded this troubled took the fall.

Last year, Pilooski respectfully re-mixed it - recognizing near perfection when he heard it, I assume - and in it's new form celebrated its fortieth birthday while sitting on top of the UK dance charts.

Check out the video for the re-mix and have a great weekend.


Friday, June 6, 2008

June 06, 2008 Earworm




As you prepare to start the weekend, please keep in mind that when you come across a body in the road, you should, at the very least, call 911. Should you want to do something nice for the world around us, you should also send emails to the two top political bags - douche and scum - and tell them to stop holding up the Ship Strike Reduction Act of 2008 and that you just might be willing to spend a few cents more on your imported gadgets and things if it saves only one of the three hundred remaining white whales from being a statistic in the nautical hit and run game. I mean, really, it's the least Cheney and Bush can do. Well, that and to let the door him them on the way out.

And then you can put down your granola and hug a tree.

I'd recommend Jessica James and The Outlaws' 1966 flop, "Give Her Up (Baby)", as a great driving song but no one can afford to drive anymore. Instead, I offer it up as a great motivator for dancing in the living room, getting those chores done, or singing into a hair brush while practicing your Dusty Springfield's Drag 101 Hand Gestures.

Jessica, of course, was really Peggy Santiglia and Peggy Santiglia was once a member of The Angels. As Peggy Farina, she and Bob Gaudio wrote one of the best (and under appreciated )4 Seasons songs (that will have to wait for another day) and the world is a much nicer place having had Peggy in it. Sultry and sassy, she sounds like a angel who has lost her halo on "Give Her Up (Baby)", on the verge of exposing valuable assets to keep her Baby.

To recap:
1)Call for help when encountering a body in the road
2)Emails to thing one and thing two to save a whale
3)Groove along to "Give Her Up (Baby)
4)Granola and tree hugging (optional)