Showing posts with label The Shangri-Las. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Shangri-Las. Show all posts

Monday, April 13, 2009

April 13, 2009 Earworm



The jury has finally reached a verdict and Phil Spector is guilty of second degree murder. By most accounts, he was not a good man: driven by demons and haunted by a family history of mental instability, the stories of his manipulations and eccentricities compile a very strong narrative for his eventual comeuppance. Yet, there still seems to be something missing in this, the final nail in both his and Lana Clarkson's coffin. While I think that Spector is guilty of much, and in the case for which he was tried, of something, I still have reasonable doubt as to how Clarkson's final hour played out and what, exactly, Phil's part in that gunshot was. The details do not matter to the victim when the outcome is death but the difference between manslaughter and murder mean everything for the defendant although, given Phil's litigious history, his appeals may mean that he, himself, dies before he ever spends a day in prison.

His legacy, of course, will live on regardless of these events. When I received a text telling me that the jury was about to announce it's verdict, an odd bit of timing found me listening to Shivaree's beautiful cover of "Paradise", a song Phil recorded with the Ronettes in 1965 and then left to languish while the kids at Red Bird made a classic Shangri-Las track with it. Ambrosia Parsley and company create a wide open oasis on their version with only the tympani passing judgement on her fantasy.

Monday, February 4, 2008

February 04, 2008 Earworm



The Shangri-Las' "Give Him A Great Big Kiss" not only taught us the new way to spell love - L-U-V - but also made those who recognized that The Dud was the most exciting option in Mystery Date feel less alone. "Dirty fingernails, oh boy what a prize" is just one of the many fine reasons that Mary Weiss sings the praises of the boy that Milton Bradley shunned.

Not falling victim to the idealized and unattainable All-American, she recognizes a diamond in the rough -"He's good bad, but he's not evil" - and follows her heart. She knows what she wants and there's no doubt that she knows how to get it.

When the other girls ask Mary, "Is he a good dancer", she replies incredulously, "Whaddyou mean, is he a good dancer?" "Well, how does he dance?", she's asked; "Close. Very, very close" she replies and you can plainly hear that her eyes are closed as she savors the moment.

Those of us who have ever loved a dud close our eyes and nod.

See the Shangs lip-sync "Give Him A Great Big Kiss" on Shivaree

See the Shangs sing "Give Him A Great Big Kiss" on Shivaree