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SONGS I CAN’T LIVE WITHOUT, VOL 1

May 13th, 2008 · 8 Comments

Old Bill Shakespeare once said “If music be the food of love, play on”. Never were truer words spoken, or written. My love of music is well documented here. Yet in spite of that, I actually came pretty close to shutting down the blog today. As much as I love it, it just seemed irrelevant. In light of this past weekend, a lot of things do. See, in a life of great moments, I had one of the top five this past weekend. I’ve watched the sunset and rise in the middle of the oceans. Stood in the shadows of the Sphinx and stood on the great Pyramids of Egypt. I’ve walked the streets of Isreal. Yet watching my baby graduate was such an amazing moment, it’s really changed me forever. I dare any man who has watched if baby girl do something like that to tell me otherwise.

Fortunately, I was talked down from the edge by someone I consider a pretty good friend. However, I am going to take next week off, while I enjoy a week with my baby girl on her dream vacation. So this week, I am gong to be a little selfish, and post some of the songs I consider my favorites of all time. They are the songs I can’t live without. They all have a special meaning to me, and I want to share it with you all.

  1. The Velvet Underground & Nico - Sunday Morning - The first Velvet Undergound song I ever heard. It remains my favorite to this day. I can listen to that album all day long.
  2. David Bowie - Five Years - Listening to the stuff Bowie did in the early 80’s, I was curious as to why he was considered great. this song answered that question in my mind. Doesn’t matter that he didn’t do too much I considered great after 1980. Ziggy will live forever.
  3. Sweet - Love Is Like Oxygen - I remember hearing this song on a car radio in the 70’s at a gas station. At the time, we were forced in to listen to country music in my house. Never rock. This song was my first clue there was a bigger, better world out there waiting to be discovered.
  4. The Beatles - A Day In The Life - The greatest song The Beatles ever did. My friends and I would sit and get stoned in the late 80’s to the Beatles. As a young teen, John Lennon was a god. He was shot the day after my birthday. I was watching Monday Night Football at the time, and I remember I went to my room in the basement, and cried.
  5. Queen - Killer Queen - Glam rock never knew a greater talent than Freddy Mercury. His command of an audience was complete, as anyone who saw him sing Radio Gaga on Live Aid can attest to. Kids, want to know what great is? Watch this clip. There’s 200,000+ plus in Wembley, and he controls them like a puppet master. I watched this performance live on TV, and will never as long as I live forget it.
  6. The Sex Pistols - Anarchy In The UK - Johnny Rotten opens this song with a menacing snarl and laugh, and it only gets better from there. This song made my head explode the first time I heard it in a record shop in Kent, Ohio. It started a love affair with punk that continues to this day.
  7. Joy Division - Transmisssion - I first heard the next two songs in the same record shop. I had no clue what it was I was listening to, but it changed my work for ever. These two songs are some of the finest songs ever, and they changed for ever the way I listen to music. The older I get, the more I live Joy Division. RIP, Ian…your music will live forever.
  8. Joy Division - Love Will Tear Us Apart
  9. Blondie - Heart of Glass - My introduction to Blondie, I’m ashamed to say. But I quickly bought everything I could find of theirs. Just a perfect band, and a prefect object of lust for a teenage me.
  10. Gerry Rafferty - Baker Street - My favorite song of all time. Odd choice, isn’t it? In 1978, three things reached a loner kid in the 8th grade. One was reading SE Hinton’s The Outsiders. The second was reading When Legends Die. This was the third. For some reason, it reached me. I still love it, and sing every word of it. By myself, of course.
  11. Jackson Browne - Running on Empty - This song gave me hope that someday, I could escape the desperately drab, poverty stricken world I was raised in. This past weekend, while dining with my sisters and my neices and nephews, I pointed across the street from the restaurant to an empty parking lot. “Thats where they handed out the government cheese in the Reagan years. Sometimes thats all we had to eat for a week was cheese sandwiches.” That spoke volumes to the our children, and forever put to rest their questions of just how poor we were as kids.
  12. Pink Floyd - Comfortably Numb - I loved it when it came out. We got stoned to it as teens. After my world fell apart, I lay awake at night, listening to this song, and promising myself I would somehow pull myself up and make something out of myself. I did. It was the hardest thing I ever did. In 1986, all I owned in this world was one pair of jeans, a tshirt, underwear, socks, and one pair of sneakers. It was what I wore to Navy boot camp. 21 years later, I live a life I better than the best life I ever dreamed of back then.
  13. Iggy Pop - Lust For Life - I’m worth a million in prizes, indeed. Never been a funner song to listen to.
  14. The Rolling Stones - Sympathy For The Devil
  15. - Just a perfect song, in my opinion. I’m not a huge fan of the Stones, but this is flat out one of the best rock songs ever. Every time I hear it, I can’t help but to sing it.

Tune in tomorrow for day two. This is just the beginning.



  1. The Velvet Underground & Nico - Sunday Morning
  2. David Bowie - Five Years
  3. Sweet - Love Is Like Oxygen
  4. The beatles - A Day In The Life
  5. Queen - Killer Queen
  6. The Sex Pistols - Anarchy In The UK
  7. Joy Division - Transmisssion
  8. Joy Division - Love Will Tear Us Apart
  9. Blondie - Heart of Glass
  10. Gerry Rafferty - Baker Street
  11. Jackson Browne - Running on Empty
  12. Pink Floyd - Comfortably Numb
  13. Iggy Pop - Lust For Life
  14. The Rolling Stones - Sympathy For The Devil

Tags: 70's · 60's · 80's

8 responses so far ↓

  • 1 MissParker0106 // May 13, 2008 at 6:21 am

    I’m happy you’ve “seen the light.” Next week will do your soul good and hopefully, you’ll come back refreshed and ready to take on the world again. :-)
    MissParker0106’s last blog post..80’s Music Rules ~ and so does David Marsden

  • 2 Michael // May 13, 2008 at 2:02 pm

    Sorry to bug ya but,
    When you click on “Running on Empty” you get
    Baker Street..
    When you click on “Baker Street “you get nothing..
    Download wise..
    Just saying. :)
    Michael’s last blog post..What The Hell Was That,ABC ?

  • 3 Michael // May 13, 2008 at 2:08 pm

    Oh and,when you click on Pink Floyd - Comfortably Numb you get Running on Empty..And,so on and,so on…….
    It’s all screwed up.. :)
    Michael’s last blog post..Yoohoo….I’ve found a new toy ! :)

  • 4 Infonistacrat // May 13, 2008 at 5:12 pm

    Ok, sorry for the confusion. I’ve gotten it all sorted out, I think. Please, someone let me know if I’ve screwed the pooch yet again. :-)

  • 5 mac // May 14, 2008 at 5:22 am

    I wonder how many people responded similarly when first hearing “Anarchy in the UK”??
    I can vividly remember that time, and while my head did not explode I had to know “what is that, who is that?”

    As for something akin to an out-of-body experience, that would have been the first time I heard the Only Ones “Another girl, another planet”, followed closely by the Undertones “Teenage kicks”.

  • 6 Infonistacrat // May 14, 2008 at 7:37 am

    @mac:

    See, this is the problem when I try to put together a list of songs I must have…someone comes along and mentions other songs, and I kick myself for leaving off such an obvious choice. Teenage Kicks is one of those obvious choices.

  • 7 wren // May 15, 2008 at 12:16 am

    i just found ur site.WOW!!this has 2 b the one i’ve came across n a long time.thanks u!,

  • 8 AgingChild // Jun 23, 2008 at 11:05 pm

    I’m with you Crat, I really am!
    Discovered your blog a couple weeks back via the usual stumbled-over method, and I glimpse a similar soul (3-4 brief years younger), with a far wider, deeper grasp and clutch of genuine music than I carry (and this is rare).
    As a single father — custody of older daughter; younger one grew up with her mom — I know the ache of having the heart die as another awesome piece of the flesh-and-blood steps out into the world, eyes open and beatifully, enviably unmarred.
    Daughter Two graduated just a couple weeks back, and for a time I found myself barely slithering through a couple wrenching days with little more than will-to-live, and a totally grief-wracked broken heart. I’m so happy for her, proud… and were I not medicated up to the gills, I’d be in tears for the never-to-be-repeated/-recaptured shared days forever behind us. (http://agingchild.wordpress.com/2008/06/06/pomp-and-circumsgrief/)
    Calm; more days’ span; realization: the memories have not died, nor the heart, nor the daughter (=heart’s focus). I am who I am because of her (and her sister). And in her eyes and life I see total, complete, beautiful, stunning success of the two lovers’ hearts united almost twenty years ago, whose own lives failed to entwine… and whose spinoff has righted all our own wrongs.
    And music does console, soothes (or can tear the heart out anew); bow-string, fret-string, heartstring; all the same — thanks for some great choices; different, yet parallel. Keep it up, Crat!
    AgingChild

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