When Michael's invited to the party, expect a delightfully eclectic passel o' talented people to follow! And, today's no different! Keep track of how many of our musical guests are new to you!
Thank you, Brad! It's always fun to see how you wrap these musical exchanges up with your comments, plus the added visuals and video. This was a joy to do with you (way back in August), and I think we sent each other some new, fun, and interesting tunes. The journey definitely took some unexpected twists and turns. Now that it is posted, "It's no secret" that I was doing my best "Boo-Ga-Loo" up here in Portland while you were doing the "Soul City Walk" in Austin. But, could you please leave that damn accordion at home next time! 😎
Now, if only I weren't a plant eating vegan, I might just be cooking up some fish for dinner tonight! I'll let you do that, my friend.
More tartar sauce for me, yo!😋I know....August, right? As I was writing to someone yesterday, earlier in the summer, I had only about a 1- to 2-week lead time, all of a sudden, between playing and then, composing it all for the drop the next week!
I got tired of sweating it out like that, wondering if I'd actually have a played Tag to assemble the week prior to drop! Hence the booking far ahead! What makes it fun for me is A) the original real time playing, B) forgetting what we did by the time I get to "composing week" (anywhere from a month to 6 weeks +), and then, C) reading it all in the e-mail y'all see (I like to see what y'all end up seeing)!
As for city dances, keep in mind, I was in Houston (where I was born'n'raised), and remember quite fondly and vividly Archie Bell & The Drells' popularity, and certainly this hit, playing on KILT-AM! Houston homeboys are Archie, The Drells, and li'l ole moi!
I didn't mention it in the Tag, but I've always found it hilarious my choice of instruments in those two different parts of my life: The bulky and heavy accordion being carried to practices and those recitals at 8 and 9 years old, and then the lighter-than-anything flute just 3 to 4 years later as a junior higher! Wacky! So, yes, at one mercifully welcome point, I DID leave my accordion at home!
Happy you enjoyed this, Michael, and until we Tag again.......💪😁👍🎵
I was in junior high in the late-'70s, Michael! But, I do remember hearing about The Living Eye, and having just noticed on their Wiki that they (at least) once played on The Larry Kane Show (on the local ABC affiliate...a sort of local American Bandstand-type show), which I know I used to watch regularly, so I must've seen that one! Wow! That Living Eye promo was pretty bizarre! Thanks for sharing that!
I have that radio promo on an LP comp called "Houston Hallucinations." The album compiles singles by obscure and long forgotten Houston psychedelic bands.
Just looked it up....what an amazing collectible! 1982...interesting. I DO recognize the name Fever Tree, and less so, Countdown 5. Do you recall where/when you picked up that comp?
I have probably had it since the late '80s/1990'ish. My guess is I bought it in Kansas City, Missouri, where I went to art college. There was a cool little record store there called Love Records that I found a lot of cool stuff (including a NM original copy of 'Flash' by The Moving Sidewalks).
I really enjoyed this Tune Tag -- it was a feast of new (to me) artists and bands, with a smattering of recognizable gems. Also, as a vegequarian (what others call pescatarian), I appreciated the fishy waters this tete-a-tete swam in.
Michael is another wonderful human musical encyclopedia; reading the two of you battling wits was like watching The World Book going head to head against Brittanica.
Thanks, Steve! I appreciate you stopping by and your kind words! 🙏
As a kid, I remember my parents buying a set of World Book encyclopedias from a door-to-door salesman. I spent hours lying on the floor reading them. I remember when I saw Britannica for the first time. They were definitely much more academic than the two. They also had fewer photos (often just B&W), and a smaller font. World Book invited you in, you could travel the world from your living room, read all about history like the Battle of the Somme, or tribes deep in Papua New Guinea, and even strange cetaceans that one day a weird band like Country Joe & The Fish would write a song about, and decades later Brad and I would cite in Tune Tag!
Ah, those were the days. I think social media has killed that type of curiosity in children.
Great memories, Michael! We had the Encyclopedia and a subscription to National Geographic! So, we had the world at our fingertips, definitely....but, I'll always be one to lament the loss of the tactile element in book larnin', as they say in the South!
Wow....quite a testimonial, of sorts, Steve! Thank you! Pescatarian? Gee, I thought you were Jewish! And, vegequarian is what I'd expect to see in the lobby of a Red Lobster in San Fran: The large tank of water for swimming veggies...for people to gaze inside, kumquat may!
The Brittanica....wsn't it lost at sea in a vicious gun battle with the Lusitania? "Lusi, I'm home!" Michael is a veritable font o' knowledge! Thanks again!
Nothing fishy swimming in this week’s selections 🐟🐠🎣🐡🍤. Fun to hear some of those tunes again and to discover a few new ones along the way. I even got a question sent my way during the process. 😀
I don’t know if there’s a strong connection between the kind of dancing shown on TV and what actually happened on the dancefloor in discotheques. That said, TV probably did have some influence, definitely an interesting topic to dig into for a future episode.
And by the way, watching the Drells’ dance moves just confirms it again: our African American brothers and sisters have a natural sense of rhythm that we, as white Europeans and Americans, can’t even begin to imitate. There’s always this effortless joy and ease in their movement that makes me jealous, me with my two left feet!
That is a good point about TV dancing, and in the same time frame/era, what was going on in the discos, Pe? Was there ever any overlap? Did dancers take what they saw and learned at home, and take it to the club dance floor?
As for dancing, Pe, you'll get no argument from me about your last paragraph! And, aren't we disco/pop'n'soul music lovers lucky to have had such artists as The Jacksons, the '60s girl groups, and the '70s Philly Internat'l groups, and scads of others, take advantage of that, and rehearse themselves into fits of pinpoint choreography that was nothing short of dazzling! Thanks, Pe....I'm glad you answered my in-post "bat-signal"!
Fantastic Tune Tag! Musically, I particularly enjoyed the soulful/funky foray towards the end, but I'm completely gobsmacked by how astute your connections were throughout! Especially that whole fish/cetacean thing 😅 ... all stemming from the name of an (at least to me) obscure label! 🤯😱 👏🏻 Impressive work, gentlemen! Chapeau!
Thanks for reading, Andres! I think it was Brad who clung to the title of the '60s garage single, "Feathered Fish," and it just snowballed from there. We did this back in the late summer, so I wonder if Brad was playing that damn accordion of his whilst he was BBQ'ing some catfish for dinner? I mean... Texas, BBQ, Fish... it all seems to go hand in hand (maybe less so the accordion, tho). 😊
Thanks so much, Andy! I pinpointed (in me 'ead) the parts of this one you'd really be drawn to (and, I nailed it)!😁 I love that Archie Bell/Drells track, in particular! Michael is quite the head-turning Tune Tagger, that's for sure.....I was amazed at the (new word!) cetacean turn we took, and hung onto it as long as we did, too!
Both of those were relatively small labels at the time (Flying Fish, White Whale), but for us to make that accurate, ichthyological transition was worth, I'd say, 5 microscopes!
I have a deep love for good psychedelic rock, but these days, like Andres, I listen to a lot more funk and soul. I knew we would get there in the end, I just didn't know how.
And, speaking of White Whale, I have a great little psych obscurity on that label called "Suddenly One Summer" by J.K. and Co. (who was actually a 15 year old hippie, but what he recorded is amazingly mature and technically superb for his age)!
Thanks, Matt! Too right on "Feathered Fish." On that note, check out The Sons of Adam's original guitarist, Randy Holden, and his band, The Other Half, take on the Arthur Lee song. It's more heavy rock than garage, and the vocalist puts more emphasis on the lyrics. However, it's still a banger, but for pure mid-60s teen garage angst, my heart still goes out to the Sons version.
Thanks for that Other Half version, Michael! MUCH prefer The Sons of Adam's! So much smoother and on the pop side of psychedelic, while, as you said, The Other Half is much heavier....and, where you say their singer "puts more emphasis" on the lyrics, I say he belches 'em!
I love that Other Half album, but yes, the singing style is very different. The Sons singer (I believe it is Craig Tarwater on the single) is definitely trying to sound like Arthur Lee! The Love connection was pretty tight (Michael Stuart was the Sons drummer, and he eventually joined Love).
Ha! While I do like to think of myself as being diplomatic, Brad, I was being sincere! I truly enjoyed both versions (although I do prefer the Sons of Adam version). I love tracing the pre-punk and pre-metal roots of heavy music, and my ears have been tuned over the years to receive all kinds of extreme vocals.
It's a new favorite of mine, too, Matt.....thanks to Michael! And, thank you, Matt, for your generous kudos, and your allegiance to the Tune Tag cause!!🎵✨
Great stuff, you two. Enjoyed the musical banter and was on the edge of my seat wondering if fish were going to remain the main course of this entire week - but alas, the winding road of Tune Tag. Thanks for introducing me to some “new” music.
Thanks, Heard! Yep, Michael's like George Gobel from the '60s and '70s-era of "The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson"....always welcome to the couch to set a spell and chat, and always brings the house down! 'Twas Gobel who cracked Johnny up BUT GOOD with this (I'll try to find a clip, too): "Y'know, John, did you ever feel like the world is a tuxedo, and you're a pair of brown shoes?" Michael's like that, only with music (and humor, too, ain't gwina lie)!
Here it is, Heard: Gobel with Carson, with Bob Hope and Dean Martin on the couch, as well, having already had their turns in the chair for a chat with Johnny. Watch Dino, at one point, flick his cigarette ashes (without George noticing it) into his cup of whatever he's drinking!🤣 Good night, those were the days!
Thank you, Ellen! I'm glad you enjoyed some of these songs. There's a lot of movement and sharing between The Sons and Love (songs and band members). I'm a big fan of Country Joe & The Fish, especially their first two albums!
Wasn't Michael fun on this one? He and I want to do some more on the Sons of Adam! I'd never heard of them before, so that might be our angle there! Stay tuned! I'm glad you liked our plethora of Carolines, in all their iterations! I've been dying to showcase Carolyne Mas for a while, now! I had her debut at the time, and history has all but forgotten her completely! I feel that a lot of our #MusicStackers would enjoy her music if they could/would just listen to it! Thanks, Ellen!
I have a framed gig poster from 1966 of Love and The Sons of Adam. Man, there are many reasons why I would love to jump inside a time machine. To live once again in a world without social media would be #1, but I'd also love to have seen concerts like this one! 😎
Not surprised to hear so many new-to-me tracks when one Michael K. Fell boards the Tune Tag train! And your knowledge continues to be seemingly infinite Brad. This one was a lot of fun, thanks guys!
Thanks for reading, Mark. And, thank you for your comments. I think one almost has to dig deep when sending music to Brad. We all know that even if you send him a well known song by T. Swift or The Beatles, he will most likely send in return a deep, obscure, or long forgotten and overlooked pop track. 😎
You're certainly spot-on about MKF, Mark, no doubt! And, thank you for your beyond-kind compliment! I'm amazed at how frequently Michael can find the obscure band and artist, even though I'd swear I'd rifled through every "obscure artist" bin at every flea market and second-hand record store from here to Timbuk-three! Glad you enjoyed, Mark, and I know you'll be sidled up to this Tuesday's TT, too! 'Til then........B💪😁👍
And, back at you, Mr. Kyle (as I said to Mark, I always know you have some tricks up your sleeve when it comes to obscure or long forgotten pop tracks!).
Just gotta keep this 70-year-old brain plugged in! You young snipperwhappers help me do that! See me after the first of the year! Another Tune Tag with your name on it awaits!
Wowza. Another crazy romp. I am headed over to the chat to tag a couple for you two! This one got me thinking big time. So much fun. So many new to me tracks. Great work.
Thank you, Tamara, for reading our crazy little musical escapade. I also greatly appreciate that you took the time to listen to the music. And, to play off Brad, as he said in his reply, he, too, sent me tracks that were new to me. We may approach music from different lenses and loves, the end result of Tune Tag is always fascinating, eye-opening, fun, and a great little guidebook to some new, interesting tracks and music trivia. Cheers to you, the reader! 😊🙏
Thank you, Brad! It's always fun to see how you wrap these musical exchanges up with your comments, plus the added visuals and video. This was a joy to do with you (way back in August), and I think we sent each other some new, fun, and interesting tunes. The journey definitely took some unexpected twists and turns. Now that it is posted, "It's no secret" that I was doing my best "Boo-Ga-Loo" up here in Portland while you were doing the "Soul City Walk" in Austin. But, could you please leave that damn accordion at home next time! 😎
Now, if only I weren't a plant eating vegan, I might just be cooking up some fish for dinner tonight! I'll let you do that, my friend.
More tartar sauce for me, yo!😋I know....August, right? As I was writing to someone yesterday, earlier in the summer, I had only about a 1- to 2-week lead time, all of a sudden, between playing and then, composing it all for the drop the next week!
I got tired of sweating it out like that, wondering if I'd actually have a played Tag to assemble the week prior to drop! Hence the booking far ahead! What makes it fun for me is A) the original real time playing, B) forgetting what we did by the time I get to "composing week" (anywhere from a month to 6 weeks +), and then, C) reading it all in the e-mail y'all see (I like to see what y'all end up seeing)!
As for city dances, keep in mind, I was in Houston (where I was born'n'raised), and remember quite fondly and vividly Archie Bell & The Drells' popularity, and certainly this hit, playing on KILT-AM! Houston homeboys are Archie, The Drells, and li'l ole moi!
I didn't mention it in the Tag, but I've always found it hilarious my choice of instruments in those two different parts of my life: The bulky and heavy accordion being carried to practices and those recitals at 8 and 9 years old, and then the lighter-than-anything flute just 3 to 4 years later as a junior higher! Wacky! So, yes, at one mercifully welcome point, I DID leave my accordion at home!
Happy you enjoyed this, Michael, and until we Tag again.......💪😁👍🎵
You mean you weren't hanging out at Houston's legendary psychedelic club, The Living Eye, listening to the Elevators? 😎
https://youtu.be/p3gVNF2WP_U
I was in junior high in the late-'70s, Michael! But, I do remember hearing about The Living Eye, and having just noticed on their Wiki that they (at least) once played on The Larry Kane Show (on the local ABC affiliate...a sort of local American Bandstand-type show), which I know I used to watch regularly, so I must've seen that one! Wow! That Living Eye promo was pretty bizarre! Thanks for sharing that!
I have that radio promo on an LP comp called "Houston Hallucinations." The album compiles singles by obscure and long forgotten Houston psychedelic bands.
Just looked it up....what an amazing collectible! 1982...interesting. I DO recognize the name Fever Tree, and less so, Countdown 5. Do you recall where/when you picked up that comp?
I have probably had it since the late '80s/1990'ish. My guess is I bought it in Kansas City, Missouri, where I went to art college. There was a cool little record store there called Love Records that I found a lot of cool stuff (including a NM original copy of 'Flash' by The Moving Sidewalks).
I really enjoyed this Tune Tag -- it was a feast of new (to me) artists and bands, with a smattering of recognizable gems. Also, as a vegequarian (what others call pescatarian), I appreciated the fishy waters this tete-a-tete swam in.
Michael is another wonderful human musical encyclopedia; reading the two of you battling wits was like watching The World Book going head to head against Brittanica.
Thanks, Steve! I appreciate you stopping by and your kind words! 🙏
As a kid, I remember my parents buying a set of World Book encyclopedias from a door-to-door salesman. I spent hours lying on the floor reading them. I remember when I saw Britannica for the first time. They were definitely much more academic than the two. They also had fewer photos (often just B&W), and a smaller font. World Book invited you in, you could travel the world from your living room, read all about history like the Battle of the Somme, or tribes deep in Papua New Guinea, and even strange cetaceans that one day a weird band like Country Joe & The Fish would write a song about, and decades later Brad and I would cite in Tune Tag!
Ah, those were the days. I think social media has killed that type of curiosity in children.
Great memories, Michael! We had the Encyclopedia and a subscription to National Geographic! So, we had the world at our fingertips, definitely....but, I'll always be one to lament the loss of the tactile element in book larnin', as they say in the South!
The one-two educational punch! It explains why you both are so filled to the gills with the knowledge!
Wow....quite a testimonial, of sorts, Steve! Thank you! Pescatarian? Gee, I thought you were Jewish! And, vegequarian is what I'd expect to see in the lobby of a Red Lobster in San Fran: The large tank of water for swimming veggies...for people to gaze inside, kumquat may!
The Brittanica....wsn't it lost at sea in a vicious gun battle with the Lusitania? "Lusi, I'm home!" Michael is a veritable font o' knowledge! Thanks again!
Nothing fishy swimming in this week’s selections 🐟🐠🎣🐡🍤. Fun to hear some of those tunes again and to discover a few new ones along the way. I even got a question sent my way during the process. 😀
I don’t know if there’s a strong connection between the kind of dancing shown on TV and what actually happened on the dancefloor in discotheques. That said, TV probably did have some influence, definitely an interesting topic to dig into for a future episode.
And by the way, watching the Drells’ dance moves just confirms it again: our African American brothers and sisters have a natural sense of rhythm that we, as white Europeans and Americans, can’t even begin to imitate. There’s always this effortless joy and ease in their movement that makes me jealous, me with my two left feet!
Thank you, PeDupre! I'm sure when it came to Don Cornelius' Soul Train, much of the dancing featured on the show was also happening in the clubs.
I'm now wondering what the question was that was sent your way.... 😊
That is a good point about TV dancing, and in the same time frame/era, what was going on in the discos, Pe? Was there ever any overlap? Did dancers take what they saw and learned at home, and take it to the club dance floor?
As for dancing, Pe, you'll get no argument from me about your last paragraph! And, aren't we disco/pop'n'soul music lovers lucky to have had such artists as The Jacksons, the '60s girl groups, and the '70s Philly Internat'l groups, and scads of others, take advantage of that, and rehearse themselves into fits of pinpoint choreography that was nothing short of dazzling! Thanks, Pe....I'm glad you answered my in-post "bat-signal"!
Fantastic Tune Tag! Musically, I particularly enjoyed the soulful/funky foray towards the end, but I'm completely gobsmacked by how astute your connections were throughout! Especially that whole fish/cetacean thing 😅 ... all stemming from the name of an (at least to me) obscure label! 🤯😱 👏🏻 Impressive work, gentlemen! Chapeau!
Thanks for reading, Andres! I think it was Brad who clung to the title of the '60s garage single, "Feathered Fish," and it just snowballed from there. We did this back in the late summer, so I wonder if Brad was playing that damn accordion of his whilst he was BBQ'ing some catfish for dinner? I mean... Texas, BBQ, Fish... it all seems to go hand in hand (maybe less so the accordion, tho). 😊
Thanks so much, Andy! I pinpointed (in me 'ead) the parts of this one you'd really be drawn to (and, I nailed it)!😁 I love that Archie Bell/Drells track, in particular! Michael is quite the head-turning Tune Tagger, that's for sure.....I was amazed at the (new word!) cetacean turn we took, and hung onto it as long as we did, too!
Both of those were relatively small labels at the time (Flying Fish, White Whale), but for us to make that accurate, ichthyological transition was worth, I'd say, 5 microscopes!
Science is golden!🎶✨🙌
I have a deep love for good psychedelic rock, but these days, like Andres, I listen to a lot more funk and soul. I knew we would get there in the end, I just didn't know how.
And, speaking of White Whale, I have a great little psych obscurity on that label called "Suddenly One Summer" by J.K. and Co. (who was actually a 15 year old hippie, but what he recorded is amazingly mature and technically superb for his age)!
Just read a little bit about J.K.....he was in a band at 12!😱I wouldn't mind hearing some of JK & Co. I might look up some of the songs!
The album is surprisingly REALLY good (and several years ago I found an original White Whale promo with a timing strip).
Excellent TT, gents! And special thanks to Michael for turning me on to "Feathered Fish" - that single is a banger!
Thanks, Matt! Too right on "Feathered Fish." On that note, check out The Sons of Adam's original guitarist, Randy Holden, and his band, The Other Half, take on the Arthur Lee song. It's more heavy rock than garage, and the vocalist puts more emphasis on the lyrics. However, it's still a banger, but for pure mid-60s teen garage angst, my heart still goes out to the Sons version.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JGfX497Hsj0
Thanks for that Other Half version, Michael! MUCH prefer The Sons of Adam's! So much smoother and on the pop side of psychedelic, while, as you said, The Other Half is much heavier....and, where you say their singer "puts more emphasis" on the lyrics, I say he belches 'em!
😆
I love that Other Half album, but yes, the singing style is very different. The Sons singer (I believe it is Craig Tarwater on the single) is definitely trying to sound like Arthur Lee! The Love connection was pretty tight (Michael Stuart was the Sons drummer, and he eventually joined Love).
Thanks for the additional rec, Michael - each version has its own charms!
I love your diplomacy, Matt! I should take notes!!💪😁👍🎶✨
Ha! While I do like to think of myself as being diplomatic, Brad, I was being sincere! I truly enjoyed both versions (although I do prefer the Sons of Adam version). I love tracing the pre-punk and pre-metal roots of heavy music, and my ears have been tuned over the years to receive all kinds of extreme vocals.
It's a new favorite of mine, too, Matt.....thanks to Michael! And, thank you, Matt, for your generous kudos, and your allegiance to the Tune Tag cause!!🎵✨
Great stuff, you two. Enjoyed the musical banter and was on the edge of my seat wondering if fish were going to remain the main course of this entire week - but alas, the winding road of Tune Tag. Thanks for introducing me to some “new” music.
Thanks for reading! I'm glad you enjoyed the music on the long and winding road that Brad named, Tune Tag!
Thanks, Heard! Yep, Michael's like George Gobel from the '60s and '70s-era of "The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson"....always welcome to the couch to set a spell and chat, and always brings the house down! 'Twas Gobel who cracked Johnny up BUT GOOD with this (I'll try to find a clip, too): "Y'know, John, did you ever feel like the world is a tuxedo, and you're a pair of brown shoes?" Michael's like that, only with music (and humor, too, ain't gwina lie)!
Here it is, Heard: Gobel with Carson, with Bob Hope and Dean Martin on the couch, as well, having already had their turns in the chair for a chat with Johnny. Watch Dino, at one point, flick his cigarette ashes (without George noticing it) into his cup of whatever he's drinking!🤣 Good night, those were the days!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=efHVcgUajtA
Really interesting selections here. Thanks for the intro to the Carolynes/Carolines.
Enjoyed learning about the Sons of Adam (who knew?), and enjoyed hearing more Country Joe & the Fish. You're in my favorite era there.
Thank you, Ellen! I'm glad you enjoyed some of these songs. There's a lot of movement and sharing between The Sons and Love (songs and band members). I'm a big fan of Country Joe & The Fish, especially their first two albums!
Always nice to hear from you! :)
I think you guys doing a post on these bands would be cool. Would love to know and hear more.
Wasn't Michael fun on this one? He and I want to do some more on the Sons of Adam! I'd never heard of them before, so that might be our angle there! Stay tuned! I'm glad you liked our plethora of Carolines, in all their iterations! I've been dying to showcase Carolyne Mas for a while, now! I had her debut at the time, and history has all but forgotten her completely! I feel that a lot of our #MusicStackers would enjoy her music if they could/would just listen to it! Thanks, Ellen!
I have a framed gig poster from 1966 of Love and The Sons of Adam. Man, there are many reasons why I would love to jump inside a time machine. To live once again in a world without social media would be #1, but I'd also love to have seen concerts like this one! 😎
Not surprised to hear so many new-to-me tracks when one Michael K. Fell boards the Tune Tag train! And your knowledge continues to be seemingly infinite Brad. This one was a lot of fun, thanks guys!
Thanks for reading, Mark. And, thank you for your comments. I think one almost has to dig deep when sending music to Brad. We all know that even if you send him a well known song by T. Swift or The Beatles, he will most likely send in return a deep, obscure, or long forgotten and overlooked pop track. 😎
We work in the shadows, Michael! And, as Maxwell Smart would say, "Aaaand, loving it!"😎👍
You're certainly spot-on about MKF, Mark, no doubt! And, thank you for your beyond-kind compliment! I'm amazed at how frequently Michael can find the obscure band and artist, even though I'd swear I'd rifled through every "obscure artist" bin at every flea market and second-hand record store from here to Timbuk-three! Glad you enjoyed, Mark, and I know you'll be sidled up to this Tuesday's TT, too! 'Til then........B💪😁👍
And, back at you, Mr. Kyle (as I said to Mark, I always know you have some tricks up your sleeve when it comes to obscure or long forgotten pop tracks!).
Just gotta keep this 70-year-old brain plugged in! You young snipperwhappers help me do that! See me after the first of the year! Another Tune Tag with your name on it awaits!
These are all songs I didn't know before! You guys are real originals in your selections!
Thanks, Dan! Always a fun challenge when Michael drops by!
Likewise, when bouncing a tag off Brad. You never know what will come your way. Thanks for reading, Dan!
Wowza. Another crazy romp. I am headed over to the chat to tag a couple for you two! This one got me thinking big time. So much fun. So many new to me tracks. Great work.
Thank you, Tamara, for reading our crazy little musical escapade. I also greatly appreciate that you took the time to listen to the music. And, to play off Brad, as he said in his reply, he, too, sent me tracks that were new to me. We may approach music from different lenses and loves, the end result of Tune Tag is always fascinating, eye-opening, fun, and a great little guidebook to some new, interesting tracks and music trivia. Cheers to you, the reader! 😊🙏
Thanks so much, Taz! Michael threw down some new (and great!) tracks and artists for me, too! I'll see ya over in Chats!