That Guy on TV - John Graham's Blog, Resume, and Hootenanny
That Guy on TV - John Graham's Blog, Resume, and Hootenanny

18 Days Until Christmas

Does a song have to mention Christmas at all to be a Christmas song? I bet this cover tune puts you in the holiday frame of mind even though the original was a hit in the summer of 1969.

Annie Lennox and Al Green teamed up to cover Jackie DeShannon’s “Put a Little Love in Your Heart” for the “Scrooged” soundtrack in 1988. The cast sang the song at movie’s end and transitioned to Lennox and Green as the credits rolled.

Green had left pop music in 1980 after falling off a stage and taking it as a sign from God that he should turn exclusively to gospel music. Producer Jimmy Iovine was the musical supervisor for “Scrooged.” He asked Green to record the song, Green asked if Annie Lennox would sing with him, and it became Green’s first Top 10 pop hit since 1974. It’s also Lennox’s highest charting song outside of Eurythmics, although her bandmate, David Stewart, did produce the track.

Here’s the original from Jackie DeShannon. Odd bit of trivia – Jackie wrote “Bette Davis Eyes,” the 1981 hit for Kim Carnes.

And let’s wrap up with an all-star version I found in doing my research. From a 1979 UNICEF charity concert in Assembly Hall at the United Nations – here’s John Denver, Donna Summer, Barry Gibb, Olivia Newton-John, Earth, Wind, and Fire, Andy Gibb, Rod Stewart, and ABBA. I also see Henry Fonda, Henry Winkler, Gilda Radner, David Frost, Rita Coolidge, Kris Kristofferson, and I’m sure I missed a few…

1980s, Music
December 7, 2020 | 8:44 am

19 Days Until Christmas

I’m posting a holiday song a day from my personal collection until Christmas day … and today is a Jimi Hendrix medley of “Little Drummer Boy,” “Silent Night,” and “Auld Lang Syne.” Jimi was rehearsing in December 1969 for some shows at Fillmore East with drummer Buddy Miles and bassist Billy Cox (aka The Band of Gypsys).  The space didn’t have soundboard so think of the medley, recorded on a two-track tape recorder, as more an official bootleg than a polished single. I can’t find a YouTube link, and the Vimeo link isn’t won’t embed,  so instead, you’ll have to click on this bit of run-on typing to hear it.

The pic of Santa Jimi on the cover is from a 1967 photo shoot to promote “Axis: Bold As Love” in the UK’s “Record Mirror” weekly paper. Another photo from that shoot is at the top of the post.

“The Little Drummer Boy” is not my favorite Christmas song, but here’s a second version I can get behind – a revved-up surf rock take by Los Straitjackets,

 

1970s, Music
December 6, 2020 | 8:23 am

20 Days Until Christmas

I have to confess. For years, I assumed “I Want a Hippopotamus for Christmas” was sung by an adult pretending to be a little kid. I wasn’t listening to the radio in 1953, so when I first heard Gayla Peevey’s strong voice and comic timing years later, I assumed she was a studio singer banging out a novelty hit between commercials for Ipana toothpaste and Chesterfield cigarettes.

Turns out, Gayla Peevey was a real ten-year-old radio singer from Oklahoma City. “I Want a Hippopotamus for Christmas” was her first single for Capitol Records, a song found for her by Mitch Miller. This clip is from “The Ed Sullivan Show.”

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Music, Orlando
December 5, 2020 | 9:00 am

21 Days Until Christmas

My favorite labored rhyme in a Christmas song? “Chimney” and “Bimini.” I’m posting a holiday song every day from now until December 25, and today, it’s that most loved Christmas crooner … Billy Squier … and 1981’s “Christmas Is the Time to Say ‘I Love You.’”

The video for the song was an on-air Christmas card from MTV. The veejays and crew and office staff got together on bleachers and Billy lip-synched in a magnificent sweater of the era. Here’s the clip, introduced by the 1990 Martha Quinn, reminiscing about nine years earlier. Jump to 1:28 if you don’t wanna hear Miss Quinn.

Lyrically, “Christmas Is the Time to Say ‘I Love You’” is pretty standard and kinda lovely – sharing the holiday spirit around the globe and hoping it just keeps going – which is why I’m surprised it hasn’t been covered by more contemporary singers. Katharine McPhee had done it, and Darlene Love, whom I’ll write about more as we close in on December 25. The cover that best captures Billy Squier’s enthusiasm is pop punkers SR-71 on the 2001 Special Olympics benefit album, “A Very Special Christmas 5.”

1980s, Music, TV
December 4, 2020 | 9:50 am

22 Days Until Christmas

Want to hear The Monkees sing a Spanish Christmas carol from the 1500s? I promised a holiday song from my collection, every day until December 25, so here’s Mike, Micky, Peter, and Davy singing “Ríu Ríu Chíu” on their 1967 Christmas episode.

You can always watch “Ríu Ríu Chíu” (or just “Riu Chiu”) on YouTube, and there’s a transfer of the TV audio on the 2007 deluxe reissue of “Pisces, Aquarius, Capricorn & Jones Ltd.,” but the only digital remaster I’ve found is on the Target-exclusive version of The Monkees’ 2018 CD “Christmas Party.” The lyrics are about the Virgin Mary and the Immaculate Conception and Jesus Christ’s birth on Earth (aka Christmas Day). The actual words “ríu ríu chíu” are nonsense, mimicking the sounds of a bird, a nightingale or kingfisher.

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1970s, Music
December 3, 2020 | 8:47 am
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About John

John Graham is That Guy on TV – an Emmy-winning producer/writer/host and owner of Mosquito County Productions, based in Orlando, FL.

Over the years, John has produced YouTube videos with millions of views, worked with Muppets and Princesses, won two regional Emmys for travel reporting, interviewed celebs from Ariana Grande to Hillbilly Jim, and done thousands of live news broadcasts. (You know it’s me writing this, right?)

Get ahold of me at John@thatguyontv.com

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