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Music CD - Various Artists: Super Hits of the '70s: Have a Nice Day, Vol. 15

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Music CD: Super Hits of the '70s: Have a Nice Day, Vol. 15 Artist: Various Artists
List Price: $11.98
Our Price: $7.09
Your Save: $ 4.89 ( 41% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Rhino / Wea
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Tracks:
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1. I'm On Fire - Dwight Twilley Band 2. Fallin' In Love - Hamilton, Joe Frank, & Reynolds 3. Black Superman-'Muhammad Ali' - Johnny Wakelin & The Kinshasa Band 4. I'm Not Lisa - Jessie Colter 5. At Seventeen - Janis Ian 6. Run Joey Run - David Geddes 7. Rocky - Austin Roberts 8. Eighteen With A Bullet - Pete Wingfield 9. Sky High - Jigsaw 10. Saturday Night - Bay City Rollers 11. Convoy - C.W. McCall 12. You Sexy Thing - Hot Chocolate
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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0081227076221 Label: Rhino / Wea Manufacturer: Rhino / Wea Number Of Discs: 1 Publisher: Rhino / Wea Release Date: 1990-10-15 Studio: Rhino / Wea
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: The "Have A Nice Day" Series Comment: This series has songs that are unavailable on almost all other collections. If you want some of the great "one-hit wonders" from the 1970's, then this is the place to go!
Customer Rating:      Summary: A hodgepodge of styles but a fairly decent effort from Rhino Comment: With this look at 70s A.M. radio hits, Rhino gives us proto-power pop (Dwight Twilley), a bit of bubblegum (Austin Roberts, David Geddes), country (Jessi Colter), folkie earnestness (Janis Ian), the 70s idea of a 'boy band' (Bay City Rollers), and a foretaste of disco (Hot Chocolate).
HIGHLIGHTS:
"S-A-TUR-DAY NIGHT!" is still as insistent today as it was then, threatening to resurrect Rollermania if played at good volume. The percolating "You Sexy Thing" also continues to charm. "At Seventeen" is the anthem of "ugly ducklings" everywhere and the frenetic stabbing strings of Jigsaw's "Sky High" make it one of the finest one hit wonders ever.
MIDDLING:
These two are kind of in the "love it or hate it" category so I chose to make special mention of Austin Roberts' "Rocky" and David Geddes "Run Joey Run". Both feature melodramatic plotlines ('Rocky' dies young leaving the song's protagonist a single father while "Joey" is a single father dodging the shotgun of his would-be bride's father) that ensure not much middleground. I like them both but they're definitely not for everyone.
LOWS:
Usually I like power pop but Dwight Twilley's "I'm on Fire" leaves me cold. "Fallin' in Love" is a bland followup to the zippy "Don't Pull Your Love" (even if it was the bigger chart hit). Pete Wingfield's "Eighteen With A Bullet" is an unlistenable mess.
3 1/2 stars
Customer Rating:      Summary: Just for one song Comment: These songs are all basic throwaway hits. The only reason why I gave it five stars was because it had Rocky by Austin Roberts on it. Its the only cd ive ever found with the song on it. Its one of my all time favorite songs and im glad that I finally found it on cd.
Customer Rating:      Summary: SHAYLE HARRIS Comment: I REALLY LIKED THE MUSIC BUT THERE IS ONE SONG I WANTED TO LISTEN TO BUT I COULDNT WHITCH WAS ROCKY BY AUSTIN ROBERTS,AS I WANTED TO KNOW IF IT WAS THE SAME SONG I HAVE BEEN LOOKING FOR,FOR AGES. THANK YOU SHAYLE
Customer Rating:      Summary: Nice blend Comment: How tacky are some of these songs? Well, I can remember hearing these songs being played at SEARS while shopping for clothes (no choice in those days. I lived in the suburbs and didn't yet have a car). The direct memories of denim jackets with sequins, and shorty tops - with sequins, fill me with shivers both warm (memories) and cold (fashion hell), as I listen to these songs. But not all of 'em are tacky. There are a couple of juicy goodies that actually broke the ground of riskless AM radio. "You Sexy Thing" was a hot crossover tune that got white people dancing (one could even say it was one of the first preludes to disco), and that title garnished many a sequined shorty top. Even many a pair of ..... (the seventies were SO fabulously sleazy!). And "Eighteen With A Bullet", despite it's slight '50sish Frankie Lymon feel, had a tight euphoric bite to it, which was a fresh charge in let's face it, what was a pretty stale, generic musical wasteland by the mid-seventies. Even Bay City Roller-mania was a delightful change, despite the fact that their fans all looked like Catholic school rejects (I guess that's where they got all that plaid). Come to think of it, maybe sequined shorty tops weren't so bad after all! Have fun - and don't forget to have a nice day! :)
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