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Janis Ian Revived Her Career with 'At Seventeen'
Janis Ian was 14 when she wrote her 1967 hit single “Society’s Child,” a controversial song about how social pressure doomed an interracial romance. “I was sitting on a bus in East Orange, NJ, where I was living with my parents, and I saw it happening around me,” Ian told Songwriter Universe.

edgarstreetbooks
3 days ago3 min read


The 'Bad Time' That Changed Everything for Grand Funk
“Bad Time” was a №4 hit, certified by BMI as radio’s most-played song of 1975. Written by guitarist Mark Farner, the song was a departure from the trio’s hard rock roots. “It was kind of a different song,” Farner told Songfacts.

edgarstreetbooks
4 days ago2 min read


From ‘Deep in the Bosom of Suburbia’ Came ‘Ariel’ by Dean Friedman
“Ariel” was a №26 hit for Dean Friedman in 1977. It opens with the lyric, “Way on the other side of the Hudson / Deep in the bosom of suburbia.”

edgarstreetbooks
Feb 242 min read


'I'm Easy' by Keith Carradine: 'That's Not a Single, There's No Way'
Keith Carradine wrote and performed “I’m Easy” for the 1975 Robert Altman film Nashville. Carradine, as womanizing musician Tom Frank, performs the song to an audience of past, present, and possibly future lovers.

edgarstreetbooks
Feb 222 min read


Get Outta Here: 'Katmandu' by Bob Seger
Bob Seger mixed classic rock with a geography lesson in “Katmandu,” first released on his 1975 LP Beautiful Loser. The single reached №43. The song refers to the capital of Nepal, located in the Himalayan Mountain range. Seger wrote “Katmandu” to poke fun at the music business.

edgarstreetbooks
Feb 212 min read


The Seafaring 'Brandy (You're a Fine Girl)' by Looking Glass Came From... New Jersey?
The members of Looking Glass were students at Rutgers University in New Jersey when the band formed in 1969. Singer-guitarist Elliot Lurie told The College Crowd Digs Me how the band got its name.

edgarstreetbooks
Feb 162 min read


‘Tiny Dancer’ by Elton John: 'The Perfect Oedipal Complex'
“Tiny Dancer” was first released on Elton John’s 1971 album Madman Across the Water. When an edited single version was released in 1972, it only reached №41. As more album cuts were played on FM radio in the 1970s, “Tiny Dancer” in its original form became a listener favorite.

edgarstreetbooks
Feb 122 min read

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