Happy New Year and welcome to the first 2023 installment of The Sunday Six! This also marks the 100th time that I’d like to invite you to join me on a time-travel journey into the beautiful world of music. As usual, the zig-zag trip includes six tunes in different flavors from different decades. Hop on, fasten your seatbelts and off we go!
Lee Morgan/The Sidewinder
The March 7, 2021 installment, the eighth of this weekly recurring feature, was the first to open with a jazz tune. I’ve since continued to start these mini-music excursions with an instrumental, typically a jazz track, and intend to continue the tradition, at least for now. Today, my pick is Lee Morgan, an American jazz trumpeter and composer. He started to record as an 18-year-old in 1956 with his solo debut Lee Morgan Indeed! After playing in Dizzy Gillespie’s Big Band from 1956 until 1958, he joined Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers and between 1957 and 1966 was featured on numerous of their albums. Morgan’s prolific recording career came to an abrupt end in February 1972 at the age of 33, when his common-law wife Helen Moore shot him during an altercation at a jazz club in New York City where Morgan was performing with his band. Morgan is regarded as one of the key hard bop players of the 1960s. The Sidewinder, a Morgan composition, is the title track of a July 1964 album released under his name. He was backed by Joe Henderson (tenor saxophone), Barry Harris (piano), Bob Cranshaw (double bass) and Billy Higgins (drums). The Sidewinder became Morgan’s best-known track and even made the U.S. pop mainstream charts.
Natalie Imbruglia/Torn
For this next stop on our little trip, we jump to November 1997 and the solo music debut by Natalie Imbruglia. The singer from down under started her professional career as an actress in the early 1990s on Australian soap opera Neighbours. Left of the Middle, Imbruglia’s first of seven albums she released to date, became a huge international success, topping the charts in Australia and placing in the top 5 in The Netherlands (no. 2), Switzerland (no. 3), Germany and Italy (no. 4 each), as well as the UK (no. 5). In the U.S., it reached no. 10 on the Billboard 200. Left of the Middle also became her most commercially successful album with more than 7 million copies sold to date. The impressive performance was fueled by lead single Torn, a tune co-written by Scott Cutler, Anne Preven and co-producer Phil Thornalley. Originally, the song had been recorded in 1996 by American-Norwegian singer Trine Rein. While Rein’s version reached no. 10 on the charts in Norway, it was Imbruglia’s rendition that became a major internal hit. Imbruglia, now 47, remains active, both as a music artist and an actress. Even though Torn has a pretty commercial sound, I’ve always liked the tune.
Squeeze/Black Coffee in Bed
The time has come to pay a quick visit to the ’80s with a nice track by English pop rock and power pop band Squeeze. The group was initially formed in March 1974 by Chris Difford (guitar, vocals, lyrics) and Glenn Tilbrook (vocals, guitar, music). Jools Holland (keyboards, backing and occasional lead vocals), Harri Kakoulli (bass) and Paul Gunn (drums) rounded out the initial line-up. After five albums, Difford and Tilbrook decided to break up the band in 1982 and released an eponymous album as a duo the following year. In 1985 Squeeze reformed. The band’s second incarnation lasted until 1999 and saw seven additional albums. In late 1999, they broke up again. Their third incarnation started in 2007 and remains active to this day, with Difford and Tilbrook remaining as the only original members. Black Coffee in Bed, penned by Difford and Tilbrook, appeared in April 1992 as the lead single from Squeeze’s fifth album Sweets from a Stranger, released in September of the same year. It enjoyed moderate success in the UK where it reached no. 51 on the Official Singles Chart. In the U.S., the tune peaked at no. 26 on Billboard’s Mainstream Rock chart.
The Clash/London Calling
One of the few punk bands I liked from the get-go were The Clash. During their 10-year career from 1976 until 1986, the British group released six studio albums. The third, London Calling, was their most successful one. The critically acclaimed record from December 1979, which has sold over five million copies worldwide and was certified platinum in the US for sales of one million, blends a traditional punk rock sound with elements of reggae, rockabilly, ska, New Orleans R&B, pop, lounge jazz, and hard rock. Overall, it also became the band’s best-performing album on the charts, reaching no. 2 in Sweden, no. 4 in Norway and no. 9 in the UK, among others. In Rolling Stone’s most recent 2020 version of its list of The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, London Calling was ranked at no. 16, only down 8 spots from the 2003 and 2012 editions. Here’s the great title track, co-written by vocalist Joe Strummer and lead guitarist Mick Jones. London Calling also appeared separately in December 1979 as the record’s lead single.
Plain White T’s/Hey There Delilah
For this next tune let’s jump to the current century. Like I suspect is the case for the majority of folks, I only know Plain White T’s because of their one no. 1 hit Hey There Delilah. The rock and pop punk band was formed as a trio in early 1997 by high school friends Tom Higgenson (lead vocals, guitar, keyboards), Dave Tirio (guitar, drums percussion), and Ken Fletcher (bass), and rounded out by Steve Mast (lead guitar, backing vocals) shortly thereafter. In 2000, they recorded their debut Come On Over. Hey There Delilah first appeared on the group’s third studio album All That We Needed, released in January 2005. But the beautiful ballad wasn’t noticed until May 2006 when it appeared as a single. Among others, it topped the charts in the U.S., Canada and Germany, and surged to no. 2 in the UK, Ireland and Belgium. Until that single, Plain White T’s essentially had been an underground act in Chicago. Hey There Delilah was also included as a bonus track on the group’s fourth studio album Every Second Counts, which came out in September 2006. It’s safe to assume the tune helped fuel the success of that record, which became their best-selling album to date and charted in multiple countries, including Ireland (no. 2), UK (no. 3) and the U.S. (no. 10), among others. Plain White T’s are still around. Their eighth and most recent studio album Parallel Universe came out in August 2018.
The Box Tops/Cry Like a Baby
Once again we’ve reached the final stop of another music trip. My pick is Cry Like a Baby, the title track of a studio album by American blue-eyed soul and rock band The Box Tops, released in April 1968. In February that same year, the tune had appeared as the record’s lead single. Overall, it became their second-biggest hit after The Letter, reaching no. 2 in the U.S. on the Billboard Hot 100, no. 3 in Canada, no. 15 in the UK and no. 46 in Australia. Formed as The Devilles in Memphis, Tenn. in 1967, the band soon thereafter changed their name to The Box Tops in 1967. Cry Like a Baby was the last album featuring the original line-up of Alex Chilton (lead vocals, rhythm guitar), Gary Talley (lead guitar, backing vocals), John Evans (keyboards, backing vocals), Bill Cunningham (bass, backing vocals) and Danny Smythe (drums, backing vocals). In 1971 after the first break-up of The Box Tops, Chilton became a co-founder of American rock and power pop band Big Star. In 1996, Cunningham organized the first reunion of The Box Tops, which lasted until 2010. Following the death of Chilton from a heart attack in March 2010, the group split again. In mid-2015, Cunningham and Talley reformed The Box Tops who have remained active since then.
Of course, The Sunday Six wouldn’t be complete without a Spotify playlist. Hope there’s something for you here!
Sources: Wikipedia; YouTube; Spotify
Good list! First one is unknown to me but I like all the others, ‘Torn’ especially. Actually listened to ‘London Calling’ yesterday. Happy new year to you…hope there’s plenty of good listening ahead!
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Thanks, Dave. Looking forward to another year of great music. Once again, Happy New Year to you as well! 🙂
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Great list Christian…this has to be one of my favorite of your lists on Sunday… first of all Natalie Imbruglia with Torn. That song was forgotten for a long time…I always liked it. The rest…too many good ones to pick from! Clash, Box Tops, and most of all Squeeze.
Thanks Christian and once again have a great New Year!
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Alright, thanks, Max. Looks like I’m off to a decent start! 🙂
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No…you are off to an incredibly great start!
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nice selections. good to see The Clash in there.
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First one such a good jam. I probably mentioned before that I saw the great Barry Harris in Chicago in the late 90’s (or was it early 2000s?) with The Barry Harris Trio. Such a smooth touch on the ivories he has. The 2nd song and the Delilah song are more guilty pleasure type songs than my standard listening choice. Both beautiful and nice to hear once in awhile. Two goodies of that genre. Squeeze and Clash both awesome. I was about 10 years old when The Box Tops had those tunes on the airwaves and I remember exactly what I doing that summer. That might have been the summer my folks divorced and my mom and us kids moved into a new home/neighborhood/world/lifestyle. Marvin Gaye’s Heard it Through the Grapevine was out around the same time iirc. Good playlist, Christian. A great start to 2023!
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Thanks, Lisa, sounds like I passed the first audition of 2023! 🙂
It’s funny how you characterized “Torn” as a “more guilty pleasure”. That’s kind of how I look at it as well. Every now and then, a ’90s mainstream pop tune can grab me, especially if it’s as catchy as this one!
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You’re welcome 🙂
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I love Black Coffee in Bed.
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I love Cry Like a Baby it’s great. Not as great as Soul Deep or The Letter, but almost!! Do you remember that other one they did called Sweet Cream Ladies Forward March, but I’m not sure if that’s the title or just part of the lyrics. That song is awesome too.
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Thanks! In these posts I’m trying to avoid repetition. I had featured “The Letter” before. Also, I’m afraid “The Letter” and “Cry Like a Baby” are the only Box Tops tunes I can name. I just checked “Soul Deep” and “Sweet Cream Ladies, Forward March” and like both as well! 🙂
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A nice, eclectic selection of songs, Christian. I always liked “Torn”, though never explored much of Natalie Imbruglia’s other music. “Hey There Delilah” is one of my favorite songs from the 2000s, and always great hearing songs from Squeeze and The Clash. “Cry Like a Baby” is a good one from the 60s, and brings back memories. And finally, poor Lee Morgan!
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Thanks, Jeff. I also haven’t explored Natalie Imbruglia, and “Torn,” which I always liked, is her only tune I can name. The same applies to Plain White T’s. I first head “Cry Like Like a Baby” in the ’80s when Kim Carnes covered it – not a bad rendition, I think.
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There’s a real good doc on Morgan floating around I recommend it
Side note. Watched the Ron Carter doc. Fantastic.
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