LISTEN TO BOOMTOWN RADIO! “ALL the Music That Matters for the Generation That Created Rock 'n' Roll”

Wednesday, 08 May 2024 03:20

The Flub That Was the Flubber Fad

As kids, we all loved the Disney film, The Absent-Minded Professor (1961). What you may not remember was that Hasbro introduced a toy in 1962 called “Flubber” based on the miraculous compound invented by Fred MacMurray in that film.

It was made from synthetic rubber & mineral oil and had all of the qualities one would want from a toy. It bounced like crazy, could be molded into a wide variety of shapes, you could stretch it or break it into pieces, and it was inexpensive, usually within the reach of our allowances.

Just one problem. Hasbro forgot to actually test it with kids over a long period of time. Turns out, Flubber made kids sick. Its toxic substances caused sore throats, rashes, and other nasty reactions. It also picked up dirt and heaven-knows-what-else from the surfaces it was applied to.

Hasbro was forced to pull Flubber off toy shelves quickly and the fad was over as fast as it had begun. Fortunately for the company, those times were far less litigious and there weren’t a lot of lawsuits that could have put the company out of business.

They just had one final problem. What to do with tons of this toxic toy that came back to the factory? You couldn’t bury the stuff at sea. It was lighter than water and would float to the surface. You couldn’t burn it because that would cause huge clouds of toxic smoke.

So, the company buried it beneath a building on Delta Drive in Pawtucket, Rhode Island. More than 50 years later, residents claim that on hot summer days, the smell of Flubber still fills the air, and the stuff can still be seen oozing through the cracks in the pavement.

Parents of millennials will get a sense of déjà vu because Nickelodeon experienced somewhat similar problems when they tried to market Gak as a kid’s toy in the '90s.

Monday, 06 May 2024 03:20

A Lot of Musical Memories Here

Quite the collection of early rock stars in this picture. Front, left to right: Dion, early Philadelphia DJ Jay Blavat, Darlene Love, and Frankie Avalon. In the back: Chubby Checker. We give the photo a 78. It’s got a good beat and you can dance to it.

Thursday, 25 April 2024 18:35

R.I.P. Mike Pinder (1941-2024)

Mike Pinder, one of the founders of the Moody Blues and the last surviving member of the band’s original line-up, passed away on Wednesday, April 24th at the age of 82.

As the group’s primary keyboardist, Pinder was responsible for adding the mellotron, an early synthesizer, that gave the band its distinctive orchestral sound, especially after Pinder tinkered with the instrument, doubling the number of string section tape loops.

Mike also was the one who called up his pal, Justin Hayward to join the group after their initial vocalist, Denny Laine, quit. The group then added bass player John Lodge and locked in the personnel that would carry them to international fame beginning with the new line-up’s first effort (and second Moodys LP), Days of Future Passed.

Among the many songs Pinder wrote for the group are “Dawn (Is a Feeling),” “Thinking Is the Best Way to Travel,” “Om,” “Have You Heard,” “Out and In” (co-written with Hayward), and "Melancholy Man.”

Pinder passed away at his home in northern California surrounded by family.

Monday, 22 April 2024 03:00

Rock Icon: Burt Bacharach (?)

His work has been recorded by artists all over the musical map – from Perry Como to the Beatles, from roots rocker Gene Vincent to Neil Diamond, from Nat King Cole to Elvis Costello. Next to Lennon & McCartney, he may be the most successful composer of the latter half of the 20th century. Along the way he penned 73 songs that hit the Top 40 on Billboard’s Hot 100 and earned 6 Grammys, 3 Oscars and 1 Emmy.

He is, of course, Burt Bacharach. Over 1,000 different artists have recorded his compositions. His collaboration with lyricist Hal David, produced a string of hits for 60s pop icons like Dionne Warwick, Gene Pitney and Dusty Springfield. Along the way he also composed the title tune for the schlock teenage sci-fi film that became a cult classic, The Blob, while also building a surprisingly successful career as a live performer, playing his hit compositions on piano while backed by a full orchestra.

While primarily seen as a “pop” composer, Bacharach’s ability to work with rock acts like Vincent, the Drifters, Elvis Costello and others make him an undeniable part of rock history.

Born in Kansas City, but raised in New York City, Bacharach used a fake ID, not to drink, but to sneak into New York’s jazz nightclubs where he soaked up the music Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie and others. Trained by his mother to be a classical pianist, Bacharach much preferred the jazz and pop he heard on his nightly sojourns.

Following a stint in the army, Bacharach started the 1950s as arranger and pianist for singer Vic Damone. From there, he served in similar capacity for a variety of other singers until he finally wound up leading the back-up band for Marlene Dietrich in 1956. While touring the world with Dietrich, he also began working as a songwriter, teaming with Hal David in 1957. They sold their first song, “I Cry More,” to the motion picture, Don’t Knock the Rock. The song went nowhere. They finally broke through with a song they wrote for Marty Robbins, “The Story of My Life,” which hit #1 on the Billboard country chart. They next scored a top 10 hit with Perry Como and “Magic Moments” (in the days before rock came to dominate the charts).

As the 60s began, Bacharach’s success as a songwriter led to him taking a more active role in the studio. He was first listed as arranger & conductor on Jerry Butler’s 1962 recording of the Bacharach-David tune “Make It Easy on Yourself.” That same year, Bacharach thought one of the backup singers doing session work showed some potential. Her name was Dionne Warwick. He and David wrote a tune specifically crafted for her, “Don’t Make Me Over.” That recording launched a long and successful collaboration that lasted into the 1980s.

Among the many artists who have found success with Bacharach tunes are the Drifters, the Beatles (a cover of the Shirelles’ “Baby, It’s You”), Tom Jones, Frankie Avalon, Manfred Mann, B.J. Thomas, Bobby Vinton and dozens more.

Elvis Costello had a father who was a cabaret singer in the UK, so Elvis had developed a fondness for Bacharach-David compositions from childhood. He used to sneak one or two into his early sets (particularly “I Just Don’t Know What to Do with Myself”). Ultimately, he became one of Bachrach’s later collaborations, co-writing the album Painted from Memory.

In addition to writing specifically for the movies (two of his most acclaimed movie tunes being “The Look of Love” and “Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head”), his work has also been found lightening up such later films as Austin Powers and My Best Friend’s Wedding.

A composer whose versatility is unmatched, Bacharach passed away in February of 2023 at the age of 94. His music lives on.

Wednesday, 17 April 2024 03:20

Calling All Gals

Can you pass the test?

Thursday, 18 April 2024 03:20

Fraud Watch: From Washing to Cooking

Time was when we mostly paid our bills by sending out physical checks. In those days, fraudsters would engage is something called check washing. This involved treating a stolen check with certain solvents that would remove everything you wrote on your check except your signature. That allowed the crooks to fill any amount and any payee to steal from your checking account. While devastating, a washed check could only be used once.

In our digital age, bunko artists are now doing something known as check cooking. This involves the thief taking a digital picture of a stolen check and manipulating the image with various phot editing software to alter. In this way, they can use that stolen check multiple times, simply printing out new copies or using smartphone technology to deposit the altered check multiple times into a bank account.

What can you do to protect yourself? The experts urge you to do as much bill paying as possible using your bank’s online payment services or using those verified money apps like Venmo. If you still have to send a paper check, don’t leave in your mailbox for your local carrier. Instead, take it directly to your nearest post office and drop it off there.

Tuesday, 16 April 2024 03:20

Pain Points

Sad, but true. As we age, we experience more aches and pains. Many of them can bet treated fairly easily with over-the-counter pain medications. The 4 most common are Aspirin, Ibuprofen. Naproxen and Acetaminophen.

All are effective for headaches, muscle pains, toothaches and backaches. However, there are some conditions for which you should avoid using one or more of these choices:

DON’T use Aspirin: Wounds, bruises or nerve pain. Also, you should never use Aspirin if you’re on blood thinners or run the risk of excessive bleeding.

DON’T use Ibuprofen or Naproxen: Nerve pain.

DON’T use Acetaminophen: Nerve pain or inflammatory conditions (like Arthritis).

If every girl you knew in college back in the day had a copy of Simon & Garfunkel’s Parsley, Sage, Rosemary & Thyme, every guy probably had a copy of this album, Led Zeppelin’s self-titled debut LP.

When the Yardbirds disbanded in 1968, somehow Jimmy Page (a late arrival in the band’s ever-shifting line-up) wound up with rights to the name and an obligation to honor some Yardbird concert dates in Scandinavia still on the books. Page recruited fellow session musician John Paul Jones on the bass, added Robert Plant as vocalist when Page’s original choice, Terry Reid, turned him down and finished off with John Bonham on drums.

The group honored those concert dates as “The New Yardbirds,” playing a mix of Yardbirds songs as well as working up some new material. Returning to London in the fall of 1968, the lads decided to carry on as a group, but with a new name. Legend has it that, at one time, Page, Jeff Beck, Keith Moon and John Entwistle considered forming a rock band. Moon remarked that the group would go over like a lead balloon. “More like a lead zeppelin,” added Entwistle. So, Page thought the name would suit their new effort.

Lacking a recording contract, the group took the then-unheard of step of recoding their first album on their own. Studio time was paid for by Page himself and the group’s manager, Peter Grant. That meant two things: 1.) the band could record exactly what they liked with no interference from a record label and 2.) they needed to record it quickly because they were paying for the studio time out of their own pocket.

The album we know as Led Zeppelin was recorded quickly, in about 36 hours over just a couple of weeks. Page served as producer while bringing in his childhood mate, Glyn Johns, to serve as engineer. Most of the songs were actually recorded live with the band playing as one in the studio. Fortunately, the group had worked out most of the album’s songs while touring as the New Yardbirds and we’re already fairly tight as an ensemble.

With the completed album tucked under his arm, manager Grant had little trouble attracting label interest, signing Led Zeppelin to Atlantic Records fairly quickly. Their debut disc was released in the States in January of 1969 and in their native UK in March of the same year. Surprisingly, the initial reviews for the record were not good. Rolling Stone remarked that the LP had “little that its twin, the Jeff Beck Group, didn't say as well or better three months ago.” Several other rock publications offered equally lackluster reviews.

However, the disc quickly became a smash on the then-emerging genre of “progressive rock” radio stations with virtually all of the album’s track getting substantial airplay. Grant also made the shrewd decision to bringing the boys to America almost immediately where their bombastic, exciting stage show generated sensational word of mouth.

Now, of course, the album is correctly lauded as a classic. It pioneered the smash-up of hard rock with traditional blues that came to dominate the music scene as we moved out of the 60s into the 70s. The group is also credited with pioneering the genre of rock that has come to be known as heavy metal, although their status as one of rock’s most popular acts meant Led Zeppelin has really transcended genre labels.

Led Zeppelin consistently makes those lists of the “Greatest Rock Albums” of al time and has been reissued (often with outtakes and other material added) mulitple times over the years.

Wednesday, 20 March 2024 18:37

A Personal Invitation from Boomtown America!

We can guarantee you that if you strap on an accordian, your friends really will be astonished, but we doubt you'll "make" the party!

Tuesday, 12 March 2024 11:48

R.I.P. Eric Carmen (1949-2024)

It is with sadness that we share the news that Eric Carman has passed away at the age of 74. Born in Cleveland, Eric was a musical prodigy who dreamed of a career as a concert pianist. That dream changed radically when the Beatles hit the scene in the early 60s and Eric decided he’d rather be a rock star instead.

Eric rose to fame as leader of the group the Raspberries. They scored a number of hits in the 1970s, beginning with “Go All the Way.” Carmen went on to even greater success as a solo artist with such hits as “All by Myself,” “Hungry Eyes,” and “Make Me Lose Control.”

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