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Some of My Favorite Music From 1960-1964

February 6, 2018 By C.S. Elston

Although it’s been a while, this is the third installment of the “Some of My Favorite Music” series. We’re heading into the 1960s now, which may very well be my favorite decade for music and I think it’s time to start splitting those decades in half. So, this time, I’ll be focusing on the 1960-1964.

Chuck Berry, songs: “Nadine (Is It You?),” “No Particular Place to Go,” “You Never Can Tell,” “Little Marie” and “Promised Land” (1964)

Ben E. King, songs: “This Magic Moment,” “Save the Last Dance for Me,” “I Count the Tears” and “Spanish Harlem” (1960,) “Stand by Me” and “Amor” (1961,) “Don’t Play That Song (You Lied)” (1962) and “I (Who Have Nothing)” (1963)

Johnny Cash, songs: “Seasons of My Heart” and “Second Honeymoon” (1960,) “The Rebel – Johnny Yuma” and “Tennessee Flat Top Box” (1961,) “The Big Battle,” “In the Jailhouse Now,” “Bonanza” and “Busted” (1962,)  “Ring of Fire” and “The Matador” (1963) “Understand Your Man” and “The Ballad of Ira Hayes” (1964)

Nat King Cole, songs: “Time and the River” (1960,) “Ramblin Rose,” “Dear Lonely Hearts” and “The Christmas Song” (1962,) “All Over the World,” “Those Lazy-Hazy-Crazy Days of Summer” and “That Sunday, That Summer” (1963) and “My True Carrie Love,” “I Don’t Want to Be Hurt Anymore” and “I Don’t Want to See Tomorrow” (1964)

Howlin’ Wolf, songs: “Spoonful” (1960,) “Wang-Dang Doodle,” “Goin’ Down Slow” and “The Red Rooster” (1961) and “I Ain’t Superstitious” (1962)

Etta James, songs: “All I Could Do Was Cry” and “My Dearest Darling” (1960,) “At Last,” “Trust in Me” and “Don’t Cry Baby” (1961,) “Something’s Got a Hold on Me” and “Stop The Wedding” (1962,) “Pushover” (1963) and “Loving You More Every Day” (1964)

James Brown, songs: “I’ll Go Crazy,” “Think,” “You’ve Got the Power,” “This Old Heart” and “The Bells” (1960,) “Bewildered,” “I Don’t Mind,” “Baby You’re Right,” “Just You and Me, Darling” and “Lost Someone” (1961,) “Night Train,” “Shout and Shimmy,” “Mashed Potatoes U.S.A.” and “Three Hearts in a Tangle” (1962,) “Like a Baby,” “Prisoner of Love,” “These Foolish Things” and “Signed Sealed and Delivered” (1963) and “Oh Baby Don’t You Weep,” “Please, Please, Please” and “Have Mercy Baby” (1964)

Ray Charles, songs: “Let the Good Times Roll,” Don’t Let the Sun Catch You Cryin’,” “Just for a Thrill,” “Tell the Truth” and “Come Rain or Come Shine” (1960)

Sam Cooke, songs: “Wonderful World” and “Chain Gang” (1960,) “That’s It, I Quit, I’m Movin’ On” and “Cupid” (1961,) “Twistin’ the Night Away,” “Bring It on Home to Me,” “Having a Party,” “Nothing Can Change This Love,” “Somebody Have Mercy” and “Send Me Some Lovin’” (1962,) “Another Saturday Night,” “Frankie and Johnny” and “Little Red Rooster” (1963) and “Good News,” “Good Times,” “Tennessee Waltz,” “That’s Where It’s At,” “Cousin of Mine,” “Shake” and “A Change Is Gonna Come”

B.B. King, songs: “Sweet Sixteen, Pt. 1” and “Walking Dr. Bill” (1960,) “Someday” and “Peace of Mind” (1961,) “My Sometime Baby” (1962) and “How Blue Can You Get,” “Beautician Blues,” “Help the Poor,” “Rock Me Baby” and “Never Trust a Woman” (1964)

Elvis Presley, songs: “Stuck On You,” “Fame and Fortune,” “It’s Now or Never,” “A Mess of Blues,” “Are You Lonesome Tonight?” and “I Gotta Know” (1960,) “Surrender,” “Lonely Man,” “Flaming Star,” “I Feel So Bad,” “Wind in the Country,” “(Marie’s the Name) His Latest Flame,” “Little Sister” and “Can’t Help Falling in Love” (1961,) “Rock-A-Hula Baby,” “Good Luck Charm,” “Anything That’s Part of You,” “Follow That Dream,” “She’s Not You,” King of the Whole Wide World” and Return to Sender” (1962,) “One Broken Heart for Sale,” “(You’re The) Devil in Disguise,” “Bossa Nova Baby” and “Witchcraft” (1963) and “Kissin’ Cousins,” “It Hurts Me,” “Kiss Me Quick,” “What’d I Say,” “Viva Las Vegas,” “Such a Night,” “Ask Me” and “Ain’t That Loving You Baby” (1964)

The Shirelles, songs: “Tonight’s The Night” and “Will You Love Me Tomorrow” (1960,) “Mama Said,” “A Thing of the Past,” “Big John (Ain’t You Gonna Marry Me)” and “Baby It’s You” (1961,) “Soldier Boy,” “Welcome Home, Baby,” “Stop the Music” and “Everybody Loves a Lover” (1962,) “Foolish Little Girl” and “Don’t Say Goodnight and Mean Goodbye” (1963)

Nina Simone, songs: “Nobody Knows You When You’re Down and Out” (1960) and “Trouble in Mind” (1961)

Ike & Tina Turner, songs: “A Fool in Love” (1960,) “I Idolize You” and “It’s Gonna Work Out Fine” (1961,) “Poor Fool” and “Tra La La La La” (1962)

Jackie Wilson, songs: “A Woman, a Lover, a Friend,” “Night,” “Alone at Last,” “Doggin’ Around,” “Am I the Man” and “(You Were Made For) All My Love” (1960,) “My Empty Arms,” “The Tear of the Year” and “I’m Comin’ on Back to You” (1961) and “Baby Workout” (1963)

The Crystals, songs: “There’s No Other (Like My Baby)” (1961,) “Uptown,” “He’s a Rebel” and “He’s Sure the Boy I Love” (1962) and “Da Doo Ron Ron (When He Walked Me Home)” and “Then He Kissed Me” (1963)

Del Shannon, song: “Runnaway” (1961)

The Beatles, songs: “My Bonnie” (1961,) “Love Me Do” and “P.S. I Love You” (1962,) “Please Please Me,” From Me to You,” “She Loves You,” “Roll Over Beethoven,” “I Want to Hold Your Hand” and “I Saw Her Standing There” (1963) and “From Me to You,” “All My Loving,” “Can’t Buy Me Love,” “Twist and Shout,” “You Can’t Do That,” “Do You Want to Know a Secret?,” “Thank You Girl,” Ain’t She Sweet,” “A Hard Day’s Night,” “I Should Have Known Better,” “I’ll Cry Instead,” “And I Love Her,” “If I Fell,” “Matchbox” and “Slow Down”

Patsy Cline, songs: “I Fall to Pieces” and “Crazy” (1961,” “She’s Got You,” “When I Get Through with You,” “So Wrong” and “Heartaches” (1962) and “Leavin On Your Mind” (1963)

Marvin Gaye, songs: “Stubborn Kind of Fellow” and “Hitch Hike” (1962,) “Pride and Joy” and “Can I Get a Witness” (1963) and “You’re a Wonderful One,” “Once Upon a Time,” “What’s the Matter with You Baby,” “Try It Baby,” “Baby Don’t You Do It” and “How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved by You)” (1964)

The Isley Brothers, song: “Twist & Shout” (1962)

Booker T. & the MG’s, song: “Green Onions” (1962)

Louis Armstrong, songs: “Mack the Knife” (1962) and “Hello, Dolly” (1964)

The Kingsmen, song: “Louie Louie” (1962)

The Rolling Stones, songs: “Come On” and “I Wanna Be Your Man” (1963) and “Not Fade Away,” “Tell Me,” “It’s All Over Now,” “Time Is on My Side,” “Little Red Rooster” and “Heart of Stone” (1964)

Martha and the Vandellas, songs: “Come and Get These Memories” and “Heat Wave” (1963) and “Quicksand,” “Live Wire” and “In My Lonely Room” (1964)

The Animals, song: “The House of the Rising Sun” (1964)

The Four Tops, songs: “Baby I Need Your Loving” and “Without the One You Love (Life’s Not Worth While)” (1964)

Little Richard, songs: “Crying in the Chapel” (1963) and “Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On,” “Goodnight Irene” and “Blueberry Hill” (1964)

The Kinks, song: “You Really Got Me” (1964)

The Righteous Brothers, song: “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’” (1964)

The Shangri-Las, songs: “Remember (Walking in the Sand),” “Leader of the Pack” and “Give Him a Great Big Kiss” (1964)

The Sonics, song: “The Witch” (1964)

The Supremes, songs: “Where Did Our Love Go,” “Baby Love” and “Come See About Me” (1964)

The Zombies, song: “She’s Not There” (1964)

Well, now you probably understand why I decided to start cutting the decades in half. So much great music . . . And, so much more to come . . . After all, the early 1960s primarily continued the pop and rock ‘n’ roll trend of the 1950s but the second half of the 1960s would see the evolution of rock.

Filed Under: Blog, Home, Music Tagged With: (Marie’s the Name) His Latest Flame, (You Were Made For) All My Love, (You’re The) Devil in Disguise, 1960, 1960-1964, 1960s, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, A Change Is Gonna Come, A Fool in Love, A Hard Day’s Night, A Mess of Blues, A Thing of the Past, A Woman a Lover a Friend, Ain’t She Sweet, Ain’t That Loving You Baby, All I Could Do Was Cry, All My Loving, All Over the World, Alone at Last, Am I the Man, And I Love Her, animals, Another Saturday Night, Anything That’s Part of You, Are You Lonesome Tonight?, Ask Me, At Last, B.B. King, Baby Don’t You Do It, Baby I Need Your Loving, Baby It’s You, Baby Love, Baby Workout, Baby You’re Right, band, Beatles, Beautician Blues, Bewildered, Big John (Ain’t You Gonna Marry Me), Blueberry Hill, Bonanza, Booker T. & the MG’s, Bossa Nova Baby, Bring It on Home to Me, Busted, Can I Get a Witness, Can’t Buy Me Love, Can’t Help Falling in Love, Chain Gang, Chuck Berry, Come and Get These Memories, Come On, Come Rain or Come Shine, Come See About Me, country and western, country music, Cousin of Mine, Crazy, Crying in the Chapel, Cupid, Da Doo Ron Ron (When He Walked Me Home), Dear Lonely Hearts, Del Shannon, Do You Want to Know a Secret?, Doggin’ Around, Don’t Cry Baby, Don’t Let the Sun Catch You Cryin’, Don’t Say Goodnight and Mean Goodbye, Elvis Presley, Etta James, Everybody Loves a Lover, Fab Four, Fame and Fortune, Flaming Star, Follow That Dream, Foolish Little Girl, four tops, Frankie and Johnny, From Me to You, Give Him a Great Big Kiss, Goin’ Down Slow, Good Luck Charm, Good News, Good Times, Goodnight Irene, Green Onions, Have Mercy Baby, Having a Party, He’s a Rebel, He’s Sure the Boy I Love, Heart of Stone, Heartaches, Heat Wave, Hello Dolly, Help the Poor, Hitch Hike, How Blue Can You Get, How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved by You), Howlin Wolf, I Ain’t Superstitious, I Don’t Mind, I Don’t Want to Be Hurt Anymore, I Don’t Want to See Tomorrow, I Fall to Pieces, I Feel So Bad, I Gotta Know, I Idolize You, I Saw Her Standing There, I Should Have Known Better, I Wanna Be Your Man, I Want to Hold Your Hand, I’ll Cry Instead, I’ll Go Crazy, I’m Comin’ on Back to You, If I Fell, Ike & Tina Turner, Ike and Turner, Ike Turner, In My Lonely Room, In the Jailhouse Now, Isley Brothers, It Hurts Me, It’s All Over Now, It’s Gonna Work Out Fine, It’s Now or Never, Jackie Wilson, James Brown, Johnny Cash, Just for a Thrill, Just You and Me Darling, king of rock 'n' roll, King of the Whole Wide World, kingsmen, kinks, Kiss Me Quick, Kissin’ Cousins, Leader of the Pack, Leavin On Your Mind, Let the Good Times Roll, Like a Baby, Little Marie, Little Red Rooster, Little Richard, Little Sister, Live Wire, Lonely Man, Lost Someone, Louie Louie, Louis Armstrong, Love Me Do, Loving You More Every Day, Mack the Knife, Mama Said, Martha and the Vandellas, Marvin Gaye, Mashed Potatoes U.S.A., Matchbox, Music, musical group, My Bonnie, My Dearest Darling, My Empty Arms, My Sometime Baby, My True Carrie Love, Nadine (Is It You?), Nat King Cole, Never Trust a Woman, Night, Night Train, Nina Simone, No Particular Place to Go, Nobody Knows You When You’re Down and Out, Not Fade Away, Nothing Can Change This Love, Oh Baby Don’t You Weep, Once Upon a Time, One Broken Heart for Sale, P.S. I Love You, Patsy Cline, Peace of Mind, Please, Please Please Me, Please Please Please, Poor Fool, Pride and Joy, Prisoner of Love, Promised Land, Pushover, Quicksand, Ramblin Rose, Ray Charles, Remember (Walking in the Sand), Return to Sender, righteous brothers, Ring of Fire, rock, rock 'n' roll, rock 'n' roll music, Rock Me Baby, Rock-A-Hula Baby, Roll Over Beethoven, rolling stones, Runnaway, Sam Cooke, Seasons of My Heart, Second Honeymoon, Send Me Some Lovin’, Shake, She Loves You, She’s Got You, She’s Not There, She’s Not You, Shirelles, Shout and Shimmy, Signed Sealed and Delivered, singer, Slow Down, So Wrong, Soldier Boy, Somebody Have Mercy, Someday, Something’s Got a Hold on Me, song, songs, sonics, Spoonful, Stop the Music, Stop The Wedding, Stubborn Kind of Fellow, Stuck On You, Such a Night, supremes, Surrender, Sweet Sixteen Pt. 1, Tell Me, Tell the Truth, Tennessee Flat Top Box, Tennessee Waltz, Thank You Girl, That Sunday That Summer, That’s It I Quit I’m Movin’ On, That’s Where It’s At, The Animals, The Ballad of Ira Hayes, the Beatles, The Bells, The Big Battle, The Christmas Song, The Crystals, The Four Tops, The House of the Rising Sun, The Isley Brothers, The Kingsmen, The Kinks, the man in black, The Matador, The Rebel - Johnny Yuma, The Red Rooster, The Righteous Brothers, The Rolling Stones, The Shangri-Las, The Shirelles, The Sonics, The Supremes, The Tear of the Year, The Witch, The Zombies, Then He Kissed Me, There’s No Other (Like My Baby), These Foolish Things, Think, This Old Heart, Those Lazy-Hazy-Crazy Days of Summer, Three Hearts in a Tangle, Time and the River, Time Is on My Side, Tina Turner, Tonight’s The Night, Tra La La La La, Trouble in Mind, Trust in Me, Try It Baby, Twist & Shout, Twist and Shout, Twistin’ the Night Away, Understand Your Man, Uptown, Viva Las Vegas, Walking Dr. Bill, Wang-Dang Doodle, Welcome Home Baby, What’d I Say, What’s the Matter with You Baby, When I Get Through with You, Where Did Our Love Go, Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On, Will You Love Me Tomorrow, Wind in the Country, Witchcraft, Without the One You Love (Life’s Not Worth While), Wonderful World, You Can’t Do That, You Never Can Tell, You Really Got Me, You’re a Wonderful One, You’ve Got the Power, You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’, zombies

The Inspiration Behind “The Gift of the Elements” Books

July 28, 2017 By C.S. Elston

Music, and the often-accompanying lyrics, has been a source of inspiration in my life for as long as I can remember. When I was a kid, my dad introduced me to songs like “Big Bad John” by Jimmy Dean and the Tommy Sands version of “Sinner Man” (although I now prefer the Three Dog Night and Nina Simone renditions) when I would ride with him in the car on trips from the northern suburbs of Seattle to the southwestern tip of Washington State where he spent one weekend a month serving in the Coast Guard reserves at Cape Disappointment in Ilwaco. The time with my dad was priceless and the music he introduced me to on those trips began my love affair with song lyrics. The love affair allowed me to branch out into different genres of music and gave me an appreciation that threw a wider net than it otherwise may have.

I fell in love with the stories those lyrics told and the emotional impact they could deliver. As I got older, however, I started noticing that certain songwriters are poets who deliver that impact more consistently than others. Not all lyricists are created equal. Some of my favorites over the years have included Willie Nelson, Adam Duritz of Counting Crows, Johnny Cash, Brandi Carlisle, Lecrae Devaugn Moore, Bob Dylan, Ed Sheeran, Billy Joel, Jason Emmanuel Petty (aka, Propaganda,) Hank Williams, Hank Williams, Jr., John Legend, Toby McKeehan, James Taylor, Merle Haggard, Kevin Max Smith, Bernie Taupin, Leonard Cohen, Alan Jackson, Rich Mullins, Eddie Vedder of Pearl Jam, Paul Simon, Michael Tait, Bob Marley, Kurt Cobain of Nirvana, John Lennon, Paul McCartney, Chris Tomlin, Stevie Wonder, Adele, Chris Cornell, and recently both Zac Brown and Chris Stapleton. It’s an already ridiculously long list that could go on and easily become ten times as long as it already is.

I left one important name off that list because it’s the most critical one when it comes to “The Gift of the Elements” series. That name is Vladimir John Ondrasik III.

I was in the backseat of my parents’ car on the way back to their house after having dinner and the song “Superman (It’s Not Easy)” by Five For Fighting came on the radio. It wasn’t the first time I’d heard it. It may very well have been the 100th. The song got a lot of airplay following its release in April of 2001 and this was at the height of the song’s popularity. However, for some reason, the lyrics impacted me in that moment more than they ever had before. Perhaps it was because “Smallville” had started airing around the same time. I honestly can’t remember if I had even seen the show yet at that point. But, whatever the reason was, I listened to the song and began to think about Superman, this being of immense power, more as Clark Kent than I ever had before. It struck me, on a deep level, how difficult and lonely that life could be.

Then I began to think about what it would be like if you had grown up without those powers but suddenly, they began to develop with the onset of puberty. That would be, in addition to lonely, completely terrifying. But, once you accepted what was happening to you, you’d have to make a choice. Do you use those powers for selfish gain? Or, do you use them for the betterment of humankind as a whole?

I was told once that my writing seems to have a common theme of redemption. Maybe that’s why the lyric that struck me the hardest was “I’m just out to find, the better part of me.” It’s thoughts like that that stick with you. They give you a thread that can spin off into a whole new piece of work. It did for me.

In fact, three weeks later, I had completed a screenplay called “The Gift of Tyler.”

It wasn’t until about a decade later that I pulled the script back out and began to develop it. Through that process, I dropped the whole puberty element and also decided I liked the idea of something larger happening around the world and experiencing it through one of the few people chosen to play a major role in it. This could possibly have been influenced by how brilliant I thought M. Night Shyamalan’s concept was for the movie “Signs.”

Then I put that polished script away again and decided to write my first book, “The Four Corners.” By the time the book was finished, I had gotten married and left Los Angeles after about fifteen years and moved back to the northern suburbs of Seattle to be close to my family. With “The Four Corners” out in the marketplace, I knew I wanted to write another book. I decided to wait on the sequel to the first book and write something new. So, I sat down and developed a 7-book game plan for a series called “The Gift of the Elements” based on “The Gift of Tyler.”

Chronologically, “The Gift of Tyler” is the fourth story in the series. However, the first four books all stand alone since they are individual stories about the four people chosen to play a major part in that global event. It isn’t until the final trilogy in the series that those four characters interact with one another. So, I wrote “The Gift of Tyler” first and then followed up with “The Gift of Rio” which is chronologically the first book.

I’m finally writing the sequel to my first book while I also do the final edits on “The Gift of Rio.” But, I’m already anxious to get back to “The Gift of the Elements.” The entire series carries themes found in the song that inspired it all and they still manage to touch me deeply, the same way they did in the backseat of my parents’ car that day.

Vladimir John Ondrasik III (aka Five For Fighting) hasn’t gotten a shout-out in either of the first two “Gift” books. Perhaps, I’ll throw him a bone in “The Gift of Mattias.” After all, like the man said, “even heroes have the right to dream…”

Filed Under: Blog, Home Tagged With: Adam Duritz, Adele, Alan Jackson, Audio Adrenaline, Audioslave, author, authors, Beatles, Bernie Taupin, Big Bad John, Billy Joel, Bob Dylan, Bob Marley, Books, Brandi Carlisle, Chris Cornell, Chris Stapleton, Chris Tomlin, Clark Kent, Counting Crows, CS Elston, dcTalk, Ed Sheeran, Eddie Vedder, Elton John, Five For Fighting, Four Corners, Gift of Rio, Gift of the Elements, Gift of Tyler, Hank Williams, Hank Williams Jr, Inspiration, James Taylor, Jimmy Dean, John Legend, John Lennon, Johnny Cash, Kevin Max Smith, Kurt Cobain, Lecrae, Leonard Cohen, M Night Shyamalan, Merle Haggard, Michael Tait, Music, Newsboys, Nina Simone, Nirvana, Paul McCartney, Paul Simon, Pearl Jam, Propaganda, Rich Mullins, Signs, Simon & Garfunkel, Sinner Man, Smallville, Soundgarden, Stevie Wonder, Superman, Tait, Three Dog Night, TobyMac, Tommy Sands, Willie Nelson, writers, writing, Zac Brown

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