Joined: Oct 13 2004 Posts: 36122 Location: Poodle Power!
I'm biased to this band I know but who isn't biased to something. This song has already been mentioned in another thread but it got me thinking.
The track was written in 1969 and although the lead track of a classic album it was not a single. For many years it was a fans and critics favourite but generally got little airplay and remained a relatively obscure track compared to the bands more well known charts hits - of which there were many.
Then some years back the AA and a well known Hollywood Director used the track in an add and a film and suddenly the track began to get noticed.
In the years that have followed it's been used on countless films, remixes, covers and other things. It is the bands most downloaded track apparently. It is also the bands song most likely to be on someones iPod - for most it will be the only track they have from a band they generally have little interest in.
The track is the Rolling Stones - Gimme Shelter.
My question is are there any other records like this.
WE ARE NOT TALKING ONE HIT WONDERS HERE BUT SONGS FROM ESTABLISHED ARTISTS.
The two that I can think of are "Perfect Day" Lou Reed - the story of which is almost identical to Gimme Shelter.
Hoppipolla by Sigur Ros, used by countless TV programme makers, heard by nearly everybody in the country, yet most of those people wouldn't have the foggiest who its by or what it is called.
The band themselves have even christened it 'the Money Song', purely on the regularity of its use and the amount of cash it has made them in royalties.
And so you aim towards the sky, And you'll rise high today, Fly away, Far away, Far from pain....
Joined: Sep 27 2008 Posts: 2136 Location: Down the hollow
Dita's Slot Meter wrote:Hoppipolla by Sigur Ros, used by countless TV programme makers, heard by nearly everybody in the country, yet most of those people wouldn't have the foggiest who its by or what it is called.
The band themselves have even christened it 'the Money Song', purely on the regularity of its use and the amount of cash it has made them in royalties.
Can't say i've heard that before and will be glad to never hear it again, i have known of this group long before pretentious hipsters made them semi famous, i didn't like them then and i don't now
Canon EOS 60D, Canon EF 70-200mm F/4 L USM, Canon EF 50mm f1/8, Sigma10-20mm f4-5.6 EX DC HSM and that's how i roll
Judas Priest's Tyrant, better than anything The Killers, The Script & The Black Keys could ever come up with
Baked Bean Boogie wrote:Can't say i've heard that before and will be glad to never hear it again, i have known of this group long before pretentious hipsters made them semi famous, i didn't like them then and i don't now
I guess somebody who has a liking for Judas Priest is always going to be capable of spouting nonsense when it comes to musical matters...
And so you aim towards the sky, And you'll rise high today, Fly away, Far away, Far from pain....
Joined: Sep 27 2008 Posts: 2136 Location: Down the hollow
Dita's Slot Meter wrote:I guess somebody who has a liking for Judas Priest is always going to be capable of spouting nonsense when it comes to musical matters...
think what you like, my musical tastes are very diverse
Canon EOS 60D, Canon EF 70-200mm F/4 L USM, Canon EF 50mm f1/8, Sigma10-20mm f4-5.6 EX DC HSM and that's how i roll
Judas Priest's Tyrant, better than anything The Killers, The Script & The Black Keys could ever come up with
Baked Bean Boogie wrote:think what you like, my musical tastes are very diverse
Nothing wrong with diverse - However, you need to accept that other people's tastes are equally diverse and won't always be the same as yours, so to simply slag them off as pretentious surely just makes you equally pretentious??...
And so you aim towards the sky, And you'll rise high today, Fly away, Far away, Far from pain....
Don't Stop Believin' by Journey has to be in there. Didn't even reach the top 40 in the UK singles chart when released in 1981. Featured in a few films in recent years with no real recognition but gained high profile press coverage when it was used in the final scene of The Sopranos. Cue its rise in popularity, its use in Glee and various X-Factor versions which has made it the top-selling catalog track in iTunes history, and you have Journey making an absolute fortune from a song first released over 30 years ago. Ask the majority of people who love this song if they could name another Journey song and you would probably be met by a blank look on their face.
"Back home we got a taxidermy man. He gonna have a heart attack when he see what I brung him."
Joined: Feb 20 2007 Posts: 10540 Location: Hunting Gopher
Hallelujah?
Grace is a truly brilliant album, yet most people will only know of Jeff Buckley via that song (that wasn't even his) after it was picked up by the reality shows.
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