{"version":"https:\/\/jsonfeed.org\/version\/1","title":"Mustang Sally","home_page_url":"https:\/\/2112-68ada896318cf.radiocms.com\/blogs\/mustang-sally\/","feed_url":"https:\/\/2112-68ada896318cf.radiocms.com\/blogs\/mustang-sally\/json","items":[{"id":"o1282-1832-67b38c0be3426","url":"https:\/\/2112-68ada896318cf.radiocms.com\/blogs\/mustang-sally\/post\/ride-around-the-blog-with-mustang-sally4\/","title":"Ride Around The Blog With Mustang Sally","date_published":"2025-02-17T19:20:00+00:00","summary":"Find out what number one hit's lead singer wrote the song as a tribute to Elvis in this week's Mustang Music Memories.","content_html":"<p><strong>This Week in Mustang Music Memories<\/strong><\/p>\n\n<p>In 1990 Motley Crue debuted their song Without You.<\/p>\n\n<p>In &#39;84, Van Halen hit the number one spot with Jump; Bon Jovi made their debut into Billboards Top 100 with Runaway.&nbsp; Runaway became a radio hit in 1983 after winning New York&#39;s WAPP, The Apple, contest of unsigned bands and it went on to be the first single release from the band&#39;s self-titled debut album, <em>Bon Jovi<\/em>.<\/p>\n\n<p>Crazy Little Thing Called Love was the number one hit this week in 1980 by Queen.&nbsp; Crazy Little Thing was written by lead singer Freddie Mercury in the &quot;rock-a-billy&quot; style of Elvis as a tribute to him.&nbsp; Elvis had died less than two years earlier.<\/p>\n\n<p>The Police debuted Roxanne this week in &#39;79.&nbsp; Written by lead singer Sting, the song was inspired by the band&#39;s compassion they had for the prostitutes working outside their seedy hotel in Paris France when they were scheduled to perform at the Nashville Club in October of &#39;77.<\/p>\n\n<p>This week in 1977, the Eagles debuted the title song to their fifth album, Hotel California; however, the first single from the album released a few weeks earlier, New Kid In Town, hit the top spot also this week in &#39;77.<\/p>\n\n<p>In &#39;76, Peter Frampton debuted Show Me The Way.<\/p>\n\n<p>Do you remember Bertha Butt?&nbsp; &quot;<em>Bertha, Bertha Butt.&nbsp; One of the Butt Sisters&quot;.&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/em>She was a character in several songs by The Jimmy Castor Bunch that was introduced in their hit Troglodytes (Cave Man) in &#39;72.&nbsp; This week in 1975, The Bertha Butt Boogie made it&#39;s debut and turned the bump dance craze into the Boogie.<\/p>\n\n<p>In &#39;71, George Harrison debuted What Is Life, a song he wrote with the intention of his good friend Billy Preston recording it.<\/p>\n\n<p>In 1966, the Stones debuted their 19th Nervous Breakdown.<\/p>\n\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>","author":{"name":"Sally"},"_mobile_inapp_url":"https:\/\/2112-68ada896318cf.radiocms.com\/_app_pages\/stations\/5320\/blogs\/posts\/79158"},{"id":"o1282-1832-67ac9473bfdad","url":"https:\/\/2112-68ada896318cf.radiocms.com\/blogs\/mustang-sally\/post\/ride-around-the-blog-with-mustang-sally3\/","title":"Ride Around The Blog With Mustang Sally","date_published":"2025-02-12T06:00:00+00:00","summary":"Find out what classic rock hit's singer and co-author described the song as \"trying to be a Motown song but it didn't quite get it\". Plus what Hollywood actor, director and producer made his debut into the Billboard Hot 100s, in this week's Mustang Music Memories.","content_html":"<p><span style=\"font-size:16px;\"><strong>This Week&#39;s Mustang Music Memories:<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n\n<p>This week in 1971, Santana debuted Oye Como Va on Billboard Hot 100s. The title simply means, Come and Enjoy.<\/p>\n\n<p>In &#39;72 Harry Nilsson had the number one hit with Without You and the group America made it&#39;s debut into the Hot 100s with Horse With No Name.<\/p>\n\n<p>The B-side to Layla, Eric Clapton&#39;s Derek and the Dominos&#39; Bell Bottom Blues made it&#39;s debut this week in &#39;73.&nbsp; Clapton wrote Layla for Pattie Boyd who was George Harrison&#39;s wife at the time.&nbsp; Many have speculated that Bell Bottom Blues was written for her also; however, according to Songfacts.com the song&#39;s co-author, Bobby Whitlock, has said it&#39;s about a girl Clapton dated for a week in France who &quot;was like a Persian princess or something, and she wore bell bottoms&quot;.<\/p>\n\n<p>Linda Ronstadt hit the number one spot with You&#39;re No Good this week in 1975.&nbsp; Ronstadt had been performing the song since &#39;73 including a televised performance on an episode of&nbsp;<em>The Midnight Special&nbsp;<\/em>in December of that year.<\/p>\n\n<p>In &#39;78, Electric Light Orchestra debuted Sweet Talkin&#39; Woman.<\/p>\n\n<p>Blondie debuted Heart of Glass this week in &#39;79 and Call Me in &#39;80.<\/p>\n\n<p>In 1980, the Pretenders had the number one hit with Brass In Pocket, co-written by lead singer Chrissie Hynde.&nbsp; Paul Zollo of American Songwriter wrote, &quot;musically, Hynde, described &#39;Brass in Pocket&#39; as &#39;trying to be a&nbsp;Motown&nbsp;song, but it didn&#39;t quite get it.&#39;&quot;&nbsp; That could explain the phrase, &quot;Detroit leaning&quot;; which was a way of driving with one hand on the wheel and in particular steering with the wrist while at the same time leaning waaay back and to the side.<\/p>\n\n<p>In &#39;82, the J Geils Band debuted Freeze Frame and Stevie Nicks debuted Edge of Seventeen.<\/p>\n\n<p>In &#39;83, the Clash debuted Should I Stay Or Should I Go.<\/p>\n\n<p>Clint Eastwood made his debut into the Billboard Hot 100s in 1984 on TG Sheppard&#39;s Make My Day.&nbsp; On a side note, Eastwood&nbsp;reached number one on the Hot Country Songs chart in July 1980&nbsp;with his duet with Merle Haggard, Bar Room Buddies.<\/p>","author":{"name":"Sally"},"_mobile_inapp_url":"https:\/\/2112-68ada896318cf.radiocms.com\/_app_pages\/stations\/5320\/blogs\/posts\/79054"},{"id":"o1282-1832-67a1401aba58d","url":"https:\/\/2112-68ada896318cf.radiocms.com\/blogs\/mustang-sally\/post\/ride-around-the-blog-with-mustang-sally2\/","title":"Ride Around The Blog With Mustang Sally","date_published":"2025-02-03T22:15:00+00:00","summary":"Find out what song Jimi Hendrix told Kenny Rogers was his all time favorite song.","content_html":"<p>This week&#39;s Mustang Music Memories:<\/p>\n\n<p>In 1964, the Beatles had the number one hit with I Want to Hold Your Hand and debuted I Saw Her Standing There; and, in &#39;65 they debuted Eight Days A Week.<\/p>\n\n<p>In 1968, the First Edition, with Kenny Rogers as lead vocals, debuted the psychedelic rock song, Just Dropped In (To See What Condition My Condition Was In).&nbsp; It became Kenny Rogers&#39; first top 10 hit.&nbsp; According to Rogers, he met Jimi Hendrix at a bar in Miami and Hendrix told him that Just Dropped In was his favorite song <em>ever<\/em>.&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n<p>Brewer and Shipley debuted One Toke Over The Line in &#39;71.&nbsp; Mike Brewer has always insisted that the song was just a metaphor about too much excess.<\/p>\n\n<p>In &#39;72, Yes debuted Roundabout.<\/p>\n\n<p>In 1973, Vicki Lawrence barely made her debut into the Billboards Hot 100s at number 100 with The Night The Lights Went Out In Georgia; however, it only took four weeks to reach number one.<\/p>\n\n<p>In &#39;75, Queen debuted Killer Queen and Ringo Starr debuted the No No Song (research indicates that Ringo has remained alcohol and drug free for several decades).<\/p>\n\n<p>Men At Work had the number one hit this week in 1983 with Down Under.<\/p>\n\n<p>In &#39;86, Robert Palmer debuted Addicted To Love.<\/p>\n\n<p>In 1987, Bon Jovi had the number one hit with Living On A Prayer.&nbsp; Written by Desmond Child and Paul Stanley (KISS), Child told Songfacts in a 2023 interview that &quot;The message is, ...we&#39;re not going to give up.&nbsp; Even in the face of failure, we keep trying.&nbsp; And that&#39;s the American Way.&quot;<\/p>","author":{"name":"Sally"},"_mobile_inapp_url":"https:\/\/2112-68ada896318cf.radiocms.com\/_app_pages\/stations\/5320\/blogs\/posts\/78915"},{"id":"o1282-1832-6797ff92b5e84","url":"https:\/\/2112-68ada896318cf.radiocms.com\/blogs\/mustang-sally\/post\/ride-around-the-blog-with-mustang-sally1\/","title":"Ride Around the Blog with Mustang Sally","date_published":"2025-01-27T21:50:00+00:00","summary":"Find out what hit single's music video MTV chose in 1999 as the 13th worst videos of all time.","content_html":"<p>This Week&#39;s Mustang Music Memories:<\/p>\n\n<p>In 1969, Crimson and Clover by&nbsp;Tommy James and the Shondells was number one, while Someday Soon by Judy Collins made its debuted on Billboards Hot 100s.<\/p>\n\n<p>Written by Paul McCartney, Badfinger&#39;s Come and Get It debuted in 1970.<\/p>\n\n<p>I&#39;m Just A Singer In A Rock and Roll Band by the Moody Blues debuted in 1973.<\/p>\n\n<p>This this week in 1982, from their Freeze Frame Album, the J. Geils Band had the number one hit with Centerfold; Joan Jett and the Blackhearts debuted I Love Rock and Roll -- this was the first release with the Blackhearts.<\/p>\n\n<p>In &#39;83, Journey debuted Separate Ways (Worlds Apart) and went on to spend four weeks at number one. The video, released less than a month later, was chosen in 1999 as MTV&#39;s 13th worse videos of &quot;All Time&quot;.&nbsp; Steve Perry&#39;s defense, &quot;We&#39;re musicians, not actors&quot;.<\/p>\n\n<p>Number one this week in &#39;84, Foreigner with I Want To Know What Love Is.<\/p>\n\n<p>Making its debut this week in &#39;86, John &quot;Cougar&quot; Mellencamp&#39;s R-O-C-K in the USA from his Scarecrow album.&nbsp; John Mellencamp produced the album under the alias &quot;Little Bastard&quot; taken from the name James Dean had decaled on his Porsche .&nbsp; It would be the first time Mellencamp credited himself this way but it would not be the last.&nbsp; Look for the &quot;Little Bastard&quot; on your old albums and CDs.<\/p>\n\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>","author":{"name":"Sally"},"_mobile_inapp_url":"https:\/\/2112-68ada896318cf.radiocms.com\/_app_pages\/stations\/5320\/blogs\/posts\/78836"},{"id":"o1282-1832-678ea2be24a3c","url":"https:\/\/2112-68ada896318cf.radiocms.com\/blogs\/mustang-sally\/post\/ride-around-the-blog-with-mustang-sally\/","title":"Ride Around the Blog with Mustang Sally","date_published":"2025-01-20T19:23:00+00:00","summary":"I Heard It Through The Grapevine that this week in 1988, the California Raisins made their Billboard Hot 100 debut.","content_html":"<p>This Week In Rock-n-Roll History:<\/p>\n\n<p>In 1988, the California Raisins made their Billboards Hot 100 debut with I Heard It Through The Grapevine.&nbsp; The song would go on to reach #84 before dropping off the charts; however, this was only the beginning of one of the most enduring advertising and marketing campaigns.&nbsp; Many of the items created for the advertising campaign and the associated merchandise are on display at the Smithsonian Institute.&nbsp;&nbsp;<\/p>\n\n<p>Also this week in RnR history:<\/p>\n\n<p>In &#39;85, Julian Lennon debuted his debut song, Too Late For Goodbyes on Billboards Hot 100.<\/p>\n\n<p>In &#39;82, 867-5309\/Jenny by Tommy Tutone also made it&#39;s debut.<\/p>\n\n<p>John Lennon had the number one hit with (Just Like) Starting Over in &#39;81.<\/p>\n\n<p>In &#39;78, Van Halen made their debut on Billboards Hot 100 with a remake of the Kink&#39;s 1969 You Really Got Me.&nbsp; Eddie Van Halen remembered hearing it for the first time on the radio at 2:00 in the morning and woke his parents up screaming, &quot;We&#39;re on the radio! We&#39;re on the radio!&quot;<\/p>\n\n<p>Ringo Starr had the number one hit this week in &#39;74 with You&#39;re 16. Harry Nilsson sang backup and Paul McCartney made the kazoo sound (the album credits McCartney with a solo sax; however, he played a homemade kazoo on Sergeant Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band track Lovely Rita.&nbsp; Judge for yourselves).<\/p>\n\n<p>In &#39;73, David Bowie&#39;s Space Oddity made its debut on Billboards Hot 100.<\/p>\n\n<p>Number one this week in rock-n-roll history in 1971, Don McLean&#39;s American Pie.&nbsp; The phrase, &quot;the day the music died&quot; refers to the February 3, 1959 plane crash that killed Buddy Holly, Richie Valens, and JP &quot;The Bopper&quot; Richardson.<\/p>","author":{"name":"Mustang Sally"},"_mobile_inapp_url":"https:\/\/2112-68ada896318cf.radiocms.com\/_app_pages\/stations\/5320\/blogs\/posts\/78741"}]}