So, without further ado, here are the titles and artists.
Sakura saku - Hayashibara Megumi
The title means “Sakura blooms.” Anime fans will recognize this as the theme song to the Love Hina TV series.
Don’t know much about history
This is actually not a song title, but the rather famous opening to the song (What a) Wonderful World, first recorded by Sam Cooke (and written by Cooke, Herb Alpert, and Lou Adler). The version I have is a cover by Art Garfunkel, with help from James Taylor and Paul Simon.
Dancing Queen – ABBA
Their only #1 hit in the U.S. -- and oddly enough, perhaps my least favorite ABBA song.
Grand Designs – Rush
From Power Windows.
Good-bye Season - Moritaka Chisato
One of her early songs.
Congratulations - Traveling Wilburys
Lead vocals by Bob Dylan on this one.
Graduation - U-ka Saegusa in db
A kind of weird band name, pronounced “Yuka Saegusa in decibel.” High school graduation is a Big Deal in Japan, and there are a lot of popular songs about it. I can’t think of any by Western artists.
You can make history (young again) - Elton John
Natural Science – Rush
This time from Permanent Waves.
Jet Airliner - Steve Miller Band
This song dates itself by mentioning getting on a 707.
Going History - Hayashibara Megumi
Black Wall - Dennis deYoung
This song gets a special mention for being one of the few that is actually about what the blog post is about – Dennis wrote the song about the Vietnam War, with specific reference to the Memorial.
This war keeps hanging on as if it were today
‘Cause many a good man died on the road from Tet to Hue
They won every battle they fought but the one that raged at home
And now the only words that count are the names carved out in stone
A very cool song that kept going through my head as we looked at those names carved out in stone.
Jefferson – Roxette
I Love To See The Temple – Primary song
Digital Rhapsody – Hirose Kohmi
Out In The Country – Three Dog Night
Drive My Car – The Beatles
She’s Gone – Hall and Oates
Fifteen Minutes of Fame – Randy Bachman
Bachman was the founder and lead guitarist for The Guess Who and Bachman-Turner Overdrive. I accidentally used this title twice.
What’s Your Name – Boston
Lesser-known song from their Walk On album. Lynyrd Skynyrd did a much more famous song with the same name, which is kinda cool because that song specifically mentions Boise, Idaho. But that coolness can’t cancel out the fact that it’s a rather skanky song. So I choose the title to be from the Boston tune instead.
love the island – Suzuki Ami
Her first single, this song was an official campaign song to promote tourism in Guam. That makes this song about what the blog post was about, too.
Sweet and Innocent – Donny Osmond
Rock Islands – Sugiyama Kiyotaka
This song is also kind of about what the post was about -- Japanese tourists visiting a Pacific island.
Octopus’s Garden – The Beatles
Written, and with lead vocal, by Ringo. I think this is the first (and maybe only?) song Ringo wrote that made it onto a Beatles album.
Big in Japan – Alphaville
Sayonara – Off Course
As you might expect, there are scads of songs with this title, but the Off Course song is my favorite.
Spirits in the Material World – Police
Dance the Night Away – Van Halen
In My Life – The Beatles
Thankful – Kelly Clarkson
Roll The Bones – Rush
Snowball fallin’ on my head – Favorite Blue
Don’t Fence Me In – Bing Crosby and The Andrew Sisters
Written by Cole Porter, based on a poem by Bob Fletcher, it has been sung by a lot of famous folks over the years. For this version, Bing walked into the studio having never seen or heard the song before, and within 30 minutes learned it and recorded the final version. It was #1 on the charts for eight weeks and sold over a million copies. Not bad for a half-hour’s work.
A Little Christmas Music – The King’s Singers
Castle Walls – Styx
Ring of Fire – Johnny Cash
Total Eclipse of the Heart – Bonnie Tyler
Gift – Sakamoto Maaya
At Christmas – Hanson
Splish Splash – Bobby Darin
It's amazing how goofy songs like this used to be so popular...
Far East Café – Oda Kazumasa
Seventeen – Foreigner
White Room – Cream
I Love a Piano – Tony Bennett
An old standard written by Irving Berlin.
Pictures at an Exhibition
A classical piano piece written by Modest Mussorgsky. No, I didn't know that until I looked it up on Google to write this blurb.
Flowers Never Bend With the Rainfall – Simon and Garfunkel
Birthday – The Beatles
Fourth title from the Fab Four on this list, putting them in the lead (Rush is in second, with three).
Sakura no toki – aiko
Fly Like An Eagle – Steve Miller Band
Dear mother, all flowers remind me of you
Not a song title, but a line from the Mother’s Day Primary song I Often Go Walking.
Beautiful Music – Barry Manilow
And, to be self-referential, the title of this post:
Wait for an Answer – Heart
We now return you to your regularly scheduled family-related blog posts.
1 comment:
So we didn't do so well. We did figure out the primary songs though.
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