Saturday, September 22, 2007

KFXM Tiger Mag Sept 22, 1967

Association picture and artcile and #1 with Never My Love Pictures of Dick Lyons, Charlie Walters and Al Anthony
Otis Redding article. He is just starting to make it big.

Rock & Roll Woman-Buffalo Springfield up to #9 from 37 last week
Incense & Peppermints-Strawberry Alarm Clock highest debut this week
Local group The light with Music Box/Back Up
I really like Holiday by The Bee Gees new on the charts. I remember hearing the flip side Every Christian Lion Hearted Man Will Show You


6 comments:

Anonymous said...

--BEE GEES flip was also good but
did it get airplay? Every christian.......
--MUSIC BOX finally shows up.
This one definitely makes me
remember the Fall of 67!
If you don't have it, and it's kinda
hard to get even as an MP3, leave
your email addy here and I will forward you an MP3 of it.
It was a local group, THE LIGHT, that had this song. Played a lot
locally so we consider it a hit.

Anonymous said...

I remember the first time I heard "Holiday" on the radio. Gary Marshall played it on KFXM as I was driving on Mills. "Rock 'n Roll Woman" was the best from Buffalo Springfield. Jonny Bruce

Anonymous said...

Buffalo had a lot of good
stuff. But ON THE WAY HOME is
my favorite. Maybe Johnny
Bruce remembers it but that
was being played by scabs while
JB was on the picket line.
Remember November 1968??

Anonymous said...

Don't remember playing the flip of HOLIDAY, but early BeeGees were all super. Love ON THE WAY HOME too.... Johnny Helm

Anonymous said...

The good thing about ON THE WAY
HOME is that all you needed to
do was play a jingle and
let it rip. It took care of
itself. No need to walk up to it.

Anonymous said...

I had never heard HEAVY MUSIC.
Today I was listening to RBRoldies
on the internet. Kept listening
to the lyrics and figured it
was that song. Sure enough,
it was the Gary Marshall Pick Hit.
I had remembered seeing it recently
on a chart. It was here.
Not a bad rockin song. Why wasn't
this a bigger hit. Looks like
it disappeared and didn't make
a dent. But Bob Seger sure made
it big in the mid-late 70s.