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What do you see?
The sun is a-risin'
Most definitely
A new day is comin', whoo-hoo
People are changin'
Ain't it beautiful, whoo-hoo
Crystal blue persuasion
Better get ready
Gonna see the light
Love, love is the answer, whoo-hoo
And that's all right
So don't you give up now, whoo-hoo
It's so easy to find
Just look to your soul (Look to your soul)
And open your mind
Crystal blue persuasion
Mm-hmm
It's a new vibration
Crystal blue persuasion
Crystal
Blue persuasion
Maybe tomorrow
When he looks down
On every green field, whoo-hoo
And every town
All of his children
In every nation
There'll be peace and good
Brotherhood
Crystal blue persuasion
Yeah
Crystal blue persuasion, aha
Crystal blue persuasion, aha
Crystal blue persuasion, aha (Oh)
Crystal blue persuasion, aha
Crystal blue persuasion, aha
Crystal blue persuasion, aha
Crystal blue persuasion, aha
Summer of '87? Subtract about 18 years or so and you're in the ballpark....
Reminds me of something different: Cooking with Walt
I'd never heard this before, and was convinced it had to be some 90s outfit from Manchester attempting a retro sound.
In a way, maybe that speaks well of Tommy James!
CFRA-AM, Ottawa here. This song was enjoyable even on an awful sound system.
Wow... great song. I had to stop what i was doing to listen.
Graham
Somewhere in Kuwait....
Reminds me of something different: Cooking with Walt
Wow... great song. I had to stop what i was doing to listen.
Graham
Somewhere in Kuwait....
That's a great way to put it. Junior high school, nervous as a whore in church. Trying to get the nerve up to ask a girl to dance.
-John
"nervous as a whore in church" -
That's a great way to put it. Junior high school, nervous as a whore in church. Trying to get the nerve up to ask a girl to dance.
-John
In a 1985 interview in Hitch magazine, James said the title of the song came to him while he was reading the Biblical Book of Revelation:
I took the title from the Book of Revelations in the Bible, reading about the New Jerusalem. The words jumped out at me, and they're not together; they're spread out over three or four verses. But it seemed to go together, it's my favorite of all my songs and one of our most requested.
According to James's manager, James was actually inspired by his readings of the Book of Ezekiel, which (he remembered as) speaking of a blue Shekhinah light that represented the presence of the Almighty God, and of the Book of Isaiah and Book of Revelation, which tell of a future age of brotherhood of mankind, living in peace and harmony.
9 years old...the radio is playing...life is good...and so is this.
not a bad place to be
I didn't either when this was a HUGE radio smash back then. It didn't match up to Led Zeppelin, Hendrix, Cream, Doors, Traffic, et al., which is where I was at.
But now I really appreciate it, probably due to its nostalgia. It's also very listenable. And I like how these oldies are mixed in with all of the other genres we hear here. That's generally how I listen to my own collection, thanks to MP3s and digital audio players running in random mode, ala RP.
Heisenberg´s song!
Brings a smile to my face.
Tommy James has been doing reunion tours recently in the past few years.
Days of youth long gone
summertime hot, cicadas singing
cool water in the creek
nowhere to go
man we had it all
Meth.
Hammond organ.....wooooooooooooo
Brings a smile to my face.
Hah! That's nothin' - I remember valve radios. Not that they were especially portable, mind you
The father of a friend graduated engineering in the 50s. His grad paper was about the vacuum tube and he assured us that the paper was cutting edge :) He also claimed that vacuum tubes were still in use in submarines at least into the 80s. Apparently they had some advantage in those circumstances but I don't remember what that advantage was supposed to be if I ever knew.
n4ku wrote:
Yes! On the transistor radio, at the beach. Early 70's?
Yes! This song totally brings back that warm sun, sand, beach memory...
Sure you want to know? :)
Shondell (n): a backup musician, singer, or dancer, who is not otherwise important enough to have a name. Typically found in the company of a primary musician, singer, or dancer, who is important enough to have the name "Tommy James."
That could lead to some hanky panky.
Chillax
fredriley wrote:
Hah! That's nothin' - I remember valve radios. Not that they were especially portable, mind you . I also remember building very basic radio sets with transistors (usually burning them out because I didn't know how to solder properly), diodes, capacitors and tuning coils. Again, those weren't right portable, or even working...
I think folk these days, when you've millions of transistors etched on a microchip, forget just how revolutionary the transistor was in the 60s, and why the phrase 'solid state' (meaning transistor circuits) was such a strong selling point for electronic items, including high-end stereo amps. The transistor has to be up there in the top 10 of world-shaking inventions. Portable transistor radios were the 'must have' cool item in those days, particularly for music and football (soccer, to youse across the Pond) fans. Transistor radios had the same kudos then as iPods do these days. Really.
Ok, that's enough of All Our Yesterdays...
stevano wrote:
Sure you want to know? :)
Funny. I remember, and can still picture, my first transistor radio. It was a Hitachi and I probably got it in about 1963 or thereabouts. Remember when such radios used to proudly display how many transistors they had on the case? My Hitachi was an "eight transistor" model and was vastly superior, I'm sure, to my friend's "six transistor."
Hah! That's nothin' - I remember valve radios. Not that they were especially portable, mind you . I also remember building very basic radio sets with transistors (usually burning them out because I didn't know how to solder properly), diodes, capacitors and tuning coils. Again, those weren't right portable, or even working...
I think folk these days, when you've millions of transistors etched on a microchip, forget just how revolutionary the transistor was in the 60s, and why the phrase 'solid state' (meaning transistor circuits) was such a strong selling point for electronic items, including high-end stereo amps. The transistor has to be up there in the top 10 of world-shaking inventions. Portable transistor radios were the 'must have' cool item in those days, particularly for music and football (soccer, to youse across the Pond) fans. Transistor radios had the same kudos then as iPods do these days. Really.
Ok, that's enough of All Our Yesterdays...
martinc wrote:
Great summer. I was still in high school!
martinc wrote:
Yes! On the transistor radio, at the beach. Early 70's?
Funny. I remember, and can still picture, my first transistor radio. It was a Hitachi and I probably got it in about 1963 or thereabouts. Remember when such radios used to proudly display how many transistors they had on the case? My Hitachi was an "eight transistor" model and was vastly superior, I'm sure, to my friend's "six transistor."
exceptional !!!! So much better than a lot of stuff we hear today.
Me too
Thanks Bill
On_The_Beach wrote:
From Wikipedia:
"The title of the song came to James while he was reading The Bible's Book of Revelation, according to James in a 1985 interview in Hitch magazine:
"I took the title from the Book of Revelations in the Bible, reading about the New Jerusalem. The words jumped out at me, and they're not together; they're spread out over three or four verses. But it seemed to go together, it's my favorite of all my songs and one of our most requested."
However some sources cite the Song of Solomon instead. It has also been suggested that this song was also inspired by a book James had read called The Truth That Leads to Eternal Life by the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society (Jehovah's Witnesses).
The book gives information about the future of mankind based on Scripture, and has a blue cover. However, according to James's manager, James was actually inspired by his reading of the Book of Ezekiel where it speaks of the Blue Shekinah Light which represented the presence of the Almighty God and the Books of Isaiah and Revelation where it speaks of a bright future of a brotherhood of mankind living in peace and harmony."
No kidding. It's a reference to a Jehovah's Witness book, traditionally blue covered. If not exactly true, it's how the Witnesses think of the song, and I tend to believe that they're correct. Blue...persuasion.
From Wikipedia:
"The title of the song came to James while he was reading The Bible's Book of Revelation, according to James in a 1985 interview in Hitch magazine:
"I took the title from the Book of Revelations in the Bible, reading about the New Jerusalem. The words jumped out at me, and they're not together; they're spread out over three or four verses. But it seemed to go together, it's my favorite of all my songs and one of our most requested."
However some sources cite the Song of Solomon instead. It has also been suggested that this song was also inspired by a book James had read called The Truth That Leads to Eternal Life by the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society (Jehovah's Witnesses).
The book gives information about the future of mankind based on Scripture, and has a blue cover. However, according to James's manager, James was actually inspired by his reading of the Book of Ezekiel where it speaks of the Blue Shekinah Light which represented the presence of the Almighty God and the Books of Isaiah and Revelation where it speaks of a bright future of a brotherhood of mankind living in peace and harmony."
Yes! On the transistor radio, at the beach. Early 70's?
i don't see it. . . but everyone's got their own perception, persuasion,
where exactly does the "crystal" come in?
dmax wrote:
No kidding. It's a reference to a Jehovah's Witness book, traditionally blue covered. If not exactly true, it's how the Witnesses think of the song, and I tend to believe that they're correct. Blue...persuasion.
Tommy looked WAY too mod on Ed Sullivan...in particular, he looked really out-of-place with ruffled shirt cuffs. Hec tried oh-so-hard to appear hip when he was really out of the Pat Boone mold. Nevertheless, I like this tune simply for its nostalgia value.
My impression—and I love these guys—was of an American "matching outfits" band (think early Sam the Sham and the Pharaohs, Joey Dee and the Starliters, Jimmy Gilmer and the Fireballs, or a dozen others from the mid to late '60s) that had gravitated to psychedelia. Both Paul Revere and the Raiders and the Young Rascals started out that way—hell, so did The Beatles. What's cool about this track is the deep undercurrent of blue-eyed soul, James's stock-in-trade that he clung to despite the paisley pretentions and Biblical overtones.
My late brother & I loved TJ and the Shondells—their songs were always distinctive and made you take notice in a time when there was a lot of excellent music on the radio. Miss that time.
this takes me back to my earliest memories of music, please tell me when this was first released, it's not been easy to find online with so many reissues
According to AMG, it was released in 1969. I will dig out my LPs later and see if I can confirm that.