Monday, June 15, 2026

The Monarchs IV – Surge / Weekend

It’s brutely scorching outside — the kind of heat that feels personally offended you dared to exist. Luckily, Cooper and I are early‑morning creatures, sneaking out while it’s still dark enough that the sun can’t tattletale on us. He struts around like he’s running a secret society of dawn‑patrollers, and honestly, I’m just honored to be his plus‑one.

I didn’t get much recording done this weekend… my ADHD staged a tiny, adorable mutiny and I spent two days hopping between half‑projects like a gremlin with a clipboard. Monday morning drag music comes from an April session — Past Me tossed Present Me a little stash like, “You’re gonna need this, buddy.”

The Monarchs IV revved things up on “Surge” like they were trying to jump‑start the entire weekend. Meanwhile, I was over here wishing someone would jump‑start me.  Anyway, I’m tossing the doors open for requests — go ahead, try to stump the ole chump and his record collection. I dare you. I double‑dog dare you. Cooper triple‑dog dares you, and he plays for keeps. He’s already pawed through the shelves and picked something obscure just to mess with you. He lives for this.


Sunday, June 14, 2026

Brother Prince Dixon - I'm Glad I'm Free/ In The Spirit Of The Lord

WAKE UP, MY FRIENDS, because the spirit isn’t just stirring — it’s kicking the doors off the hinges this morning. Brother Prince Dixon just delivered the kind of soul‑medicine that hits harder than a week’s worth of struggle. After the days I’ve had, this record didn’t just play… it ROARED, it JUMPED, it shot pure hope and holy optimism straight into my chest like gospel adrenaline in 45‑RPM form

And you already know when it comes to these Peacock 45s, I’m a hopeless case. I’m knee‑deep, heart‑deep, spirit‑deep baptized in that sound. But this one? This one feels like the moment the choir stands up, the organ swells, and the whole room catches fire.

From what I can tell, this might’ve been Brother Prince’s very first release — and if that’s true, then the man didn’t just hit a homerun… he sent that ball into the next county and had time to shout “GLORY!” before it landed. A little digging shows he later rose to fame in the ’70s lifting souls with the Jackson Southernaires, and even led his own Gospel Caravan like a man who knew exactly where the road to joy was paved. And get this — there’s a whole documentary about it streaming for FREE! That’s not a suggestion — that’s destiny. Sounds like the perfect date-night flick for me and the missus, because she’s got the spirit too- it will be time for feet up, hearts full, spirit fed.

Saturday, June 13, 2026

The Yellow Payges - Jezebel/ We Got A Love In The Makin

It’s been a week — and not the charming kind people put on inspirational calendars. No, this one came with the good, the bad, and the kind of ugly that makes you stare into the middle distance and reconsider your life choices.

The good: Cooper the Wonder Dog and I have been tearing up the streets on our early‑morning walks like a couple of retirees training for the Senior Olympics. Spirits high, steps counted, squirrels intimidated.

The bad: My wife gave me a magnificent 22‑ounce Father’s Day coffee mug — a heroic vessel capable of holding enough caffeine to keep me marginally functional. I managed to keep it alive for three days before gravity and my own clumsiness teamed up to assassinate it. Of course.

The ugly: Last month I bought new tires for the ol’ Chevy Colorado, which felt only slightly less invasive than donating a kidney. Then, a week ago Friday, some renegade metal stick decided to reenact a jousting tournament with my sidewall. The tire lost spectacularly. Thankfully, the warranty covered it, because apparently I’ve already sacrificed enough organs to the automotive gods.

And yet, here I sit, surprisingly zen. It’s the weekend, and my biggest crisis is choosing the final cover‑version post of the week — a problem I’ll gladly take over, say, another tire impalement. I’m already “planning” next month’s cover version series, (and by “planning,” I mean I’ve said out loud that I’ll probably do it).

Today’s pick comes from a group that deserved far more love than they ever got. I’ve owned all their 45s and their lone album — the kind of collection that makes people squint and say, “Who?”. Their final single peaked at #102 on Billboard’s Bubbling Under chart, which is basically the musical equivalent of being told, “You almost made varsity, champ.”

But their second 45? That one slaps. They tackle the classic “Jezebel” like Mark McGwire swinging for the fences — minus the pharmaceutical assistance. And the B‑side? Also a scorcher. Another forgotten 45 sinking gracefully into the swamp of music history… and, naturally, into my collection.








Friday, June 12, 2026

Otis Williams And The Charms - I Fall To Pieces/Gotta Get Myself Together

Otis surprising singing I Fall to Pieces is one of those cosmic jokes the universe slips into the crate just to see if you’re paying attention. I’m not convinced he ever heard Patsy Cline’s version, and I’m positive she would’ve given him that slow, disappointed head‑tilt teachers reserve for kids who eat paste. He rushes through the song so fast the fall doesn’t even have time to register — it’s less “tragic heartbreak” and more “oops, tripped on a rug, moving on.”

And yet… I want more. Because somewhere out there, Otis recorded a country album in 1971. A whole album. Country. Otis. This is the kind of magic that keeps crate‑diggers awake at night, staring at the ceiling like, “Did he yodel? Did he wear a hat? Did he mean it?” I want it in my hands yesterday!

Before all this chaos, he was out there with the Charms in the mid‑’50s, polishing that sweet Doo Wop shine until it gleamed. Things were going fine until the Army showed up like an overzealous mall cop and escorted his career off the premises. He came back swinging with some Okeh soul 45s, but success kept dodging him like it owed him money.

Honestly, the man might’ve had a shot if anyone had bothered to flip the record over. Because that B‑side? That’s the real fire. That’s where Otis stops being polite and starts being Otis. I can see it perfectly: the lights low, the stage vibrating, the go‑go girls swirling around him like a technicolor tornado while he tears into Gotta Get Myself Together like he’s trying to convince both the audience and himself. “Gotta Get Myself Together Right Away, Hey, Hey Hey…” he shouts, and you can practically hear the drummer thinking, “Buddy, same.”

Thursday, June 11, 2026

California Spectrum- She May Call You Up Tonight/Rainbo

I always come back from trips home to Colorado with something interesting, but this time the souvenir wasn’t a postcard or a bag of green‑chile pretzels — it was a 45 plucked from a bin of unsleeved orphans in a Florence Colorado antique store. Four for a buck, the kind of deal that promises disappointment with a wink. But record digging is a faith-based sport: you endure 999 cracked polka singles so that number 1,000 can walk up, tap you on the shoulder, and whisper, hey…I’m the one.

This one absolutely was. I didn’t know it was collectible, and I had zero clue who the band was, but I got that little brain‑zap — the collector’s sixth sense that says, nope, this isn’t trash; pay attention. The hook was immediate: a cover of one of my all-time favorite Left Banke songs, “She May Call You Up Tonight,” and this version doesn’t just do it justice — it floats. Pure bliss, like someone bottled the exact moment a summer evening turns golden.

Then came the kicker. California Spectrum wasn’t just some mystery group; tucked inside were Danny and Shaun Harris, born just down the road in Colorado Springs, long before they drifted west and plugged into The West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band. That’s the kind of résumé that deserves to be printed on linen paper and framed above a turntable.

The B‑side sounds like Sputnik didn’t just fall out of orbit — it showed up drunk, skidded across the atmosphere, and belly‑flopped into Earth.

A quarter well spent. A universe well played.


Wednesday, June 10, 2026

First Class - Funny How Love Can Be/ Surfer Queen

Oh wow — what is it with record companies and their obsession with assembling fake groups? Here we go again.

This studio creation featured Tony Burrows, the undisputed Olympic gold medalist of studio‑only pop vocals. The man was basically a one‑man British Invasion, whose voice powered a whole parade of one‑hit wonders under at least five different band names. He’s the voice behind “Love Grows (Where My Rosemary Goes)” by Edison Lighthouse, “United We Stand” by Brotherhood of Man, “My Baby Loves Lovin’” by White Plains (some despite on this one), “Gimme Dat Ding” by the Pipkins, and “Beach Baby” by First Class.

At this point, Burrows wasn’t just singing hits — he was speed‑running the entire concept of “one‑hit wonder.” Naturally, Beach Baby hits #4 in the U.S. charts  and the record company immediately panics:“Quick! We need a touring band!” Meanwhile the studio musicians are looking around like, “Tour? Us? Oh no, sweetie, we don’t tour. We overdub.” So the label does what labels do: they slap the First Class name on a touring band and more 45s and hope no one notices the band is about as real as Bigfoot. Today’s cover‑version curiosity was one of those attempts — a minor U.S. hit that barely cracked the charts at #74, which is basically the chart equivalent of “participation trophy.”

I kept wondering why they covered this particular song. Then it clicked. John Carter — the producer who assembled First Class — wasn’t just behind the curtain. He was the original singer and writer of the song back when he was in the Ivy League, a mid‑60s UK band that had approximately zero impact in the States. I own their original version, which means I’m one of maybe twelve people on Earth who do.

So really, this wasn’t a cover. This was Carter saying, “You know what? Let’s give my old tune a second chance. Maybe this time people will actually hear it.”



Tuesday, June 09, 2026

Huxton Creepers - Pretty Flamingo

Why not keep the obscure‑cover streak alive. Once you start digging in that corner of the musical attic, it’s hard to stop — everything down there glows with its own strange little light.

Take the Huxton Creepers, for example. An Australian group who, for one brief, jangly moment, nudged their way onto the Australian charts with a version of “Pretty Flamingo” so faithful you can almost see Manfred Mann nodding in approval from across the decades. It’s clean, bright, earnest — the kind of cover that doesn’t try to reinvent the wheel, just gives it a fresh spin and a little extra shine. Personally, I’ve always had a soft spot for the Tommy Roe version off the Sweet Pea LP — that slightly sugary, sun‑washed vibe he had going — but that’s me wandering off into the weeds again.

Somewhere in the archaeological dig site I call my spillout record room — or, if we’re being brutally honest, my music hoarder room — I’m pretty sure there’s a Huxton Creepers cassette on Big Time Records. It’s probably wedged sideways in a forgotten box of tapes I keep telling myself I’ll alphabetize someday.

I wrote recently about how Big Time swallowed Dumptruck whole and then spit them back out into the world, dazed and blinking. But really, you could say that about most of the bands who passed through their doors. The Creepers had talent, hooks, momentum — and a label that couldn’t quite keep its own wheels from wobbling off. The Creepers were part of that constellation: bright, promising, orbiting a star that flickered out too soon.

And maybe that’s why these obscure covers feel so good to revisit. They’re little time capsules from an alternate universe where these bands got the push they deserved — where the songs didn’t just become minor hits, but major moments. For now, though, they live in the dust and the spines and the half‑forgotten shelves of rooms like mine, waiting for the next time I decide to keep the streak going.