'Debby' is the name of that hurricane harassing Florida? Disasters should be named after disasters: 'Hillary,' 'Kamala,' 'Nancy,' 'Gretchen,' . . .
Earl Scruggs and Friends, Foggy Mountain Breakdown
Ella Fitzgerald, Misty. Beats the Johnny Mathis version. A standard from the Great American Songbook.
Jimi Hendrix, Purple Haze. Not from the Great American Songbook. And presumably not about weather conditions. 'Scuse me while I kiss the sky? Or: 'Scuse me while I kiss this guy?
Cream, Sunshine of Your Love
Tom Waits, Emotional Weather Report
Art Garfunkel and James Taylor, Crying in the Rain. Written by Carole King and popularized by the Everly Bros.
Ramblin' Jack Elliot, Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain. Written by Fred Rose and performed by Roy Acuff in the '40s.
Now my hair is turned to silver
All my life I've loved in vain
I can see her star in heaven
Blue eyes cryin' in the rain.Someday when we meet up yonder
We'll stroll hand in hand again
In a land that knows no parting
Blue eyes crying in the rain.
Allman Bros., Blue Sky
Kansas, Dust in the Wind
Eric Clapton, Let It Rain
Dave van Ronk and the Hudson Dusters, Clouds ("Both Sides Now"). This beautiful version by "The Mayor of MacDougal Street" goes out to Oregon luthier Dave Bagwill who I know will appreciate it. Judy Collins made a hit of it. And you still doubt that the '60s was the greatest decade for American popular music? Speaking of the greatest decade, it was when the greatest writer of American popular songs, bar none, Bob Dylan, made his mark. Some generational chauvinism is justified!
Joan Baez, A Hard Rain's A Gonna Fall Could Johnny Mercer write a song like this?
Eva Cassidy, Over the Rainbow. Another old standard from the Great American Songbook.
Tom Waits, On a Foggy Night
Rolling Stones, She's a Rainbow
Dan Fogelberg, Rhythm of the Rain
Cascades, Rhythm of the Rain. The original.
Dee Clark, Raindrops. Manny Mora:
"Raindrops" is a 1961 song by the American R&B singer Dee Clark. Released in April of that same year, this ballad peaked at position 2 on the Hot 100 and at position 3 on the R&B chart. [. . .]
Clark's biggest hit was also his last. [. . .]
Clark had a brief revival in 1975 when his song "Ride a Wild Horse" became a surprise Top 30 hit in the UK Singles Chart, becoming his first chart hit in the UK since "Just Keep It Up." Afterwards, Clark performed mostly on the oldies circuit. By the late 1980s, he was in dire straits financially, living in a welfare hotel in Toccoa, Georgia. Despite suffering a stroke in 1987 that left him partially paralyzed and with a mild speech impediment, he continued to perform until his death on December 7th 1990, in Smyrna, Georgia, from a heart attack at the age of 52. His last concert was with the Jimmy Gilstrap Band at the Portman Lounge in Anderson, South Carolina.
Dave Bagwill sends us to a clip in which Dave van Ronk talks a bit about the days of the "Great American Folk Scare" and then sings his signature number, "Green, Green, Rocky Road."
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