Generation X Offender

thedukesofatmosphere

Music Art Commentary

  1. 4 NGÀY TRƯỚC

    Elvis: The Sun Years (53-54)

    The Continuing Story of Rock N Roll: The First 70 Years 1956-2026   Elvis: The Sun Years (53-54)   Join us as we retrace the footsteps of a boy who would be King: The Developmental Years   From obscurity to regional recognition and everything in between. Missed opportunities, rejection, misdirection, augmentation, trial, error and crispy bacon, peanut butter and mashed banana sandwiches!  .    All this and MORE!   In the latest episode of The GXO Podcast hosted by none other than The Generation X Offender himself, offending friend and foe alike since 1966   Don't miss a beat!   *THE MUSIC 1941 That's When Your Heartaches Begin by The Ink Spots 1948 My Happiness by Jon & Sondra Steele 1950 It Wouldn't Be The Same Without You by Dude Martin & His Roundup Gang 1953 I'll Never Stand In Your Way by Joni James 1953 My Happiness by Elvis Presley 1953  That's When Your Heartaches Begin by Elvis Presley 1954  I'll Never Stand In Your Way by Elvis Presley 1954  It Wouldn't Be The Same Without You by Elvis Presley 1954 Without You by Jimmy Sweeney & Elvis Presley 1947 Blue Moon Of Kentucky by Bill Monroe & His Bluegrass Boys 1947 That's All Right by Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup 1954 Good Rockin' Tonight by Elvis Presley Do you have a burning desire to send us an email? Please do! info@gxopodcast.com   Want on our mailing list? Only one weekly email update, we promise! We're far too lazy to do any more. Wanna leave a comment? Need to contact us? Visit the Official Generation X Offender GXO website at www.gxopodcast.com   *Please Note: Audio portions of this podcast have been reproduced under the "Fair Use" doctrine. This use is intended to be transformative, adding perspective to the original work, serving an educational purpose rather than commercial gain. This use is intended academically and does not serve as a substitute for the original. Copyright Disclaimer - Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "Fair Use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. "Fair Use" is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.

    58 phút
  2. 19 THG 4

    1956 Pt 1

    Welcome Listeners! We have FINALLY arrived! At our Desired Destination Nineteen Hundred And Fifty Six...the Dawning of the Age of Rock N Roll Join us as we SPLASH DOWN DEEP into 1956, a year so chalk full of instant classics we had to break it down into multiple parts. 1956: PART ONE  All the hits fit to print that DIDN'T make it to Billboard's Top 50 Songs of 1956 Chart *THE MUSIC 1951 Drown In My Own Tears by Lula Reed 1956 Stranded In The Jungle by The Jay Hawks 1956 Roll Over Beethoven by Chuck Berry 1956 The Paperboy On Main Street USA by Bill Haley & His Comets 1956 Rip It Up by Little Richard 1956 Let The Good Times Roll by Shirley & Lee 1956 Fever by Little Willie John 1956 Honey Chile by Fats Domino 1956 Ballin' The Jack by Jim Lowe 1956 Love Is Strange by Mickey & Sylvia 1956 Treasure Of Love by Clyde McPhatter 1956 Please Be Mine by Frankie Lymon & the Teenagers 1956 In The Still Of The Night by The Five Satins 1956 Since I Met You Baby by Ivory Joe Hunter 1956 Drown In My Own Tears by Ray Charles 1956 Eddie My Love by The Teen Queens 1956 Stranded In The Jungle by The Cadets Do you have a burning desire to send us an email? Please do! info@gxopodcast.com   Want on our mailing list? Only one weekly email update, we promise! We're far too lazy to do any more. Wanna leave a comment? Need to contact us? Visit the Official Generation X Offender GXO website at www.gxopodcast.com   *Please Note: Audio portions of this podcast have been reproduced under the "Fair Use" doctrine. This use is intended to be transformative, adding perspective to the original work, serving an educational purpose rather than commercial gain. This use is intended academically and does not serve as a substitute for the original. Copyright Disclaimer - Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "Fair Use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. "Fair Use" is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.

    1 giờ 17 phút
  3. 12 THG 4

    Exposed! 1954-1955 Music Charts

    Our tale begins in the mid to late 40s... The 1940s Post War America The Great Cities of the East are full of electricity and light And music... Swing beat is DEAD daddio Bebop and Blues rule! Jump Swing Shout Blues   ...but this new thing, as yet, remains undefined   Founded in 1894 (solely sheet music back then kids!) Billboard Magazine didn't know what to do with it or what to call it either...   Although the area of Harlem, situated within the borough of New York City known as Manhattan, only takes up approximately 1.4 square miles (as reported by the New York City Department of City Planning in March of 2019) Billboard Magazine, began publishing a music chart directed towards the entire African American customer base of the United States in 1942.   They called this chart The Harlem Hit Parade.   Close to 50 years after the publication's inception, Billboard Magazine decided the African American music consuming demographic mattered, or rather, their money mattered (cue Randy Newman "It's Money That Matters").   Three short years later, Billboard changed the name of the chart to "The Most Played Juke Box Race Records" followed by "Best Selling Retail Race Records" in 1948. These unfortunate (and possibly even hateful) labels used to categorize a type of music are literally, the very definition of racist (look it up).   While some historians suggest the term "race" was a self referential term used by African Americans in the early part of the 20th Century, the word came to be considered offensive in the post-war world.   This prompted the editorial staff of Billboard Magazine to rename the chart "Rhythm & Blues Chart Listings" in June of 1949...   ...which is where our story begins   As this exciting new music slithered out of the primordial sludge of post War rhythm and blues, something MAGICAL happened...   Previously imposed barriers between people gradually, over time, began to shift and erode. And then...   The walls came tumblin' down!   IN TODAY'S EPISODE OF THE GXO MUSIC PODCAST:   Music Charts of 1954 & 1955 EXPOSED! Under the microscope   Come FEEL the NOISE and Celebrate with us 70 Years of Rock N Roll! (1956-2026)    *THE MUSIC   1947 She's The No Sleepin' Est Woman by T-Bone Walker 1947 Good Rockin' Tonight by Roy Brown 1955 I'm Just A Lonely Guy (All Alone) by Little Richard 1954 Work With Me Annie by Hank Ballard & The Midnighters 1954 Hey Senorita by The Penguins 1954 Don't You Know by Johnny Ace 1955 I Hear You Knockin' by Smiley Lewis 1955 Ain't That A Shame by Fats Domino 1955 Greenbacks by Ray Charles 1954 Shake Rattle And Roll by Big Joe Turner 1960 Ida Red (1938 original version) by Bill Wills & Tommy Duncan 1955 Maybellene by Chuck Berry 1955 Bo Diddley by Bo Diddley 1955 Good Rockin' Daddy by Etta James 1954 Tweedlee Dee by LaVern Baker 1953 Gee by The Crows 1954 I Wonder Why by The Cadillacs 1954 Honey Love by The Drifters (Clyde McPhatter lead vocals) 1955 Speedo by The Cadillacs 1954 Sh-Boom by The Chords 1955 Ling Ting Tong by Otis Williams & The Charms 1954 Thirteen Women (And Only One Man In Town) by Bill Haley & His Comets 1955 Only You (And You Alone) by The Platters (Tony Williams lead vocals) 1949 Run On For A Long Time by Bill Landford & The Landfordaires 1954 Any Day Now by The Soul Stirrers (Sam Cooke lead vocals)     Do you have a burning desire to send us an email? Please do! info@gxopodcast.com   Want on our mailing list? Only one weekly email update, we promise! We're far too lazy to do any more. Wanna leave a comment? Need to contact us? Visit the Official Generation X Offender GXO website at www.gxopodcast.com   *Please Note: Audio portions of this podcast have been reproduced under the "Fair Use" doctrine. This use is intended to be transformative, adding perspective to the original work, serving an educational purpose rather than commercial gain. This use is intended academically and does not serve as a substitute for the original. Copyright Disclaimer - Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "Fair Use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. "Fair Use" is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.

    1 giờ 39 phút
  4. 5 THG 4

    1945-1953 Rock Roll Reel

    ...the road goes on forever and the party never ENDS! Rock N Roll - Celebrating 70 YEARS of Maximun Rock N Roll (1956-2026)   ...in this episode the party CONTINUES with the JUMP BLUES and R&B SWING and SHOUT BLUES of the mid 1940s through to 1953 MAKE NO MISTAKE - this sh*ts ROCK N ROLL!  Louis Jordan T-Bone Walker (first ROCK N ROLL lead guitarist) BIG Joe Williams The Flamboyantly outrageous and openly gay Billy Wright, the ORIGINAL Georgia Peach! Roy (Good Rockin' Tonight) Brown. Little Richard would take what these two GIANTS of the genre created, Louis Jordan too, and define not only himself but the predominant popular music of the MASSES for the next 50 PLUS years! All THIS and MORE! ...in our continuing saga of the story of ROCK N ROLL 70 Years! Celebrate it MFs! *THE MUSIC (broken down chronologically by year) 1945 Caledonia by Louis Jordan & His Tympany 5 1947 You're My Best Poker Hand by T-Bone Walker 1947 Around The Clock Blues Pt. 1 by Big Joe Turner & Pete Johnson 1947 Around The Clock Blues Pt. 2  by Big Joe Turner & Pete Johnson 1948 Cadillac Boogie by Jimmy Liggins 1949 Rockin' At Midnight by Roy Brown 1949 The Fat Man by Fats Domino 1950 Tee Nah Nah by Smiley Lewis 1950 Do Something For Me by Billy Ward & The Dominoes (lead vocals by Clyde McPhatter) 1951 Rocket 88 by Ike Turner & The Kings of Rhythm (credited as Jackie Brenston & His Delta Cats) 1951 I Want To Rock by Lavern Baker credited as Little Miss Sharecropper 1952 Follow The Rule by Johnny Ace 1952 Ain't Nothing Happening by Little Richard (on RCA Records) 1952 I've Been Your Dog (Ever Since I've Been Your Man) by The Moonglows 1952 Married Woman Boogie by Billy Wright 1953 Mama He Treats Your Daughter Mean by Ruth Brown 1953 Mess Around by Ray Charles 1953 Get It by The Royals 1953 Bounce by The Spaniels 1953 Money Honey by The Drifters (lead vocals Clyde McPhatter) 1953 Give Thanks by The Platters (lead vocals Tony Williams)   Do you have a burning desire to send us an email at The Generation X Offender? Please do! info@gxopodcast.com   Want on our mailing list? Only one weekly email update, we promise! We're far too lazy to do any more. Wanna leave a comment? Need to contact us? Visit the Official Generation X Offender GXO website at www.gxopodcast.com   *Please Note: Audio portions of this podcast have been reproduced under the "Fair Use" doctrine. This use is intended to be transformative, adding perspective to the original work, serving an educational purpose rather than commercial gain. This use is intended academically and does not serve as a substitute for the original. Copyright Disclaimer - Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "Fair Use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. "Fair Use" is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.

    1 giờ 34 phút
  5. 30 THG 3

    Proto Rock N Roll: 70 Years (1956-2026)

    In this Episode we continue to CELEBRATE 70 Years of Rock N Roll! 1956 - 2026 ...from the very first HIT BLUES song ever in 1920 on the deep down low through the murky waters of the Mississippi Delta onto Robert Johnson, FOUNDING MEMBER of the 27 Club, through his TWO HISTORIC Texas Recording Sessions (1936 & 1937), Son House, Blind Willie Johnson, Charley Patton, Howlin' Wolf, Muddy Waters, Tom Waits, Captain Beefheart, Ry Cooder, the Rolling Stones and MORE! MORE! MORE! Generations in the making, Rock N Roll officially became part of the cultural zeitgeist in 1956, the first year this perpetually evolving NEW MUSIC produced the most popular song of the year. Rock N Rollers Little Richard, Fats Domino, Gene Vincent, Carl Perkins, Frankie Lymon And The Teenagers, Bill Haley And The Comets, vocal group The Platters, Johnny Ray and British skiffle sensation Lonnie Donegan were also present in the Top 50 Year End Singles Chart of 1956. This had never happened before in the history of recorded music... From this point on, Rock N Roll ruled the charts, becoming the most dominant genre of popular music for the next 40 plus years. To celebrate this milestone. The GXO music podcast will, over the next few episodes, be exploring and expanding upon the ever evolving nature of Rock N Roll from it's humble acoustic beginnings through numerous other incarnations including, but not limited to, pub rock, punk rock, proto punk, post punk, industrial, disco, electronic, hardcore, rap, EDM, post rock, new rock and ultimately where she currently resides in the hills of contemporary NPR = New Post Rock where nary a guitar is likely to be found. *WORDS AND MUSIC Keith Richards interview... 1. Paris Texas by Ry Cooder 2. Me And The Devil Blues (1937) by Robert Johnson Honeyboy Edwards interview... 3. Crazy Blues (1920) by Mamie Smith 4. Shave 'Em Dry (1924) by Ma Rainey 5. Rising High Water Blues (1927) by Blind Lemon Jefferson 6. High Water (For Charley Patton) by Bob Dylan 7. Moon Going Down (1930) by Charley Patton 8. Evil (Is Going On) (1954) by Howlin' Wolf 9. 16 Shells From A Thirty-Ought-Six by Tom Waits 10. John The Relevator (1930) by Blind Willie Johnson 11. Cocaine Blues by Reverend Gary Davis 12. Cocaine by Jackson Browne 13. You Was Born To Die (1933) by Blind Willie McTell 14. All I Want Is That Pure Religion (1926) by Blind Lemon Jefferson 15. True Religion by Hot Tuna 16. Blind Willie McTell by Bob Dylan 17. Death Letter Blues by Son House 18. Baby Please Don't Go (1952) by Big Bill Broonzy  19. Baby Please Don't Go by Them 20. Sure 'Nuff 'n' Yes, I Do by Captian Beefheart And His Magic Band 21. Love In Vain (1937) by Robert Johnson 22. Love In Vain by The Rolling Stones 23. Mannish Boy by Muddy Waters & Johnny Winter Do you have a burning desire to send us an email at The Generation X Offender? Please do! info@gxopodcast.com   Want on our mailing list? Only one weekly email update, we promise! We're far too lazy to do any more. Wanna leave a comment? Need to contact us? Visit the Official Generation X Offender GXO website at www.gxopodcast.com   *Please Note: Audio portions of this podcast have been reproduced under the "Fair Use" doctrine. This use is intended to be transformative, adding perspective to the original work, serving an educational purpose rather than commercial gain. This use is intended academically and does not serve as a substitute for the original. Copyright Disclaimer - Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "Fair Use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. "Fair Use" is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.

    2 giờ 4 phút
  6. 22 THG 3

    70 Years Of Rock N Roll

    HAPPY BIRTHDAY ROCK N ROLL! 1956 - 2026 70 Years of Maximum Rock N Roll!   Years in the making, Rock N Roll officially became part of the cultural zeitgeist in 1956, the first year this perpetually evolving NEW MUSIC produced the most popular song of the year, Heartbreak Hotel by Elvis Presley. Fellow Rock N Rollers Little Richard, Fats Domino, Gene Vincent, Carl Perkins, Frankie Lymon And The Teenagers, Bill Haley And The Comets, vocal group The Platters and British skiffle sensation Lonnie Donegan were also present in the Top 50 Year End Singles Chart of 1956. This had never happened before in the history of recorded music... From that point on, Rock N Roll instantly took over the charts, becoming the most dominant genre of popular music for the next 40 plus years. To celebrate this milestone. The GXO music podcast will, over the coarse of a number of episodes, be exploring and expanding upon the ever evolving nature of Rock N Roll from it's humble acoustic beginnings through numerous other incarnations including, but not limited to, pub rock, punk rock, proto punk, post punk, industrial, disco, electronic, hardcore, rap, EDM, post rock, new rock and ultimately where she currently resides in the hills of contemporary NPR = New Post Rock where nary a guitar is likely to be found. In the first of the series: "Its...Rock N Roll 01" we find ourselves milling about the ghastly mellow saxophones of 1973, walking Carnaby Street in fashionable London in the Swinging 60's, trolling the Bowery in 1970s East Village, lower Manhattan, frequenting both Max's Kansas City AND CBGBs, dodging THREE of The Big Four while giving up the ghost to the Heavy Metal strains of ragged orchestral cellos and all that Jazz. All this and MORE... In the latest installment of the GXO, Generation X Offender music podcast, offending friend and foe alike since 1966   *THE MUSIC "It’s... Rock N Roll" by Robyn Hitchcock  1974 by Robyn Hitchcock  Lucifer Sam by Pink Floyd Brand New Cadillac by The Clash New Feeling by Talking Heads See No Evil by Television  Max’s Kansas City by Jayne County Transmission by Joy Division  Grinding Halt by The Cure Everybody’s Happy Nowadays by Buzzcocks Everyday I Love You Less And Less by Kaiser Chiefs  Respectable Street by XTC Living On A Thin Line by The Kinks Street In The City by Pete Townshend A Long Way Down by Lloyd Cole I Almost Had A Weakness by Elvis Costello & The Brodsky Quartet  Glass Onion by The Beatles  1000 Umbrellas by XTC Purple Haze by Kronos Quartet  Prokofiev ~ Romeo & Juliet No. 13 Dance Of The Nights by Mriinsky Orchestra, Valery Gergiev conducting      Do you have a burning desire to send us an email at The Generation X Offender? Please do! info@gxopodcast.com   Want on our mailing list? Only one weekly email update, we promise! We're far too lazy to do any more. Wanna leave a comment? Need to contact us? Visit the Official Generation X Offender GXO website at www.gxopodcast.com   *Please Note: Audio portions of this podcast have been reproduced under the "Fair Use" doctrine. This use is intended to be transformative, adding perspective to the original work, serving an educational purpose rather than commercial gain. This use is intended academically and does not serve as a substitute for the original. Copyright Disclaimer - Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "Fair Use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. "Fair Use" is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.

    1 giờ 44 phút
  7. 14 THG 3

    Sex Drugs Rock N Roll

    ...and so we conclude at the Conclusion of our multi episodic Three Part Dissemination exploring Three Main Ingredients of what 21st Century British Psychedelic Poet Laureate Robyn Hitchcock once famously described as, "the great Civilizing Force of the 20th Century, Rock N Roll"   DRUGS SEX (parts 1 & 2) ROCK N ROLL   SEX, humanity's ORIGINAL DRUG, gets a Subsection B, of course. It is what it is.   Sex being Sex, there's gonna be some bad words, degenerate ideation and base behavior voiced in some of the songs. For this we do not apologize, however, we do STRONGLY URGE LISTENER DISCRETION. We got GG Allin in the house today kids so it's time to lock up your doors to protect the youth of tomorrow.   As you may have noticed, after 80 odd episodes of The Generation X Offender, we have finally given up Dancing about Architecture, or rather, talking about music, essentially the same thing. Music is meant to be listened to. FULL STOP.   We will resume talking about music in future episodes...   *THE MUSIC   Sex & Drugs & Rock N Roll by Ian Dury Why Don't You Do Right (Get Me Some Money Too) by Peggy Lee Can Your P***y Do The Dog by The Cramps Hot Dog! That Made Him Mad by Wanda Jackson What Do You Do/The Glory Of Love by Lyle Lovell & Francine Reed Settin' The Woods On Fire by Hank Williams Matchbox by Carl Perkins 24 Hour Party People by Happy Mondays Party Out Of Bounds by The B-52s Beat Crazy by Joe Jackson Woman Love by Gene Vincent & The Blue Caps Top Floor Bottom Button by Morphine The Same Thing by Willie Dixon Don't Come Home A Drinkin' (With Lovin' On Your Mind) by Loretta Lynn Leave My P***y Alone by Jayne County & Jimi LaLumia I Was Dancing In The Lesbian Bar by Jonathan Richman I Got What You Want by Steel Panther Do Ya Think I'm Sexy by Paris Hilton Upside Down by Diana Ross Jungle Fever by Chakachas How Many Licks by Lil' Kim featuring Sisqo Caroline & Sue by GG Allin Do It Again by Marilyn Monroe Walking In The Rain by Flash And The Pan One Night In Bangkok by Murray Head Drugs In My Pocket by The Monks My Sex by Ultravox   Do you have a burning desire to send us an email at The Generation X Offender? Please do! info@gxopodcast.com   Want on our mailing list? Only one weekly email update, we promise! We're far too lazy to do any more. Wanna leave a comment? Need to contact us? Visit the Official Generation X Offender GXO website at www.gxopodcast.com   *Please Note: Audio portions of this podcast have been reproduced under the "Fair Use" doctrine. This use is intended to be transformative, adding perspective to the original work, serving an educational purpose rather than commercial gain. This use is intended academically and does not serve as a substitute for the original. Copyright Disclaimer - Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "Fair Use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. "Fair Use" is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.

    1 giờ 33 phút
  8. 7 THG 3

    Sex 2

    In the immortal words of 70's disco singer and pornographic actress Andrea True, "More, more, more. How do you like it? How do you like it?" Why? Because more is, MORE! Right? Why choose when you can have more? Why chose when you can have both?   "This is what you want, this is what you get" - John Lydon   MORE SEX please! (no, we're not British)   Back by popular demand, we've extended the Sex segment of our three episode dissemination of "the great civilizing force of the 20th Century, Rock N Roll"   Why? Because we love you. We love to love you baby. Not to mention the oft cited X-Rated tome "Tales From The Camelot Motel" by Dame Mary Gauthier herself, both King & Queen of the storied Ryman "He's lying on the double bed acting self assured In his T-shirt and his underwear he's barely said a word She pours a cup of coffee lights the day's first cigarette Picks up the phone and call her kids from the motel kitchenette And there's two guys moving slowly in the room across the hall Both their heads are pounding from last night's alcohol They met in a chat room then they took it here They both go by pseudonyms and soon they'll disappear Cheaters, liars, outlaws, and fallen angels Come looking for the grace from which they fell So they hold on to each other in the darkness Cuz the morning light is hell At the Camelot Motel He met her at the pool hall the guys told him she's touched Now she's ranting and she's raving 'bout the Devil, Christ and such He's thinking 'bout the highway and the way she begged last night He's wishing that he'd blown this dump before the morning light Cheaters, liars, outlaws, and fallen angels  Come looking for the grace from which they fell So they hold on to each other in the darkness Cuz the morning light is hell At the Camelot Motel   Lancelot and Guenivere bang their bedpost in my ear Neon lights the castle walls bug lights in the entrance halls I lie awake with a troubled mind thinking 'bout what I left behind Me and the royal denizens got damn good reasons for our sins Now there's a couple counting money in Room 124 They're wrapping 10's and 20's throwing their 1's on the floor They're strung out and they're nervous, they jump at every little sound He keeps picking up his pistol then putting his pistol down Cheaters, liars, outlaws, and fallen angels Come looking for the grace From which they fell So they hold on to each other In the darkness Cuz the morning light is hell At the Camelot Motel The Camelot Motel"   This episode is dedicated to all those with deep and reoccurring knowledge of the Walk Of Shame. We know who we are.   "He shot me a look Heroes have been shooting Heroes for thousands and thousands of years" - Charles Budderick "Buddy" Cole    "Blessed are those that sex, for they shall be comforted" Marquis 5:4 120 Days Of Sodom   *THE MUSIC   1. Let's Make Love by Marilyn Monroe 2. Peel Me A Grape by Blossom Dearie 3. When You're Good To Mama by Queen Latifah 4. I Get Ideas by Tony Martin 5. Big Dipper by Elton John 6. Street Corner Love by Jobriath 7. Essence by Lucinda Williams 8. Camelot Motel by Mary Gauthier 9. Time O/O Lives by Meryn Cadell 10. 'Cause Cheap Is How I Feel by Cowboy Junkies 11. Laid by Matt Nathanson 12. Strokin' by Screaming Jay Hawkins 13. In The Bush by Musique 14. New York By Night by Dennis Parker 15. Where Is My Man (Attack Mix Edit) by Eartha Kitt and Joe T. Vannelli 16. Open Your Box (Orange Factory Club Mix) by Orange Factory and Yoko Ono 17. You Think You're A Man by Divine 18. Adolescent Sex by Japan 19. Candlelighter Man by Fanny 20. Beat My Guest by Adam and the Ants 21. Super Sex by Morphine 22. Johnny Feelgood by Liz Phair 23. Tramp by Brian Auger, Julie Driscoll and the Trinity 24. Dr. Feelgood by Aretha Franklin 25. An Occasional Man by Julie London 26. Let's Make Love by Marilyn Monroe, Frankie Vaughan, Yves Montand   Do you have a burning desire to send The GXO an email? Please do! info@gxopodcast.com   Want on our mailing list? Only one weekly update email, we promise! Wanna leave a comment? Need to contact us? Visit the GXO website at www.gxopodcast.com   *Please Note: Lyrics and audio portions of this podcast have been reproduced under the fair use doctrine. This use is intended to be transformative, adding perspective to the original work, serving an educational purpose rather than commercial gain. This use is intended academically and does not serve as a substitute for the original. Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.

    1 giờ 42 phút

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