1st time I heard this song...I was like...

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I remember playing my parents vinyl of Jimi's "Smash Hits" in my bedroom and thinking it sounded otherworldly. I was about 5 or 6, maybe 1980. Thankfully I grew up in a house that played a lot of music and most of it good. Jimi still managed to stand head and shoulders above the rest. He still does, if I'm being honest. lol
OMG. 5 or 6 in 1980? :censored: :hi Damn, now I really do feel old. Fugggg
In 1980, I was driving through ditches and plowing into mailboxes. Well, so I've been told. lol
 
Standing in a convenience store in 1986 and I hear the opening chords of a song that are a direct throwback to Chuck Berry but louder and fuller. Singer comes in and he is energetic, powerful and ready to add some roll to the rock. He keeps going and I notice a definite twang to the voice, which, to me, adds credibility.

Next thing I know, the drums, bass and lead guitar all come thundering in and this song is taking off right now! Big drum sound, metronome of a rhythm guitar track and some wailing lead guitar. I’m thinking, holy shit, who are these guys and what else have they done?

I stood in front of the beer cooler until the song ended, but this was an FM station, so no song ID followed. I grabbed my Schlitz Malt Liquor tallboys, went to the counter and asked the clerk what station was on.

Got home, cracked a tallboy, called the station and the DJ told me it was a great new record by the Georgia Satellites and the song is called “Keep Your Hands to Yourself.”

Next day, I head out to The Shoppe in Berea and grab the album. To this day, one of my all-time favorites. All killer with one song of filler.

For anyone who thinks the hit was a flukey hillbilly one- hit, take time to hear the album and you will find some timeless gut-bucket rock and roll. It includes a great cover of “Every Picture Tells a Story” by Rod Stewart. FYI, their second album is average (the classic case of having five years to write the first album and nine months to make the follow-up) and their third and final album, “ In the Land of Salvation and Sin” is mature, clever and rocking as hell.

A memory I will never forget, at least until dementia kicks in…
If you haven't, check out Paw's "Dragline" on youtube. Jesse was the only hit song on it, but they were basically the Georgia Satellites grunge. Very similar thing, sneaky good too.
 
I was a junior in high school, driving with my friends and smoking bowls. We headed to a Burger King to sate our munchies. "Look At You Look At Me" by Dave Mason came on WXRT. None of us had heard the song before, so we didn't know it was nearly 8 minutes long. We hit the parking lot of the BK just as the closing guitar solo started. Although we were all starving, we couldn't leave the car for almost three minutes until the last majestic note faded into the night and the dj told us what we had just heard. All of us picked up the album the next day!
 
I’m not just patronizing @GOS here, but “Crazy Train” and “More Than A Feeling” would definitely also make my list. I have to add “The Spirit Of Radio”. 1980, freshman year of high school, ALL music was still new to me, but THIS - Rush - was something completely different.
 
If you haven't, check out Paw's "Dragline" on youtube. Jesse was the only hit song on it, but they were basically the Georgia Satellites grunge. Very similar thing, sneaky good too.
I went on Tidal and took a spin through the album. I really liked it. The singer is different and his vocals sound great. You are right about sneaky good. I can see diggin this more as I listen more. You have to love a band that writes a song about a dog that is a life lesson as well. Thank you for the recommendation!
 
OK, no laughing here. The first time I heard Bridge Over Troubled Water was at a local funeral of my dad's friend. My dad was a very good singer and in big demand in our local community. He sang that song at the funeral, and I remember just thinking. Fuck. I was probably around 10 years old. It made a lasting impression....
That’s heavy shit at 10 years old to see your dad stand up and deliver at a funeral. As you said, that kind of thing sets a tone.
 
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