My favorite sexy song is, well I have two by the same singer that definitely go together. It’s Teddy Pendergrass and the songs are Close the Door and of course followed by, Turn off the Lights.
Peligroso-Remix By NK and De La Ghetto. I thought that I may just add to the ever growing list that we have amassed here. This style of music may not be for everyone just an FYI. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y4J1YyTGHNk&list=RDy4J1YyTGHNk&start_radio=1 Let me know what you think and have a great week out there. |
It's not a song. Lyrics are distracting. The entire album, "Tide" is beautiful and wonderfully seductive... But if you prefer a more direct approach: |
Dang @immathewj, another great one! In "Right In Time" Lu is very direct in her expressing her desires, ain’t she?! And hearing "Hot Blood" always brings me back to those early shows I saw, with Gurf Morlix on guitar, Donald Lindley on drums (now RIP), and Dr. John on bass. Last time I saw that lineup was at The Troubadour. Lu was playing a big ol’ acoustic guitar, with a music stand sitting directly in front of her. On the stand was a 3-ring binder filled with 8-1/2 x 11 pages of paper, each with a song on it. As she and the band finished one song, she turned the page to the next song. Adorable.
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"I take off my watch and my earrings Think about you and that long ride Right In Time/Lucinda Williams @bdp24 , how about Hot Blood off of the Sweet Old World CD? Or maybe the imagery that The Night's Too Long (from the self titled CD) evokes? (Not that I am a fan of Lucinda or anything like that, LOL.)
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@immatthewj: Thanks for the reminder of Lucinda's "Essence", a fantastic pick. Her singing on the song is absolutely salacious (on the entire song, but especially when she sings "Please come find me and help me.....get f*cked up"), with lots of double entendre lyrics. And musically the song is a deep, deep Bluesy Rocker. One of my very favorite songs of hers, and I've been a fan since seeing her live in the mid-80's in very small venues around Los Angeles, then getting her s/t Rough Trade album when it was released in 1988. For a more romantic rather than sexual song, her "West" is as good as it gets. The song also features superb drumming by Jim Keltner (big surprise
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@jomace: "Baby Let Me Bang Your Box" made it to San Jose, California in 1964. The city had a record store with headphones hooked up to turntables, and my friends and I rode our bikes there everyday for a week just to hear that song. The 45 was credited to Doug Clark And The Hot Nuts. Double entendre galore!
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