Long lost songs


This is a discussion on songs or versions we've heard maybe just once on the radio and spent years searching for. Anything you knew existed, but couldn't find.

For instance, about 1972 I was lying in bed listening to the local progressive rock station (WNEW) as I was falling asleep. On come a great R&B song with a line something like "Before I Die I want to be the kind of man you want me to be". The DJ never announced the title or artist that I could hear. Never heard it again. Years later I heard "She's Gone" by Hall and Oats and figured it was them. Nope. Continued to search on and off for decades, employing new technology as it became available.

Early this year, while searching for something totally different on SecondHandSongs I came across "When I Die" by Mother Lode. Bingo! Joy, joy, joy! Found the CD on Amazon, (only format available) Love It. Most of the rest of their songs are weird but "When I Die" is almost as good as my memory had made 'Before I Die'.

Another example is versions. There are some song that I love that have very different interpretations by various artists. "Hey Joe" and "Morning Dew" are two. I like to collect those versions. Long ago I heard a version of "Morning Dew" sung by a guy with a very unique voice. It had a mesmerizing rhythm guitar line that got into my brain. I never forgot it, because the girl I was with turned out to be a nymphomaniac. What a night!

Using   SecondHandSongs agin, I found Long John Baldry on his self-titled album on EMI. What a crystal clear LP! He's recorded several fine versions of the song, but this is THE one with that guitar line. Highly recommended.

I am sure many of you have similar tales and can relate to the elation I felt on finding something I'd been searching for for decades. Let's hear them.
2channel8
Scored a copy of "Sally Go 'Round The Roses" by the Jaynettes, 1963.
It got into my head and I downloaded versions by Judy Collins and Susanna Hoffs.

Here's another interesting version:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CLIUK6yY4es
Don't you go downtown
Saddest thing in the whole wide world to see your baby with another girl.

Tim Buckley and Pentangle also did versions, but the Jaynetts is my favorite.  Thanks, the Mitch Ryder version is pretty cool.
I've heard others say that Pentangle's is the best version and I usually love everything Buckley did; but after the Jaynettes' I think I like Judy Collins' best, and I'm not any sort of Collins fan. She sort of takes the eeriness of the original and amps it up.