45 Singles You Just Had to Buy


In the bad old days before the internet & streamingšŸ˜€, what pieces of music did you have to purchase on a 45rpm single because there was no other genuine way of getting them home? The trouble was that more often than not, an album cut of a rock-and-roll hit would be a different version/take/mix of the one you loved hearing on the radio. Which means you just had to get the 45.

Here's a random handful of mine --

Hanky Panky -- Tommy James & the Shondells

Save the Country -- Laura Nyro

She Don't Care about Time and Change is Now -- The Byrds

Baby Please Don't Go -- Them

Candy Girl -- Four Seasons

The Battle of New Orleans -- Johnny Horton

edcyn

Wikipedia reports that the Johnny Horton version of Battle of New Orleans was the hit, thus the one that put it in our consciousness. I arrest my case.šŸ˜Ž

When I was young with no capacity for downloading individual songs, I loved going to the record stores and scoring old 45s of songs I really liked but by artists whose full LPs I had no interest in owning. Used CDs back then were still likely to be more expensive than an old 45, buying a whole CD for 1 song was not my interest, and shopping for old 45s was justā€¦fun. Especially if they came with the original picture sleeve.
So many:

ā€œ96 Tearsā€ - ? and the Mysterians
ā€Alone Again, Naturallyā€ - Gilbert Oā€™Sullivan
ā€Reminiscingā€ - Little River Band
ā€œVoices Carryā€ - ā€˜Til Tuesday
ā€œEyes Without a Faceā€ - Billy Idol
ā€œJust the Two of Usā€ - Grover Washington Jr./Bill Withers

to name a few off the top of my head.

That kind of stuff was my much-more-fun version of plucking select songs from iTunes. I love being able to go and nab these single songs with ease now (so many great artists have several weak albums but each LP has 1 or 2 killer gems on them that arenā€™t available on comps), but my enjoyment of that process was rich, and my ignorance as to how poor the sound quality was on the majority of those 45s was bliss.

When in 1976 I discovered the record collector magazines (in particular Goldmine) and dozens of fanzines that had been started to cover the explosion of Power Pop and Punk, as well as the great underground music magazines (most notably Bomp!, the product of Rock ā€™nā€™ Roll historian and Garage Band fanatic Greg Shaw) in which cult bands and artists were being covered (The Flaminā€™ Groovies, Dave Edmunds, Nick Lowe, Moon Martin, Dwight Twilley, Marshall Crenshaw, The Nerves, The Plimsouls,The Blasters, etc.), I became aware of the phenomenon of the non-LP 45 RPM B-side. I looked for 45ā€™s containing non-LP songs of music I liked, buying ā€™em all.

Portland at that time had a bunch of small record shops which sold all the import and Indi 45ā€™s that were being pumped out in the late-70ā€™s, and my 45 collection swelled to about 1,000 titles. Over the years Iā€™ve culled the collection (I had two copies of the Nerves EP, sold one of them for $200 a few years ago. Peter Case, Paul Collins, and Jack Lee were itā€™s members), keeping about 600 titles.

Hey Joe

Sunshine of your love

Because in the 60s the 33's were too expensive for this kid.

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