Discussion:
Exotic Pop Songs
(too old to reply)
Agent Smith
2007-05-10 09:44:34 UTC
Permalink
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present

3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
Eddie Wilson
2007-05-10 12:04:06 UTC
Permalink
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
The Friends of Mr. Cairo-Jon Anderson & Vangelis
Bobby Brown-Frank Zappa
Baker Street-Gerry Rafferty
Gijs Rietveld
2007-05-10 15:56:44 UTC
Permalink
Post by Eddie Wilson
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
The Friends of Mr. Cairo-Jon Anderson & Vangelis
Bobby Brown-Frank Zappa
Baker Street-Gerry Rafferty
What's so 'exotic' about these songs?
Gijs
Martha and Cripple, Sitting in a Tree
2007-05-10 17:58:42 UTC
Permalink
Post by Gijs Rietveld
Post by Eddie Wilson
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
The Friends of Mr. Cairo-Jon Anderson & Vangelis
Bobby Brown-Frank Zappa
Baker Street-Gerry Rafferty
What's so 'exotic' about these songs?
Gijs
If you don't get it, you don't get it.

Twilight Time (Platters)
Eddie Wilson
2007-05-10 19:55:25 UTC
Permalink
Post by Gijs Rietveld
Post by Eddie Wilson
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
The Friends of Mr. Cairo-Jon Anderson & Vangelis
Bobby Brown-Frank Zappa
Baker Street-Gerry Rafferty
What's so 'exotic' about these songs?
Gijs
Lyrical imagery and melodic variation.
Mike G
2007-05-10 20:03:04 UTC
Permalink
Post by Eddie Wilson
Post by Gijs Rietveld
Post by Eddie Wilson
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
The Friends of Mr. Cairo-Jon Anderson & Vangelis
Bobby Brown-Frank Zappa
Baker Street-Gerry Rafferty
What's so 'exotic' about these songs?
Gijs
Lyrical imagery and melodic variation.
I wouldn't call Year of the Cat, Bobby Brown, Baker Street or One
Night in Bangkok "exotic" to any measurable degree. And ranking them
among the MOST "exotic" songs of the past 40-50 years is just
ridiculous.

(Hey, non-white guys record pop songs too....)
Gijs Rietveld
2007-05-11 14:21:41 UTC
Permalink
Post by Eddie Wilson
Post by Gijs Rietveld
Post by Eddie Wilson
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
The Friends of Mr. Cairo-Jon Anderson & Vangelis
Bobby Brown-Frank Zappa
Baker Street-Gerry Rafferty
What's so 'exotic' about these songs?
Gijs
Lyrical imagery and melodic variation.
Then you can add almost all of the songs by 10cc and Flash and The Pan

Gijs
Agent Smith
2007-05-11 15:16:37 UTC
Permalink
Post by Gijs Rietveld
Post by Eddie Wilson
Post by Gijs Rietveld
Post by Eddie Wilson
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
The Friends of Mr. Cairo-Jon Anderson & Vangelis
Bobby Brown-Frank Zappa
Baker Street-Gerry Rafferty
What's so 'exotic' about these songs?
Gijs
Lyrical imagery and melodic variation.
Then you can add almost all of the songs by 10cc and Flash and The Pan
"Rock The Casbah" and "The Comissar" by the Clash.

"Conquistador" and "Whiter Shade of Pale" by Procol Harum.

"Gypsies, Tramps and Thieves," by Cher.

"Brandy" by Looking Glass.

"The Wreck of the Edmond Fitzgerald" by Gordon Lightfoot.

Anything by Bob Dylan.

"People Are Strange," "Riders on the Storm" and "The Soft Parade" by The
Doors.

"At Seventeen" by Janice Ian.

"Taxi" and "Cats In the Cradle," by Harry Chapin.

I'm losing the international flavor I originally intended.
y***@yahoo.com
2007-05-11 17:44:43 UTC
Permalink
Post by Agent Smith
Post by Gijs Rietveld
Post by Eddie Wilson
Post by Gijs Rietveld
Post by Eddie Wilson
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
The Friends of Mr. Cairo-Jon Anderson & Vangelis
Bobby Brown-Frank Zappa
Baker Street-Gerry Rafferty
What's so 'exotic' about these songs?
Gijs
Lyrical imagery and melodic variation.
Then you can add almost all of the songs by 10cc and Flash and The Pan
"Rock The Casbah" and "The Comissar" by the Clash.
"Conquistador" and "Whiter Shade of Pale" by Procol Harum.
"Gypsies, Tramps and Thieves," by Cher.
"Brandy" by Looking Glass.
"The Wreck of the Edmond Fitzgerald" by Gordon Lightfoot.
Anything by Bob Dylan.
"People Are Strange," "Riders on the Storm" and "The Soft Parade" by The
Doors.
"At Seventeen" by Janice Ian.
"Taxi" and "Cats In the Cradle," by Harry Chapin.
I'm losing the international flavor I originally intended.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
Here's international flavor for you - one of the songs I mentioned,
"Sukiyaki" by the late Kyu Sakamoto, which went to # 1 in the United
States in 1963 - the only Far Eastern language # 1 here in this
country I'm aware of - not a word of English; it even penetrated to
the upper tier of WABC (of course, just before Rick Sklar got there I
think, who might have put the kabosh on the song). The real title of
the song is
"I Look Up When I Walk", but they needed something simple and
recognizable as a title in the United States:

Just the song, with unrelated scenery:



but here's a performance later on Japanese tv, from back in the day:



The poster of above, Kokoronokori, I quote here:

"...He made his show business debut in 1960. His biggest hit, Ue o
Muite Aruko (I Look Up When I Walk; "Sukiyaki" in the West), was
released in Japan in 1961. After its release in the U.S. in 1963, the
song's earnestness and melodic beauty proved irresistible despite its
incomprehensible lyrics. Against all odds, on June 15, 1963, the song
ousted Leslie Gore's "It's My Party" to become the No. 1 popular song
in the U.S. "Sukiyaki" remains the biggest international hit by a
Japanese popular singer. Credit for the song's popularity also is due
to the music by Hachidai Nakamura and the lyrics by Rokusuke Ei, who
is said to have written this touching evocation of loneliness after
his heart was broken by the actress Mieko Nakamura. On august 12, 1985
Sakamoto Kyu was tragically killed in JAL Flight 123, a 747 bound from
Haneda Airport in Tokyo to Osaka...." [end quote]

Some people who came of age in the 70's may not be able to relate to
songs and productions where melody dominates so much with hardly a
whisper from a rhythm section, but such is the culture of many lands,
Japan and Italy in particular, in their pop music, at least before
U.S. rock and roll made a deeper penetration. They are still lands
where melody predominates.

And here is this vid-link is the song with translation flashing:



You tell it doesn't get more exotic or international than this
somewhere?
Ronald 'More-More' Moshki
2007-05-12 06:05:04 UTC
Permalink
Post by y***@yahoo.com
Post by Agent Smith
Post by Gijs Rietveld
Post by Eddie Wilson
Post by Gijs Rietveld
Post by Eddie Wilson
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
The Friends of Mr. Cairo-Jon Anderson & Vangelis
Bobby Brown-Frank Zappa
Baker Street-Gerry Rafferty
What's so 'exotic' about these songs?
Gijs
Lyrical imagery and melodic variation.
Then you can add almost all of the songs by 10cc and Flash and The Pan
"Rock The Casbah" and "The Comissar" by the Clash.
"Conquistador" and "Whiter Shade of Pale" by Procol Harum.
"Gypsies, Tramps and Thieves," by Cher.
"Brandy" by Looking Glass.
"The Wreck of the Edmond Fitzgerald" by Gordon Lightfoot.
Anything by Bob Dylan.
"People Are Strange," "Riders on the Storm" and "The Soft Parade" by The
Doors.
"At Seventeen" by Janice Ian.
"Taxi" and "Cats In the Cradle," by Harry Chapin.
I'm losing the international flavor I originally intended.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
Here's international flavor for you - one of the songs I mentioned,
"Sukiyaki" by the late Kyu Sakamoto, which went to # 1 in the United
States in 1963 - the only Far Eastern language # 1 here in this
country I'm aware of - not a word of English; it even penetrated to
the upper tier of WABC (of course, just before Rick Sklar got there I
think, who might have put the kabosh on the song). The real title of
the song is
"I Look Up When I Walk", but they needed something simple and
http://youtu.be/d0bE92ZtUJ0
http://youtu.be/3xcHysLbSk4
"...He made his show business debut in 1960. His biggest hit, Ue o
Muite Aruko (I Look Up When I Walk; "Sukiyaki" in the West), was
released in Japan in 1961. After its release in the U.S. in 1963, the
song's earnestness and melodic beauty proved irresistible despite its
incomprehensible lyrics. Against all odds, on June 15, 1963, the song
ousted Leslie Gore's "It's My Party" to become the No. 1 popular song
in the U.S. "Sukiyaki" remains the biggest international hit by a
Japanese popular singer. Credit for the song's popularity also is due
to the music by Hachidai Nakamura and the lyrics by Rokusuke Ei, who
is said to have written this touching evocation of loneliness after
his heart was broken by the actress Mieko Nakamura. On august 12, 1985
Sakamoto Kyu was tragically killed in JAL Flight 123, a 747 bound from
Haneda Airport in Tokyo to Osaka...." [end quote]
Some people who came of age in the 70's may not be able to relate to
songs and productions where melody dominates so much with hardly a
whisper from a rhythm section, but such is the culture of many lands,
Japan and Italy in particular, in their pop music, at least before
U.S. rock and roll made a deeper penetration. They are still lands
where melody predominates.
http://youtu.be/0U2nBre-JEU
You tell it doesn't get more exotic or international than this
somewhere?- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
Are they exotic or nutty?

"Snoopy Vs The Red Baron" The Royal Guardsman"
1968?
Zaven
2007-05-17 00:43:03 UTC
Permalink
Post by Agent Smith
Post by Gijs Rietveld
Post by Eddie Wilson
Post by Gijs Rietveld
Post by Eddie Wilson
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
The Friends of Mr. Cairo-Jon Anderson & Vangelis
Bobby Brown-Frank Zappa
Baker Street-Gerry Rafferty
What's so 'exotic' about these songs?
Gijs
Lyrical imagery and melodic variation.
Then you can add almost all of the songs by 10cc and Flash and The Pan
"Rock The Casbah" and "The Comissar" by the Clash.
"Conquistador" and "Whiter Shade of Pale" by Procol Harum.
"Gypsies, Tramps and Thieves," by Cher.
"Brandy" by Looking Glass.
"The Wreck of the Edmond Fitzgerald" by Gordon Lightfoot.
Anything by Bob Dylan.
"People Are Strange," "Riders on the Storm" and "The Soft Parade" by The
Doors.
"At Seventeen" by Janice Ian.
"Taxi" and "Cats In the Cradle," by Harry Chapin.
I'm losing the international flavor I originally intended.
Almost anything by the Violent Fems. "Gone out the window" or "Kiss
off" come to mind.
subscriber1997
2007-05-10 16:09:33 UTC
Permalink
Post by Eddie Wilson
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
The Friends of Mr. Cairo-Jon Anderson & Vangelis
Bobby Brown-Frank Zappa
Baker Street-Gerry Rafferty
============

Little Red Riding Hood
...Sam the Sham & the pharaohs
y***@yahoo.com
2007-05-10 22:46:27 UTC
Permalink
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
Your is terribly inadequate and off-the mark. By comparison, here's
a much better attempt:

Most Exotic Pop Songs since WWII:

Quiet Village - Martin Denny (major U.S. hit instrumental, invokes
image of jungle (tropical) village from faraway land - from 1958, but
probably the most exotic thing I ever heard [as in EVER] on the radio)
Sukiyaki - Kyu Sakamoto (real translation: "I Look Up When I Walk", a
#1 U.S. hit completely in Japanese language, 1963)
Don't Worry, Be Happy - Bobby Brown
Kokomo - Beach Boys
Pata Pata - Miriam Makeeba (South African top 10 hit in U.S. - late
1960's)
The Israelites - Desmond Decker & The Aces (top 10 U.S. crossover hit
from Jamaica, late 1960's)
Rum and Coca-Cola - The Andrews Sisters (the original on Decca [ONLY!]
million-seller from 1946, about sailors on leave in the Caribbean)
Theme from Harry's Game - Clannad (you've heard this in car commercial
years ago)
El Watusi - Ray Barretto (1963 major hit - at least in New York area,
with strong Puerto Rican local population), and the best of all the
records listed here.

Nice try, but take it from a pro, your dart never even hit the board.
Christopher Helms
2007-05-10 23:34:46 UTC
Permalink
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
I don't know if this is exotic, strictly speaking, but it should be on
any offbeat songs list




Along with "Coconut" by Harry Nilson, "Clap For The Wolfman" by The
Guess Who and "Revolution #9" by Da Beetles. Oddly, I couldn't think
of any really weird songs performed by women. Macy Gray or Tori Amos
might have something suitably weird floating around out there, but
nothing really came to mind.
Agent Smith
2007-05-10 23:40:18 UTC
Permalink
Post by Christopher Helms
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
I don't know if this is exotic, strictly speaking, but it should be on
any offbeat songs list
http://youtu.be/hD6KUzP3MQQ
Along with "Coconut" by Harry Nilson, "Clap For The Wolfman" by The
Guess Who and "Revolution #9" by Da Beetles. Oddly, I couldn't think
of any really weird songs performed by women.
Turning Japanese.
Christopher Helms
2007-05-11 00:18:31 UTC
Permalink
Post by Agent Smith
Post by Christopher Helms
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
I don't know if this is exotic, strictly speaking, but it should be on
any offbeat songs list
http://youtu.be/hD6KUzP3MQQ
Along with "Coconut" by Harry Nilson, "Clap For The Wolfman" by The
Guess Who and "Revolution #9" by Da Beetles. Oddly, I couldn't think
of any really weird songs performed by women.
Turning Japanese.
"Rock On" by David Essex.
Agent Smith
2007-05-11 00:36:26 UTC
Permalink
Post by Christopher Helms
Post by Agent Smith
Post by Christopher Helms
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
I don't know if this is exotic, strictly speaking, but it should be
on any offbeat songs list
http://youtu.be/hD6KUzP3MQQ
Along with "Coconut" by Harry Nilson, "Clap For The Wolfman" by The
Guess Who and "Revolution #9" by Da Beetles. Oddly, I couldn't
think of any really weird songs performed by women.
Turning Japanese.
"Rock On" by David Essex.
Cherokee People.
Krayola Karma
2007-06-06 13:44:15 UTC
Permalink
Post by Agent Smith
Post by Christopher Helms
Post by Agent Smith
On May 10, 4:44 am, Agent Smith
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
a bit latin sounding? madonna La Isla Bonita ("lash night i dreamed of san pedro)

lonely bull herp alpert (oops, herb alpert)
Post by Agent Smith
Post by Christopher Helms
Post by Agent Smith
Post by Agent Smith
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
isn't that more of a mellow misty new age?
lose the mist nd you've got rolf rupert's "do you like peniscoladas** and smelly
socks in the rain?" (ok, mebbe i messed up those lyrics a little)


** why don't you follow me upstairs so you can taste my collection of swizzle
sticks?
Post by Agent Smith
Post by Christopher Helms
Post by Agent Smith
I don't know if this is exotic, strictly speaking, but it
should be on any offbeat songs list
http://youtu.be/hD6KUzP3MQQ
Along with "Coconut" by Harry Nilson, "Clap For The Wolfman"
by The Guess Who and "Revolution #9" by Da Beetles. Oddly, I
couldn't think of any really weird songs performed by women.
bjork likes to be wierd (i guess). human behavior was her big hit.
Post by Agent Smith
Post by Christopher Helms
Post by Agent Smith
Turning Japanese.
with that chun king intro? :-)

same era, "der kommissar" was said to be true mid euro song

la cuchracha!
Post by Agent Smith
Post by Christopher Helms
"Rock On" by David Essex.
wierd for that era (like 10cc hit)
Post by Agent Smith
Cherokee People.
that's not exotic, it's just nasty-sad :-)

why not include a few of the african trend circa 1980 (simon from simon and
garfunkel did some)
talking heads http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remain_in_Light



trower bridge of sighs was wierd (and stupid :-) ). also his lowrider instrumental
was semi-uniquely bubbley murky wierd. ripe for remixing :-)
mahavishnu light was just wierd :-)



famous with foreign sounds:
smack my bitchup prodigy ('exotic' pseudo ululating leads into the middle windup)

what about one of the sitar embedded tracks from beatles? weren;t they
"pioneers" of exotic-mainstreaming?
Zaven
2007-05-17 00:33:38 UTC
Permalink
Post by Agent Smith
Post by Christopher Helms
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
I don't know if this is exotic, strictly speaking, but it should be on
any offbeat songs list
http://youtu.be/hD6KUzP3MQQ
Along with "Coconut" by Harry Nilson, "Clap For The Wolfman" by The
Guess Who and "Revolution #9" by Da Beetles. Oddly, I couldn't think
of any really weird songs performed by women.
Turning Japanese.
Good one. How about Kristy MacColl "In these shoes?"
I once met a man with a sense of adventure
He was dressed to thrill wherever he went
He said "Let's make love on a mountain top
Under the stars on a big hard rock"
I said "In these shoes?
I don't think so"
I said "Honey, let's do it here."
So I'm sitting at a bar in Guadalajara
In walks a guy with a faraway look in his eyes
He said "I've got a powerful horse outside
Climb on the back, I'll take you for a ride
I know a little place, we can get there for the break of day."
I said "In these shoes?
No way, Jose"
I said "Honey, let's stay right here."

No le gusta caminar. No puede montar a caballo
(She doesn't like to walk, she can't ride a horse)
Como se puede bailar? Es un escandolo
(But the way she dances, it's a scandal)

Then I met an Englishman
"Oh" he said
"Won't you walk up and down my spine,
It makes me feel strangely alive."
I said "In these shoes?
I doubt you'd survive."
I said "Honey, let's do it.
Let's stay right here."
http://www.kirstymaccoll.com/music/lyrics/in_these_shoes.htm
Reality Check
2007-05-11 00:52:18 UTC
Permalink
On 10 May 2007 16:34:46 -0700, Christopher Helms
Post by Christopher Helms
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
I don't know if this is exotic, strictly speaking, but it should be on
any offbeat songs list
http://youtu.be/hD6KUzP3MQQ
Along with "Coconut" by Harry Nilson, "Clap For The Wolfman" by The
Guess Who and "Revolution #9" by Da Beetles. Oddly, I couldn't think
of any really weird songs performed by women. Macy Gray or Tori Amos
might have something suitably weird floating around out there, but
nothing really came to mind.
Kate Bush, "The Dreaming" immediately comes to mind.
kaboom
2007-05-11 01:48:52 UTC
Permalink
Post by Reality Check
On 10 May 2007 16:34:46 -0700, Christopher Helms
Post by Christopher Helms
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
I don't know if this is exotic, strictly speaking, but it should be on
any offbeat songs list
http://youtu.be/hD6KUzP3MQQ
Along with "Coconut" by Harry Nilson, "Clap For The Wolfman" by The
Guess Who and "Revolution #9" by Da Beetles. Oddly, I couldn't think
of any really weird songs performed by women. Macy Gray or Tori Amos
might have something suitably weird floating around out there, but
nothing really came to mind.
Kate Bush, "The Dreaming" immediately comes to mind.
**Awesome choice. "Sat in Your Lap" is one of my favorite songs.

kaboomie
D***@AOL.com
2007-05-11 01:52:39 UTC
Permalink
Kate Bush - Exotic = synonym

Tori Amos- Ripoff = synonym



Dennis C from Tennessee
Ronald 'More-More' Moshki
2007-05-11 05:09:50 UTC
Permalink
Post by D***@AOL.com
Kate Bush - Exotic = synonym
Tori Amos- Ripoff = synonym
Dennis C from Tennessee
Tori is 'Tori The Terrible'

Am sticking with "Afternoon Delight" Starland Vocal Band 1976
Paul
2007-05-11 13:45:24 UTC
Permalink
Post by Christopher Helms
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
I don't know if this is exotic, strictly speaking, but it should be on
any offbeat songs list
http://youtu.be/hD6KUzP3MQQ
Along with "Coconut" by Harry Nilson, "Clap For The Wolfman" by The
Guess Who and "Revolution #9" by Da Beetles. Oddly, I couldn't think
of any really weird songs performed by women. Macy Gray or Tori Amos
might have something suitably weird floating around out there, but
nothing really came to mind.
Midnight at the Oasis, Maria Muldaur. "Send your camel to bed." A little
weird...
y***@yahoo.com
2007-05-11 17:23:39 UTC
Permalink
Post by Paul
Post by Christopher Helms
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
I don't know if this is exotic, strictly speaking, but it should be on
any offbeat songs list
http://youtu.be/hD6KUzP3MQQ
Along with "Coconut" by Harry Nilson, "Clap For The Wolfman" by The
Guess Who and "Revolution #9" by Da Beetles. Oddly, I couldn't think
of any really weird songs performed by women. Macy Gray or Tori Amos
might have something suitably weird floating around out there, but
nothing really came to mind.
Midnight at the Oasis, Maria Muldaur. "Send your camel to bed." A little
weird...- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
On hump or two?
Pithy and Original
2007-05-11 22:00:13 UTC
Permalink
Post by Paul
Post by Christopher Helms
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
I don't know if this is exotic, strictly speaking, but it should be on
any offbeat songs list
http://youtu.be/hD6KUzP3MQQ
Along with "Coconut" by Harry Nilson, "Clap For The Wolfman" by The
Guess Who and "Revolution #9" by Da Beetles. Oddly, I couldn't think
of any really weird songs performed by women. Macy Gray or Tori Amos
might have something suitably weird floating around out there, but
nothing really came to mind.
Midnight at the Oasis, Maria Muldaur. "Send your camel to bed." A little
weird...
Suzanne Vega had a couple. the one about Luca and the one about.....oh
hell........getting a cup of coffee or something.
edonline
2007-05-11 22:55:22 UTC
Permalink
On Fri, 11 May 2007 22:00:13 GMT, "Pithy and Original"
Post by Pithy and Original
Post by Paul
Post by Christopher Helms
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
I don't know if this is exotic, strictly speaking, but it should be on
any offbeat songs list
http://youtu.be/hD6KUzP3MQQ
Along with "Coconut" by Harry Nilson, "Clap For The Wolfman" by The
Guess Who and "Revolution #9" by Da Beetles. Oddly, I couldn't think
of any really weird songs performed by women. Macy Gray or Tori Amos
might have something suitably weird floating around out there, but
nothing really came to mind.
Midnight at the Oasis, Maria Muldaur. "Send your camel to bed." A little
weird...
Suzanne Vega had a couple. the one about Luca and the one about.....oh
hell........getting a cup of coffee or something.
"Tom's Diner"

As for some other exotic pop, how about Tarkan (Turkish pop singer who
had a hit with "Simarik", which was later remade as "Kiss Kiss" by
another singer). There's aslo the late Israeli singer Ofra Haza who
not only had hits solo but also performed with many other singers and
groups and was sampled, including by Eric B and Rakim and M/A/R/R/S.
y***@yahoo.com
2007-05-11 00:51:40 UTC
Permalink
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
Just to prove to you Agent Smith, you aren't even close, here's a song
(a huge hit at one time) that tops anything you've listed, even though
it's far from my favorite song, and it wasn't from this decade:


y***@yahoo.com
2007-05-11 23:06:28 UTC
Permalink
Here's another one from the list of exotic hits I gave earlier-
Clannad singing (English renaming) "The Theme From Harry's
Game" (don't ask for the Gaelic):


y***@yahoo.com
2007-05-11 23:56:19 UTC
Permalink
Anyone who wants to get an idea of what major 1963 hit "El Watusi", by
Ray Barretto
sounded like, this is a much longer than 30-second clip (free):

http://localhostr.com/files/cbdcc57ce1e811652f95.mp3

Would you admit that's pretty exotic for a Top 10 WABC New York hit?
It damn sure sounded like nothing else on the radio back then.
Sounded pretty off-the-wall to my young ears, but it was dig-able, you
know? What the funk (sic) is going on here...heh-heh...funk before
we knew what it was back then, courtesy of Afro-Hispania.
Phaeton
2007-05-12 07:29:53 UTC
Permalink
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
( What is your definition of "exotic pop songs" anyway ?? )

Queen - "Mustapha" ( 1978 )

Cheers, Csaba

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|d|i|g|i|t|a|l| http://accounts.zotspot.com/?source=10965&m=l
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EARTH::AUSTRALIA:[SYDNEY]HARANGOZO.CSABA;1, delete? [N]:

Flabbergasted (adj.), appalled over how much weight you have gained.
vxp
2007-05-13 00:37:49 UTC
Permalink
Post by Phaeton
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
( What is your definition of "exotic pop songs" anyway ?? )
Queen - "Mustapha" ( 1978 )
Cheers, Csaba
Couldn't think of the '70's how about the '80's


First We Take Manhattan - Leonard Cohen

Everybody Knows - Leonard Cohen

Dance Me to the End of Love - Leonard Cohen


V

.
Rich Ardini
2007-05-12 18:49:40 UTC
Permalink
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
Didn't really like her music,
but Sade qualifies as an exotic artist.
Surprised she wasn't mentioned in the posts so far.
D***@AOL.com
2007-05-13 00:56:28 UTC
Permalink
Post by Rich Ardini
Didn't really like her music,
but Sade qualifies as an exotic artist.
Surprised she wasn't mentioned in the posts so far.
Because even though her music was exotic............the phonetic
phuck up involved in the self-pronunciation of her name is most
quixotic, baby!!!

Dennis C from Tennessee
Need Some Help ()
2007-05-13 03:14:51 UTC
Permalink
Quiet Village, Martin Denny


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y***@yahoo.com
2007-05-13 20:23:30 UTC
Permalink
Post by Need Some Help ()
Quiet Village, Martin Denny
I already mentioned that one a couple of days ago; even providing a
YouTube link.

You Got....Larry
mrsb
2007-05-13 00:55:34 UTC
Permalink
Post by Agent Smith
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
And here I thought I was the only one in the world who remembered Al Stewart
and "Year of the Cat"!
Uni
2007-06-07 07:20:26 UTC
Permalink
Post by Agent Smith
Top three most exotic pop songs from the 60's to the present
3) One Night in Bangkok (Murray Head)
2) Fernando (Abba)
1) Year of the Cat (Al Stewart)
How about Chakachas's "Jungle Fever"? That's from the '70's, though.

Okay, how about:

Jane Berkin & Serge Gainsbourg - Je T'Amie...Moi Non Plus!!!

Uni

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