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Life is too short to waste without coffee

Bad Bat or Kiss from a Rose? October 15, 2007

Filed under: ManicModay, YouTube, tunes — Sanni @ 1:14 am

[Please visit the marvellous Mo @ MM HQ for more entries]

BAT

The first bat coming to my naughty mind was the naughty bat I met found some weeks ago somewhere in the naughty parts of the www. I´ve hided the bat here to keep Coffee2go (more or less) family friendly. Click on the link if you dare.But beware: Coffee2go, especially Sanni, cannot be held responsible for anything that happens to you as a result of taking a peek through the keyhole to this naughty bat. We´re not responsible for any kind of sexual deadbeat or the opposite *wink*

For those of you who prefer the clean version of my Manic Monday I present you the second bat coming to my mind:

“Kiss from a Rose” by Seal is one of my alltime favorite songs. And here´s the special “Batman Forever” version for your listening pleasure ♥ :


Have a great Monday, folks -

xoXOxo

And now…
… our moment of Homer J.:

Homer: Operator! Give me the number for 911!

 

Light My Fire July 31, 2007

Filed under: 60s, Top50, polling station, tunes — Sanni @ 10:56 pm
The 60s

If you can remember anything about the sixties, you weren’t really there.
- Paul Kantner

Would you know a Mod from a Rocker, Dr. No from Dr. Who, or Simon from Garfunkel? If so, then kick off your go-go boots, switch on the lava lamp and reminisce about the age of peace and free love, when Berry Gordy borrowed $800 and started Motown Records, men walked on the moon, the Rolling Stone Magazine rolled of the presses and a new car cost $2.500!

Known retrospectively as “the Swinging Sixties”, this decade is, to many, a decade of memories – as much about Matchbox Cars as Vietnam; equal parts Captain Scarlet and Thunderbirds as well as Woodstock and Hendrix. Life was so much simpler. A sunny optimism permeated everything, and possibilities seemed endless. This was the “permissive” decade, and the introduction of the contraceptive pill in 1963 heralded a new freedom for women. Milk stillcame in bottles, Doctors still made house calls.

With employment high and most enjoying a reasonable income, the 60s saw an increase in consumerism. Leisure time could be enjoyed by shopping, going to the cinema, watching television and travelling abroad.

The Beatles made the film “Help!”, played Shea Stadium, visited Elvis Presley at home and went to Buckingham Palace to receive their MBEs – not quite all in the same week, but almost.

Some predicted the mini skirt would lead to anarchy – or even worse, to joy. The Pill and the miniskirt seemed to promise some kind of utopia, providing the maximum of temptation with the maximum of opportunity. While Bob Dylan said that the answer was Blowing In The Wind, many women found a better answer in the Pill.

Meanwhile, The Rolling Stones were in and out of police vans for puffing weed and peeing on walls.

Internationally, the big issues were Vietnam and civil rights and the “Space Race”:

In the United States, the Sixties were also a period of great unrest and dramatic change. The Vietnam War and the civil rights movement were both beginning to make major changes in our society, and young people were rebelling against the tremendous conformity of the Fifties. The 60s also saw the most spectacular technical achievement of the 20th Century when America won the Space Race and man landed on the moon in July 1969 – but the greatest shock of the decade was the assassination of President Kennedy in 1963.

The youth of the 1960s certainly had plenty of heroes to choose from -
Mary Quant, Twiggy, Che Guevara, Mick Jagger, Malcolm X, Muhammad Ali, Bernadette Devlin, Yuri Gargarin … film stars and those four lads from Liverpool.

Sandwiched between the studied sloppiness of the beat generation – sandals and shapeless sweaters – and the floaty self-indulgence of the hippies was the time of the Mods. All targets, chevrons, bright colours, flags and crisp hard edges. Pop art, Op art and Psychedelia.

The second half of the 60s were the years of change. No year in the decade saw greater change than 1967. It was the year of Peace and Love. It was a year perfectly summed up in “San Francisco” by Scott McKenzie. Dressed in a kaftan, beads and bells and wearing flowers in his hair, McKenzie may have looked a right pratt. Nevertheless, he and the rest of the psychedelic Hippies believed that through rock music, drugs and “free love” (sex), they could change the world. They had the innocence of children…
They called themselves Flower Children. Their slogan was “Make Love Not War” and they took their message to military establishments all over America and Britain until the authorities banned them because of increased violence as soldiers fought each other over whose turn it was to beat up and/or make love to, a flower child.

Just as 1967 was the year of peace and love, 1968 became the year of protest. In Chicago, hippies clashed with Mayor Daley´s police force; In Tokyo, Red Brigades smashed police blockades; In Paris students rioted on the boulevards and in Belgium… nothing had changed so nothing happened at all.

1968 was a year of anger. The year when young people said “No” in songs that voiced their bitter frustrations at the establishment. No area of society was immune to the wave of revolution.

I´m proud to add two important dates to the Sixties´s history… important to my family and me:
My hubby Frank was born in August 1966 and my parents got married in 1968.

The 60s left also time for ordinary people to do extraordinary things, and for the camera to be there to record them. People invented strange contests – to see who could cram the most bodies into a telephone box, to leap the widest chasm on a motorcycle, to cross rivers and oceans in the strangest craft. What a decade!

Sometimes I regret I missed a great decade, especially when I listen to the music…
I´m not a child of the 60s – I wasn´t even “planned” – but it seems my parents didn´t smoke too much weed in the Sixties. They remembered many things and helped me lots to blog this 60s special. Thank you, Miss Elli and Mr Gargamel =)

Coffee2go´s Top 50 Songs of the 60s:

  1. Hey Jude ~ Beatles
  2. Paint It Black ~ Rolling Stones
  3. My Way ~ Frank Sinatra
  4. Light My Fire ~ Doors
  5. Turn, Turn, Turn ~ Byrds
  6. Rama Lama Ding Dong ~ Edsels
  7. Give Peace A Chance ~ John Lennon
  8. Sounds of Silence ~ Simon & Garfunkel
  9. Ruby Tuesday ~ The Rolling Stones
  10. Crimson and Clover ~ Tommy James and the Shondells
  11. Mustang Sally ~ Wilson Pickett
  12. Daydream Believer ~ Monkees
  13. Hang on Sloopy ~ McCoys
  14. Paperback Writer ~ Beatles
  15. California Dreaming ~ Mamas & the Papas
  16. (Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher and Higher ~ Jackie Wilson
  17. My Girl ~ Temptations
  18. When A Man Loves A Woman ~ Percy Sledge
  19. Leaving on a Jet Plane ~ Peter, Paul & Mary
  20. Summer Wind ~ Frank Sinatra
  21. Mr. Tambourine Man ~ The Byrds
  22. Yesterday ~ Beatles
  23. The Wanderer ~ Dion
  24. Twist and Shout ~ Beatles
  25. Like a Rolling Stone ~ Bob Dylan
  26. I Heard It Through The Grapevine ~ Marvin Gaye
  27. Build Me Up Buttercup ~ Foundations
  28. Hit the Road Jack ~ Ray Charles
  29. Honky Tonk Women ~ Rolling Stones
  30. Hit The Road Jack ~ Ray Charles
  31. Louie, Louie ~ Kingsmen
  32. Yellow Submarine ~ Beatles
  33. Stand By Your Man ~ Tammy Wynette
  34. In The Ghetto ~ Elvis Presley
  35. Mellow Yellow ~ Donovan
  36. Black Is Black ~ Los Bravos
  37. Unchained Melody ~ Righteous Brothers
  38. Poetry In Motion ~ Johnny Tillotson
  39. (I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction ~ Rolling Stones
  40. Monday Monday ~ Mamas and the Papas
  41. Isrealites ~ Desmond Dekker and the Aces
  42. I Got You Babe ~ Sonny & Cher
  43. She Loves You ~ Beatles
  44. Mrs. Robinson ~ Simon & Garfunkel
  45. Ring Of Fire ~ Johnny Cash
  46. All My Loving ~ The Beatles
  47. The Leader Of The Pack ~ Shangri-las
  48. Hot Rod Lincoln ~ Johnny Bond
  49. Let’s Twist Again ~ Chubby Checker
  50. Pretty Little Angel Eyes ~ Curtis Lee
Please cast your vote and let me know how you feel about protest songs!

Have a great day -

See ya’all soon!!!
~xoXOxo~

Sanni

And now…
… our moment of Homer J.:

Homer: I’ll never wiggle my bare butt it public again
Lisa: I’d like to believe that this time, I really would.

Bonus:
Then and now… 1960s vs the 2000s:

THEN: Long Hair
NOW: Longing for hair.

THEN: The perfect high.
NOW: The perfect high yield mutual fund.

THEN: Rolling Stones.
NOW: Kidney stones.

THEN: Passing the driver’s test.
NOW: Passing the vision test.

THEN: Trying to look like Marlon Brando or Elizabeth Taylor.
NOW: Trying not to look like Marlon Brando or Elizabeth Taylor.

THEN: Popping pills, smoking joints.
NOW: Popping joints.

 

Play That Funky Music July 9, 2007

Filed under: 70s, Top50, polling station, tunes — Sanni @ 11:50 pm

Things were simple in the 70s – even politics. This wonderful synthetic decade brought us Glam Rock, Pet Rocks and Punk Rock. Even bank clerks wore purple flared suits, had their hair permed, grew a Zapata moustache and had group sex in a hot tub with the accounts department. The seventies were definitely about excess. More was very definitely more – more hair, more height, more glitter, more guitars, more drugs, more More (long, thin, black cigarettes favoured by Telly Savalas in Kojak. Moderation had ceased to exist. The key to the Seventies was ‘freedom’, and some of its bizarre crazes were the first real manifestations of the advancements made courtesy of the social revolution of the 60s. The ideas and philosophy of the previous decade became mainstream in the 70s -
sexual freedom, the end of the draft, legalization of abortion, gay liberation, breakthroughs in women’s rights… you name it.
And all accompanied by caftan-clad ladies and canned pineapple, cheese and cocktail onions on skewers shoved into a foil-covered potato at wife swapping parties.
As the decade progressed our focus turned at various times to Space Hoppers, ABBA, Mood Rings, roller skates, custom vans with airbrushed murals, Star Wars, Disco, Jaws, Iron-on T shirt transfers, Happy Days, Kung Fu, and Punk… *Phew*

Good taste and fashion may not have made great bedfellows, but it was a fun decade to grow up in. Do you already hear the music???

Coffee2go´s Top 50 Songs of the 70s:

  1. Let It Be ~ Beatles
  2. Imagine ~ John Lennon
  3. Stairway to Heaven ~ Led Zeppelin
  4. Walk This Way ~ Aerosmith
  5. Let’s Get It On ~ Marvin Gaye
  6. Nights In White Satin ~ Moody Blues
  7. All Right Now ~ Free
  8. Message in a Bottle ~ Police
  9. Bridge Over Troubled Water ~ Simon & Garfunkel
  10. Diamonds Are Forever ~ Shirley Bassey
  11. Wild World ~ Cat Stevens
  12. What’s Going On ~ Marvin Gaye
  13. Should I Stay or Should I Go ~ Clash
  14. Roxanne ~ Police
  15. A Horse With No Name ~ America
  16. I Was Made For Loving You ~ Kiss
  17. Smoke on the Water ~ Deep Purple
  18. We Are the Champions ~ Queen
  19. Papa Was A Rolling Stone ~ Temptations
  20. Mama Told Me Not To Come ~ Three Dog Night
  21. Theme From Shaft ~ Isaac Hayes
  22. One Way Or Another ~ Blondie
  23. You Are The Sunshine Of My Life ~ Stevie Wonder
  24. Dancing In The Moonlight ~ King Harvest
  25. Stuck In The Middle With You ~ Stealer’s Wheel
  26. Walk On The Wild Side ~ Lou Reed
  27. Sweet Home Alabama ~ Lynyrd Skynrd
  28. Kung Fu Fighting ~ Carl Douglas
  29. Don’t You Worry ‘Bout a Thing ~ Stevie Wonder
  30. Ring My Bell ~ Anita Ward
  31. Bennie and the Jets ~ Elton John
  32. Don’t Let The Sun Go Down On Me ~ Elton John
  33. Workin’ At The Car Wash Blues ~ Jim Croce
  34. You’re The First, The Last, My Everything ~ Barry White
  35. Why Can’t We Be Friends? ~ War
  36. Play That Funky Music ~ Wild Cherry
  37. Shake Your Booty ~ KC and The Sunshine Band
  38. You Sexy Thing ~ Hot Chocolate
  39. Bohemian Rhapsody ~ Queen
  40. Love Hurts ~ Nazareth
  41. Wonderful Tonight ~ Eric Clapton
  42. Le Freak ~ Chick
  43. You Really Got Me ~ Van Halen
  44. Take A Chance On Me ~ ABBA
  45. Fantasy ~ Earth Wind and Fire
  46. Y.M.C.A. ~ Village People
  47. My Sharona ~ The Knack
  48. I Will Survive ~ Gloria Gaynor
  49. Knock On Wood ~ Amii Stewart
  50. Black Magic Woman ~ Santana
Please cast your vote and let me know how you feel about the 70s!

Remember: Never combine eating Pop Rocks and drinking Coke!

See ya’all soon!!!
~xoXOxo~

Sanni

And now…
… our moment of Homer J.:

Duff book of records: Springfield is now the fattest city in the U.S.
Homer: Woo Hoo. In your face Milwaukee.