Topic: Website
Most-viewed tabs for the month of August 2008 (w/ view numbers):
22 - Harlequin - Thinking Of You
19 - Harlequin - I Did It For Love
15 - The Kings - Switchin' To Glide
15 - The Kings - This Beat Goes On
14 - Harlequin - Sweet Things In Life
14 - Honeymoon Suite - Burning In Love
12 - Harlequin - You Are the Light
10 - Kim Mitchell - Patio Lanterns
9 - A Foot In Coldwater - (Make Me Do) Anything You Want
9 - April Wine - Tonite
Total tab views for August: 387
(By section: Canadian-280, Girlschool-41, Various-33, Chords-33)
Most-viewed tabs overall (stats date from Oct. 3/07 to Aug. 31/08):
124 - Harlequin - Thinking Of You
83 - The Kings - This Beat Goes On
69 - The Kings - Switchin' To Glide
66 - Honeymoon Suite - Burning In Love
60 - Headpins - Don't It Make Ya Feel
56 - Girlschool - Race With the Devil (guitar)
54 - Honeymoon Suite - Stay In the Light
52 - Harlequin - Innocence
52 - Harlequin - Sweet Things In Life
50 - Kim Mitchell - Patio Lanterns
*Only tab views made by people (excluding my own views) are counted here. Webcrawler/bot views are excluded.
Updated: Tuesday, September 2, 2008 12:49 AM EDT
Post Comment | Permalink | Share This Post
I hope everybody is enjoying the Labour Day holiday weekend.
"Baby Ran" was the first 54-40 song I ever heard, and it continues to be among my favourites of theirs now. The song originally appeared on the band's 1986 self-titled album. I had that album on vinyl, but my vinyl collection has long since been retired. About a year ago I was putting together a variety playlist of songs by Canadian bands to burn onto a CD. So I went to an mp3 site in search of "Baby Ran". I had no problem finding it; it's on the band's greatest hits package Radio Love Songs: The Singles Collection (pictured). I was surprised, however, to discover that that CD had a re-recorded version of the song. I wanted the original. The site didn't have the album 54-40, though, so it seemed the original wasn't available.
Bob Seger's "Mainstreet" features a simple, but very melodic and memorable guitar Intro. The song is from Seger's first Top 10 album Night Moves (1976), and it reached #24 on the pop charts. The melody also transfers well to other instruments. In Seger's live show, this Intro is often played to great effect on saxophone (sometimes tenor sax, sometimes soprano sax). The song recounts his days in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
