Topic: Riff-In-A-Jiff
Drawn from the 1971 album Distant Light, the single "Long Cool Woman (In A Black Dress)" actually had more success in other countries than it did in The Hollies' native UK. There the song topped out at #32 on the charts. In the US it reached #2, while it was a #1 chart-topping hit in both Canada and Australia. Tabbed here is the Intro.THE HOLLIES - "Long Cool Woman (In A Black Dress)" (A. Clarke/R. Cook/R. Greenaway)
https://www.angelfire.com/planet/zerofret/annesblog/varriffs.txt
Audio (studio version): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aIRHTBvZRzU
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Updated: Tuesday, August 14, 2012 3:55 AM EDT
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This song is one part Newfoundland, one part Alberta, and one part Rudyard Kipling. Interesting mix. Taken from Big Sugar's 2001 CD Brothers & Sisters, Are You Ready?, the track is sung from the point of view of a down on his luck Newfoundlander, forced to leave his home (and loathe to do so) due to lack of employment, who is heading for the Alberta oil and natural gas fields where work is plentiful. "A Canadian story song" is how Big Sugar front man Gordie Johnson often introduces the tune in concert (including when I saw them at The Sound Of Music Festival in Burlington, Ontario back in June).
I've written here before about how much I like Jackson Hawke's debut album Forever (1976). (
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The first of six singles released from Bryan Adams' 1984 album Reckless, "Run To You" was a #4 hit in Canada, #6 in the US, and Top 20 in several other countries. Reckless was named Album Of the Year at the 1985 Juno Awards.
A #3 hit in Canada -- #26 on Billboard -- "Absolutely Right" was drawn from Five Man Electrical Band's 1972 album Coming Of Age. It also served as the title track for the band's 1995 best-of CD Absolutely Right: The Best Of Five Man Electrical Band (pictured).