itunes

gravatar
Member Since: 6/7/2004
Total Mixes: 9747
Total Feedback: 8

Other Mixes By itunes

Playlist | Other Mix
Playlist | Celebrity Playlist
image
Playlist | Celebrity Playlist
image

More '70s Pop - School of Rock: '70s Pop

Artist Song
Rupert Holmes  Escape (The Pina Colada Song)  
Loggins & Messina  Danny's Song  
King Harvest  Dancing In the Moonlight  
Player  Baby Come Back  
Looking Glass  Brandy (You're a Fine Girl)  
The Bellamy Brothers  Let Your Love Flow  
Gary Wright  Dream Weaver  
Minnie Riperton  Lovin' You  
Golden Earring  Radar Love  
Johnny Nash  I Can See Clearly Now  
Carl Douglas  Kung Fu Fighting  
Olivia Newton-John  Hopelessly Devoted to You  
Barbra Streisand  Evergreen  
Pablo Cruise  What'cha Gonna Do?  
Blues Image  Ride Captain Ride (Single/LP Version)  
Michael Murphey  Wildfire  
Redbone  Come and Get Your Love  
Cher  Gypsies, Tramps and Thieves  
Sugarloaf  Green-Eyed Lady  
Vicki Lawrence  The Night the Lights Went Out In Georgia  
Walter Egan  Magnet and Steel  
Dr. Hook  Cover of the Rolling Stone  
Lobo  I'd Love You to Want Me  
Leo Sayer  Long Tall Glasses  
The New Seekers  I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing (In Perfect Harmony)  
Steam  Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye  
Brewer & Shipley  One Toke Over the Line  

Comment:

Can't forget [i]this[/i]. Gotta have [i]that[/i] . . . No matter how many playlists we created, a few absolute must-hear odds 'n' ends slipped between the cracks, so we rounded 'em up in a grab-bag of sugar-pop scrumptiousness. Steam powers their way to the top of the charts with their taunt-astic [i]see ya[/i] to a girlfriend's ex, "Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye." Of all the songs here, it continues to get the most airplay; just tune in to the next blowout at your favorite sporting event, as the loser gets serenaded in '70s-style shame. Dr. Hook & The Medicine Show beg, wheedle, and plead their way to celebrity nirvana with their frog-throated, good-ol'-boy romp through Shel Silverstein's "Cover of the Rolling Stone." (Sadly, they didn't see their picture on the cover . . . only a caricature.) And the plot-twisting savvy that would reap Rupert Holmes Tony® Awards on Broadway earns him an unexpected date with his [i]existing[/i] girlfriend, in "Escape (The Piña Colada Song)," which claims its place in history as the decade's final #1 hit. From "Lovin' You" to "Kung Fu Fighting," we've got all the '70s mini-masterpieces your ears — and your iPod — can hold.
image for mix

Feedback: