Listening to a playlist of songs that last no more than 120 seconds reveals lots of rockabilly, surf instrumentals, British Invasion hits, the Elvises Presley and Costello, Maurice Williams and the Zodiacs’ Stay, the shortest song (1:34!) to hit #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 and the punk novelty of speeding up old songs (U.K. Subs’ 1:41 version of She’s Not There).
Not surprisingly, Lennon-McCartney and Brian Wilson are
good at minimalism (And Your Bird Can Sing, For No One, I’ll Cry Instead,
Dance, Dance, Dance, most of the Wild Honey album). Buddy Holly too
(Rave On, Not Fade Away).
Short stories like the Coasters’ Love Potion Number
Nine and Willie Nelson’s The Troublemaker. The Stones’ I Wanna Be
Your Man (1:43), the Boxtops’ The Letter (1:58), the Clash’s Career
Opportunities (1:53) and the Byrds’ Girl With No Name (1:56). Each over
in a couple of hundred heartbeats.
Plus, three other songs jumped out as well for their
sudden timeliness.
The singer in Mushroom Cloud (1961, 1:57) isn’t
losing sleep over school or because he’s bugged at his old man or that his girlfriend’s
parents don’t approve. It’s the specter of nuclear annihilation and powerlessness:
“We party, we laugh, and we pray again/And we play it cool and try not to think
of the mess we're in.”
The lyrics, written by Boudleaux Bryant and sung by Sammy
Salvo, are opposite to the song’s poppy format, complete with the male/female backing
vocals that were popular at the time. Bryant, along with wife Felice, wrote Love
Hurts and most of the Everly Brothers’ hits, including All I Have to Do
Is Dream, Bird Dog, Bye Bye Love and Wake Up Little Susie.
Salvo was a regionally well-known Alabama pop singer who later left show business
to own a meat-supply business.
Held Up Without a Gun
(1981, 1:21) by Bruce Springsteen and the B-side of Hungry Heart, was
inspired by the 1979 oil crisis (or at least the first stanza is): “I was out
driving, just taking it slow/Looked at my tank, it was reading low/Pulled in an
Exxon station out on Highway One/Held up without a gun.”
Never minding the rest of the song (or in this case the
last 40 seconds), autobiographical lyrics about a “damn fool with a guitar” signing
a bad management contract, today it’s yet another reminder of the endless economic loop we're all trapped in.
Shape of Things to Come (1968, 1:54) from the teen-exploitation flick Wild in the Streets always had an ominous feel from the fascistic name of the fictious band (Max Frost and The Troopers) to its lyrics darkly promising the wrong kind of change (There's a new sun/Risin' up angry in the sky).
The film’s plot is about a shift in the
Constitution that lowers the age requirement for voting to 14, creating a bloc
that gets Max Frost (Christopher Jones), a narcissistic rock star, elected
president. Frost runs as a Republican.
It’s still a pretty cool song.







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