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AMBITION IS THE FIRST STEP TOWARDS

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Music is their business, so it was to be expected to get the hosts of Sound Thoughts commit a whole scene to the music business. Jim DeRogatisi and Greg Kot, who run the week by week program for National Public Radio, talked about on an ongoing show their main tunes about the delights and traps of the record business.

 

Greg Kot picked "Nothing Is Good Enough" by Aimee Mann, "Mercury Poisoning" by Graham Parker, and "E.M.I" by the Sex Pistols as his preferred tunes about the music business, while co-have Jim DeRogatisi picked "Have a Cigar" by Pink Floyd, "So You Wanna Be a Rock and Roll Star" by Patti Smith, and "Got Can I Get a Witness" by Public Enemy. Every one of the six were commendable choices, yet there were a lot more they could have referenced.

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Here are ten other well known tunes expounded on the pound or joy of a vocation in music.

 

Demise On Two Legs by Queen

 

In spite of the fact that it never got the praise of "Bohemian Rhapsody" this initial track from A Night at the Opera has Freddie Mercury going after wicked arrangement producers in the business.

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Geno the Manager by Hall and Oates

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Dissimilar to numerous tunes about those engaged with the music business, this one really shows thankfulness for the person looking out for the pair.

 

The Entertainer by Billy Joel

 

It is a whimsical profession to enter, as the Piano Man so obviously brings up in this buoyant acoustic number from Streetlife Serenade.

 

Paint a Vulgar Picture by the Smiths

 

As a craftsman lies biting the dust, Morrissey impacts the way that the record organization is getting ready to exploit the disaster by repackaging her material.

 

Goon Squad by Elvis Costello

 

The title bunch in this Armed Forces track are industry officials, who Costello cautions "have come to look you over and they're giving you the eye, they need you to come join the party yet you better bid farewell."

 

Free Man In Paris by Joni Mitchell

 

Thinking about his young days in France, this exhausted record executive fantasies about escaping the hit making apparatus on this single from Court and Spark.

 

Try not to Call Us We'll Call You by Sugar Loaf

 

Most hopeful specialists were at that point very much familiar with this reaction when the band made it a Top Ten single in 1974.

 

Keep the Customer Satisfied by Simon and Garfunkel

 

Here the clients are those purchasing their collections, and the title fill in as the mantra the pair stays with accepting from their record.

 

Much thanks by the Kaiser Chiefs

 

"It ought to be a rush however it feels like a drill" Ricky Wilson sings in the theme on this track from Retirement, a collection with a few different references to the entanglements of achievement.

 

Every day Records by the Who

 

Pete Townshend on this delighftul track from Face Dances underlines that he simply needs to continue making tunes, as he becomes progressively careful about the business side of the music world.

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