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Wednesday, 3 December 2025

That’s Oldies

(Scheduled post - still struggling with understanding) 

I have been watching UK TV Freeview Channel 840, “That’s Oldies”, which I came across by chance, and had a 1960s music fix. It shows old TV rock and pop music from the 1950, 1960s, and 1970s, non-stop, end-to-end all day. These are not the tired old “Top Of The Pops” BBC programmed, endlessly repeated. 

Watching again now, there are groups I enjoyed enormously, such as Cream and the Animals, and others, at least for me, completely forgotten, such as Thunderclap Newman. 

They seem to play chunks of 1960s British groups, 1970s, and 1950s with American music. Most except for the 1970s are in black and white. Much  of the 1950s music is from American television shows, but not the original hits. 

Needless to say, I enjoyed the 1960s groups most. Many you might expect to see do not feature. There is nothing of The Beatles, Rolling Stones, or The Who. I guess it is a rights issue. So, what you get are rarely-played groups with their lesser-known hits that did not reach the top 3. That’s all right. I have not seen most of them for 60 or 70 years, and found them fascinating. 

What strikes me now is how good they were, and how many new things I missed in them at the time, such as harmonies, counter melodies, and clever solos. There were so many groups I dismissed as not worthy of attention, probably because I have much more musical knowledge and appreciation now, and, hopefully, am a better guitarist. 

It is also surprising how well groomed they all were. They were thought scruffy, but most are wearing suits. 

9 comments:

  1. I love heavy and Prog Rock in particular Tasker. I like to watch those sixties bands and see how much and fashion and hair styles evolved and were influenced by jazz, folk, popular musicians, Rock n roll. Bands like Thin Lizzy,Jethro Tull, Pink Floyd and Led Zeppelin come to mind.

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  2. Golden oldies often are just that.

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  3. Sounds like a great station for going down memory lane!

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  4. Worth putting in my hearing aids then?

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  5. You want to listen to Boom Radio, they also have a rock and light channels too. They play all the oldies, disc jockeys are David Hamilton, David Lloyd, Nicky Horn and lots of others. I've given up on Radio 2.

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  6. Listening to older music can be very educational, on top of it being a bit of time travel. Many 60s and 70s songs are forever in my heart connected with my Dad, who loved them and played them at home often.

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  7. Something in the Air, released in 1969. Year I left school.
    Thunderclap Newman are still playing. Do not tell me otherwise.
    Haggerty

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  8. Has that channel managed to blank out the cunning paedophile Jimmy Savile? Quite a tall task as he was the number one presenter on "Top of the Pops" for years. May he rot in hell!
    In 1969 I went to an all night concert at Burton Constable Hall. The headline act was supposed to be Thunderclap Newman but they pulled out because of illness and were replaced by The Nice with Keith Emerson. I was certainly not disappointed. They were bloody brilliant.

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  9. There is so much that vanishes from the forefront, 15 minutes of fame then forgotten. That's why I have a soft spot for those nostalgia channels, be it music, TV or even the adverts.

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