Footnotes to Plato from the foothills of the Superstition Mountains

Saturday Night at the Oldies: Billboard Top Ten in October, 1963 at the Height of the Profumo Affair

Some of us are old enough to remember John Profumo and his entanglement with sex kitten Christine Keeler, which eventually lead to Prime Minister Harold Macmillan's resignation in October of 1963:

At a party at the country estate of Lord Astor on July 8, 1961, British Secretary of State for War John Profumo, then a rising 46-year-old Conservative Party politician, was introduced to 19-year-old London dancer Christine Keeler by Stephen Ward, an osteopath with contacts in both the aristocracy and the underworld. Also present at this gathering was a Russian military attaché, Eugene (Yevgeny) Ivanov, who was Keeler’s lover. Through Ward’s influence, Profumo began an affair with Keeler, and rumours of their involvement soon began to spread. In March 1963 Profumo lied about the affair to Parliament, stating that there was “no impropriety whatsoever” in his relationship with Keeler. Evidence to the contrary quickly became too great to hide, however, and 10 weeks later Profumo resigned, admitting “with deep remorse” that he had deceived the House of Commons. Prime Minister Macmillan continued in office until October, but the scandal was pivotal in his eventual downfall, and within a year the opposition Labour Party defeated the Conservatives in a national election.

Seven made top ten in October of '63, but I only like six.  Here they are:

Ray Charles, Busted. "I'm broke, no bread, I mean like nothin', forget it."

Roy Orbison, Mean Woman Blues. A great live version featuring the great James Burton and his Telecaster.

Dion, Donna the Prima Donna

April Stevens and Nino Tempo, Deep Purple

I liked this number when it first came out, and I've enjoyed it ever since. A while back I happened to hear it via Sirius satellite radio and was drawn into it like never before. But its lyrics, penned by Mitchell Parish, are pure sweet kitsch: 

Peter, Paul, and Mary, Don't Think Twice, It's All Right. There have been countless covers. The original.

Village Stompers, Washington Square

Back to Profumo and Keeler: Bob Seger, The Fire Down Below. Take 'below' in two senses, and 'fire' too. There is something demonic about sex obsession.


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4 responses to “Saturday Night at the Oldies: Billboard Top Ten in October, 1963 at the Height of the Profumo Affair”

  1. Joe Odegaard Avatar

    Howlin’ Wolf, 1963, Smokestack Lightning. Enjoy. A simpler time.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UXYcpCxlYpg
    And, Goin’ Down Slow (1961).
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s865qLWy8-g

  2. BV Avatar
    BV

    Thanks, Joe, good tunes. But not ‘top ten’ material [grin]. Insufficiently ‘sanitized.’

  3. DaveB Avatar
    DaveB

    FWIW, that PP&M tune got me started playing guitar. I was 15.

  4. Joe Odegaard Avatar

    For a High Kitsch award I nominate “Nights in White Satin.”
    I had a girlfriend in college who would go completely gaga when it played on the radio.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=066HZlam91Y
    Me? I would think of alternate words… “Shells in White Cheddar, guess I’ll cook em again, Lunches I’ve eaten, always pleasing to men…”

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