Top 40 Classic Cola Soft Drink Spots

Top 40 Classic Cola Soft Drink Spots Artist: Various Artists
Label: Breakable Records
Category: Music


Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 2


UPC: 076637020551
EAN: 0076637020551
ASIN: B00007E8J7


Release Date: 2002-11-06

Top 40 Classic Cola Soft Drink Spots


Related Categories:

General General
Categories | Rock | Styles | Music
General General
Categories | Compilations | Rock | Styles | Music

Tracks:

  1. Introduction (Scanning The Dials 33-63)
  2. 1964
  3. 1965

Album Description

Full Title - Swingin' Soft Drink Spots Of The 60's. Advertisers have been using pop stars to hawk soft drinks for decades now, but never more than in the mid-'60s, when the whole notion of pairing pop (the liquid kind) and ''youth culture'' really took off! This one-of-a-kind collection includes the best radio spots in 1964 and 1965, featuring such artists as The Four Seasons, Jay & The Americans, Petula Clark, The Supremes, Ray Charles, Roy Orbison, Jan & Dean, Lesley Gore, Freddie & The Dreamers, and many more. Also includes authentic ''hit radio'' sound-bytes featuring the best-loved DJs and radio jingles, and a mini-documentary of radio advertising. Breakable Records.

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Drink up, baby boomers.......2003-04-05

On the whole, this collection is a lot of fun and often fascinating--particularly if, like me, you're a card-carrying member of the "baby boom" generation. It's pretty much an aural trip down memory lane. Beginning with a 17-and-a-half-minute track that offers snippets of radio programs, ads, announcer banter, station I.D.'s, and news and weather updates from the 1930s through 1963, CD1 then moves into the year 1964.

It's at this point that baby boomers can dive right into the nostalgia vortex of their cerebral cortex, as there's a promo for joining the fan clubs of the Beatles, actor Richard Chamberlain, and others. That segues into a robust Limelighters ad for Coke, followed by the DJ's intro over the opening chords to "I Want To Hold Your Hand." Now, that's Top 40 radio of the 1960s as I remember it. It was fast-paced, fun, and hip (yet sometimes touchingly corny if the DJ was a quick wit who told jokes and one-liners). Top 40 radio possessed a sense of generational community back then. We knew that thousands (or many thousands, if we were tuned in to a station in a major market) of other young people were hearing the same song or the same news update or the same episode of "Chicken Man" as we were at that very moment. In that respect, I guess, radio is no different today than it was in the '60s; it's just not as much fun to listen to (and, for the DJs, contemporary radio--on the whole--does not allow them to be all that creative).

CD1 clocks in at about 44 minutes; CD2 clocks in at a little more than 42 minutes. All of CD2, by the way, covers the year 1965.

This 2-CD collection is really about the advertising jingles that helped keep the Top 40 stations on the air and the economy humming along. Mostly this collection is Coca-Cola ads--more than 30 of 'em. But there's at least one ad each for Pepsi, Diet Rite, Bubble Up, Sprite, etc., and even a smattering of ads for other products or services.

What strikes me now, hearing these ads nearly 40 years after they originally aired, is the musicianship and production values the advertisers (particularly Coca-Cola) invested in their ads. I mean, some of these ads clock in at 90 seconds or better, and the singing and instrumentation are solid. (It's my understanding that many of the session musicians who played on hit singles of the time also played on these jingles. And if you should decide to buy this collection, you'll quickly hear how some of the artists' Coke jingles are cleverly written and arranged to remind listeners of the artists' actual hit singles.) Among the top-name acts contracted to sing the praises of their favorite soft drink were Jan and Dean, Lesley Gore, the Supremes, Jay and the Americans, Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenders, Tom Jones, Gary Lewis and the Playboys, the Four Seasons, and Petula Clark. Even the Shirelles, the Drifters, and the Coasters, all of whom hit their stride before 1964-1965 but were still part of the musical landscape, serve up some winners. (There are several other acts on this collection I haven't mentioned.)

Am I going to listen to this 2-CD set as often as I do, say, "Shut Down Vol. 2," "Rubber Soul," or "Mr. Tambourine Man"? No. But as a collection of familiar artists promoting familiar products during a memorable period for Top 40 radio, it's great fun. Combine the soft drink jingles with the DJ banter, the station I.D.'s, and numerous rarities (Howard Cosell doing a promo for Jets games broadcasts; a DJ announcing how some lucky listener can win a trip to London to hang out with the Dave Clark 5; a chance to win two tickets to the upcoming Beatles concert, etc.), and this is a good way to insert the real deal into those cassettes and CDs you make that cover those specific years.

Music Album:

  1. Sex Sells ~ Stiffed
  2. Singles ~ Mouth & MacNeal
  3. A Return to the Inner Experience ~ Sky Cries Mary
  4. Falling Down ~ Steve
  5. Timeline ~ Brand X
  6. One Man's Trash Is Another Man's Treasure ~ The Jody Grind
  7. Start Something ~ Lostprophets
  8. Dead Letters ~ The Rasmus
  9. Annihilation Time ~ Annihilation Time
  10. That'll Flat Git It!, Vol. 22 ~ Various Artists

Music Album

Music Album

Music CD

Assembler ~ Bill Connors

Tiger Rag ~ Louis Armstrong

Jazz Frontier ~ Lou Blackburn

Immolation/Immersion ~ Nels Cline, Wally Shoup, Chris Corsano

Swinging Jazz ~ Nanni Byl

Everything Is Hotsy-Totsy Now ~ The Coon-Sanders Nighthawks

Der Himmel Ist Hier ~ Wolf Maahn

Original Hop Scotch ~ Tommy Scott

My Glory ~ Fungus

Douce France ~ Caravelli