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FRIDAY RANDOM TEN – 2.4 MEELION DOLLARS EDITION

1. “You Took Advantage of Me,” Ella Fitzgerald, 1956. From The Rodgers and Hart Songbook. Totally unremarkable, though she gives it her best. Officially establishes the lowest score Ella can reach. 6/10

2. “Social Disease,” Elton John, 1973. Utterly pointless track from the generall good Goodbye Yellow Brick Road. 3/10

3. “Sisters of the Moon,” Fleetwood Mac, 1979. I think this is the strangest song Stevie Nicks ever wrote. Go ahead and re-read that sentence. Yeah. 3/10

4. “Tears of Rage,” The Band, 1968. Unspectacular in the extreme. It’s the first track of its album, and it definitely plays like a warm-up. 5/10

5. “Free Life,” Neil Diamond, 1970. There’s a neat little flute thing going on, but it’s an early example of the stodgy Adult Contemporary trap he’d fall into later in the decade. 4/10

6. “Tomorrow Never Knows,” The Beatles, 1966. John goes nuts to close Revolver. I’m always glad when it starts, but I usually get bored before it’s over. 6/10

7. “Procession,” The Moody Blues, 1971. For all it’s proto-prog spoken word glory, there’s something I adore about this one. Anyway, it’s the first non-dull song of the bunch. 6/10

8. “When the Ship Comes In,” Bob Dylan, 1964. Filler, pure and simple. It sounds like 50 other Dylan songs. 4/10

9. “Step Aside,” Sleater-Kinney, 2002. Whoa, culture shock. I liked One Beat a lot more before The Woods, but it’s still a good, raucous album, and if I’m not mistaken, they’re still a cred-enhancing band. 7/10

10. “Bridge Over Troubled Water,” Simon & Garfunkel, 1970. Just about the prettiest vocal track in pop history. A point off because everyone has heard this song about 400 times. 9/10

Average: 5.3/10, and I must thank Paul Simon for making even that happen.

Bonus Track: “You Really Got Me,” The Kinks, 1966.

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