Believe me, the sun always shines on TV

“Just sit right back and you’ll hear a tale, the tale of a fateful trip…”

Of all the TV theme songs that have come and gone over the decades, probably none has been so ingrained into the minds of my generation as the theme to “Gilligan’s Island.”  The show lasted only three seasons (1964-1967), but the combined music and lyrics created an insidious “ear worm” that burrowed its way permanently into the subconscious of anyone who grew up in the ’60s, and even some in the ’70s and ’80s as well.

And there were others.  The ’60s and ’70s were full of TV programs with theme songs with lyrics that basically explained the shows’ premise in a catchy, sing-songy way:  “Petticoat Junction” (1963-1970), “The Patty Duke Show” (1963-1966), “Green Acres” (1965-1971), “Flipper” (1964-1967), “The Brady Bunch” (1969-1974), “Mister Ed” (1961-1966), “The Addams Family” (1964-1966), “F Troop” (1965-1967), “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” (1970-1977) and “The Jeffersons” (1975-1985).

Yet none of these songs ever proved popular enough to be played on pop radio, but then again, they weren’t really meant for that.  Other theme songs, on the other hand, turned out to be far more suitable as Top 40 hits and were consequently released as singles, many achieving pop chart success.

Most involved lyrics, but a select few instrumental pieces also made the charts.  All told, there have been 27 TV show theme songs that have reached the Top 30 pop charts over the years between 1953 and 1992, mostly in the ’60s and ’70s. Some of them will likely be unknown to you; others you will probably be able to sing every word. I have chronicled them all here, and I urge you to jump to the end and kick on the Spotify playlist so you can listen as I attempt to bring back some fun memories for you.

Next week, I’ll be sharing more great TV show theme music, both vintage and more recent, that didn’t make the charts but were mighty memorable songs.

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“Soul Train”

The musical variety series, featuring primarily R&B, soul and hip-hop artists during its 35-year run, began airing only locally in Chicago in 1970 before being syndicated nationally in 1973. Its first official theme song, “TSOP (The Sound of Philadelphia),” was written by Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff and recorded in 1974 by the Philly soul outfit known as MFSB, with vocal contributions by The Three Degrees. It became the first TV theme song to reach #1 on the US pop charts, and it won the Best R&B Instrumental Grammy in 1975.

“S.W.A.T.”

Composer Barry DeVorzon (who also wrote “Nadia’s Theme” for “The Young and the Restless” and “Bless the Beasts and the Children” for The Carpenters) composed “Theme From S.W.A.T.,” a disco song used in the short lived “S.W.A.T.” series in 1976.  DeVorzon’s orchestra recorded the short version used during each episode’s opening, but the full length version, recorded by R&B/funk band Rhythm Heritage, had an factious dance arrangement that catapulted the track to #1 on the Billboard Top 40 chart in late 1976.  The song is remembered far more than the series that inspired it.

“Welcome Back, Kotter”

When producer Alan Sachs was putting together a Gabe Kaplan sitcom in 1975 to be titled “Kotter,” he wanted a theme song that sounded like one of his favorite ’60s pop groups, The Lovin’ Spoonful.  As luck would have it, Sachs’s agent also represented former Lovin’ Spoonful singer-songwriter John Sebastian, and he brought the two together.  Initially, Sebastian struggled trying to write lyrics that included the Kotter name, so instead he focused on the idea of the series’ premise of a teacher returning to the high school where he’d grown up.  Sachs was so pleased with Sebastian’s song “Welcome Back” that he changed the show’s title to “Welcome Back, Kotter.”  A scaled down version was used for the opening credits, but Sebastian’s full-length recording included two verses, a chorus, and a harmonica interlude, and that version reached #1 on the charts in May 1976 and eventually sold a million copies.

“Miami Vice”

Jazz-rock keyboard virtuoso Jan Hammer came up with a catchy synthesized instrumental piece that swayed the producers of Miami Vice to make it their theme song beginning in autumn 1984. The show, which used a lot of rock music in its soundtrack, was conceived by NBC honcho Brendon Tartikoff in two words he wrote on a napkin one evening:  “MTV Cops.”  The original “Miami Vice” soundtrack LP, which included Glenn Frey’s #2 hit “You Belong to the City” as well as “Smuggler’s Blues,” was the #1 album in the country for six weeks in November/December of 1985.  Hammer’s “Theme From Miami Vice” also topped the singles charts that year.

“The Heights”

When Fox was still a new network in the late ’80s/early ’90s, many new shows were introduced, but most disappeared after one or two seasons. “The Heights,” a 1992 musical drama about a fictional band of the same name, was canceled after only 13 episodes. Remarkably, though, the show’s theme song, “How Do You Talk to An Angel” (sung by cast member Jamie Walters), made it to #1 on US pop charts.

“The Greatest American Hero”

Mike Post is one of the most successful writers of television theme songs, winning multiple Emmys and Grammys for his work over four decades.  It’s Mike Post’s music you heard on each episode of “Law and Order,” “Law and Order: SVU,” “NYPD Blue,” “L.A. Law,” “Quantum Leap,” “The A-Team,” “Murder One” and “CHiPs,” among many others. One of Post’s few theme songs which had lyrics was “Theme From Greatest American Hero (Believe It Or Not),” co-written by Stephen Geyer, which became a #2 hit single in 1981 for one-hit wonder Joey Scarbury (although he later had success as a country music songwriter).

“Dragnet”

This venerable detective drama began life as a radio show in 1949, then a TV series in 1951-1959, and revived in 1967-1970. The instrumental theme music, with its instantly identifiable four-note intro, was written by Walter Schumann for the radio program, and was used in both runs of the TV series as well. In 1953, a recording of “Theme From Dragnet” by Ray Anthony and his Orchestra reached #3 on US pop charts and sold a half a million copies.

“Secret Agent”

P.F. Sloan, a successful pop songwriter who wrote more than 20 hits for various ’60s artists like The Turtles (“You Baby”) and Barry McGuire (“Eve of Destruction”), came up with the iconic guitar lick that was selected for use on the American broadcast of the British spy show “Danger Man,” retitled “Secret Agent” by CBS.  Initially, the producers wanted just a 20-second snippet for use in the show’s opening, but eventually Sloan and partner Steve Barri wrote the full length song entitled “Secret Agent Man.”  Famed producer Lou Adler brought in Johnny Rivers, who’d already had four Top Ten hits by then, to record the song (with extra verses) live at the Whiskey A Go Go club on the Sunset Strip.  That recording went to #3 on the Top 40 charts in 1966.

“Hawaii Five-0”

It’s no surprise the the producers of a detective show called “Hawaii Five-0” would want to use surf music as the basis for its theme song.  Morton Stevens, a successful film and television score composer, wrote “Theme From Hawaii Five-0” in 1968 for the show’s first season, played by the CBS Orchestra.  It became so popular that it was soon re-recorded by the California pop group The Ventures and released as a single, which reached #4 on the Top 40 charts in early 1969.  Because the show lasted another 11 years (and was later revived in a new prime-time version), the theme music has become a dominant soundtrack in pop culture.

“Happy Days”

When the “Happy Days” sitcom debuted in early 1974 as TV’s answer to the film “American Graffiti,” the show used Bill Haley and The Comets’ 1955 classic “Rock Around the Clock” as its opening theme song.  Over the closing credits was an early version of “Happy Days,” written by Norman Gimbel and Charles Fox, and sung by Jim Haas.  By Season 3, the song was re-recorded with different lyrics by the team of Pratt & McClain, and used in both the opening and closing credits for the remaining seven seasons of the show’s run.  When it was released as a single in 1976, it reached #5 on the Top 40 charts.

“Makin’ It”

Don’t recognize this TV show?  You’re not alone.  If you blinked in 1979, you missed it, because it aired for only eight episodes.  Created to capitalize on the popularity of the “Saturday Night Fever” film and the disco craze, the show was a victim of poor timing, debuting as the public’s love affair with disco was dissipating.  The show starred actor David Naughton, who later starred in the 1981 film “An American Werewolf in London,” and it was also Naughton who sang the show’s disco-based theme song, written by Dino Fekaris and Freddie Perren.  Naughton’s recording of “Makin’ It” reached #5 on the Top 40 charts in May 1979, two months after the show’s cancellation.

“Peter Gunn Theme”

When the great Henry Mancini wrote this original “night in the city” music, he said he was trying to evoke a mysterious “danger lurking” feeling, which has been imitated hundreds of times since, most notably by John Barry when he wrote the “James Bond Theme” three years later that has been used in every Bond film since.  In 1959, Ray Anthony and His Orchestra recorded “Peter Gunn Theme,” a full-length version of the 45-second theme music used in the show (which ran from 1958-1961), and it ended up at #8 on the Top 40 charts that year.  Mancini’s original soundtrack album “The Music from Peter Gunn” won an Album of the Year Grammy in 1959 at the 1st Grammy Awards.

“Cops”

Fox debuted “Cops,” the long-running law enforcement reality show, in 1989, and it’s still on the broadcast schedule today. The veteran Jamaican reggae band Inner Circle, led by singer-songwriter Ian Lewis, recorded the song “Bad Boys” for their ninth LP “One Way” in 1987, and the producers of “Cops” tapped it as the show’s theme song. It was released twice as a single in the US, and its re-release in 1993 made it all the way to #8 that year.

“Dr. Kildare”

The fictional character Dr. James Kildare was created in the 1930s for a literary magazine, then made into a series of theatrical films in the 1940s and a radio program in the 1950s before becoming a Top Ten-rated TV show in the early 1960s.  The instrumental theme music used for the series was written by Jerry Goldsmith, the celebrated film/TV composer of dozens of soundtracks.  Although it was never heard as part of any “Dr. Kildare” episode, it had lyrics and the parenthetical title “Theme From Dr. Kildare (Three Stars Will Shine Tonight).”  Actor Richard Chamberlain, who had a decent singing voice as well, took a shot at recording the full version in 1962 and releasing it as a single, and lo and behold, it peaked at #10 on the Top 40 charts that year.

“The Rockford Files”

James Garner’s successful run as private eye Jim Rockford ran for six seasons in 1974-1980. Mike Post (see “The Greatest American Hero” above) had his first breakthrough in the TV theme song business in 1974 with his “Theme From The Rockford Files,” a synthesizer-driven instrumental piece that ended up reaching #10 on the Top 40 charts in 1975.  

“Hill Street Blues”

Mike Post scored another victory in the early ’80s, writing the theme music for the critically praised police drama “Hill Street Blues,” which ran from 1981-1987 and won multiple Emmys for best drama series. Post and jazz guitarist Larry Carlton co-wrote “Theme From Hill Street Blues” for the 1981 pilot, and the instrumental piece reached #10 on the Top 40 charts the same year.

“Zorro”

A mask-wearing, horse-riding hero named Zorro was a character created in a 1919 novella who helped oppressed people in 1840s California. The TV series starring Guy Williams, despite being very popular at the time, lasted just two seasons (1957-1959) due to a dispute between ABC and The Disney Company over ownership rights. The “Zorro” theme song, written by Norman Foster and George Bruns and first recorded by The Mellomen, became a hit in 1958 when re-recorded by The Chordettes, reaching #17 on the US pop charts.

“Batman”

The theme song to the campy TV version of the Caped Crusader story was basically an infectious guitar riff that was part spy movie score and part surf music, with “Batman!” shouted ten times by a female chorus.  Neal Hefti wrote the three-chord blues structure and gave it to The Marketts, an L.A.-based surf music combo of the mid-’60s, and their rendition of the “Batman!” song ended up reaching #17 on the Top 40 charts upon its single release in the fall of 1966.

“Friends”

From 1994 to 2004, there was “Friends,” and then there were all the other shows.  Wildly popular, the show about six friends based in Manhattan still pulls in a gazillion bucks a year in syndication residuals.  Danny Wilde and Phil Solem, savvy music veterans who had been writing and touring as a duo called The Rembrandts, were signed to write and record a theme song for the new sitcom.  In 1995, a Nashville DJ looped the one-minute theme into a longer version and put it on the radio, where it proved so popular that The Rembrandts had to go back into the studio and re-record it as a proper single, entitled “I’ll Be There For You.” It reached #1 in Canada and #3 in England, and peaked at #17 on the US Top 40 that year.

“Angie”

Donna Pescow, the actress who played the tragic character Annette in the 1977 film “Saturday Night Fever,” was picked to star in “Angie,” a sitcom about a Philadelphia-based waitress and her pediatrician boyfriend/husband. It did well in the ratings at first but fell off in the second season and was cancelled after just 36 episodes. Norman Gimbel and Charles Fox, who had written the “Happy Days” theme, wrote “Different Worlds,” a disco-styled theme song for “Angie” which became a #18 hit in 1979 as recorded by singer Maureen McGovern.

“Bonanza”

Jay Livingston and Ray Evans were a successful songwriting duo in the 1940s and 1950s, writing timeless songs like “Mona Lisa,” “Que Sera Sera” and “Tammy,” as well as the Christmas classic “Silver Bells.” In the 1960s, they began writing for TV, and their first effort was the iconic theme music for the hugely popular “Bonanza” series, which ran from 1959 to 1973. Al Caiola and His Orchestra released a single of their rendition of the “Bonanza Theme” in 1961, and it reached #19 on the pop charts that year.

“Then Came Bronson”

Folk musician/composer Jim Hendricks had been married to Cass Elliot and involved in early ’60s groups that later became The Mamas and Paps and The Lovin’ Spoonful. In 1967, he wrote “Summer Rain,” the poignant Top Ten hit for Johnny Rivers. In 1969, he wrote “Long Lonesome Highway,” which was adopted as the vocal theme song for “Then Came Bronson,” a TV series starring Michael Parks as a disillusioned wanderer riding his motorcycle around the American West. It lasted only one season, but “Long Lonesome Highway,” sung by Parks, was a #20 hit on US pop charts in 1970.

“Baretta”

Robert Blake played the title role in “Baretta,” about an unorthodox plainclothes detective who used a wide array of disguises to infiltrate criminal gangs. The show did well over its four seasons (1975-1978) but Blake grew tired of the role and quit, which ended its run. Composer Dave Grusin, a multiple winner and nominee of Oscars and Grammys for film scores like “Heaven Can Wait” and “On Golden Pond,” wrote “Baretta’s Theme,” also known as “Keep Your Eye on the Sparrow,” which was recorded by multiple artists. Although singer Merry Clayton’s version stalled at #45 in 1975, the jazz/disco arrangement by Rhythm Heritage peaked at #20 in 1976 and #15 in Canada. The lyrics included one of Baretta’s favorite lines: “Don’t do the crime if you can’t do the time.”

“The Dukes of Hazzard”

For a time, the fairly mindless action/comedy series “The Dukes of Hazzard” scored huge ratings during its 1979-1985 run, particularly in rural Southern markets. Veteran country music star Waylon Jennings, who served as the show’s narrator as well as an unseen balladeer, wrote “Theme From The Dukes of Hazzard (Good Ol’ Boys)” and included it on his 27th LP “Music Man” in 1980. When “Good Ol’ Boys” was released as a single, it soared to #1 on the country charts and reached #21 on the pop charts, his biggest mainstream hit.

“Moonlighting”

The punchy dialog and sexual chemistry between David Addison (Bruce Willis) and Maddie Hayes (Cybill Shepherd) made “Moonlighting” one of the most popular shows of the 1980s, although it lasted only four seasons (1985-1989).  The Los Angeles locale required a jazzy, jet-setting theme song, and who better suited than singer Al Jarreau to co-write and perform it?  His recording of “Moonlighting Theme” reached #23 on the Top 40 charts in 1987.

“Laverne & Shirley”

“Happy Days” had proved to be so popular that it successfully spun off another sitcom starring two supporting characters, Laverne DeFazio and Shirley Feeney, who became stars in their own right on “Laverne & Shirley,” which ran from 1976-1983.  Norman Gimbel and Charles Fox, who had written the “Happy Days” song, also authored “Making Our Dreams Come True,” the theme song for “Laverne and Shirley.” A young lady named Cyndi Grecco was tapped to record the single, and her rendition made it to #25 in the show’s initial year of 1976.

“Magnum P.I.”

The crime drama series starring Tom Selleck enjoyed a consistently successful run during its 1980-1988 time period. Ubiquitous composer Mike Post managed yet another entry in the Top 30 of the US pop charts when his instrumental, “Theme From Magnum P.I.,” reached #25 in 1982 as a fleshed-out version featuring Larry Carlton’s guitar phrasings.

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Bubbling under the Top 40:

“Theme from ‘Mission Impossible’,” by Lalo Schifrin, 1968; peaked at #41.

“Those Were the Days (Theme from ‘All in the Family’),” sung by Carroll O’Connor and Jean Stapleton, 1972; peaked at #42.

“The Ballad of Jed Clampett (Theme from ‘The Beverly Hillbillies’),” written by Paul Henning, performed by Lester Flats and Earl Scruggs, 1963; peaked at #44 (and #1 on Country charts).

“Theme from ‘Charlie’s Angels,'” by Henry Mancini, 1977; peaked at #45.

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The last thing I needed first thing this morning

I was writing a to-do list of things I needed to accomplish this week, and it occurred to me that every list has a beginning and an end. Crossing off the first completed task on the list feels good, but not as satisfying as finishing the last item.

Based on that admittedly flimsy premise, I’ve compiled 20 songs that featured the word “first” or “last” in the title. It’s not the first such playlist I’ve ever assembled, and it won’t be the last…

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“You’re the First, The Last, My Everything,” Barry White, 1974

In 1953, a songwriter named Peter Radcliffe wrote a country song entitled “You’re My First, You’re My Last, My In-Between,” but it was never recorded or released. R&B legend Barry White came across a rough demo of it in 1974 and decided it had promise as a disco tune if it was rearranged with altered lyrics. He was right about that — it reached #2 on US pop charts as his fourth of six Top Ten hits between 1973 and 1977. It’s a statement of complete devotional love: “You’re my sun, my moon, my guiding star, /My kind of wonderful, that’s what you are, /I know there’s only one like you, there’s no way they could have made two, /Girl, you’re all I’m living for, your love I’ll keep for evermore, /You’re the first, you’re the last, my everything…”

“The First Cut is the Deepest,” Rod Stewart, 1976

Cat Stevens wrote this appealing song for his “New Masters” album when he was only 19, but neither the song nor the album fared well in the UK or elsewhere. His career would get the kickstart it needed in 1970 with the superb “Tea For the Tillerman” LP, which had other artists investigating his early work for material they could cover. Canadian artist Keith Hampshire landed on “The First Cut is the Deepest” and scored a #1 hit on Canadian charts in 1973, and much later, Sheryl Crow and James Morrison each recorded their renditons as well. Rod Stewart found the most success with it, reaching #1 on UK charts in 1976, and it peaked at #21 in the US as a single off his “A Night on the Town” album: “I still want you by my side just to help me dry the tears that I’ve cried, /And I’m sure gonna give you a try, and if you want, I’ll try to love again, /Baby, I’ll try to love again, but I know the first cut is the deepest…”

“Last Night,” The Traveling Wilburys, 1988

George Harrison was in LA recording songs and, as luck would have it, so was Jeff Lynne, working with both Roy Orbison and Tom Petty on their respective albums. Harrison recruited Bob Dylan as well, and they met in Dylan’s home studio to record Harrison’s “Handle With Care.” It turned out so well that the five musicians chose to record an entire album, calling themselves The Traveling Wilburys. Each contributed songs, with Petty offering “Last Night,” a catchy tune about a sexual encounter gone bad: “I asked her to marry me, she smiled and pulled out a knife, /The party’s just beginning she said, ‘Your money or your life,’ /Now I’m back at the bar, she went a little too far, /She done me wrong, all I got is this song, /Last night, thinking about last night…”

“First Things First,” Stephen Stills, 1975

After the initial breakup of Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young in 1970, they all went off for solo careers. Stills released two solid albums before forming the eclectic, vibrant band Manassas in 1972, including the likes of Chris Hillman, Joe Lala, Fuzzy Samuels and Dallas Taylor. When that band splintered in 1974, Stills recruited most of them to appear on his next solo LP, entitled simply “Stills.” He persuaded David Crosby and Graham Nash to add vocals on two tracks, one of which was this spirited tune by Taylor and Stills, which offers sensible “be in the now” philosophical advice: “First things first, when you can quit livin’ in the past, /When you stop worryin’ ’bout tomorrow, then I think you just might last…”

“Last Train to Clarksville,” The Monkees, 1966

Written by the Brill Building songwriting team of Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart, “Last Train to Clarksville” was the opening salvo in The Monkees’ brief run of pop song success on US charts. Its opening guitar part was meant to emulate the kind of intro The Beatles had used in recent hits like “Day Tripper” and “Paperback Writer.” Although there are multiple Clarksvilles in the US, Boyce and Hart said they weren’t writing specifically about any town. “We’d recently driven by Clarkdale, Arizona, and thought Clarksville sounded better. That’s all there was to it,” Hart said. “Take the last train to Clarksville, now I must hang up the phone, /I can’t hear you in this noisy railroad station all alone, /I’m feelin’ low, oh no no no, oh no no no, /And I don’t know if I’m ever coming home…”

“The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face,” Roberta Flack, 1969

Ewan MacColl’s 1953 folk classic was recorded by several artists in the folk music community in the early ’60s, including Peter, Paul and Mary and Gordon Lightfoot. But it wasn’t until Roberta Flack gave it a smooth jazz piano treatment on her 1969 debut LP “First Take” that it became an international #1 hit. Actor Clint Eastwood helped make that happen by featuring it in his 1971 directorial debut film “Play Misty For Me,” a thriller about a late-night jazz DJ stalked by an obsessed listener. A lover recounts the first time “I saw your face, I kissed your mouth, I lay with you” in idyllic, romantic language: “And the first time ever I lay with you, I felt your heart so close to mine, /And I knew our joy would fill the earth, and last ’til the end of time, my love…”

“The Last Time,” The Rolling Stones, 1965

The basic idea for this early Stones single was liberally borrowed by the Jagger/Richard songwriting team from a gospel song The Staple Singers popularized in the ’50s called “This May Be the Last Time.” It ended up reaching #9 on US charts in early 1965, paving the way for their titanic #1 “Satisfaction” a few months later. (It may not sound like it to some listeners, but the popular 1997 track “Bittersweet Symphony” by The Verve uses the same chord progression as “The Last Time,” but at a slower tempo.) “Well I told you once and I told you twice that someone will have to pay the price, /But here’s a chance to change your mind, ’cause I’ll be gone a long, long time, /Well, this could be the last time, this could be the last time, /Maybe the last time, I don’t know…”

“First We Take Manhattan,” Jennifer Warnes, 1987

Poet/songwriter Leonard Cohen came up with this compelling piece in 1986 as he was working on material for his next album. He ended up giving it first to singer Jennifer Warnes, who was such a big fan of his work that she recorded an entire album of his songs called “Famous Blue Raincoat.” Cohen later included it on his 1988 release “I’m Your Man.” Its lyrics suggest religious and “end times” themes, and has been described as “a threatening vision of social collapse and a terrorist’s revenge.” “I’m guided by a signal in the heavens, /I’m guided by the birthmark on my skin, /I’m guided by the beauty of our weapons, /First we take Manhattan, then we take Berlin…”

“One Last Kiss,” J. Geils Band, 1978

Hailing from Worcester, Mass., The J. Geils Band had a fanatical if not enormous following through the 1970s, performing their energetic brand of R&B-infused blues rock. They would eventually have their biggest commercial success with their #1 LP “Freeze Frame” in 1981, but leading up to that, they charted a total of six singles in the Top 40. “Give It To Me” and “Must’ve Got Lost” fared best, but also notable was “One Last Kiss,” a spirited rocker from their 1978 LP “Sanctuary” about a relationship that has run its course: “Just one last kiss before I walk out the door, /I’m gonna hold you tighter than I ever did before, /And I never promised you the things you promised me, /And I can’t justify the way it’s gotta be…”

“My First Night Alone Without You,” Bonnie Raitt, 1975

Charles “Kin” Vassy was a country singer-songwriter who spent several years as a member of Kenny Rogers and The First Edition before striking out on his own, first as a solo artist and then as a session musician. In 1975, Bonnie Raitt was compiling material to record fort her fifth LP, “Home Plate,” and she chose to include her rendition of Vassy’s song “My First Night Alone Without You,” a tearjerker about someone trying to fill the void left when a romantic partner has left: “There is an aching in my head from the bed I can’t get used to, /It’s these little hours in the dark I dread as I spend my first night alone without you…”

“The Last Resort,” The Eagles, 1976

On “Hotel California,” songwriters Don Henley and Glenn Frey had written about drugs and love affairs and excessive behavior, but for the album closer, “The Last Resort,” Henley chose to take a stand against man’s indifference to the environment. “We have mortgaged our future for greed,” said Henley in 1978 interview. Frey called the song “Henley’s opus,” adding, “We’re constantly screwing up paradise. That was the crux of the song: At some point, there will be no more new frontiers.” It ends this way: “We satisfy our endless needs, and justify our bloody deeds, /In the name of destiny, and in the name of God, /And you can see them there on Sunday morning, /They stand up and sing about what it’s like up there, /They call it paradise, I don’t know why /You call someplace paradise and kiss it goodbye…”

“Feels Like the First Time,” Foreigner, 1977

British guitarist Mick Jones had moved to the US in 1975 and decided to form a new group with two other Brits and three Americans, choosing to call themselves Foreigner “because whatever country we were in, at least half the band were foreigners.” Jones had recently divorced his first wife, then met and married an American woman, and he wrote about that new beginning in the lyrics of “Feels Like the First Time,” their first single from their debut LP in 1977: “And I know that it must be the woman in you that brings out the man in me, /I know I can’t help myself, you’re all that my eyes can see, /And it feels like the first time like it never did before, /Feels like the first time like we’ve opened up the door…” Both the song and the album went Top Five in the US and kicked off a solid career filled with power pop, rockers and ballads.

“Last Train to London,” Electric Light Orchestra, 1979

ELO was formed in Birmingham, home town of Jeff Lynne and other members of the band. During their late ’70s heyday, they were often required to travel back and forth to London for recording sessions, business meetings and radio and TV interviews promoting their latest music. While preparing the songs that would comprise ELO’s 1979 LP “Discovery,” Lynne wrote about the burden of working when you want to stay put with your loved ones: “It was one of those nights, one of those nights when you feel the world stop turning, /You were standing there, there was music in the air, /I should’ve been away but I knew I had to stay, /Last train to London, just heading out, /Last train to London, just leaving town…”

“Never as Good as the First Time,” Sade, 1984

Through the years since her mid-Eighties debut, Sade’s music has leaned toward smooth jazz and something called “sophisti-pop,” and lyrically, her songs tend to be about commitment and security. This uptempo number, though, is an ode to carefree sex and living purely in the present. It reached #20 as the second single from her second LP “Promise” in 1986. The words claim that the first sexual encounter with someone is difficult or impossible to top for excitement: “Natural as the way we came to be, /Second time won’t live up to the dream, /It’s natural as the way we came to be, /The second time is not quite what it seems, /It’s never, ooh, as good as the first time…”

“Save the Last Dance For Me,” The Drifters, 1960

Doc Pomus and Mort Shuman, each accomplished songwriters on their own, teamed up in 1960 to write this classic for The Drifters, when they still featured Ben E. King as their lead singer. It became the R&B vocal group’s only #1, their highest charting of nearly a dozen hits between 1959 and 1964. Pomus, who used a wheelchair while battling polio, wrote the song on his wedding day as he watched other men dancing with his new bride while he watched from the sidelines. “I was telling her to have fun dancing, but remember who your man is,” he said: “Oh I know that the music is fine, like sparkling wine, /Go and have your fun, laugh and sing, /But while we’re apart, don’t give your heart to anyone, /But don’t forget who’s taking you home and in whose arms you’re gonna be, /So darlin’, save the last dance for me…”

“First of May,” James Taylor, 1988

Long ago, I heard an amusing couplet about springtime: “Rah rah, the first of May, outdoor loving starts today!” That’s what Taylor was referring to when he wrote this breezy, positive tune for his 1988 LP “Never Die Young.” He’s always been partial to songs that offer a message with a grin and a sly wink, and this song clearly qualifies. It served as the closing deep track on the album, and is one of my favorites from his 1980s output: “First day of May, things are beginning, /Our side is winning, hip hip hooray, /Made in the shade, deep in the shadow, /Down by the meadow, lie in my arms, /And the moon will rise before our very eyes, /We will rise too, I’ll be with you, /It’s a rite of spring, a horizontal thing, /The sweetest sort of dance hidden in among the plants…”

“Last Night,” Michael Stanley Band, 1979

Cleveland’s hometown heroes, The Michael Stanley Band wrote, recorded and performed some of the most authentic, quality heartland rock of the ’70s and ’80s, and enjoyed phenomenal success regionally, but they never quite made it nationally. Too bad, because songs like “Last Night” were tailor made for mainstream pop/rock radio. Its lyrics focus on the thrill of forbidden sex, with the narrator feeling guilt about it but still wanting the affair to go on forever: “She’s gotta know she’s playing around with his life, /It’s so hard explaining these things to his wife, /They cut like a knife, how could he tell her ’bout /Last night, last night, /When we were together, it was so right, so right…”

“First Day in August,” Carole King, 1972

In 1972, King was still riding a huge wave of popularity created by the phenomenal, multiplatinum “Tapestry” album the previous year. Her next two LPs, “Music” and “Rhymes and Reasons,” also claimed the top spot on US album charts, thanks to her stellar reputation as a songwriter and a few more hit singles (“Sweet Seasons” and “Been to Canaan”). For me, one of the jewels on that album was “The First Day in August,” a romantic ballad: “On the first day in August, I want to wake up by your side /After sleeping with you on the last night in July, /In the morning, we’ll catch the sun rising, /And we’ll chase it from the mountains to the bottom of the sea…”

“Mary Jane’s Last Dance,” Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers, 1993

Petty was working on his solo LP “Wildflowers” when he wrote this sad track, and he chose not to include it on that album because he felt it didn’t fit well with the others. In 1993, when his label insisted on putting out a Greatest Hits package against his will, he chose to include “Mary Jane’s Last Dance” as one of two bonus tracks to give fans something new with all the repackaged singles. The cryptic lyrics talk mysteriously about a woman who seems suicidal from drug use: “There’s pigeons down on Market Square, she’s standin’ in her underwear, /Lookin’ down from a hotel room, the nightfall will be comin’ soon, /Oh, my my, oh, hell yes, you got to put on that party dress, /It was too cold to cry when I woke up alone, I hit my last number, I walked to the road, /Last dance with Mary Jane, one more time to kill the pain, /I feel summer creepin’ in and I’m tired of this town again…”

“Last Thing I Needed First Thing This Morning,” Willie Nelson, 1982

Gary Nunn, a country singer-songwriter who wrote the theme song for the longtime TV variety show “Austin City Limits,” wrote this poignant tune for Willie Nelson, who made it the third single from his popular 1982 LP “Always on My Mind.” The song reached #2 on US country charts that year, and current country star Chris Stapleton recorded it in 2017. The lyrics focus on the various ways a person’s day can start off on the wrong foot, none more depressing than losing one’s lover: “This morning at breakfast, I spilled all the coffee, /And I opened the door on my knee, /But the last thing I needed the first thing this morning was to have you walk out on me…”

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Honorable mention:

Last Dance,” Donna Summer, 1978; “The Last Time I Saw Her,” Gordon Lightfoot, 1968; “Remembering the First Time,” Simply Red, 1995; “Last Night I Dreamt That Somebody Loved Me,” Eurythmics, 1989; “My First Night Without You,” Cyndi Lauper, 1989; “Last Night I Didn’t Get to Sleep at All,” The 5th Dimension, 1972; “First Week/Last Week…Carefree,” Talking Heads, 1977; “The Last Time I Saw Richard,” Joni Mitchell, 1971; “Always the Last to Know,” Del Amitri, 1992; “I Dreamed Last Night,” Justin Hayward, 1975.

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