When You're In Love With A Beautiful Woman - Dr Hook And The Medicine Show

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When You're In Love With A Beautiful Woman - Dr Hook And The Medicine Show
Dr. Hook & The Medicine Show ~ "Sylvia's Mother"
RIP Dennis Locorrier
MAYA:
13.0.13.5.0
oxlajun[13] AHAU|AJPU [lord|one blow-gunner] - waxaklajun[18 MUWAN
galactic tone: ascension/ universal movement
sun sign: SUN| snail or conch/yellow or blue/south
ask for wisdom and continued honored memory of ancestors
NAHUA:
mahtlactli-onei[13] - XOCHITL [flower]
last day of TONALPOHUALLI (260 day calendar)
Citlalicue | Xochiquetzal
toznene [parrot]
lord of the night: Tepeyolltl/Tlaloc
trecena [13]: Xiuhtecuhtli
x: mahtlactli-omome[12] - toxcatl
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"Waiting for Dad", Winslow Homer, 1873
"DAD", Dana Schutz, 2007
"Dad", Octav Angheluta, 20th C
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My Dad was born on this day in 1954, so here are songs and performers that mention DAD:
Harry Chapin: Cat's in the Cradle
Foster The People: Pumped Up Kicks
Joni Mitchell: Ray's Dad's Cadillac
Woody Guthrie: Ship in the Sky
Marvin Gaye: I'm Going Home (Move)
Dr. Hook: Cover of the Rolling Stone
The White Stripes: Red Death at 6:14
Amy Winehouse: Rehab
Billie Eilish: bad guy
Rod Stewart: Touchline
The 1975: Love It if We Made It
Buju Banton: Single Parent
Demi Lovato: Daddy Issues
Pearl Jam: Release
Ariana Grande: thank u, next
George Jones: Bull Mountain Lad
Sabrina Carpenter: Juno
Bloodhound Gangs: My Dad Says That's for P*ssies
GRLWood: I'm Yer Dad
Gorillaz: 5/4
Taylor Swift: But Daddy I Love Him
DIE ANTWOORD: Daddy
Weezer: Say It Ain't So
Korn: Daddy
Coldplay: Daddy
Merle Haggard: Sing a Family Song
Radiohead: Sulk
Audra McDonald: Your Daddy's Son
Red Hot Chili Peppers: Mommy Where's Daddy?
Beyonce & the Chicks: Daddy Lessons
Alice Cooper: Enough's Enough
Manfred Mann's Earth Band: Blinded by the Light
Big Daddy Kane: I Get the Job Done
Green Day: Coming Clean
Elvis Presley: Inherit the Wind
Elvis Costello: Shot with His Own Gun & Clubland
Peter Gabriel: Father, Son
The Yardbirds: Ha! Ha! Said the Clown
Talking Heads: Big Daddy & Mommy Daddy You and I
Johnny Cash: Send a Picture of Mother
Bob Dylan: Rank Strangers to Me
Nat King Cole: Friendless Blues
Nirvana: Sliver
Bruce Springsteen: Born in the USA
Lana Del Rey: Be My Daddy
David Bowie: Bleed Like a Craze, Dad
Little Richard: Heeby-Jeebies
Hank Williams: My Son Calls Another Man Daddy
Ella Fitzgerald: My Heart Belongs to Daddy
Chuck Berry: Dear Dad
Bo Diddley: Diddley Daddy
Dennis Locorriere ~died May 16, 2026 in West Sussex, England at the age of 76.
An American musician best known as a founding member, guitarist, and one of the lead vocalists of the country rock group Dr. Hook (formerly Dr. Hook & the Medicine Show). Although he sang lead on several of the band's later hits, the group's primary lead vocalist during its classic era was Ray Sawyer.
A Year Of Songs #36: “I Call That True Love” by Dr. Hook
This bluesy bopper from Dr. Hook’s self-titled 1972 debut is intended to offend. It’s also written by children’s literature legend Shel Silverstein along with all but one track on their debut.
“I Call That True Love” is a misogynistic incel male fantasy that’s so over the top that if it doesn’t make you snicker you’re probably part of the problem.
“I wanna come home every evenin' to a great big meal of wine and roasted pheasant
I want you to say to me Ray, hey this is Susy, this is Kay, I brought 'em both home to you for a present
When The Man downs his soul and find my stash, won't you tell 'em it belongs to you
And when you're sittin' in the slam tell all the other chickies when they get out they should look me up too”
Silverstein piles it on from tip to tail, and Dr. Hook makes the fucker swing with tipsy back porch charm, especially singer Ray Sawyer’s fully committed, frog croak delivery. The man sells verses lesser frontmen would have flubbed.
Like much of the group’s first three albums, “I Call That True Love” is only-in-the-seventies counter culture courting gold best enjoyed with an ice cold Banquet Beer and a freshly rolled number.
81. Sylvia's Mother by Dr Hook and the Medicine Show debuted Apr 72 and peaked at number five, scoring 987 points.
The group formed in New Jersey with singer Ray Sawyer (with the eye patch) as Dr Hook and Dennis Locorriere as lead singer. The group had 21 chart entries from this, their first, to 1982. In 1975 the name was shortened to Dr Hook. Six of their hits made the top ten, two peaking at number five, and four peaking at number six.
Please, Mrs. Avery
Sylvia’s mother says…
“I’m sorry to tell you this, young man,
But Sylvia’s broken it off. She’s a flighty thing,
As you’re probably well aware and - to be
Blunt - she just doesn’t care to talk.”
She’s typically found it enough
For the boyfriend of the month, but now
The phone will not stop ringing. On and on,
Until Sylvia’s mother can hardly stand it.
Turning to her daughter, she says
“For Christ’s sake, by all that’s holy,
Sylvie, will you please just talk to the lad?”
But Sylvia,
Packing in her room,
Pondering, red dress or white?
Or maybe the blue? (she knows the blue one
Drives the boys crazy) just widens her eyes
At her mother. “Please, you talk to him!
Tell him I’m busy! Or that I’m sick!
Come ON, Mum! Just get him
To let me alone!”
So Sylvia’s mother -
Oh, that long-suffering mother -
Picks up the phone again and says
“Look, Sylv’s preoccupied! In fact, she’s
Moving away. Out of the country. To Vancouver,
If you must know, she’s got cousins over there
And she’ll walk in the snow and take up hiking,
So please, PLEASE stop ringing us.”
But the calls keep coming, and
Sylvia’s father starts getting involved.
“Look, Sylvie, this has to stop. The man’s
Half-mad with phoning the house - I don’t know
Where he’s getting all the pennies from.”
Sylvia smirks, a little, over the dining table,
But her father keeps going: “If you would only
Talk to him, we’re sure - your mother and I,
Quite sure, he’d stop. It’s doing our heads in.”
And Sylvia stays silent,
Brooding on her cornflakes,
While across the room her mother says
“Well, I’m sorry to have to tell you this,
But Sylvia died. Quite suddenly. Last
Tuesday, as it happens. We’re
Distraught, of course. Of
Course. No flowers,
Thank you. Yes.”
There’s silence -
A blissful, fumbling silence on the line -
Then one last blurt of speech
As Sylvia’s mother says…
“Yes.
Yes, thank you.
Yes.
Good day.”