by Al Kooper
Simon, Carly
Simon, Joe
Simon, John
Simon, Lou
Simon, Lucy
Simon, Paul
Simon and Garfunkel.
Simon Sisters
“Simple Man,”
Sinatra, Frank
Slammer, the (recording studio)
Sledge. Percy
Slick, Grace
Sloan, P. F.
“Smiling Phases,”
Smith, Keely
Smokey Robinson and the Miracles
Soloff, Lew
Solomon, Howard
Somerville, Massachusetts
“Somethin’ Goin’ On,”
Somewhere in England
“So Much Love,”
Sons of Adam, The
Sony Records
Soul of a Man
Sound Emporium
Sounds of the South
South, Joe
Southern, Terry
“Space Baby,”
“Space Oddity,”
Spann, Otis
Spector, Phil
Speiser, Sandy
Spero, David
Spier, Larry, Jr.
Spinal Tap.
Spinal Tap
Spoelstra, Mark
Spooner, Bill
“Spoonful,”
Springfield, Dusty
Springsteen, Bruce
Stallworth, Paul
Stanley, Snadowsky
Staple Singers
Stardust
Starr, Ringo
State University of New York at Stonybrook
“Stay With Me Baby,”
Steen, Roger
Steve Paul’s Scene.
“Steve’s Song,”
Sticky Fingers
Stills, Steve
Sting
Stoller, Mike
Stone, Chris
Stone, Sly
Stout, Jeff
“Stranger in a Strange Land,”
Strawberry Alarm Clock, The
Strazza, Peter
Streisand, Barbra
Stronach, John
Strzelecki, Henry
Stubenhaus, NeilStudio One (recording studio)
“Subterranean Homesick Blues,”
Sunset Sound
Super Session
“Swamp Music,”
Swarthmore College
Sweet, Rachel
“Sweet Home Alabama,”
“Swept for You Baby,”
Szymczyk, Bill
Tackett, Fred
Take a Little Walk with Me.
“Take Me to the Pilot,”
“Talking Radio Blues,”
Tamarkin, Jeff
Tan, Amy
Tannenbaum, Bob
Tate, Danny
Tate, Eric Quincy
Taupin, Bernie
Taylor, Derek
Taylor, “Run” Joe
“Teen Angel,”
Teller, Al.
Tench, Benmont“Texas Flood,”
Texas Tornado
Thelonious Monster
“These Boots Were Made for Walking,”
“Thing of the Past, A,”
“Thirty-Eight People,”
“This Diamond Ring,”
“This Wheel’s on Fire,”
Thomas, B. J.
Thomas, Mickey
Thomas, Tasha50
Thompson, Linda
Thompson, Richard
Three Dog Night
“Thrill Is Gone, The,”
Thunder, Johnny
“Tie a Yellow Ribbon,”
“Time of the Season,”
“Today’s Teardrops,”
Tokens, The
“Tombstone Blues,”
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
Tony Orlando & Dawn
Top of the Pops
Tornado Jam concert
Toussaint, Allen
Tower of Power
Town Hall, New York City
Townshend, Pete
“Town Without Pity,”
Traffic
“Traintime,”
Traum, Artie
Travis, Randy
Trident Studios
Troggs, The
Troiano, Dom
Tubes, The
“Tuesday’s Gone,”
Tufnel, Nigel
Tumbleweed Connection
Tumler, Nick
“Turn My Head Towards Home,”
“Two Trains Running:
Uhelszki, JaanUnited Artists
United States of America, The
Universal Studios
University of Bridgeport
“Up from the Deep,”
“Up on the Roof,”
Uptown Horns
Utne Reader, The
U2
Vai, Steve
Vale, Jerry
Valente, Gary
Valentine, Elmer
Valentines, The
Van Ronk, Dave
Van Ronk, Teri
Van Zant, Johnny
Van Zant, Ronnie
Vaughan, Stevie Ray
Vee, Bobby
Ventures, The
Verve-Folkways
Vietnam War and the draft
Vincent, Stan
Vinton, Bobby
“Violets of Dawn,”
Virgin Records
“Visions of Johanna,”
Vitale, Joe
Vivino, Jimmy
Volunteers for Literacy
Waits, Tom
“Wake Me Shake Me,”
Walden, Alan
Walden, Phil
“Walk on the Wild Side,”
Wallace, Mike
Walsh, Joe
Warner Brothers
Warwick, Dionne
Was, Don
Washington, Ricky
Waters, John
Waters, Muddy
Waxman, Lou
Waybill, Fee
“(We Are) The Last Two People on Earth,”
Webman, Hal
Webster, Guy
“We Gotta Get Outta This Place,”
“Weight, The,”
Weil, Cynthia
Weinberg, Max
Weiss, Danny
Weiss, Jerry
Welles, Orson
Wells, Junior
Welnick, Vince
We’re an American Band
Werman, Tom
Westlake Studios
We Three Music
WetWillie
Wexler, Jerry
“What Do You Want from Life,”
“What Is Success?,”
What’s Shakin,’
“Whiskey Rock-A-Roller:’
Whisky A Go Go
White Chocolate
“White Punks on Dope,”
Who, The
“Who Do You Love,”
“Why Do Fools Fall In Love,”
Wilczewski, David
“Wild Thing,”
Wilkes, Tom
Wilkeson, Leon
William Morris Agency
Williams, Big Joe
Williams, Hank
Williams, Jesse
Williams, Paul (student-journalist)
“Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow,”
Wilson, Brian
Wilson, Tom
Winwood, Steve
“Without Her,”
Wolf, Dick
Wolf, Howlin;
Wolf, Peter
“Women Paint Signs (That Men Cannot Read),”
Wonder, Stevie road crew of1
Wood, Ron
“Workin’ for MCA,”
Wow/Grape Jam
“Wrack My Brain,”
XTC
Yardbirds, The
Yarrow, Peter
Yearwood, Trisha
“You Belong to Me,”
“You Can’t Always Get What You Want,”
“You Can’t Catch Me,”
“You Don’t Love M
e,”
“You Got To Serve Somebody,”
“You Go Your Way I’ll Go Mine,”
“You Lit a Fire,”
“You Made Me So Very Happy,”
“Young Blood,”
Young, Neil
Young, Paul
“Your Cheating Heart,”
“You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin,”
Yukich, Jim
Zappa, Frank
Zappa, Gail
Zombies, The
ZZTop
1 “It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue,” © 1965 Warner Bros. Inc; © renewed 1993 Special Rider Music (SESAC). Used by permission. All rights reserved.
2 “Ballad Of A Thin Man,” © 1965 Warner Bros. Inc.; © renewed 1993 Special Rider Music (SESAC). Used by permission. All rights reserved.
3 Interview with Bobby Colomby, April 2, 1998 http://www.rdrop.com/users/rickert/bobby.html. Appears on the World Wide Web at address © 1998 by Jeremiah Rickert.
4 This was a lesson I learned once when flying from New York to London. A friend offered me a monster English sleeping pill, and I took it half an hour be before the plane was to depart. Fifteen minutes later, the flight was delayed two hours, and said friend ended up having to carry me on board! So after that incident I never medicated myself until half an hour after we were in the air.
5 © 1995, Rekooped Music BMI. Used with permission.
6 A four-day turnaround consists of delivering the finished music for an episode four days after initially viewing the episode.
7 The technology had escalated in such a way that a musician could set up a bank of synthesizers and assign each one a different instrument sound, then program into a sequencer what each synth would play and have the whole synthesized band play back at the same time in perfect synchronization. This could all be done on a computer, and that is how our work on Crime Story was performed each week. This new technology changed the face and sound of music when introduced in 1985.