Joe Viglione Media

Joe Viglione Media Established in 1976 - a boutique publicity company see full bio here http://joeviglione.com/

Lots of You in My Life (Feb 2025 Larry Lessard Long Mix 7)https://youtu.be/5IikWLR8nHM  Lots of You in My Life (Feb 2025...
12/01/2025

Lots of You in My Life (Feb 2025 Larry Lessard Long Mix 7)

https://youtu.be/5IikWLR8nHM



Lots of You in My Life (Feb 2025 Larry Lessard Long Mix 7)

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Lots of You in My Life (Feb 2025 Larry Lessard Long Mix 7)

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Sent: Monday, December 1, 2025 at 10:20:55 AM EST
Subject: Mix 7 Lots of You in My Life. Count Viglione

The video features the song "Lots of You in My Life (Feb 2025 Larry Lessard Long Mix 7)" by Count Viglione, Joe Viglione vocals, songwriting (ASCAP) and Peter Calo on most instruments except Eric Lee on Fiddles.

The song is a heartfelt reflection on the joy and happiness found in having a significant other in one's life.

Key themes and lyrical content include:
Constant Presence: The singer repeatedly expresses gratitude
for having "lots of you in my life," emphasizing a continuous and cherished presence
(0:00, 0:19, 1:12, 1:31, 1:44, 2:44, 2:49, 2:58).
Intimacy and Connection:
The lyrics describe holding the person tight in the middle of the night
(0:08, 1:21, 1:40), signifying a deep and intimate bond.

Seasonal Joy and Nature: The song mentions "spring and summer unfolding" (0:34, 3:09),
and a drive up the coast of Maine with the sun breaking through a little rain (0:54),
painting a picture of shared happiness amidst beautiful natural settings.
Ideal Companionship: The singer describes a "perfect day" with their loved one,
including activities like riding with a "chestnut bear" and sitting by the water (2:25).

Commitment: The lyrics express a desire to be "your husband" and "your wife" (2:51),
highlighting a profound commitment to the relationship.

Provided to YouTube by DistroKidLots of You in My Life (Feb 2025 Larry Lessard Long Mix 7) · Count Viglione · Joe Viglione · Peter CaloLots of You in My Life...

11/14/2025

🔗: bit.ly/4r0UeyT

Jeffrey Epstein called President Donald Trump "dangerous" in a newly-shared email included in a trove of documents released by the House Oversight Committee on Wednesday, Nov. 12.

📷: Getty

59th Anniversary of the Beatles/Bobby Hebb tour in August, https://joeviglione.substack.com/p/bobby-hebbs-sunny-and-beat...
07/16/2025

59th Anniversary of the Beatles/Bobby Hebb tour in August, https://joeviglione.substack.com/p/bobby-hebbs-sunny-and-beatles-yesterday two of the biggest songs in history, "Yesterday" and "Sunny" on the same tour as they were being played on the radio We have a Sunny page on Facebook that will be going through the tour day by day in August, and then the Yardbirds/Bobby Hebb tour in October, 59 years ago

Bobby Hebb moved to Rockport on Cape Ann, he toured with the Beatles and then the Yardbirds.Nick Simper of Johnny Kidd and the Pirates toured with Bobby as well. Google the Sunny song page on Facebook

Joe Vig Top 40 . com for March, I'm afraid to post the link or the Meta bots will get me.    Spoiler alert: SUITS LA suc...
03/07/2025

Joe Vig Top 40 . com for March, I'm afraid to post the link or the Meta bots will get me. Spoiler alert: SUITS LA sucks. Find my page for more reviews.

To quote the great Roma Maffia from the film Disclosure, LA Suits lacks any managerialbrio. What I love about the old Perry Mason series (and spin-offs Jake and the Fatman, Matlock and Diagnosis Murder, and let's face it, Law & Order SVU is definitely a Perry Mason spin off) is the terrific stories, directing delivery/acting, they work on all cylinders.

Was SO excited to go back to the worlds of Suits, White Collar, even the m.i.a. Lincoln Lawyer. They all are captivating, fun and exciting. Episodes 1 and 2 of Suits LA both have no character development, no identity, at least when the comedy vinyl lp The Masked Marauders did a parody of Bob Dylan and Mick Jagger it was humorous. There is no humor in this watered-down pathetic excuse for a Suits spin-off. If you like boredom and a television program that says nothing, does nothing, this empty suit is for you. The original is still the greatest.

03/02/2025

Explore Joey Molland's discography including top tracks, albums, and reviews. Learn all about Joey Molland on AllMusic.

World Entertainment War Review by Joe Viglionehttps://www.allmusic.com/album/world-entertainment-war-mw0000264051This 19...
10/31/2024

World Entertainment War Review by Joe Viglione
https://www.allmusic.com/album/world-entertainment-war-mw0000264051

This 1991 disc is interesting and important as a Jefferson Starship artifact. Vocalist Darby Gould would step into Grace Slick's shoes, all documented nicely on Jefferson Starship's own Deep Space/Virgin Sky disc from 1995, and her emergence here is a nice starting point for a singer who still works with the legendary '70s group well into the new millennium. In fact, it's not a stretch to say this material follows the Paul Kantner solo efforts of the '70s, though not with as much vision and charm. The key song, "Dark Ages," written by vocalist Rob Brezsny, became an important part of the JS 1990s set and is a keeper. A melody with strong commercial potential, the message also cuts through better than anything else on this self-titled disc. The 20-track CD actually has 14 songs with radical ramblings in between, those words not as coherent as Tommy James audio movie, A Night in Big City, but still annoying enough to interrupt the flow. The music has a bit of intrigue, track 14 "Kick In" containing moments of interest, but -- for the most part -- the sounds begin to lose their identity and at times the drama becomes tedious. One can certainly hear seeds of the latter day Jefferson Starship here, and the group is from San Francisco with a thanks to Paul Kantner in the credits. There's an elaborate six-page fold-out with bizarre artwork looking like Hieronymus Bosch paintings while the artist was on a downer. The lyric/text is very thick and after many, many repeated spins it is so very hard to get a grasp on what they were doing, outside of "Dark Ages," a song that truly resonates. "In a Crisis" has its moments as well, a definitive way to end the disc and not a bad combination of Quicksilver Messenger Service perhaps having a lost weekend on the Indian Reservation. The project gets an A for effort, a C or passing grade for ex*****on, and for those looking for rock music with an interesting edge, you could do worse to go elsewhere. Hardcore Jefferson Starship fans should definitely seek it out.

Somebody to Love Review by Joe Viglionehttps://www.allmusic.com/song/somebody-to-love-mt0035014049Originally titled "Som...
10/31/2024

Somebody to Love Review by Joe Viglione
https://www.allmusic.com/song/somebody-to-love-mt0035014049
Originally titled "Someone To Love" when the former Grace Wing's brother-in-law and bandmate, Darby Slick of The Great Society, penned it for that band, it became the break-through hit for the Jefferson Airplane when re-titled "Somebody To Love" going Top 5 in May of 1967. The opening with Grace Slick's voice booming an acappella "When the truth is found" is such a great top of the hour lead-off call to arms that classic rock and oldies radio do just that with it decades after its initial sojurn at the upper reaches of the charts. Followed in less than two months by "White Rabbit" the members wouldn't have Top 40 success again until 8 years later when revitalized as Jefferson Starship Marty Balin's "Miracles" went Top 3 in September of 1975. "Somebody To Love" with its jangly guitars and cool San Franciscan sound moves with a pop intensity and urgent lyric so essential to the vibe of the time. Todd Rundgren wanted to find himself and Leroy a girlfriend in "We Gotta Get You A Woman" in 1971 and John Cougar needed "a lover that don't drive" him crazy in 1979, but the purest sentiment regarding finding a significant other was in this track, a direct admonition: "You'd better find somebody to love." The Lady Mondegreen or mis heard lyric here is a major one. In the second verse. The lyric sheet reads "When the garden flowers ...are dead", but it sounds like sly Grace might be slipping in "When God and his laws, are dead...". How counterculture. The song

is an essential element of The Jefferson Starship's repertoire, the band mutating it into a sludgy "Jumpin' Jack Flash" riff closer in the new millenium. Both latter-day group vocalists Darby Gould and Diana Mangano understand the majesty and sing the words Grace Slick is known for with reverence. Check out the 1990's version live from the House Of Blues with a rare guest appearance by Grace which shows up on the Deep Space/Virgin Sky CD. The hard rock is a far cry from the manic almost garage band original ...and Slick says "garden flowers" very clearly in the live rendition.

White Rabbit Review by Joe Viglionehttps://www.allmusic.com/song/white-rabbit-mt0032097696hAPPY birthday Grace! From the...
10/31/2024

White Rabbit Review by Joe Viglione
https://www.allmusic.com/song/white-rabbit-mt0032097696
hAPPY birthday Grace!

From the Surrealistic Pillow album comes this song which, like the word surrealistic indicates, has "an oddly dreamlike or unreal quality". Few psychedelic moments can match Grace Slick's trance-like monotone perhaps inspired by having just read [roviLink="BW"] Lewis Carroll: The Complete Illustrated Works: Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Through the Looking-Glass and

What Alice Found There ]. With hypnotic guitar work in the slow-march intro sounding like it was induced by F.A. Mesmer himself, it's all the more ominous in the harder rocking version released decades later on the Deep Space/Virgin

Sky[/roviLink] live reunion CD. Originally performed with The Great Society, this

composition by Grace came right on the heels of "Somebody To Love" and instantly

insured Ms. Slick superstardom with more Top 40 airplay in 1967 than her

famous colleague Janis Joplin. With well over a hundred cover versions

by such diverse acts as punk/new wavers The Damned, the hard rock

Lizzie Borden (no relation to the new wave girl group produced by

Genya Ravan) and, believe it or not, jazz maestro George Benson,

it is Grace and her pharmaceutical prescription advice which is the definitive

rendition and inspired the Keanu Reeves film The Matrix as much as James Cameron's

The Terminator did. When in the movie Morpheus offers Neo the little red pill or the

little blue pill, it is pure Grace Slick opening the door to wonderland with

narcotics. Years later it is amazing the censors didn't put a stop to it,

Janis Ian's "Society's Child" finding more problems with an in*******al

love affair than The Jefferson Airplane's window to another world. It's a

classic in the truest sense of the world and always a pause for fun when it comes on the radio.

Manhole Review by Joe Viglione https://www.allmusic.com/album/manhole-mw0000015080Manhole was the last of the experiment...
10/31/2024

Manhole Review by Joe Viglione

https://www.allmusic.com/album/manhole-mw0000015080
Manhole was the last of the experimental Jefferson Airplane, and Grace Slick's first official solo album. While Bark and Long John Silver, the final stages of the original Airplane, displayed the excessive psychedelic nature of the musicians within the confines of their group format, Blows Against the Empire, Sunfighter, and Baron Von Tollbooth and the Chrome Nun allowed for total artistic expression. Manhole concluded this phase with 1974's other release, the Jefferson Starship's Dragonfly. By taking the name from Paul Kantner's Blows Against the Empire solo project, Dragonfly began the renewed focus on commercial FM which would turn into Top 40 airplay. Manhole is the antithesis of that aim, but is itself a striking picture of Grace Slick as the debutante turned hippy being as musically radical as possible. To the kids who think she's the cool singer on the mechanical Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now, Manhole is an alien concoction, but it works on many levels as great head music. The title track itself is almost 15-and-a-half minutes of orchestrated underground rock with Craig Chaquico on lead guitar; Jack Casady on bass, along with Ron Carter; voices from David Crosby, David Freiberg, Slick and Paul Kantner; mandolin by Peter Kaukonen; and a 42-piece orchestra (51, if you include the fragments of the Airplane/Starship onboard). It's fun stuff, but looking back one wonders how they maintained a distribution deal for Grunt records with R.C.A., the material being so far from commercial. The title track has a left-hand piano part which "was stolen from an improvisation by Ivan Wing," Slick's father, and the epic is rife with Spanish/English by the singer, translated in the booklet with Slick's "phonetic Spanish spelling." Again, this is total underground excess, but it is actually more than listenable than it looks on paper, and for fans, it has the serious/eccentric nature of this woman who emerged as a big, big star due to her quirky personality having the talent to back it up. Attacks on the government and Clive Davis in the elaborate booklet only prove all involved were not out to make friends, but songs like "Come Again? Toucan" are compelling and intriguing, more so than some of what would constitute 1981's Welcome to the Wrecking Ball, which contained more elements of guitarist Scott Zito than the star. On Manhole, the music is wonderfully dense, macabre, exhilarating, and totally out there. This is a great portion of music from the lead singer of one of America's great music groups. Maybe David Freiberg's "It's Only Music" deserved to be on an Airplane project or solo LP of his own, but it sounds great and works. "Better Lying Down" is Grace Slick and Pete Sears re-writing Janis Joplin's "Turtle Blues," a nice change of pace from the heavy instrumental backing of the other tracks. Slick is in great voice, and reflecting on the album years after it was recorded, the conclusion is that Manhole has much to offer fans. Compare this to Deep Space -- recorded live at the Hollywood House of Blues in the 1990s to see the difference between capturing the time and trying to recapture the magic. Despite the eye toward success and the more serious nature of that later project, it just doesn't have the charm of this artifact from the glory days. It's also a far cry from the 1980s, when Slick returned with three more solo outings: Dreams, Welcome to the Wrecking Ball, and Software, projects which differ vastly from Manhole. The hard rock of Wrecking Ball and the synths and post-Kantner Starship feel of producer Peter Wolf's collaborations on Software show a woman dabbling with other rock formats. Put those three discs in a boxed set with Manhole, and you have true culture shock from a major counterculture figure. Manhole is orchestrated psychedelia at its finest with the voice from "White Rabbit" stretching that concept across two sides.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY GRACE SLICK  https://www.allmusic.com/album/welcome-to-the-wrecking-ball%21-mw0001879293Welcome to the Wr...
10/31/2024

HAPPY BIRTHDAY GRACE SLICK https://www.allmusic.com/album/welcome-to-the-wrecking-ball%21-mw0001879293
Welcome to the Wrecking Ball! Review by Joe Viglione
To coincide with the 1981 album Welcome to the Wrecking Ball, Grace Slick released an insightful interview disc which is actually more fun than the record. The album isn't bad, mind you, it's just that she's such a personality that listening to the star ramble on about the wrecking ball as a symbol of destruction along with her other opinions on life is thoroughly enjoyable. The three essential elements of her Dreams album from the year before reprise their roles here, producer Ron Frangipane, engineer Ed Sprigg, and guitarist Scott Zito writing all the music on Wrecking Ball. Slick creates only lyrics to four of the ten titles, so this is really a Scott Zito album with Grace Slick as the vocalist. Where on the previous disc, Dreams, the singer composed five of the ten totally without a collaborator, that album is closer to what the fans expect from "White Rabbit"'s author. Dreams, Manhole, and Software have more of her personality in the grooves. The first track, "Wrecking Ball," explodes off the disc, a complement to the photos on the cover and inside the gatefold. It is heavy stuff, crunching along and is one of the better tracks here. You won't find a member of Pablo Cruise crashing this party, as Steve Price did on the previous outing. Maybe the disc didn't sell enough for Sonny & Cher to file a lawsuit because "No More Heroes" is the exact melody to the verse of "Bang Bang," you can even sing along "I was five and he was six/we rode on horses made of sticks," though Grace Slick sounds like she's fronting Genesis vocally while the band dwells on hard rock. It's an intriguing progression going from solo album to solo album to see what mood Slick was in what year. Software in 1984, produced by Ron Nevison, featuring Slick's songwriting collaborations with producer Peter Wolf, is far more interesting. Track down the radio promo disc on this, though. The legendary singer gives a great image and superb PR; too bad she mailed her performance in.

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