Friday 9 December 2022

Ten Great Universal Music Group Songs

The Universal Music Group is one of the world’s leading record labels. I am a fan of Elton John & Bob Seger who are both part of the Universal Music Group. There are many other songs I enjoy that are part of the Universal Music Group. This article is a collection of Universal Music Group songs. It features a 50/50 mix of British & American artists.


Reelin’ In The Years - Steely Dan (1972)

This jazz rock song opens with the incredible guitar playing by Elliott Randall whose guitar is prominent throughout the song. Singer Donald Fagen gives a good piano part with the piano being the main instrument in the verses. The guitar part in the verses is subtle so you almost can’t hear it. This reminds me of Elton John’s 1973 song “Grey Seal” where guitarist Davey Johnstone does not play guitar during the verses. Elliott also plays two intense and powerful guitar solos.

 

Ramblin’ Man - The Allman Brothers Band (1973)

This is a southern rocker written and sung by guitarist Dickey Betts. Chuck Leavell’s piano drives the song with good organ support from Gregg Allman. There are intense guitar parts which come throughout the song. There is a guitar solo a little after the one minute mark. The guitars are played by Dickey and Les Dudek. The last two minutes of the song feature guitar soloing by them.


Still The Same - Bob Seger & The Silver Bullet Band (1978)

This ballad shows us Bob Seger at his best. Bob does double duty playing piano and acoustic guitars. The song features those two instruments in the intro. The other instruments join in and Bob starts singing. Bob sings from his heart. Bob plays the piano well providing a good selection of musical notes and he gives a moving piano solo. Keyboardist Robyn Robins gives good organ accompaniment.


Promises - Eric Clapton (1978)

This is a country leaning song featuring electric piano. The guitar parts are a mix of acoustic and electric. Eric sings “la la la la .. ” in the chorus. It’s nice how there’s an electric guitar part doubling it which could be played by Eric himself. Eric sings gently on this song. Keyboardist Dick Sims also plays organ in addition to electric piano.


Twisting By The Pool - Dire Straits (1983)

This is a good, fun rock & roll song. Mark Knopfler wrote, sang and played lead guitar on this song. Keyboardist Alan Clark provides a jolly piano part. As this is a rock & roll song, Mark’s guitar solo sounds like one you’d hear in 50s music. There are a few brief drum solos. The backing vocals offer adequate support to Mark.


I Guess That’s Why They Call It The Blues - Elton John (1983)

It opens with Elton’s warm melodic piano. The other instruments slowly come in, with it becoming a full band song once Elton starts singing. The most prominent instrument alongside Elton’s piano is Davey Johnstone’s guitars. Davey co-wrote the song with Elton and his lyricist Bernie Taupin. This song seems like blues pop to me. Stevie Wonder gives a touching harmonica solo.


That’s All - Genesis (1983)

This is a piano driven rock song. It opens with piano and soft drumming. Phil Collins sings this song and also plays drums on it. The drumming gets more intense close to the one minute mark. There is an organ solo a bit before the halfway mark. There is an interesting guitar solo in the last section of the song. Phil does some subtle singing during the guitar solo.


Dancing On The Ceiling - Lionel Richie (1986)

While Lionel Richie is a soul artist, he has done some songs which went in a rock direction such as this one. I’d classify this as both a pop rock song and a soul song. It opens with cheering, Lionel talking and John Robinson’s drum intro. The piano and guitars give off a rock vibe. There are many glissandos on the piano. A rocking guitar solo is given. This song seems to be influenced by rock & roll music. This is a fun, energetic song.


Alone - Heart (1987)

This is an epic arena rock song. The song opens with a piano with some synth. The verses are slow and the choruses go into intense rock mode with strong guitar and synth parts. Ann Wilson sings powerfully in the choruses. There is a guitar solo three quarters of the way in the song. This is a pure 80s power ballad.


Roll With It - Steve Winwood (1988)

This song has a soul and blues feel. Steve Winwood plays all the instruments on this song except for the horns and some keyboards by Mike Lawler. The main keyboard parts of piano & organ are played by Steve. It opens with drumming, a horn intro and then the lead instrument of piano comes in. Steve sings powerfully. Nice organ parts first appear in the chorus and are used throughout the song. There is a soulful saxophone solo.


I featured a diverse collection of songs I like from the Universal Music Group. Their musical styles are a mix of rock, pop, soul, blues, jazz and country.

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