I am still using the "what would I play if Sirius/XM would let me host a segment, and these are songs that I could play over and over again.. I will continue the "Bugaloo" theme shortly, it is still resting up in the pasture after being rode hard for the past year.
I
decided to roll with "Paint it black" It is a Rolling Stone song that
was used in the opening credits of a TV series that we GI's watched in
the barracks. We liked the realism, the attention to detail, they had
used Vietnam veterans as advisers to ensure the realism and gritty
reality...for 80's TV anyway. When the show came on, the dayroom was
full as everybody clustered around the AFN broadcast of the show. This
song is the only song by the Rolling Stones that I really liked.....We
would cheer when the soldiers would shoot up Charlie and the
firefights. The interplay of the people was very well done, we liked
the way the new LT played by Stephen Caffrey was mentored by the platoon
sergeant played by Terrance Knox. All the other guys also played well
on each other and at the end of the video, it showed the 3 soldiers
standing at attention and saluting the flag on TV at the end of the
broadcast day....when they played the national Anthem. That was
telling for me. The simple patriotism showed represented the beliefs of
the Veterans in their country..
Tour of Duty is an American drama television series on CBS. It ran for three seasons from September 1987 to April 1990 as 58 one-hour episodes. The show was created by Steve Duncan and L. Travis Clark, and produced by Zev Braun.
The show follows an American infantry platoon on a tour of duty during the Vietnam War. It was the first television series to regularly show Americans in combat in Vietnam and was one of several similarly themed series to be produced in the wake of the acclaimed Oliver Stone film, Platoon. The series won an Emmy Award in 1988 for Outstanding Sound Mixing for a Drama Series, and it was nominated again in 1989 and 1990.
The first season was filmed on location in Hawaii at Schofield Barracks. For the second and third seasons the series was filmed around Los Angeles, California in order to reduce costs. This also enabled the producers to redress a studio backlot as Saigon. The move also meant reusing the same locations, notably a small river with grass on one bank and woods on the other which turns up in a number of episodes. A lot of filming was undertaken on the old set of M*A*S*H. Helicopter scenes with McKay were filmed on the ground with the rotors running.
The first season opens in 1967 and follows a standard light infantry platoon. In the second season, the troops found themselves relocated to a base near Saigon while conducting the typical "search and destroy" missions. Production staff interviewed in VIETNAM Magazine cited this change as a change in premise that doomed the series, as female characters were also introduced (in hopes of gaining more female viewership and because of the premiere of the ABC Vietnam Army Nurses drama "China Beach" which was aimed at a more female audience ) and the show ceased to be a realistic chronicle of life in the field for the average line infantryman in favor of being more romance- and action/adventure-oriented. In the third season, the remaining female character was killed off and the platoon was transferred to a SOG (Studies and Observation Group) unit under the command of Colonel Brewster—played by Carl Weathers, conducting covert operations in Vietnam and in Cambodia, culminating in the fictional version of the raid on Son Tay Prison. The third season was the show's last.
In its third season, CBS moved the show to the Saturday 9:00 p.m. time slot. Being forced to compete with NBC's The Golden Girls and Empty Nest, the show's ratings dropped and the show was canceled at the end of the season.
All 3 seasons that have been released in the United Kingdom, has the complete original soundtrack including "Paint It, Black".
The show was known for its classic American rock soundtrack including Creedence Clearwater Revival, Jimi Hendrix, and Jefferson Airplane. One first-season episode, "USO Down", used "live" versions of "Wooly Bully", and "We Gotta Get Out of This Place" as performed by a USO band, the latter song being used also for ironic comment. The songs in this episode were retained in the DVD soundtracks. But for copyright reasons, the VHS and DVD soundtracks of the majority of episodes were replaced with sound alikes—a move which was widely protested by buyers, and resulted in a significantly lower sales volume for the third-season DVD set than for the first two.
In the Netherlands, amongst other European nations, a total number of seven albums were released, containing most of the songs featured on the show. As a result, "Paint It, Black" was re-released as a single, again hitting the number 1 position in the Dutch top 40 popchart in May 1990
Great tune. And as soon as you said TV show I went "Yes! Tour Of Duty". One of my favorites. They are showing it again in reruns on the Heroes & Icons (H&I TV) channel on Saturdays at 8:00PM. We have it as digital channel 19.2 in Pittsburgh. Maybe some station in your area carries it.....
ReplyDeleteHey Taminator;
DeleteWe also have "H&I" here and yes it was cool watching it with my Dad, who would comment about it while we were watching.