
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Executive Producer
Brandon Fugal
Honorary Producers
Craig M, James Smith, Ardashir Lea, j lee, Michael Bedenbaugh
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Check out my Hand Picked Selection Below
Professor's Store
- Van Halen OU812 Vinyl Album
- The 80s Collection
- 100 Best Selling Albums
- Ultimate History of 80s Teen Movie
- 80s to 90s VHS Video Cover Art
- Totally Awesome 80s A Lexicon
- Best In Ear Headphones (I Use These Every Day)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Check Out The Professor of Rock Merch Store -
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Check Out Patron Benefits
Help out the Channel by purchasing your albums through our links! As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases at no extra cost to you, thank you for your support.
Click here for Premium Content:
#classicrock #80smusic #vinylstory #80srock
Hey music junkies, Professor of Rock, always here to celebrate the greatest artists and the greatest songs of all time. If you miss the days of MTV when They actually played music. YOu’ll dig this channel of Deep Musical Nostlgia. Make sure to subscribe below right now. I promise that you are going to love this channel. make sure to go sign up at professor of rock .com we have a live stream coming up this week plus other exclusives
Today was are releasing volume 3 of our TABBOO SONGS countdown. Five massive hits that were everywhere back in the day but have since become bristling, controversial taboo. Let’s get right into it. Kicking things off at #5—I’ve got my all-time celebrity Crush, from Scotland…it’s Sheena Easton with Morning Train (Nine to Five). Sheena has had a great career and an even better voice. She’s a six-time Grammy Award nominee, and a 2-time winner, including the award for Best New Artist in 1982.
Sheena’s breakthrough was a #1 smash on the Billboard Hot 100 back in February, 1981, but in the 2000s, that song would’ve likely never seen the light of day. Sheena was 22 years old when “Morning Train” raced to #1, but she had already been down that sometimes rocky track of marriage. Just before “Morning Train” went to #1, she & her first husband divorced. When she was 19, she performed on a BBC Reality TV show called The Big Time, which followed young aspiring artists trying to break into the music business. The exposure worked, and she was signed to EMI. Her first single “Modern Girl” stiffed, but then she was given a Florrie Palmer song titled “9 to 5,” and things got interesting for the Scottish singer. In the States, the label changed the title to “Morning Train (9 to 5)” to avoid confusion with Dolly Parton’s big hit “9 to 5” and the movie of the same name.
“Morning Train (9 to 5)” was a catchy little ditty with a snappy Peter Van Hooke drumline, and some ‘happy go lucky’ sax work by Tony Hall, according to critics…it’s a conservative dream and a feminist nightmare: As the song's narrator, Sheena tells the story of a woman whose entire day revolves around waiting for her man to come back home. She’s bored and restless, consumed by thoughts of him: "All day I think of him / Dreaming of him constantly / I’m crazy mad for him / And he’s crazy mad for me." Her happiness is entirely dependent on his return.