I think "Slow Ride" works perfectly for the ending of "Dazed and Confused." To me that embodies the spirit of '76 perfectly, along with Blue Öyster Cult's "Don't Fear the Reaper" and Thin Lizzy's "The Boys Are Back in Town." (I remember falling on my face roller skating while those were playing at the rink.)
Led Zeppelin is an excellent and important band, but it seems that the more blue-collar groups like Aerosmith, Nazareth and Bad Company connected better with teenagers, at least where I grew up. My older brother had all the Zep albums, and they were exotic and mystifying to me then, but I absolutely love them now. Plus you had acts like Pink Floyd, Queen, Kiss, Bowie, Alice Cooper, Fleetwood Mac, the Stones, AC/DC, Ted Nugent, the Runaways, Cheap Trick and the Scorpions going strong. Plus there was a growing punk and New Wave movement, and disco was huge for those who were so inclined. What an insanely excellent time to be a teenager!
Supposedly the soundtrack is what's holding up the DVD release of "Looking for Mr. Goodbar," but I wonder at this point if Paramount just doesn't think it's worth it. Other than Thelma Houston's "Don't Leave Me This Way," the film doesn't have huge songs like "Saturday Night Fever" had. It features important stars very early in their career like Diane Keaton (the year she won the Oscar for "Annie Hall"), Richard Gere and Tom Berenger, and it has perhaps the bleakest ending I have ever seen in a film. I'm holding on to my VHS basically forever.
And yes, Fantasy is pretty much known as The Label that Screwed John Fogerty. Other than disco singer Sylvester and jazz acts like Dave Brubeck, I can't name a single act on the label without Googling.
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