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Length: 6:12
Plays (last 30 days): 2
Don't let it get you down, you can take it
And if it hurts
Don't let them see you cry, you can make it
Hold your head up, woman
Hold your head up, woman
Hold your head up, woman
Hold your head high
Hold your head up, woman
Hold your head up, woman
Hold your head up, woman
Hold your head high
And if they stare
Just let them burn their eyes on you moving
And if they shout
Don't let it change a thing that you're doing
Hold your head up, woman
Hold your head up, woman
Hold your head up, woman
Hold your head high
Hold your head up, woman
Hold your head up, woman
Hold your head up, woman
Hold your head high
Hold your head up
Hold your head up
Hold your head up
Hold your head up
Hold your head up
Hold your head up
Hold your head up
Hold your head up
Hold your head up
Hold your head up
Hold your head up
Hold your head up
Hold your head up, woman
Hold your head up, woman
Hold your head up, woman
Hold your head high
Hold your head up, woman
Hold your head up, woman
Hold your head up, woman
Hold your head high
And if they stare
Just let them burn their eyes on you moving
And if they shout
Don't let it change a thing that you're doing
Hold your head up
Hold your head up
Hold your head up
Hold your head up
Hold your head up
Hold your head up
Hold your head up
I kind of feel that "Liar" was the song where Rod Argent was no longer a Zombie. Then when he recorded "Hold Your Head Up," he was a Zombie again.
He left Zombies for good with Oblivion Express
Remember taping this tune on my little portable cassette machine from my parents
clock radio.
Cool! Fond memories! ...now, thanks to RP. you can hear it in ultra hi-fidelity FLAC! Thanx RP!
CHOON!
TRUTH
Phish regularly covers this song and the song played just before it "Peaches in Regalia". Weird coincidence....
Nice keyboards from the golden age of organs.
I'm sure that long organ solo was cut out for radio when this came out.
Brings back great memories.
Love Radio Paradise!!
They say "hold your head up", 38 times! LOL! Still a good tune!
Lyrics were at a premium in those days.
It might need more cowbell though.
Fishman Electrolux vacuum solo intro
Never knew the song lyrics were "woman" at the end of - hold your head up.
I thought they were singing whoa!
same!
They say "hold your head up", 38 times! LOL! Still a good tune!
It's good advice. ;) I love the killer whales holding their heads up.
Remember taping this tune on my little portable cassette machine from my parents
clock radio.
This was on the juke box at the Kiwanis Club, right next to the four square court. I played it every weekday, the whole summer
Always got them confused with Atomic Rooster...
Good tune! Brings back memories!
Even better now in FLAC w/ great phones, amp & DAC! Thanx RP!
Great and classic. But...since I heard it x,000 times back in the '70s and on the airwaves of Jurassic Classic FM, I gotta change the channel.
I agree! Except, it has been soooo long since I have heard it!
RP is so kind as to tell us the year each cut was released! 1972 for this gem.
Life-affirming stuff for an ageing female non-conformist.
Funny, I have always thought they were saying 'Hold your head up, whooaa!'. Now I know!!
Just not my thing.
Life-affirming stuff for an ageing female non-conformist.
I think I see (left to right)... Elton John, Luciano Pavarotti and Stevie Windwood.
IIRC, the vinyl album (which opened up to a display inside) actually had a whos-who of everyone in the line-up. I don't think they are famous, I think they are just friends and family of the band.
I think I see (left to right)... Elton John, Luciano Pavarotti and Stevie Windwood.
If so, good company!!
That still kicks ass today, as it did when it came out!!! Full volume tune, to be sure!!!
I thought they were singing whoa!
Me too! FWIW, the correct link: Argent
Shades of Teen years. *sigh*
LOVE you RP, B&R!!!!
I thought they were singing whoa!
Neither did I, and I heard it 100,000 times on FM when it was released.
Interpretation? As of this afternoon: "Theme Song for a Defiant Walk of Shame."
............................................................
Having the Wikipedia entry on the page often leads to humorous connections.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argent_(band)
Great song, btw
10
AG!!
clock radio.
True, there was lots of gratuitous doodling but not all the 'prog' music was like that.
See: the Yes album Relayer for example. Camel is a great example. I never found myself saying oof! listening to the Moody blues or most of Pink Floyd. There some show off material on Jethro Tull but not all of it.
On Quebec prog star Serge Fiori, or his band Harmonium's there was no empty doodling. I have not listened to Argentinian Sui Generis in quite some time but do not recall any empty doodling.
There are a couple of Steven Wilson songs where doodling creeps in but he has gone on record as being opposed and has talked about reining in lead guitar superstars like Guthrie Govan.
Ohhh, first time I have seen Guthrie Govan on a comment here in RP, my sister really thinks highly of him and went to one of his guitar workshops, and came home learning quite a lot from him.
We have also seen Steven Wilson a few times and 100 percent recommend anyone going to see him.
Now Argent, great tune, even now after all this time.
...correct me if I'm wrong... but wasn't "doodling" (keyboard or otherwise) a staple of most prog rock? It was (in part) this kind of experimentation that helped set it apart as its own genre.
True, there was lots of gratuitous doodling but not all the 'prog' music was like that.
See: the Yes album Relayer for example. Camel is a great example. I never found myself saying oof! listening to the Moody blues or most of Pink Floyd. There some show off material on Jethro Tull but not all of it.
On Quebec prog star Serge Fiori, or his band Harmonium's there was no empty doodling. I have not listened to Argentinian Sui Generis in quite some time but do not recall any empty doodling.
There are a couple of Steven Wilson songs where doodling creeps in but he has gone on record as being opposed and has talked about reining in lead guitar superstars like Guthrie Govan.
I think I see (left to right)... Elton John, Luciano Pavarotti and Stevie Windwood.
Had a cassette of this album.
Interesting comments. Liked some of ELP's material but much of it fell flat.
Loved Yes but my favourite Yes album does not have Rick Wakeman on it.
Count me in as a life-long fan of prog but not gratuitous keyboard doodling. For that matter, I am not a fan of gratuitous guitar doodling either.
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This is great if nothing else for the nostalgia factor. Apt for the President-elect Trump period going forward. I expect many on the American street to hold their heads up high.
...correct me if I'm wrong... but wasn't "doodling" (keyboard or otherwise) a staple of most prog rock? It was (in part) this kind of experimentation that helped set it apart as its own genre.
10
If that's too much, there's plenty of cowbell here to zone in on.
Well I like Argent's key work here. I don't find it overdone. I was just saying with Emerson, as much as I liked some of ELP's stuff it was too much at times.
If that's too much, there's plenty of cowbell here to zone in on.
+1, brother…
"My wife, she's no bargain either . . ."
Unfortunately, Chopin and Rachmaninoff aren't alive today to make critiques.
Keith Emerson had Wakeman beat all to hell on gratuitous keyboard doodling. I could barely ever sit through one album side of ELP, and I've been a prog fan over 40 years.
Interesting comments. Liked some of ELP's material but much of it fell flat.
Loved Yes but my favourite Yes album does not have Rick Wakeman on it.
Count me in as a life-long fan of prog but not gratuitous keyboard doodling. For that matter, I am not a fan of gratuitous guitar doodling either.
————————————————————-
This is great if nothing else for the nostalgia factor. Apt for the President-elect Trump period going forward. I expect many on the American street to hold their heads up high.
Yup! Hearing this song on the radio certainly gave me a lift occasionally when I needed it while growing up.
I know that. I was replying to Skydog's remarks about Wakeman.
Unfortunately, Chopin and Rachmaninoff aren't alive today to make critiques.
Keith Emerson had Wakeman beat all to hell on gratuitous KB doodling. I could barely ever sit through one album side of ELP, and I've been a prog fan over 40 years.
yeah but that was Rick Wakeman the king of keyboard doodles
Unfortunately, Chopin and Rachmaninoff aren't alive today to make critiques.
Keith Emerson had Wakeman beat all to hell on gratuitous keyboard doodling. I could barely ever sit through one album side of ELP, and I've been a prog fan over 40 years.
Yes, there's no need for an apology - it's a good song.
yeah but that was Rick Wakeman the king of keyboard doodles
Sill, 1 tip o the hap to the Northern Lad.
yeah but that was Rick Wakeman the king of keyboard doodles
The Hammond B3 solo on the track was cited by Rick Wakeman as the greatest organ solo ever.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hold_Your_Head_Up
I'm not quite sure . . . but if you're a woman I think . . . they want you to hold your head up?
Do you really want me to tell you what you should do with it?
Any chance of digging up Russ Ballard's "Born on Halloween"? My birthday song.
: )
What repetitive chorus?
PSD.
Picked up this 45 back when I was in 6th grade... in a trade for Crocodile Rock. I remember some tough negotiations but I’ve never looked back. Great memory.
Argent?
Argent?
I must've heard this 1,000 times in the last 20+ years (and changed the radio station 950 of those times) and never, ever knew this was by "Argent"... REO Speedwagon maybe, but never Argent
At least with ELP the obligatory organ solo was good, on account of Keith Emerson being a classically-trained pianist, even if it was usually way de trop and baroque.
Note to under-30s on here: electric organs were the precursors to synthesisers. Back in the Cretaceous they were bloody expensive so a band having one was a status symbol, and added many points to the band's coolness factor.
"My wife, she's no bargain either . . ."
Followed by, "What, are you kiddin'?"