iTunes Top 200: #124

Music.  It is a powerful thing that brings people together, creates memories, and evokes emotions.  It is the universal language that speaks to the soul.  It forms the soundtrack of our lives.

It has now been five years since we last counted down the Top 200 songs in my iTunes library, featuring he songs I have listened to the most since 2007.  It is time to do so again, seeing which older songs still resonate and if any newer ones have joined the fray.  So, without further ado, here are my most listened to songs, based on number of plays as of January 1, 2025.

We continue this week with the next batch of songs tied for 124th place with 39 plays apiece since my stats began in late 2007.

#124: Warren G – Regulate
iTunes stats: 39 plays, most recently on 9/15/2024
Previous ranking: #125

Used as the at-bat music for Jacob Amaya during his brief tenure with the White Sox in 2024, this debut hit from Dr. Dre’s step-brother added seven new plays over the past five years.

#124: Van Halen – Panama
iTunes stats: 39 plays, most recently on 11/3/2024
Previous ranking: #125

Inspired by a race car, this third single from the band’s seminal 1984 album, it reached #13 on the Billboard Hot 100.

#124: Tegan and Sara – Walking With A Ghost
iTunes stats: 39 plays, most recently on 5/11/2024
Previous ranking: #89

Used in a season three promo for the Patricia Arquette show Medium, the lead single from the duo’s 2005 album picked up just four new listens since 2020.

#124: Nerf Herder – Buffy Theme
iTunes stats: 39 plays, most recently on 10/29/2023
Previous ranking: #89

Having written and performed the theme song to Buffy the Vampire Slayer, the band was the last guests to perform at The Bronze.

#124: Me First and the Gimme Giimmes – Rainbow Connection
iTunes stats: 39 plays, most recently on 11/5/2024
Previous ranking: #98

Written by Paul Williams and Kenneth Ascher for 1979’s The Muppet Movie, this 1999 cover by the punk rock supergroup adds a little more oomph to the festivities.

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iTunes Top 200: #96

itunes_image3 years ago, we first counted down the then Top 100 songs in my iTunes library. Since that time, I’ve successfully managed to migrate my music collection to a new PC with the stats intact. So, I figured it was time to take another look, expanding out the field to the top 200 songs, based on number of plays as of January 1, 2016.

Today, we finish off the first 100 songs of the countdown with the next grouping of songs tied for 96th place with 20 plays apiece since late 2007.

#96: Pearl Jam – Go
iTunes stats: 20 plays, most recently on 8/20/2015
Previous ranking: Unranked

The song got a boost after being used by Paul Konerko as his at bat music during his final season.

#96: The Offspring – Come Out And Play
iTunes stats: 20 plays, most recently on 7/8/2015
Previous ranking: Unranked

The breakthrough single for the punk band also appeared on Volume 14 of my mix tapes.

#96: Mazzy Star – Into Dust
iTunes stats: 20 plays, most recently on 11/7/2015
Previous ranking: Unranked

Despite never being released as a single, the song has charted two different times in the UK.

#96: Kermit – Rainbow Connection
iTunes stats: 20 plays, most recently on 11/19/2015
Previous ranking: Unranked

The signature song for the main muppet from the first Muppet Movie.

#96: Garfunkel & Oates – Google
iTunes stats: 20 plays, most recently on 5/24/2015
Previous ranking: Unranked

The comedy duo’s tune on dating realities in the 21st century.

#96: Garfunkel & Oates – Handjob, Blandjob, I Don’t Understand Job
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Top 200 Albums – #172 – 180

itunes_imageMy latest desktop computer arrived in late 2007, at which point I transitioned all of my music off of my laptop. 2 iPods, 3 iPhones, and an iPad later, that computer is still my main repository of music, with iTunes updating its stats every time I listen to something.

Having already gone through cassette tapes and CDs, and digital music, it’s time to roll everything up with the Top 200 albums whose songs I’ve listened to as of September 2014, according to iTunes. Today we keep moving up the list and look at the 9 albums tied for 172nd with 24 listens.

#172: Tori Amos – Under The Pink
iTunes stats: 24 plays
Tori places her second album on this chart with her second solo album, thanks to its 2 hits.

#172: The Muppets – The Muppet Movie
iTunes stats: 24 plays
2 tracks from this soundtrack put in on the list.

#172: Warren G – Regulate…G Funk Era
iTunes stats: 24 plays
Warren G’s debut album places this high thanks to his biggest hit and the 2 follow ups that nobody probably remembers.

#172: Bangles – Bangles: Greatest Hits
iTunes stats: 24 plays
5 of the Bangles biggest hits contribute to this total for their greatest hits album.

#172: Run DMC – Ultimate Run DMC
iTunes stats: 24 plays
This greatest hits collection makes the chart thanks to 3 of Run DMC’s biggest hits.

#172: Mexican Cheerleader – Mexican Mystery Tour
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Book 4 (of 52) – Jim Henson: The Biography

Jim Henson: The Biography - Brian Jay Jones

Jim Henson: The Biography – Brian Jay Jones

The story of Jim Henson began on September 24, 1936 when he was born in Greenville, Mississippi.  Thankfully, it didn’t end when he died on May 16, 1990 in New York.  His legacy lives on, in both the legions of people who grew up with him and his creations on Sesame Street and The Muppet Show and those who are just now discovering him for the first time, with Muppets Most Wanted heading to theaters later this month.  With public interest in the Muppets and its highest level since before Henson’s death, biographer Brian Jay Jones tackled the story, and the myth, of Jim Henson.

At an early age, Jim Henson became enthralled with the new invention of television.  He started working at a local station in Maryland while he was still in high school.  By the time he was a sophomore at the University of Maryland, he was producing the top rated local show, where he first introduced what would eventually become known as the Muppets.

Throughout the 60s, Henson and his fellow performers would appear on variety shows, like The Ed Sullivan Show and The Jimmy Dean Show, expanding the Muppet repertoire while also appearing in commercials in order to pay the bills.  As the decade was coming to a close, Jim Henson joined forces with the team at the Children’s Television Workshop to come up with a show to could both teach and entertain children.  The resulting show, Sesame Street, became a cultural phenomenon that still educates and enthralls children today.

During the 1970s, Jim Henson tried to convince the broadcast community that the Muppets could sustain a half hour show.  After many many false starts, he eventually got the chance to prove himself when The Muppet Show was greenlit and began airing in 1976.  The show aired for 5 seasons, becoming a smash hit both in the US and abroad.  During the show’s run, Henson turned his sights to the big screen, starting with 1979’s The Muppet Movie.  In 1981, following the conclusion of The Muppet Show, the second film, and the first to be directed by Henson, was released.

At this point, Henson was moving on from the Muppets, starting work on his long in-development project The Dark Crystal, which he co-directed with fellow Muppet performer Frank Oz.  While successful, the film was not as well received as Henson’s previous work.  While Oz started working on the third Muppet feature film, Henson turned his attention to another fantasy film, Labyrinth.  Reviews for this film were scathing, and the box office followed suit.  For the first time, Jim Henson was experiencing some failures.

In the late 80s, Henson found that he was spending too much time running his company and not enough being creative.  He put a plan in motion to sell the company, and the Muppets, to Disney, which would free him up to start creating again.  Sadly, while negotiations were ongoing to close the deal, Henson fell ill and died due to organ failure caused by a Group A streptococcal infection.  His death, while certainly a sad event, was also turned in to a celebration of all the joy he had given to people.  Generations have now grown up watching Sesame Street before moving on to the various Muppet shows and movies.  While Jim Henson’s story may have come to a close in 1990, his legacy lives on, and will continue to do so thanks to his creations.