Stock Music track: Little Dreamy

Mustachioed 60’s porn star lays down a hearty, swingy love vibe to beautiful young chartreuse. Sexy saxophone duet chimes in to help set the mood. This song has just enough cheese and campiness without being too full of itself. Retro feel / Pulp.

Shockwave-Sound.com T14166 14.00 55.00

Track details

Track ID number: 14166
Genres: Vocal Jazz music - royalty free jazz with vocals -- Jazz: Old-time jazz / Retro jazz -- Rock: Pulp & Surf Rock
Moods/Emotions: Ironic / Spiteful / Bad Attitude -- Cool / Funky / Strutting
Suggested Production Types: Historical / Retro: 1970's -- Historical / Retro: 1960's -- Men / Motors / Guys stuff
Prominent Instruments: Bass (Upright/Acoustic) -- Brass section / Horns -- Drums (Drum Kit) -- Guitar (Electric) -- Vocals (Male) / Singing with Lyrics
Keywords / Hints: retro jazz, surf, quentin tarantino
Tempo feel: Slow -- Medium
Tempo Beats Per Minute: 115
Artist: Buddy Moncrief
Composer: John Swanson (BMI - CAE#: 00545496814)
Publisher: Acoustic SwaneeLand (BMI)
SRCO (Sound Recording Copyright Owner): John Swanson
PRO / Non-PRO Track? PRO (What's this?)
WAV file bit depth: CD-quality / 16-bit (What's this?)
Stem files available for this track: No
Lyrics: Little dreamy
Don’t you love me
Don’t you want me now
Little dreamy
You’re an idol
You’re a golden child

More than you wanted
More than you need
Little dreamy
We’re going down baby
I’m taking you down
Little dreamy
I can feel you
I can steel you blind
Little dreamy
You’re so tight baby
Let me help you unwind

Got what you wanted
Got what you need
Little dreamy
We’re going down baby
I’m taking you down

Little dreamy
Don’t you love me
Don’t you want me now
Little dreamy
You’re an idol
You’re a golden child

More than you wanted
More than you need
Little dreamy
We’re going down baby
I’m taking you down
Album containing this track: (None)
About the Artist
Buddy Moncrief Buddy Moncrief

Somewhere out on New Route 66, about 50 miles west of Sinatra and 75 miles east of Tom Waits, Swanson struts his swingin' and singin'. He loves Dave Frishberg songs and Johnny Walker in a tumbler. He'd like to hear Kurt Elling cover Stone Temple Pilots. Lonnie Johnson is God.

On his latest full-length release "We Can't Party Like We Used To" (2009 Acoustic SwaneeLand), Swanson pounds out 12 original vocal jazz cuts with a cool retro vibe. His bluesy vocals and tasty guitar licks remind of crooners past and present - Sinatra, Cole, John Pizzarelli come to mind - but his clever songwriting has a leaner, edgier feel to it that puts him squarely in the current century.