June 9, 2025 – James Bond


Today we enter the world of Bond—James Bond—told not through gadgets or gunfire, but through music. These theme songs are more than title tracks. They’re portals. Each one carries the fingerprint of its era, the tone of the man who played him, and a mood that outlives the movie.

So pour a martini, shaken not stirred,  settle into the shadows, and let’s begin.

Playlist for the week of June 9, 2025:

00:00:00 John Barry – The James Bond Theme

00:05:41 Matt Monro – From Russia With Love

00:08:13 Shirley Bassey – Goldfinger

00:11:01 Tom Jones – Thunderball

00:13:52 Nancy Sinatra – You Only Live Twice

00:16:48 Louis Armstrong – We Have All the Time in the World

00:21:50 Shirley Bassey – Diamonds Are Forever

00:24:29 Paul McCartney & Wings – Live and Let Die

00:27:41 Lulu – The Man with the Golden Gun

00:30:16 Carly Simon – Nobody Does It Better

00:33:50 Sheena Easton – For Your Eyes Only

00:36:52 Rita Coolidge – All Time High

00:39:55 Gladys Knight – Licence to Kill

00:46:35 Tina Turner – GoldenEye

00:51:14 Sheryl Crow – Tomorrow Never Dies

00:56:03 Garbage – The World Is Not Enough

00:59:57 Jack White & Alicia Keys – Another Way to Die

01:04:18 Adele – Skyfall

01:12:24 Billie Eilish – No Time To Die

The Many Grooves of Bond: A History of James Bond Films
Since his cinematic debut in Dr. No (1962), James Bond has evolved from Cold War assassin to emotionally complex antihero, but what’s remained constant is the mythic pulse of the character—a rhythm that plays differently in each actor’s hands. Each Bond reflects the age he inhabits, but just as crucially, each actor brought a different groove to the role: a unique mix of timing, temperament, and backstory that shaped the music of the movies. Behind every tuxedo was a man with a surprising path to the part.

Sean Connery, a former milkman and bodybuilder from Edinburgh, seemed an unlikely choice. When producers Albert “Cubby” Broccoli and Harry Saltzman first saw him, Connery walked away from their meeting with a panther-like swagger that clinched the deal. Though Ian Fleming initially doubted him—calling Connery “an overgrown stuntman”—he changed his tune after seeing Dr. No. Connery’s Bond was muscular jazz: sleek, swinging, and dangerous, with a sardonic glint in the eye. He invented the template—every Bond since has either echoed or rebelled against his beat.

George Lazenby was a model with no acting experience when he bluffed his way into the role. He bought a Rolex, tailored a suit like Connery’s, and faked a film résumé. The producers were so impressed with his audacity that they gave him the part. In On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (1969), Lazenby offered a Bond who could fall in love and cry—a soft, minor key moment in the symphony of the franchise. Though his tenure was brief, the emotional resonance of his Bond would echo decades later in Daniel Craig’s arc.

Roger Moore, already famous as TV’s The Saint, was long considered for Bond but was initially too busy—or too suave. When Connery finally stepped down for good, Moore took over with effortless charm. His Bond was the lounge act version: smooth, light, and ironic. The groove shifted into disco mode—flared pants, outlandish plots, and eyebrow-arching double entendres. Moore’s Bond knew it was all a bit much, and that was the point.

Timothy Dalton was a serious Shakespearean actor who had turned the role down in the ’70s, feeling he was too young. When he finally stepped in during the late ’80s, he brought gravitas and emotional complexity. His Bond didn’t quip—he brooded. The Cold War was ending, and Dalton’s groove was stripped-down and stormy, more noir than fantasy. He offered a foretaste of the darker realism that would define Bond’s 21st-century incarnation.

Pierce Brosnan had been poised to take over in 1987, but his contract with the TV show Remington Steele kept him out—just barely. When the role came around again in the ’90s, he seized it with a balance of Connery’s toughness and Moore’s polish. His Bond was built for the globalized, digital era: slick, corporate, and always ready with a one-liner. The action ramped up, the gadgets went high-tech, and Brosnan’s groove was pure techno-thriller—adrenaline on a soundtrack.

Daniel Craig was met with skepticism: too blond, too rough, too un-Bond. But Casino Royale (2006) rebooted the franchise with brutal elegance. Craig, a classically trained actor with indie credentials, brought a bruised physicality and emotional depth. His casting marked a shift toward a more psychologically complex Bond—less fantasy, more fracture. Over five films, Craig’s arc traced Bond’s inner life as much as his missions. His groove was stripped and rhythmic, like a heartbeat under pressure—wounded, human, and mythic.

Now, with Craig’s departure, Bond stands again at a crossroads, waiting for his next incarnation. What makes this franchise endure is not the martinis or the Aston Martins, but the ability to let the rhythm shift with time. Each Bond grooves to the beat of his moment in history—and in doing so, he teaches us something about the fantasies we cherish and the silences we try to fill.

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