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Shiniest car I've ever seen
The back seat is nice and clean
She rides as quiet as a dream
Someone dug a hole six long feet in the ground
I said goodbye to you and I threw my roses down
Ain't nothing left at all in the end of being proud
With me riding in this car and you flying through them clouds
I've had some time to think about it
And watch the sun sink like a stone
I've had some time to think about you
On the long ride home
One day I took your tiny hand
Put your finger in the wedding band
Your daddy gave a piece of land
We made ourselves the best of plans
Forty years go by with someone laying in your bed
Forty years of things you say you wish you'd never said
How hard would it have been to say some kinder words instead?
I wonder as I stare up at the sky turning red
I've had some time to think about it
And watch the sun sink like a stone
I've had some time to think about you
On the long ride home
Headlights searching down the driveway
The house is dark as it can be
I go inside and all is silent
And seems as empty as the inside of me
I've had some time to think about it
And watch the sun sink like a stone
I've had some time to think about you
On the long
On the long
Oh the long
On the long ride home
horseplayer wrote:
I am going to go say something nice to my wife right now.
IMHO one distinguishing feature of 'recent' country music is the nasal vocal style. It's encouraged in modern country. However it wasn't always hat way in the past (e.g. the old time country you can hear on Nashville or albums like Emmmylou's Spyboy). Classical vocal teachers dislike it - for good reasons. Sometimes it happens naturally because the singer doesn't have vocal training and doesn't know better. They haven't been taught to support their voice with their diaphragm and let the air do the work. But at least it's sort of natural. Other singers do it deliberately and it really comes out sounding phony and affected. It grates on me after a while, especially if the song is vapid. But in moderate amounts I can tolerate it if the rest of the composition has redeeming qualities - which this one has in droves. YMMV.
"Hot funk, cool punk... even if it's old junk, it's still rock n roll to me."
I think what Mr. Joel was trying to say there is that the label doesn't matter. If it's good and twangy, it could be Bluegrass, Folk, Americana, or even Country. Besides, what we call "Country" today would be unrecognizable as Country to the Country artists 50 years ago, before everything splintered into subgenres.
The 30th - Billie Eilish
Get Better - Alt-J
Didn't think I'd end my Friday workday like this
It is Bluegrass. ;-)
One of those songs that make me feel very foolish for saying in my youth "I hate country music". I just didn't know what was out there for a true music lover.
This is bluegrass. Mandolin, guitar, dobro, and no percussion instruments. Please don't hate yerself!
I would definitely agree with the YMMV disclaimer at the end.
Listening to & reading the lyrics makes me think that the song is already written from the viewpoint of a man ("One day I took your tiny hand" ... "Your daddy gave a piece of land" [dowry?]). Getting past that, it seems like the regrets of a man after a far-from-perfect marriage, wondering why he argued with her so much and didn't say more things to show his love or just to bring happiness to her. That his life is incomplete without her, even though he seems to have taken her for granted all these years.
If We Were Vampires is more from the perspective of a couple that is deeply in love with each other and very aware of their eventual mortality, wanting to get the most out of their life & love.
As for the gender flip, you could look at it two ways. If you want to hear the same song, I think Bruce Springsteen could do a kick ass version of it. He has the storyteller chops & the gravitas to pull off the tale, as long as he doesn't overdo it. If you want to hear a guy sing the same type of story from a woman's perspective, I don't know of any off the top of my head. I'm not great with recognizing lyrics and there are sizable gaps in my musical knowledge, but I'm confident someone worthy of such a song has put the idea to paper & music.
It's funny that you mention Bruce Springsteen: She does a cover of Stolen Car and likewise sings the original part of a man, running away from his girl and his life. I kind of like that she doesn't bother switching the gender in the song just because she's not a male. It's all storytelling, and stories can be about men or women. John Prine does it in Angel From Montgomery too.
I would definitely agree with the YMMV disclaimer at the end.
Listening to & reading the lyrics makes me think that the song is already written from the viewpoint of a man ("One day I took your tiny hand" ... "Your daddy gave a piece of land" [dowry?]). Getting past that, it seems like the regrets of a man after a far-from-perfect marriage, wondering why he argued with her so much and didn't say more things to show his love or just to bring happiness to her. That his life is incomplete without her, even though he seems to have taken her for granted all these years.
If We Were Vampires is more from the perspective of a couple that is deeply in love with each other and very aware of their eventual mortality, wanting to get the most out of their life & love.
As for the gender flip, you could look at it two ways. If you want to hear the same song, I think Bruce Springsteen could do a kick ass version of it. He has the storyteller chops & the gravitas to pull off the tale, as long as he doesn't overdo it. If you want to hear a guy sing the same type of story from a woman's perspective, I don't know of any off the top of my head. I'm not great with recognizing lyrics and there are sizable gaps in my musical knowledge, but I'm confident someone worthy of such a song has put the idea to paper & music.
Have you heard her song "Get Ready Marie" - She's writing from the perspective of her Grandfather who is preparing her Grandmother for their wedding night. Pretty hilarious.
Sometimes it seems miraculous what music can do...
AndyJ wrote:
Would like to hear same song by a guy...
I think it would hit harder and at a different spot.
---
Try Jason Isbell – If We Were Vampires
Same spot same impact - there's more than one way to get where you are
YMMV
I would definitely agree with the YMMV disclaimer at the end.
Listening to & reading the lyrics makes me think that the song is already written from the viewpoint of a man ("One day I took your tiny hand" ... "Your daddy gave a piece of land" [dowry?]). Getting past that, it seems like the regrets of a man after a far-from-perfect marriage, wondering why he argued with her so much and didn't say more things to show his love or just to bring happiness to her. That his life is incomplete without her, even though he seems to have taken her for granted all these years.
If We Were Vampires is more from the perspective of a couple that is deeply in love with each other and very aware of their eventual mortality, wanting to get the most out of their life & love.
As for the gender flip, you could look at it two ways. If you want to hear the same song, I think Bruce Springsteen could do a kick ass version of it. He has the storyteller chops & the gravitas to pull off the tale, as long as he doesn't overdo it. If you want to hear a guy sing the same type of story from a woman's perspective, I don't know of any off the top of my head. I'm not great with recognizing lyrics and there are sizable gaps in my musical knowledge, but I'm confident someone worthy of such a song has put the idea to paper & music.
Me toi
I think it would hit harder and at a different spot.
Try Jason Isbell – If We Were Vampires
Same spot same impact - there's more than one way to get where you are
YMMV
Your comment jogged my memory! Thanks- Patty reminds me of the character "Ernestine" from Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In, circa 1969. Ernestine was played by the late Lily Tomlin, a telephone operator who spoke with an hilarious, exaggerated nasal tone... Patty could "sing the phone book" but it would regrettably be entirely through her nose.
I don't think Lily Tomlin has passed and Wiki agrees that she is still alive.
Your comment jogged my memory! Thanks- Patty reminds me of the character "Ernestine" from Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In, circa 1969. Ernestine was played by the late Lily Tomlin, a telephone operator who spoke with an hilarious, exaggerated nasal tone... Patty could "sing the phone book" but it would regrettably be entirely through her nose.
you're a bit short on the grade there nick..
Um, no they're not.
you're a bit short on the grade there nick..
I love this song, but the one that kills me every time is "Making Pies". Damn dust, getting in my eye.
Yeah, that one gets me too. A lot of her songs hit me where it hurts.
Speak for yourself, Kemo Sabe. I'm just visiting...
I can make it all the way to "I go inside and all is silent and seems as empty as the inside of me" before my allergies act up...
Dangit!
Same here.
Truth.
FYI: Patty does one nice version of "Boots of Spanish Leather".
Perhaps you are thinking of the version by Bob Baez?
I love this song, but the one that kills me every time is "Making Pies". Damn dust, getting in my eye.
izycrzy wrote:
Makes me want to be a better man
Too right. We are not here long enough to waste the love we are shown. Once it's gone, it's gone.
As usual.
FYI: Patty does one nice version of "Boots of Spanish Leather".
Makes me want to be a better man
If I have my way Patty will be singing in the background as I pass to the next life...
sounds perfect this morning
Put your finger in the wedding band
Your daddy gave a piece of land
We made ourselves the best of plans
Forty years go by with someone laying in your bed
Forty years of things you say you wish you'd never said
How hard would it have been to say some kinder words instead?
I wonder as I stare up at the sky turning red
I've had some time to think about it
And watch the sun sink like a stone
I've had some time to think about you
On the long ride home
The whole song just gives me chills, as do many of her songs.
No one finer. She was entertaining and very down to earth. A national treasure to be sure.
You drove 1100 miles just to see Patty? That's what I call a fan!
I think it would hit harder and at a different spot.
No one finer. She was entertaining and very down to earth. A national treasure to be sure.
Patty Griffin by CaptAbernathy
https://www.flickr.com/photos/captabernathy/
Patty Griffin at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival, 5.1.09
© All rights reserved.
Put your finger in the wedding band
Your daddy gave a piece of land
We made ourselves the best of plans
Forty years go by with someone laying in your bed
Forty years of things you say you wish you'd never said
How hard would it have been to say some kinder words instead?
I wonder as I stare up at the sky turning red
I've had some time to think about it
And watch the sun sink like a stone
I've had some time to think about you
On the long ride home
I don't know if she's a wonderful person or not, but I absolutely love her singing!
On reading the lyrics, it appears to be a song by a man to his late wife and not, as I assumed, a personal experience of Patty's.
Yes, I was wondering about the 'tiny hand'. Must be singing as a man
This ^^^^^ Arrrgghhhhhhh! Painful!
Nice! Everything,music, the voice, arrangement, words.Nice
On reading the lyrics, it appears to be a song by a man to his late wife and not, as I assumed, a personal experience of Patty's.
Not at all - I feel the same way about some of the Poe songs that are played on RP. Sometimes a song's emotion is just too intense.
Me too. Not strange at all.
I agree, It's probably my favorite Patty Griffin tune, whenever it comes on I have to stop whatever I'm doing and listen. By the end of the song the tears are flowing...
40 years of an unfulfilled relationship. that would make just about anybody cry.I'm going on year 21.
I agree, It's probably my favorite Patty Griffin tune, whenever it comes on I have to stop whatever I'm doing and listen. By the end of the song the tears are flowing...
And thank you calypsus_1 for another fantastic image (and words of wisdom)!
Dude, if this doesn't get it for you, I have no idea what ever will. This entire song, lyrics, music, everything, is PERFECT.
If I can EVER listen to this with out tearing up...I will be dead.
If I can EVER listen to this with out tearing up...I will be dead.
Dude, if this doesn't get it for you, I have no idea what ever will. This entire song, lyrics, music, everything, is PERFECT.
Dude, if this doesn't get it for you, I have no idea what ever will. This entire song, lyrics, music, everything, is PERFECT.
Same here. She is a treasure.
2nd this.
or 3rd, actually.
This gets an 8 right off the bat! Yep! That's a baseball reference, and that, too is a good thing!
Thanks, RP!
Same here. She is a treasure.
Thanks Bill & Rebecca, love your work.
DITTO
And for the people whining about this discussion taking place. Buzz the fuck off! I have had it up to here with whiners who hate discussions on a comment board. Fuck Off.
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rockpommel16 wrote:
....you left me at Lefty Frizzell........boring.....words and music....
For me, the concept of "artistic merit" and "commercial merit" are perfectly defined and separated, when analyzing an artistic musical work, though compatible and coexist together.
Obviously I understand that this contrasts sharply with and diverge the nature of the business and organization of the music industry, where everything, music / art, and business, with a whole roll, and even if accepted, that is the only way that makes sense . But it is not.
That success is based on artistic merit, based on taste and adherence to this musical work, regardless of the success achieved on sale.
The merit-based commercial success, is also based on a component like, but it is mandatory condition to be sold on a large scale.
And therein lies the fundamental contradiction: that is to obtain and enforce commercial success, uses mechanisms promotional aggregates industry in order to induce and create advantage in a given musical work in order to obtain the maximum profit. Creating what they calls "music that is trendy."
While it is relegated by default, artists and genres more elaborate, but which are not potentially interesting to come to generate sales.
About my response to Horstman: I just direct "I replied to the letter," but I confess I have not used a lot of patience, and not used the "mass of polish words," obviously we are not here concerned people themselves, but what they say in their quality of this radio commentators. As few as.
About the images, links, drawings, "reviews of background," i put here, there is nothing commercial or promotional, much less advertising, is an inestimable benefit, to create "visual identification ties", biographic, pedagogic character, if desired, with the artists, which in my personal perspective, of recognized merit beyond the average.
You do not think, not even close, not even remotely, that all common people has access to artists, as you have. They have not.
And you do not doubt it, that only listen "airplaylist" couple of hours daily is sufficient. Not at all. Because the dinosaurs of the music business, take a big advantage with the integrated control of their broadcast media - image, video.tv, newspaper-magazine, "corporate rags". So.
I do a drawing for you: if you ask in any street of the western world, to an anonymous, for example, who is Justin Timberlake? Who is Gillian Welch ? Who is Patty Griffin? Who is Neil Young?, you'll be amazed.
Patty who? I know a Patty, but is my neighbor the 4th left.
Neil Young? let me see, what u say? Liliane?
Gillian Welsh? who? Raquel Welch? ...
Justin Timberlake? there will be many more people to hit the target .....
What makes the difference? "Propaganda -phenomenon".
comment "on board": specifically, does not exist. The closest thing is a "chat" giant, with allusions and commentary, instant character as part of a rolling platform, open to the entire community, style similar to "Twitter".
Review: critical analysis or building on a theme based on taste, sensitivity, acceptance or rejection based on facts (quote or external collection of information), which may or may not contain, and be assisted with external links, photos, cartoons, drawings , video, and more.
You focus on a certain point, "if we had five or 10 other people who posted?", "Or about 20 or 30 other?". This is the point. Only a very small number around the RP is "dare" to comment, interact, why? (and many of them are known among themselves)
Therefore should be more members to make it all up, it would be "icing on the cake"
Why are the remaining few thousand, I think, do not feel motivated to do this? This is what should be of concern and a goal. It is to let the opinion of a few prevail by a whole can not be conclusive; which opinion and feedback, of the other thousands of listeners about airplay? It would be interesting to know, and even then more support for RP.
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rdo wrote:
The comment board is for comments, not advertising. I know many people like your posts. I ask those people this: what if we had 5 or 10 other people who posted the same "comments" that you post? What about 20 or 30 other? The comment board would no longer be a comment board. It would become Rolling Stone or Spin, two corporate rags that I avoid on purpose because they're, uh, corporate rags. I am not denying the quality of your 1000s of bandwidth sucking images or advertisements. It's the quantity. As for your pathetic insults, spare me, you are a world class bore and I could not care less.