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I can hear the insects buzz and the leaves 'neath my feet
Ramble up the stairwell into the hall of books
Since we got the interweb these hardly get used
Duck into the men's room, combing through my hair
When God gave us mirrors he had no idea
Looking for a lesson in the periodicals
There I spy you listening to the AM radio
Karen of the Carpenters, singing in the rain
Another lovely victim of the mirror's evil way
It's not like you're not trying, with a pencil in your hair
To defy the beauty the good Lord put in there
Simple little bookworm, buried underneath
Is the sexiest librarian
Take off those glasses and let down your hair for me
So I watch you through the bookcase, imagining a scene
You and I had dinner, spending time, then you sleep
And what then would I say to you, lying there in bed
These words with a kiss I would plant in your head
What is it inside our heads that makes us do the opposite
Makes us do the opposite of what's right for us
'Cause everything'd be great and everything'd be good
If everybody gave like everybody could
Sweetest little bookworm, hidden underneath
Is the sexiest librarian
Take off those glasses and let down your hair for me
Take off those glasses and let down your hair for me
Simple little beauty, heaven in your breath
Simplest of pleasures, the world at its best
It's a default setting to order by up/down, though a simple click on the newest/oldest fixes that!
And I'm OK with the "Lay Lady Lay" comparison, heck enough so to go 8 to 9 today....Long Live RP!!
It really should default to "newest", in my opinion.
Imagining the object in bed with him .... loser
Does he wear a stained overcoat when he goes to the library?
Damn good lyrics there.
Some choose to focus on the "creepiness" of the guy in the stacks but I hear a song about three flawed people. Two suffer from vanity. One of them, fatally so.
The librarian ain't one of the them, however. Her flaw is she's unaware of others as well as herself. And that makes her perfect in the eyes of the guy.
Creepy? All too human if you ask me.
Hiding in the stacks,
I wonder if she sees me,
Lurking in the back.
For those of you who might be unaware, Karen Carpenter died of anorexia. Her death was totally unnecessary and a damn shame.
c.
Don't we all? However, they are also more like they are now than they have ever been before.
This is true in a very real sense! As Regina Spektor sang "Today were younger than we ever gonna be"! (Small Town Moon)
"Karen of the Carpenters, singing in the rain
Another lovely victim of the mirror's evil way"
For those of you who might be unaware, Karen Carpenter died of anorexia. Her death was totally unnecessary and a damn shame.
I totally agree!
A small downside to the new ordering (e.g. by up/down votes) is that
comments don't remain side-by-side in time anymore. Someone did indeed
compare this to Dylan's Lay Lady Lay (1wolfy wrote: Like this one...it has a Bob Dylan style 'lay across my big brass bed') prompting the comment to which you
replied.
That said, I in no way agree with mikec09 that this is "schmaltzy". It's a great song from a great band.
It's a default setting to order by up/down, though a simple click on the newest/oldest fixes that!
And I'm OK with the "Lay Lady Lay" comparison, heck enough so to go 8 to 9 today....Long Live RP!!
A small downside to the new ordering (e.g. by up/down votes) is that
comments don't remain side-by-side in time anymore. Someone did indeed
compare this to Dylan's Lay Lady Lay (1wolfy wrote: Like this one...it has a Bob Dylan style 'lay across my big brass bed') prompting the comment to which you
replied.
That said, I in no way agree with mikec09 that this is "schmaltzy". It's a great song from a great band.
Did someone make that comparison somewhere? This song sounds nothing like that song to me - different chords, different tempo, different melody.
A small downside to the new ordering (e.g. by up/down votes) is that
comments don't remain side-by-side in time anymore. Someone did indeed
compare this to Dylan's Lay Lady Lay (1wolfy wrote: Like this one...it has a Bob Dylan style 'lay across my big brass bed') prompting the comment to which you
replied.
That said, I in no way agree with mikec09 that this is "schmaltzy". It's a great song from a great band.
"Karen of the Carpenters, singing in the rain
Another lovely victim of the mirror's evil way"
Did someone make that comparison somewhere? This song sounds nothing like that song to me - different chords, different tempo, different melody.
It didn't' materialized into anything, but I'm glad to know her.
yeah, I'd like to meet her
Don't we all? However, they are also more like they are now than they have ever been before.
Isn't that what you are supposed to do?
Hear hear!!!!!!!!
The only response I can come up with is, WTF?
that's pretty much my response to all the RP comments for this song. beautiful song, sweet story.
"A man's got to know his limitations."
The only response I can come up with is, WTF?
My grandmother would tell him to get a room and stop scaring the horses.
I'll bet female librarians get all sorts of damp and clammy "friends" like this.
still dislike this one oh so very much.
How sad...that you don't understand.
The tyranny of cool raises its ugly head.
this is why my email address is what it is. i love this song.
Funny! I can tell you're kidding because otherwise you wouldn't type like that.
I think I'll head off to The Library as well... Not sure how much reading I'll get done, but I know a cute Librarian or two there.
How sad...that you don't understand.
I understand that I don't like the song and that is all I need to know. I also understand that I do not like onions therefore I will not eat them. I really do not think any deeper than that about likes and dislikes. I am glad that listening to music is a cereberal experience for you, I would rather just sit back and enjoy the tunes or change the station when I don't.
Well stated, Sir.
How sad...that you don't understand.
Well stated, Sir.
A bit lower.
And not in a good way.
I suppose it would feel more appropriate if this were a song about LOLCats...
For me it's just like "Did he really just sing that? Ugh!"
Jim James, My Morning Jacket by for2now2 Gerry Hardy
https://www.flickr.com/photos/2now2/
New Orleans Voodoo Fest 2010
All rights reserved
.
At least I get the joke. I once had someone tell me that it was an accepted pronunciation.
Same here. And I'm even finishing up my Master's in Library & Information Science. This song (and this band) just leave me cold.
Does it not touch your heart?
My Morning Jacket by ~eliotwilder
©2003-2010 ~eliotwilder
I recently photographed the new band My Morning Jacket for the cover of the next issue of Amplifier magazine (the Web site is www.amplifiermagazine.com). I met them backstage right after their soundcheck at the Fleet Pavillion in Boston (where they were to open for Peter Yorn and Foo Fighters). It was 95 degrees, 100% humidity and they were sweaty and road weary, but friendly and willing. I had 15 minutes to get my shots done and virtually nowhere to shoot them that looked interesting. We ended up between two tour buses, where I got this shot. I asked them to walk away and then suddenly turn and face me. I think it came out well I think.
Oh yeah, I saw Dave Grohl, and he *is* a goofy guy.
...it's curious how the difference between romantic longing and creepy stalking is simply how attractive one's suitor may be...
I dont think it matters. It's creepy. I like the sound of the song but I can't get passed the creepiness.
...it's curious how the difference between romantic longing and creepy stalking is simply how attractive one's suitor may be...
Check out a dictionary while you're at the library.
silly! everyone knows the Dictionaries are in the Reference collection and can not be checked out!
"everything'd be great, and everything'd be good. if everybody gave, like everybody could..."
OK redstorm, that may very well be the case in the USA, because local governments have difficulty deficit-financing expenditures, US priorities are screw-ball, and you are living through the worst economic recession since the 1930s.
But my original statement stands. The demand is surely there and can be expected to increase going forward. Information and technology can be safely predicted to play an ever increasing, more important role in the economy of the 21st century.
Directing deficit-financed federal revenues to local libraries during this nasty recession would make excellent, superb social sense from this economist's perspective. I thought part of Obama's stimulus package was supposed to do this but I don't pretend to know all the details.
We do a lot of screw-ball things up here in old self-righteous Canada. But at least we maintain our essential public services. Both provinces and municipalities can raise money in the markets to deficit-finance expenditures if need be. I am not aware of a public library ever being closed in a post-war recession. Recessions are a great time to get educated, upgrade skills, etc.
To borrow a phrase from ecological activists: "The long-term is now."
There are plenty of other libraries than your local public one. Large law firms and investment firms often have them and also have research departments that employ people with library science backgrounds (my brother is one of those people). Quite a few corporations have them too. It's a degree that applies to more than just your local library.
Good observation about the similarity to Lay Lady Lay before .
The university you attended might have had a great vinyl collection, but it looks like it had a shortage of dictionaries.
Edit: Oh - I just noticed the album title ... have I been missing something here?
Check out a dictionary while you're at the library.
He writes the music, and is great live.
Few decades past Bette and Barry writes the songs, but i like it!
Interesting. My hatred of the lyrics obliterates anything I might think about the singer.
He writes the music, and is great live.
you summed up my exact sentiments much more hilariously than could have.
This the stupidest comment I have seen in awhile, what's the word here, juvenile. Yes that's it.
Hm. I think I know what you mean. I see I gave this a 3 (Ho Hum) last time. I've just re-rated it as a 7.
Funniest comment I've seen on here in a while.
I'm warming up to this song.
Other posters are right. Librarian skills are going to be in heavy demand going forward.
Probably one helluva a recession-proof job to have right now.
not really, lot's of library's are being closed, or having hours shortened, as the counties in which they reside look at reducing costs, and trying to find ways to keep police, firemen, teachers, and road crews employed....God, what a mess we are in.
OK redstorm, that may very well be the case in the USA, because local governments have difficulty deficit-financing expenditures, US priorities are screw-ball, and you are living through the worst economic recession since the 1930s.
But my original statement stands. The demand is surely there and can be expected to increase going forward. Information and technology can be safely predicted to play an ever increasing, more important role in the economy of the 21st century.
Directing deficit-financed federal revenues to local libraries during this nasty recession would make excellent, superb social sense from this economist's perspective. I thought part of Obama's stimulus package was supposed to do this but I don't pretend to know all the details.
We do a lot of screw-ball things up here in old self-righteous Canada. But at least we maintain our essential public services. Both provinces and municipalities can raise money in the markets to deficit-finance expenditures if need be. I am not aware of a public library ever being closed in a post-war recession. Recessions are a great time to get educated, upgrade skills, etc.
To borrow a phrase from ecological activists: "The long-term is now."
That must've been quite a tour. I guess you covered the Do-me Decimal system.
HAHAHAA.
Except if they were at an academic library, there's a very real possibility the classification system in use would have been the Library of Congress's. But 20 years ago, some prominent academic libraries were still using Dewey.
True fact about Dewey - he wanted to change the way we spelled words in order to be more efficient and phonetic. Given his druthers, he would have spelled his surname Dui.
Welcome to RP.
Bogey? Germans?
Can't help but fondly remember "Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid"...
>>What do you know about a plane with Germermans on it?
>>Germerm... Germans.
>>Germermans.
>>There's a plane with mermans on it.
>>The plane's in town.
>>Ethel Merman came in on it.
>>Wanna go see Ethel Merman with me?
>>I'll buy two tickets.
>>Let me get on my pajamas, I'll be ready to go.
>>I'd done some brilliant things in my time.
>>Asking Kitty Collins to mix me a drink wasn't one of them.
One of my favourite movies! Let me make you a cuppa my famous java...
I'm warming up to this song.
Other posters are right. Librarian skills are going to be in heavy demand going forward.
Probably one helluva a recession-proof job to have right now.
I am heavily into post-apocalyptic sci-fi right now, and it's amazing how many of these stories have people burning books from the library to keep warm...it's become a symbol of everything good and mindful and enlightened that we will lose when this world implodes, that we will shed in order to survive. Personally, I think I'd rather freeze.
I'm warming up to this song.
Other posters are right. Librarian skills are going to be in heavy demand going forward.
Probably one helluva a recession-proof job to have right now.
not really, lot's of library's are being closed, or having hours shortened, as the counties in which they reside look at reducing costs, and trying to find ways to keep police, firemen, teachers, and road crews employed....God, what a mess we are in.
Our library system (NY) is looking into: 1) Charging you to use the online catalog. 2) Charging you for using the interlibrary loan system.
Gotta make up those deficits somehow.
Idiots.
"The boys upstairs wanna see...how much you'll pay, for what you used to get for free."
-Tom Petty
Too right. I am stunned by the irrationalism and the blatant denial that people in this country have about our current economic dilemma. We are in danger of losing an entire generation of school-age children, due to poor education.
Yet we have to keep on waging a stupid war on two fronts, and try to pull ourselves out of BUSH'S f*cking Depression. Damn, this crap makes me mad!
Vouchers, baby. . .vouchers. And if that's not convincing enough for you, let John Stossel give it a try.
I'm warming up to this song.
Other posters are right. Librarian skills are going to be in heavy demand going forward.
Probably one helluva a recession-proof job to have right now.
not really, lot's of library's are being closed, or having hours shortened, as the counties in which they reside look at reducing costs, and trying to find ways to keep police, firemen, teachers, and road crews employed....God, what a mess we are in.
Too right. I am stunned by the irrationalism and the blatant denial that people in this country have about our current economic dilemma. We are in danger of losing an entire generation of school-age children, due to poor education.
Yet we have to keep on waging a stupid war on two fronts, and try to pull ourselves out of BUSH'S f*cking Depression. Damn, this crap makes me mad!
I'm warming up to this song.
Other posters are right. Librarian skills are going to be in heavy demand going forward.
Probably one helluva a recession-proof job to have right now.
not really, lot's of library's are being closed, or having hours shortened, as the counties in which they reside look at reducing costs, and trying to find ways to keep police, firemen, teachers, and road crews employed....God, what a mess we are in.
An excellent example of quality musicianship...through and through!
I'm warming up to this song.
Other posters are right. Librarian skills are going to be in heavy demand going forward.
Probably one helluva a recession-proof job to have right now.