This isn't gods
This isn't gods
When the lyrics are " I don't want anybody else" it doesn't sound like she sings "want", it sounds more like "book" (" I don't book anybody else")!?!? It is clearly an o-sounding vowel and maybe "k" rather than "nt". What's up with that!?
When the lyrics are " I don't want anybody else" it doesn't sound like she sings "want", it sounds more like "book" (" I don't book anybody else")!?!? It is clearly an o-sounding vowel and maybe "k" rather than "nt". What's up with that!?
Stevie, which was previously known by the titles Kid and Live To Fight/Live To Fight Another Day, was inspired by artist Carrie Reichardt, particularly her Mad in England mosaics. "The first verse is elders pinning you down," Serge explained in an NME interview, "the second verse is the comeback."[1] The song is about "standing up for what you believe in. [...] We all have our own, personal battles."[2] The name Stevie was chosen for its gender ambiguity.
Stevie, which was previously known by the titles Kid and Live To Fight/Live To Fight Another Day, was inspired by artist Carrie Reichardt, particularly her Mad in England mosaics. "The first verse is elders pinning you down," Serge explained in an NME interview, "the second verse is the comeback."[1] The song is about "standing up for what you believe in. [...] We all have our own, personal battles."[2] The name Stevie was chosen for its gender ambiguity.
Smooth criminal according to Jermaine Jackson was based on the real serial killer Richard Ramirez. The name Annie, did not come from any of his victims. It came from a Annie CPR doll that was in the studio, Michael walked over to it and said " Annie are you okay?" I am not sure if the victim he was talking about was a 78 yr lady named Jeannie Vencow. Richard Ramirez's other Victims were also elderly mostly Asians. He went after couples who some were murdered, others had survived. His victim a 6 yr old girl was dropped of at a...
Smooth criminal according to Jermaine Jackson was based on the real serial killer Richard Ramirez. The name Annie, did not come from any of his victims. It came from a Annie CPR doll that was in the studio, Michael walked over to it and said " Annie are you okay?" I am not sure if the victim he was talking about was a 78 yr lady named Jeannie Vencow. Richard Ramirez's other Victims were also elderly mostly Asians. He went after couples who some were murdered, others had survived. His victim a 6 yr old girl was dropped of at a gas station in the city where I live, She was raped but survived and now is married with children.
It's more about loss; narrator lost someone in the house and now he's trying to move on. In a coffee can- Throw my nickels in- Just in case I have to leave. from the first time I heard this line, the image of loneliness came to my mind. He's stuck in his lonely everyday life in this house with so many memories of the past, holding him back, making him angry and later crazy; contemplating leaving. Another meaning : the house is actually his own body. It is poetry after all so you can't take it word by word. This body is our prison [in...
It's more about loss; narrator lost someone in the house and now he's trying to move on. In a coffee can- Throw my nickels in- Just in case I have to leave. from the first time I heard this line, the image of loneliness came to my mind. He's stuck in his lonely everyday life in this house with so many memories of the past, holding him back, making him angry and later crazy; contemplating leaving. Another meaning : the house is actually his own body. It is poetry after all so you can't take it word by word. This body is our prison [in the words of Rumi].
The way I interpret is pretty general - it is about trying to let go, fighting to accept loss.
The way I interpret is pretty general - it is about trying to let go, fighting to accept loss.
It was great
It was great
This song is so so much good And I like the way it begins it gives the love to listen to it 💯
This song is so so much good And I like the way it begins it gives the love to listen to it 💯
"When Mitchell released her Hejira album in 1976 with the song Furry Sings the Blues, he hated the song and “that woman,” as he would put it that sang it. From what I understand, the song was inspired by this meeting, but mostly it was a commentary of the existing landscape of Beale Street which was getting very run down by that time in the seventies. The song paints a bleak picture of the current state of affairs on Beale Street as she recalled when she was there. The song was more about that mood than anything else. She...
"When Mitchell released her Hejira album in 1976 with the song Furry Sings the Blues, he hated the song and “that woman,” as he would put it that sang it. From what I understand, the song was inspired by this meeting, but mostly it was a commentary of the existing landscape of Beale Street which was getting very run down by that time in the seventies. The song paints a bleak picture of the current state of affairs on Beale Street as she recalled when she was there. The song was more about that mood than anything else. She only mentioned his name and a few aspects, but the song was never totally about him… However, many people close to Furry would disagree. Furry thought he should have received some kind of a royalty for singing about him." thebluesblogger.com/71/beale-street-furry-sings-the-blues
what the flip
what the flip