Till The Next Goodbye Lyrics
I know a coffee shop down on Fifty Second Street
And I don't need no fancy food and I don't need no fancy wine
And I sure don't need the tears you cry
Till the next time we say goodbye
Till the next time we say goodbye
I'll be thinking of you
I'll be thinking of you
Ain't a very likely place for you and I to meet
Watching the snow swirl around your hair and around your feet
And I'm thinking to myself she surely looks a treat
Till the next time we say goodbye
Till the next time we say goodbye
Till the next time that we kiss goodnight
I'll be thinking of you
I'll be thinking of you
I can't go on like this, can ya?
Now that's a recipe I sure do need
Some cider vinegar and some eldeberry wine
May cure all your ills, but it can't cure mine
Your Lou'siana recipes have let me down
Your Lou'siana recipes have surely let me down
Till the next time we say goodbye
Till the next time we say goodbye
Till the next time that we kiss goodnight
Till the next time we say goodbye
Till the next time we say goodbye
I'll be thinking of you
I'll be thinking of you
Till the next time that we say good bye
Til the next time that we kiss goodnight...

No comments? Fuckin' hell... Anyway, beautiful, could easily have been written about me and the time I had in Germany earlier this year...

yea I guess people that visit this site don't know what good music is?

yeah, better than your average memory motel

true stones fans enjoy the album songs/less popular songs aswell as their hits. brilliant song...
Some cider vinegar and some eldeberry wine May cure all your ills, but it can't cure mine
dont know why but it sticks out to me. love it

You got this right Jobie...."true stones fans enjoy the album songs/less popular songs as well" This is an awesome song!

This songs is about about an illicit relationship between two lovers. The point of view, Jagger as narrator, speaks to the mistress apologetically and with a guilty conscience... In one line on the bridge, Jagger manages to convey empathy, culpability, and frustration: 'I can't go on like this/Can ya? Can ya?' On paper it seems clear, the narrator is asking out of the relationship (paraphrasing): "I can't do this, can ya?" But the way Jagger sings it, it sounds like he's asking, "You can't do this anymore, can you?" He's conveying a different meaning altogether, almost as if he is playing both parts in one line.

anyone who says his voice is somehow cold... just listen to this number and see how soulful he is... the man is a God. also on "Your Louisiana recipes have let me down" I kinda think he's referring to sth specific, a kinda double meaning but I don't know what.