Thanks for the clip. Incredible performance. Shelter From the Storm from that show is probably my favorite of any of Dylan's.Yep Dylan was a hell of a song writer. I agree with your dad. However there is one song that no one can do as good as Dylan and that is A hard rain is gonna fall. My favorite Dylan song of all time.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q0o_0b5abwA
First LP I ever owned. Got if as a prize for selling magazines for a school fundraiser.Def Leppard- Pyromania (1983)
Rock Rock (Till You Drop)
Photograph
Stagefright
Too Late for Love
Die Hard the Hunter
Foolin’
Rock of Ages
Comin’ Under Fire
Action Not Words
Billy’s Got a Gun
Arguably the best of the 80s “hair bands”, these Brits were largely successful due to their producer Mutt Lange, and their ability to combine pop hooks with metal guitar licks. Subsequent albums would sell even better than this one, particularly the mega selling Hysteria, but this is the one that introduced them to the world and made them superstars, thanks to some really great rock and roll like “Photograph” and “Rock of Ages.”
Yea can't get much better than Baez and Dylan duets.Thanks for the clip. Incredible performance. Shelter From the Storm from that show is probably my favorite of any of Dylan's.
Oof, I'm on the other end of this one. I find her voice/vibrato excruciating.Yea can't get much better than Baez and Dylan duets.
Does anybody here remember Vera Lynn?Pink Floyd- The Wall (1979)
I only recently learned Vera Lynn was a singer in the 40s who had a song We'll Meet Again Some Sunny Day - which I thought was fantastic.Does anybody here remember Vera Lynn?
As I have read, Waters purposely used the double negatives there so that many would misinterpret the meaningThe lyrics "We don't need no education, we don't need no thought control" was so intriguing. We knew is was bad. And wrong (we did need education).
The Byrds album we just reviewed ends with a decent cover of this song, which was also used for the film Dr. Strangelove.I only recently learned Vera Lynn was a singer in the 40s who had a song We'll Meet Again Some Sunny Day - which I thought was fantastic.
That seems weird. Certainly Waters isn't pro-thought control. Next you'll tell me I can have my pudding if I don't eat my meat.As I have read, Waters purposely used the double negatives there so that many would misinterpret the meaning
When I worked in entertainment in a resort in Florida, we created this awesome haunted house during Halloween. We scared the living daylights out of some people. Anyway, when you first entered the haunted house you had to walk through this almost pitch black hallway, and I made about a 40 second clip of "Is There Anybody Out There" and played it repeatedly in the black hall. It was spooky.Too many weird, short, filler songs like Vera, Don't Leave Me Now, Is There Anybody Out There, etc.
Very true. I love Young Lust, One of my Turns, and Mother as well. I still listen to this album a lot and it is in my top 5 albums of all time. Absolutely brilliant work. The album is weird but there are cool rock songs mixed in with really touching tunes.Goodbye Blue Sky is so underrated it is criminal.
I think "Mother" is up there with those songs, and "Young Lust" is a pretty good tune. Some of the short songs (which I think some consider filler) are nice lead-ins to other songs. For example "Empty Spaces" is a great lead-in to "Young Lust." I love the harmonizing on "The Show Must Go On." I also dig songs such as "One Of My Turns" and "Waiting for the Worms" and "Another Brick in the Wall part 3." I like the whole double album.Comfortably Numb, Run Like Hell, Blue Sky, and Hey You are the stars here. Love the album, but I think my admiration is largely associated with the movie. Without the movie, some these songs are just so-so. The movie/slash album are really inseparable.
No, he isn't. But he does like to #### with people.That seems weird. Certainly Waters isn't pro-thought control. Next you'll tell me I can have my pudding if I don't eat my meat.
It was mine for a very long time. I was obsessed with this record when I discovered it in the fall of 1990. This is probably my most-listened-to album ever. I still know every single part of it like the back of my hand.My favorite album of all time.
Agreed 100%. I’m not sure a week goes by where I don’t listen to at least one song off this album. So good.The Wall would make my list of desert island albums. An all-time rock and roll classic.
Tea in the Sahara never excited me. Walking in Your Footsteps may be my favorite on the album. This is why music is great...something for everyone.A lot of good ones on that album with Mother being the only real stinker. Big fan of Tea in the Sahara as an underrated song of this album.
I still have a working Sony Walkman. Of course, I don't have many cassettes anymore, but a cassette deck comes in handy at times if you're into thrift store hunting for cassettes (or hipster music with cassette-only releases like Burger Records in L.A.)Of course I have no way of playing cassettes anymore, but would likely throw it in if I could. It's probably been 30 years since I've listened to the album.
My first thought when I saw Tim had changed the thread. Miss Gradenko was always my favorite.A lot of good ones on that album with Mother being the only real stinker. Big fan of Tea in the Sahara as an underrated song of this album.