Oh god, and the way he looks up when he says that. . .
Oh god, and the way he looks up when he says that. . .
I still think we can have both, dammit.
Can't we have both?
I'm very much a sucker for "Saying Goodbye" from Muppets Take Manhatten, but this one's up there too.
Oh, I get it! Like, "Why aren't I listening to The Bends instead of every Coldplay record?"
You cheap lousy FLAGGED
Sickbed of Cuchulainn
Lorelei
Fairytale Of New York
In his defense, I'm pretty sure MacGowan's condition isn't medical.
I'm not sure yet if you're right or not. Give me a couple days, and I'll get back to you.
Clearly you've never listened to "The Life Pursuit."
I have a pretty clear memory of watching this show when I was 4 or 5 (every damn day, Mr. Rogers and Sesame Street, I never missed an episode for years), and suddenly thinking it was strange that a grown up didn't seem to know much about anything. Because he'd always have the most basic questions about how things…
It'll be worth it.
Zombie Jack Valenti will be pleased to know that, if your guitar playing is as good as Buckingham's, the end result will sound pretty similar to 'Seeds We Sow.' Awesome album, sounds like it was recorded in a closet.
You mean 'Wings?'
Yeah. . . Oh Well.
Has that period really ended?
If you haven't, you should check out "Law And Order," the first solo Lindsey Buckingham record. He made it right after "Tusk," and it sounds pretty much the same. As in, awesome.
Yes.
Definitely my favorite too. It just sets the tone for the whole record. "Over And Over" is a pretty typical ballad, a fairly mellow start to the album, then out of nowhere we get "The Ledge," two minutes of apeshit coke-fueled rockabilly recorded in a basement, and from that point on, you have no idea what to expect.
Rumor (no pun intended) has it "Tusk" was a reference to the male phallus. And whenever Lindsey Buckingham would say "Real savage-like" onstage, Stevie Nicks would get all pissed and diva-ish.