I actually encourage people that are really into modern country music to let "Jesus Take the Wheel" on their way home.
I actually encourage people that are really into modern country music to let "Jesus Take the Wheel" on their way home.
In the '60s Janis made love to many, many men - often outdoors in the mud and the rain - and it's possible that a woman slipped in. There'd be no way of knowing.
"Who is this leader of men?"
That's the exact kind of joke he would have loved
Also,
They're pills that create a sort of temporary forgettingness. So if somebody finds out how you do a trick, you just give 'em one of these, and they forget the whole thing. It's a mainstay of the magician's toolkit, like how clowns always have a rag soaked in ether.
Gob: Steve Holt's not my son.
George Michael: Steve Holt? What, the moron jock?
Gob: That's my son, you pothead.
I live in Auburn, AL (50 miles east of Montgomery) and I remember seeing that commercial back in the day.
Also, I submit "Forever Changes" by Love.
I can't believe that no one has mentioned "The Mollusk" by Ween. It was recorded on the Jersey Shore during the deserted winter months and that's pretty much what it sounds like: a cold squall. It has a very loose theme (pirates, ocean, etc.) but you'd be hard-pressed, in my book anyway, to find an album better suited…
I want them to do an entire episode of 30 Rock in Kenneth/Muppet-vision. I was Lizzing so hard.
The first half of "A Blessing & A Curse" is just about perfect as far as contemporary rock 'n' roll albums go. That album got a lot of shit it didn't deserve.
"Tonight the Bottle Let Me Down" gets my vote for best country drinking song. I love the Merle Haggard version, but the Elvis Costello version is good too.
"Never trust a man in a blue trenchcoat/Never drive a car when you're dead"
For a split second, when you said that you were "experimenting with E," I thought you meant the solo work of E from Eels.
Nashville Skyline is an amazing record. I remember being amazed that it was actually Dylan singing on that record. It turns out he could sing this whole time, he just didn't want anyone to know it. Best song on there: "One More Night."
Jerry Garcia, David Grisman, and Tony Rice do a really good version of "Long Black Veil" on The Pizza Tapes. That's where I first heard the song. Also, The Band's version from Music From Big Pink is classic.
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"I Am the Greatest Man That Ever Lived (Variations on a Shaker Hymn)"
The live version of "Over the Hills & Far Away" that's on How the West Was Won is… did someone already use the word "transcendental"?