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Your rating:
Total ratings: 4883
Length: 4:36
Plays (last 30 days): 2
See the love there that's sleeping
While my guitar gently weeps
I look at the floor
And I see it needs sweeping
Still my guitar gently weeps
I don't know why nobody told you
How to unfold your love
I don't know how someone controlled you
They bought and so-old you
I look at the world
And I notice it's turning
While my guitar gently weeps
(With) every mistake
We must surely be learning
Still my guitar gently weeps
Yeah
I don't know how you were diverted
You were perverted too
I don't know how you were inverted
No-one alerted you
I look at you all
See the love there that's sleeping
While my guitar gently weeps
Look at you all
Still my guitar gently wee-ee-eeps
Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh
Oh
Oh, oh, oh, oh (eee...)
Oh, oh, oh (... eee)
Oh, oh (eee...)
Oh, oh (... eee...)
Oh, oh (... eee)
Yeah, yeah, yeah (eee...)
Yeah, yeah, yeah (... eee...)
Yeah, yeah, yeah (... eee...)
Go! (... eee)
Oh (eee)
Yep. He was returning the favor of George playing on Cream's, Badge. Or vice versa.
George was credited on the Goodbye album as L'Angelo Misterioso.
Electric Ladyland?
for some reason, ever since i saw that live concert from many years ago, i keep waiting for prince's guitar solo to happen...
damn, such a good song.
But, Prince's epic solo gets an 11.
Waaaaayyy back in 1969 our Catholic grade school hired a renegade for an eighth grade teacher - Ed M.- and he would use this album to teach us poetry lyrics. Especially this song. The other teachers hated him. We kids - we thought he walked on water. Especially when he brought in a motorcycle engine to teach us combustion in science.
He went on to a career in the National Park Service and is now retire. Thank you Mr. Ed.
My NJ high school Film as An Art Form teacher often showed films in classes or enabled students to see movies that were outside the G and PG ratings that 15 or 16 year olds might be allowed to see, at least in 1972. Or at least movies that 15 year olds would find challenging (Breathless, Citizen Kane or Lolita, anyone? -- not the usual fare in vogue circa 1970.) He pushed the envelope of titles and mind engagements. Bonnie and Clyde, The Wild Bunch, Rosemarys Baby, Easy Rider, Dr. Strangelove, and many more. Some were sort of subversive, others just not traditional or mainstream but could evoke or provoke. He upset some parents, and had to talk the school board and the town board into his methodology. He succeeded. During some lectures about Orson Welles or John Ford, on entirely related matters of family and media and history and mise en scene and much more, he sometimes theatrically wielded a cane he dubbed Citizen Cane. He poked lazy students with it. He was beloved. On top of that, he was discreetly but clearly gay. Which in 1972, was a taboo. We saw A Clockwork Orange at a NYC invite screening. I was stunned but exhilarated. The Sorrow and the Pity. I was devastated. The Hot Rock. Several years later, Rocky. The Prince of the City.
Ed died in the year of our favorite movie, 2001. I miss him and his generous teaching ways every day.
For better or for worse, for the glory despite the sacrifice, I'm in the movie business.
For me, Pink Floyd - The Wall should be #1 or #2 on this kind of list.
Everybody has different tastes! "The Wall" is the only Pink Floyd album that I do not like.
Prince did it better.
Blasphemy!
I often wonder the same Dave, but as an engineer I can explain it in terms of signal and noise. The peak, in this case around 10, is the signal. You may notice that even the greatest songs get around 1% 1s, 2s and 3s, this is the noise, i.e. random effects like static, cosmic background radiation, people being born with a genetic mutation that causes them to hate great music, etc. It's only possible to add votes, not take them away, so the noise is always additive, hence it creates a baseline just above zero.
The message here is, "don't worry about it" you can just ignore it.
Hope that helps
As a physicist, I can say that your explanation is spot on! It's just the noise floor. :)
But oh wow, Strawberry Fields takes me back. Sounds just as good as when I first heard it driving my Mini back in '67 - such a wonderful time to be alive. Wish I had a magic carpet to take me back ❤️
BTW...The latest Beatles documentaries that have come out on Apple TV and Hulu are fantastic — with McCartney321 being my favorite.
Okay!
Regarding the Prince solo at the end of "While My Guitar..." at the posthumous induction of George Harrison at the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame, in a New York Times article from April 28, 2016, Craig Inciardi (Curator at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Museum) says "I’ve seen every induction performance from ’92 to the present, so that’s like 24 shows. On a purely musical level, a technical level as far as musicianship, that performance seems like the most impressive one."
During the rehearsals the night before, Jeff Lynne's guitar player, who was also playing the song, essentially takes the lead ahead of Prince at every opportunity, but places it straight, note for note, as George had done it. Prince says nothing and just plays rhythm, so no one really gets to hear what's he's going to do. He later comments to the producer not to worry, during the actual performance, he just says nonchalantly, I'll step in at the end. So basically no rehearsal.
Tom Ferrone, drummer for Tom Petty, says just before the actual performance: "Tom sort of went over to him (Prince) and said, “Just cut loose and don’t feel sort of inhibited to copy anything that we have, just play your thing, just have a good time.” It was a hell of a guitar solo, and a hell of a show he actually put on for the band. When he fell back into the audience, everybody in the band freaked out, like, “Oh my God, he’s falling off the stage!” And then that whole thing with the guitar going up in the air. I didn’t even see who caught it. I just saw it go up, and I was astonished that it didn’t come back down again. Everybody wonders where that guitar went, and I gotta tell you, I was on the stage, and I wonder where it went, too."
I was told by a great musician that the roadie who held him up when he fell backwards off the stage was the same guy who caught the guitar.
As far as studio double albums from great bands go, I have to say that I rank this album just below:
1. The Rolling Stone - Exile on Main Street
2. Led Zeppelin - Physical Graffiti
3. The Clash - London Calling
For me, Pink Floyd - The Wall should be #1 or #2 on this kind of list.
I often wonder the same Dave, but as an engineer I can explain it in terms of signal and noise. The peak, in this case around 10, is the signal. You may notice that even the greatest songs get around 1% 1s, 2s and 3s, this is the noise, i.e. random effects like static, cosmic background radiation, people being born with a genetic mutation that causes them to hate great music, etc. It's only possible to add votes, not take them away, so the noise is always additive, hence it creates a baseline just above zero.
The message here is, "don't worry about it" you can just ignore it.
Hope that helps
In fact, @markybx, the whole rating system is so much noise, given how subjective opinions about songs are. I note that you have rated Yello's The Race a 1 compared to the collective rating of 7.1. Which rating is noise?
I use the rating system primarily to screen songs for my "My Favorites" list. If I hear a song I want on my list it gets at least a 7, if not, something less, or I don't bother rating it at all. And once I have decided I want it on that list, it doesn't matter much to me whether it is rated a 7 or a 10.
Further, one of the things I like best about RP is the constant stream of new songs and artists. I have been listening to While My Guitar Gently Weeps since it came out in 1968, two years after I graduated from HS. You won't hear me saying it isn't a great song, but I have heard it enough, so no, I don't want it on my My Faves list, thank you. Give me a song I haven't heard before.
Like you said, "... 'don't worry about it' you can just ignore it." All of it!
Waaaaayyy back in 1969 our Catholic grade school hired a renegade for an eighth grade teacher - Ed M.- and he would use this album to teach us poetry lyrics. Especially this song. The other teachers hated him. We kids - we thought he walked on water. Especially when he brought in a motorcycle engine to teach us combustion in science.
He went on to a career in the National Park Service and is now retire. Thank you Mr. Ed.
At my Catholic boys high school in 1969 it was Brother Raphael and Simon & Garfunkel lyrics but same idea. Great times!
I often wonder the same Dave, but as an engineer I can explain it in terms of signal and noise. The peak, in this case around 10, is the signal. You may notice that even the greatest songs get around 1% 1s, 2s and 3s, this is the noise, i.e. random effects like static, cosmic background radiation, people being born with a genetic mutation that causes them to hate great music, etc. It's only possible to add votes, not take them away, so the noise is always additive, hence it creates a baseline just above zero.
The message here is, "don't worry about it" you can just ignore it.
Hope that helps
Or maybe a world of 100% consensus would be not desirable at all.
scrubbrush wrote:
As far as studio double albums from great bands go, I have to say that I rank this album just below:
1. The Rolling Stone - Exile on Main Street
2. Led Zeppelin - Physical Graffiti
3. The Clash - London Calling
Electric Ladyland? & Quadrophenia ??
Thank you George Harrison!
Amazing to fathom just how eclectic the Beatles were!
1. The Rolling Stone - Exile on Main Street
2. Led Zeppelin - Physical Graffiti
3. The Clash - London Calling
Electric Ladyland?
expatlar wrote:
Makes me chuckle to see that there are actually 43 people who desire to play the contrarian enough to rate this song a '1'. You don't have to 'love the Beatles' but come on, a 1? What kind of a foul mood do you have to be in to rate this song a 1? :-)
One request tho.. Please play it in the evening when I usually enter a state that enhances my appreciation of music... and food too.
1. The Rolling Stone - Exile on Main Street
2. Led Zeppelin - Physical Graffiti
3. The Clash - London Calling
During the rehearsals the night before, Jeff Lynne's guitar player, who was also playing the song, essentially takes the lead ahead of Prince at every opportunity, but places it straight, note for note, as George had done it. Prince says nothing and just plays rhythm, so no one really gets to hear what's he's going to do. He later comments to the producer not to worry, during the actual performance, he just says nonchalantly, I'll step in at the end. So basically no rehearsal.
Tom Ferrone, drummer for Tom Petty, says just before the actual performance: "Tom sort of went over to him (Prince) and said, “Just cut loose and don’t feel sort of inhibited to copy anything that we have, just play your thing, just have a good time.” It was a hell of a guitar solo, and a hell of a show he actually put on for the band. When he fell back into the audience, everybody in the band freaked out, like, “Oh my God, he’s falling off the stage!” And then that whole thing with the guitar going up in the air. I didn’t even see who caught it. I just saw it go up, and I was astonished that it didn’t come back down again. Everybody wonders where that guitar went, and I gotta tell you, I was on the stage, and I wonder where it went, too."
Having seen the clip for numerous times I would say his smiling face tells differently but, believe it or not George Harrison's son, Dhani, called Prince's legendary guitar solo "gratuitous" and "awkward" in an interview.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zQLPd-aw_mM
During the rehearsals the night before, Jeff Lynne's guitar player, who was also playing the song, essentially takes the lead ahead of Prince at every opportunity, but places it straight, note for note, as George had done it. Prince says nothing and just plays rhythm, so no one really gets to hear what's he's going to do. He later comments to the producer not to worry, during the actual performance, he just says nonchalantly, I'll step in at the end. So basically no rehearsal.
Tom Ferrone, drummer for Tom Petty, says just before the actual performance: "Tom sort of went over to him (Prince) and said, “Just cut loose and don’t feel sort of inhibited to copy anything that we have, just play your thing, just have a good time.” It was a hell of a guitar solo, and a hell of a show he actually put on for the band. When he fell back into the audience, everybody in the band freaked out, like, “Oh my God, he’s falling off the stage!” And then that whole thing with the guitar going up in the air. I didn’t even see who caught it. I just saw it go up, and I was astonished that it didn’t come back down again. Everybody wonders where that guitar went, and I gotta tell you, I was on the stage, and I wonder where it went, too."
I have mixed feelings about this performance.
Yes, Prince plays a fantastic solo, but I feel that Lynne and Petty are paying respect, leaving room for his purpleness to be just showing off, when it may not be appropriate.
Also, Prince is a truly great artist, but I still think Jimi Hendrix would have whooped his little arse here.
Prince comes in at 3:27 (through the end).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6SFNW5F8K9Y
WOW....and even before Prince starts playing, Tom and Jeff were sounding great....then Prince with one of the best damn performances I've seen. RIP George, Tom, and Prince!!
+1 - definately
Period.
He went on to a career in the National Park Service and is now retired. Thank you Mr. Ed.
I often wonder the same Dave, but as an engineer I can explain it in terms of signal and noise. The peak, in this case around 10, is the signal. You may notice that even the greatest songs get around 1% 1s, 2s and 3s, this is the noise, i.e. random effects like static, cosmic background radiation, people being born with a genetic mutation that causes them to hate great music, etc. It's only possible to add votes, not take them away, so the noise is always additive, hence it creates a baseline just above zero.
The message here is, "don't worry about it" you can just ignore it.
Hope that helps
This comment is FANTASTIC! I had just bumped up one, now I think I'll go two!
I often wonder the same Dave, but as an engineer I can explain it in terms of signal and noise. The peak, in this case around 10, is the signal. You may notice that even the greatest songs get around 1% 1s, 2s and 3s, this is the noise, i.e. random effects like static, cosmic background radiation, people being born with a genetic mutation that causes them to hate great music, etc. It's only possible to add votes, not take them away, so the noise is always additive, hence it creates a baseline just above zero.
The message here is, "don't worry about it" you can just ignore it.
Hope that helps
Everybody in my hotel room agrees with you, DeemerDave... hope you are having a blast this nude year... this song is soooo good for the ears... everybody in my hotel room loves this song... we be dancing like happy hippies... love Radio Paradise...
Prince comes in at 3:27 (through the end).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6SFNW5F8K9Y
WOW! Spine tingling solo. RIP man.
During the rehearsals the night before, Jeff Lynne's guitar player, who was also playing the song, essentially takes the lead ahead of Prince at every opportunity, but places it straight, note for note, as George had done it. Prince says nothing and just plays rhythm, so no one really gets to hear what's he's going to do. He later comments to the producer not to worry, during the actual performance, he just says nonchalantly, I'll step in at the end. So basically no rehearsal.
Tom Ferrone, drummer for Tom Petty, says just before the actual performance: "Tom sort of went over to him (Prince) and said, “Just cut loose and don’t feel sort of inhibited to copy anything that we have, just play your thing, just have a good time.” It was a hell of a guitar solo, and a hell of a show he actually put on for the band. When he fell back into the audience, everybody in the band freaked out, like, “Oh my God, he’s falling off the stage!” And then that whole thing with the guitar going up in the air. I didn’t even see who caught it. I just saw it go up, and I was astonished that it didn’t come back down again. Everybody wonders where that guitar went, and I gotta tell you, I was on the stage, and I wonder where it went, too."
Prince comes in at 3:27 (through the end).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6SFNW5F8K9Y
And is fully on! Just the theatrics that go with it, Backwards off stage in the middle of it all!
Prince comes in at 3:27 (through the end).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6SFNW5F8K9Y
Is this a question or a statement ?
In case of question; why don´t you google the playlist of the album ?
In case of a statement, what do you want to tell us ?
Lighten up Francis
Is this a question or a statement ?
In case of question; why don´t you google the playlist of the album ?
In case of a statement, what do you want to tell us ?
Deserves a bump because the Purple One HAS TO BE WATCHED on this video with what is (in my book) one of the best solos ever played.
No shit!
islander wrote:
65% of all statistics are made up on the spot.
If you counted three quarters of the population of the United States there would be about 25% who were not counted.
5/3 of people are bad at fractions.
80% of communication is body language so I don't know what you're all talking about
It's time for Wynona's Big Brown Beaver
My favorite song by my favorite Beatle...
Deserves a bump because the Purple One HAS TO BE WATCHED on this video with what is (in my book) one of the best solos ever played.
Wow!!
Deserves a bump because the Purple One HAS TO BE WATCHED on this video with what is (in my book) one of the best solos ever played.
The owls are not what they seem.
80% of communication is body language so I don't know what you're all talking about
skooba wrote:
islander wrote:
65% of all statistics are made up on the spot.
Yes, but did you know that some owls aren't that smart?
The owls are not what they seem.
I opened the comments section just to add the very same comment. George Harrison is sorely missed.
And this is is one of the few truly good Beatles songs. John Lennon and George Harrison was easily the two best song writers in the group, in my humble opinion. Mind you, I see Beatles as being overrated in general... But not George Harrison. He's often underrated. But a great musician!
I had no idea! Thanks for posting...
islander wrote:
65% of all statistics are made up on the spot.
If you counted three quarters of the population of the United States there would still be about 25% who were not counted.
Does anybody know what were the very first songs played here at RP? I'd love to go back and read some embryonic comments of 13+ years ago. I only found this station after reading this TIME magazine article from April 2004:
>>Bill and Rebecca Goldsmith are making a living from an idea that would probably get you laughed out of business school: running an Internet radio station commercial free. From their home in Paradise, Calif., in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada, they operate Radioparadise.coma format-busting station that spins a tasteful mix of music ranging from the Beatles to Norah Jones to the Strokes. Fewer than 5,000 listeners tune in during peak times, but fans like it so much, they sent the couple $120,000 in contributions last year, covering the cost of bandwidth, song royalties and other expenses and leaving enough to support a "comfortable lifestyle," says Bill Goldsmith, who quit a 30-year career in FM radio to run and DJ his homegrown version.
If you can't bear another spin of Britney Spears, you're one of the reasons that stations like Radioparadise are beginning to prosper and investors are again flocking to another alternative to the AM/FM dial: satellite radio. After years of unmet promise, online stations, along with satellite offerings like Sirius and XM Satellite Radio, are building audiences even as regular radio struggles through a decade-long slump (time spent listening is down 14% since 1994, according to the ratings firm Arbitron). Critics say industry consolidation has turned AM/FM stations into McRadio: nationally uniform, repetitive and clogged more than ever with ads and promos. But scores of high-quality alternatives are now competing for your ears (and dollars).
Just a few years ago, online radio heads were mainly tech geeks willing to put up with patchy, low-quality sound. These days about 19 million people listen to online radio at least once a week, up from 7 million in 2000, according to Arbitron. Online listenership is growing at an average 43% a year as more people get broadband connections at home and tune in for content that's unavailable or in short supply on commercial stations, from blues to folk to Al Franken's new liberal Air America network, which is broadcast in just a few markets on the AM/FM dial but was streamed 2 million times in its first week, according to its exclusive webcaster, RealNetworks. "People are fed up with terrestrial radio," says Dave Goldberg, who oversees Yahoo's music site and radio network, Launchcast, which draws 1 million listeners a week.
For now, it's the satellite guys, together claiming around 2 million subscribers, who are drawing Wall Street's attention. Though their stock prices had plummeted over concerns that they might run out of cash, their shares have soared in the past year. XM is up 379%; Sirius, 491%. Analyst April Horace of Janco Partners in Denver predicts that within five years 16 million Americans will be listening to satellite radio. She says the market would explode if a popular shock jock like Howard Stern were to defect with his 15 million listeners, a prospect that looked more likely last week after six traditional stations dropped his show following an FCC proposal to fine their corporate parent, Clear Channel Communications, $495,000 for airing his "indecent" content.
Satellite broadcasters use a pay-radio model, beaming dozens of channels coast to coast commercial free, with original programming such as comedy and kids' shows. Financially backed in part by automakers, the satellite firms charge between $10 and $13 a month, mainly targeting car-radio users. Increasingly, though, listeners are buying portable tuners for their homes. To neutralize a key AM/FM advantage, both satellite broadcasters have started to provide traffic and weather updates in select markets.
So far, digital radio's growth isn't hurting big radio empires such as Clear Channel. With 1,213 stations and roughly a 30% ratings share in markets such as Phoenix, Ariz., and Milwaukee, Wis., Clear Channel had a record 2003: revenues of $8.9 billion and a net income of $1.1 billion. But listeners are clearly spending less time with terrestrial radio. One cause may simply be more media competition, from DVDs to video games to an expanding universe of digital TV. But critics of the radio industry say consolidation is partly to blame too. They claim Clear Channel and other big groups have ruined the airwaves by homogenizing song lists, politicizing the dial with conservative talk and sucking out local flavor with voice-tracking technology, which enables DJs to sound like local talent even if they're a thousand miles away. Clear Channel contends that its cost-cutting measures have saved hundreds of stations from bankruptcy and that it's the programming's popularity, reflected in ratings, that ultimately drives the business.
Nonetheless, teenagers and young adults are increasingly going online to find new music (not just file-sharing networks), particularly alternative content that rarely gets airplay on the commercial FM dial. About 13% of Americans ages 12 to 24 now listen to online radio on a weekly basis, up from 6% of that age group in 2001, according to Edison Media Research/Arbitron. With 185 stations, AOL's radio network, which, like TIME, is part of Time Warner, draws a weekly listenership of 1.5 million (by that measure, Arbitron notes, it's the nation's largest online network). Advertising remains tiny, but that may change. Ronning Lipset, an upstart Internet-radio ad firm in New York City, recently started packaging AOL, Live365.com MSN and Yahoo into a kind of national network, which has a combined audience of at least 250,000 listeners in a quarter hour, the minimum needed to appeal to national-media planners. The firm says the networks will start running audio spots from national advertisers in May.
For now the AM/FM industry doesn't seem too concerned. Arbitron estimates that 228 million Americans ages 12 and up still listen to broadcast radio weekly, and radio remains the top broadcast medium after TV for advertisers who want to reach a mass market. Radio ad sales in Arbitron markets are forecast to rise 5.5% this year, to $14 billion, according to BIA Financial Network, a media consultancy in Chantilly, Va. Yet as more consumers tune to stations like Radioparadise, those numbers could slip. Goldsmith's thoughtful playlists are organized by musical theme, moving from, say, a bluesy Tracy Chapman tune to a Latin-blues Carlos Santana track to a rock-blues number by the Hellecasters. He heeds listener feedback and says the only thing he really cares about is "playing good music," regardless of whether it's a hot single being pitched by a promoter or a classic. That's why his fans are pulling out their wallets to support him.
Posted: Mar 08, 2002 - 12:17
An interesting worldbeat track. The AMG Artist Info link is kinda funny, though. For Similar/Related albums they list Dave Brubeck, Jackson Browne, Bananarama, and Perry Como, among others. (Maybe they just use a random album generator if they're not sure?) :p
Earlier than Pangea — Kiranga Beat, anyway.
skooba wrote:
islander wrote:
65% of all statistics are made up on the spot.
Yes, but did you know that some owls aren't that smart?
islander wrote:
65% of all statistics are made up on the spot.
George even said it himself about this song, that when he first presented it to the band, that they weren't into it. So he brought in Eric Clapton (which was unheard of back in the day) to spruce it up a bit.
I think I know what you mean. I always assumed it was something to do with the engineering/production. Like maybe the tape speed was just slightly off, or fluctuating, resulting in that "not quite right" sound. If there are any recording engineers in the audience I'd be interested to hear their opinion. No denying it's a classic song, of course.
This piece does "plod," and that's a result of the slowed-down tempo. I have to believe the tempo is 100% purposeful. It's slower than your heart rate with a timing that makes it feel a bit off balance. This tempo gives the whole number a certain lamenting effect. Another reason why I find the tune so amazing.
90% of song ratings are crap.
True, but only 10% of the time.
personally it's a 9 :) Just be happy it averages North of 9, indicating the vast majority rate highly.
DeemerDave wrote:
90% of song ratings are crap.
personally it's a 9 :) Just be happy it averages North of 9, indicating the vast majority rate highly.
DeemerDave wrote:
haters gonna hate
Good question, Its a perfect 10 for me.
haters gonna hate
Just message Bill. . . I am sure he will remember the first songs he played. A clue will be the first songs he loaded onto the system, which can be found by changing the end number in the address bar on your browser
I found this station very soon after it appeared in 2010 because it was one of the first songs listed on the first iTunes radio listings and I was listening before there were such things as logins or members. . . it was just streaming music that Bill put out to start the whole thing. At that time there were no comments section on each track but early on there was a comments forum that is now in the main community forum on RP. This only goes back to 2004 but I bet Bill has copies of all the comments before that somewhere.
Hope this helps.
"appeared in 2010"—you must have typed that in wrong. It was 2001. I remember vividly that's when I found it.
it's weird and wonderful to mark your life by how things that haven't changed (beatles songs, for instance) have changed in perspective in one's own life.....
just sayin'
love these guys more and more the older i get
George Harrison Documentary Will Premiere on HBO
A new documentary about the life of George Harrison featuring home movies, interviews and unseen footage of the late Beatle will premiere on HBO in October. George Harrison: Living in the Material World, a film produced by Martin Scorcese along with Harrison's widow Olivia, is set to air in two parts on October 5th and 6th.
This seems like a few months ago... time flies when we're having fun... love this song...
Does anybody know what were the very first songs played here at RP? I'd love to go back and read some embryonic comments of 13+ years ago. I only found this station after reading this TIME magazine article from April 2004:
Just message Bill. . . I am sure he will remember the first songs he played. A clue will be the first songs he loaded onto the system, which can be found by changing the end number in the address bar on your browser
I found this station very soon after it appeared in 2010 because it was one of the first songs listed on the first iTunes radio listings and I was listening before there were such things as logins or members. . . it was just streaming music that Bill put out to start the whole thing. At that time there were no comments section on each track but early on there was a comments forum that is now in the main community forum on RP. This only goes back to 2004 but I bet Bill has copies of all the comments before that somewhere.
Hope this helps.
a magnificent song from a truly great album... love it...
Air — Talisman
Younger Brother — Train
Pink Floyd — Time
Beethoven — Symphony No.5
While my guitar gently weeps
this is why I listen to RP
Does anybody know what were the very first songs played here at RP? I'd love to go back and read some embryonic comments of 13+ years ago. I only found this station after reading this TIME magazine article from April 2004:
>>Bill and Rebecca Goldsmith are making a living from an idea that would probably get you laughed out of business school: running an Internet radio station commercial free. From their home in Paradise, Calif., in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada, they operate Radioparadise.coma format-busting station that spins a tasteful mix of music ranging from the Beatles to Norah Jones to the Strokes. Fewer than 5,000 listeners tune in during peak times, but fans like it so much, they sent the couple $120,000 in contributions last year, covering the cost of bandwidth, song royalties and other expenses and leaving enough to support a "comfortable lifestyle," says Bill Goldsmith, who quit a 30-year career in FM radio to run and DJ his homegrown version.
If you can't bear another spin of Britney Spears, you're one of the reasons that stations like Radioparadise are beginning to prosper and investors are again flocking to another alternative to the AM/FM dial: satellite radio. After years of unmet promise, online stations, along with satellite offerings like Sirius and XM Satellite Radio, are building audiences even as regular radio struggles through a decade-long slump (time spent listening is down 14% since 1994, according to the ratings firm Arbitron). Critics say industry consolidation has turned AM/FM stations into McRadio: nationally uniform, repetitive and clogged more than ever with ads and promos. But scores of high-quality alternatives are now competing for your ears (and dollars).
Just a few years ago, online radio heads were mainly tech geeks willing to put up with patchy, low-quality sound. These days about 19 million people listen to online radio at least once a week, up from 7 million in 2000, according to Arbitron. Online listenership is growing at an average 43% a year as more people get broadband connections at home and tune in for content that's unavailable or in short supply on commercial stations, from blues to folk to Al Franken's new liberal Air America network, which is broadcast in just a few markets on the AM/FM dial but was streamed 2 million times in its first week, according to its exclusive webcaster, RealNetworks. "People are fed up with terrestrial radio," says Dave Goldberg, who oversees Yahoo's music site and radio network, Launchcast, which draws 1 million listeners a week.
For now, it's the satellite guys, together claiming around 2 million subscribers, who are drawing Wall Street's attention. Though their stock prices had plummeted over concerns that they might run out of cash, their shares have soared in the past year. XM is up 379%; Sirius, 491%. Analyst April Horace of Janco Partners in Denver predicts that within five years 16 million Americans will be listening to satellite radio. She says the market would explode if a popular shock jock like Howard Stern were to defect with his 15 million listeners, a prospect that looked more likely last week after six traditional stations dropped his show following an FCC proposal to fine their corporate parent, Clear Channel Communications, $495,000 for airing his "indecent" content.
Satellite broadcasters use a pay-radio model, beaming dozens of channels coast to coast commercial free, with original programming such as comedy and kids' shows. Financially backed in part by automakers, the satellite firms charge between $10 and $13 a month, mainly targeting car-radio users. Increasingly, though, listeners are buying portable tuners for their homes. To neutralize a key AM/FM advantage, both satellite broadcasters have started to provide traffic and weather updates in select markets.
So far, digital radio's growth isn't hurting big radio empires such as Clear Channel. With 1,213 stations and roughly a 30% ratings share in markets such as Phoenix, Ariz., and Milwaukee, Wis., Clear Channel had a record 2003: revenues of $8.9 billion and a net income of $1.1 billion. But listeners are clearly spending less time with terrestrial radio. One cause may simply be more media competition, from DVDs to video games to an expanding universe of digital TV. But critics of the radio industry say consolidation is partly to blame too. They claim Clear Channel and other big groups have ruined the airwaves by homogenizing song lists, politicizing the dial with conservative talk and sucking out local flavor with voice-tracking technology, which enables DJs to sound like local talent even if they're a thousand miles away. Clear Channel contends that its cost-cutting measures have saved hundreds of stations from bankruptcy and that it's the programming's popularity, reflected in ratings, that ultimately drives the business.
Nonetheless, teenagers and young adults are increasingly going online to find new music (not just file-sharing networks), particularly alternative content that rarely gets airplay on the commercial FM dial. About 13% of Americans ages 12 to 24 now listen to online radio on a weekly basis, up from 6% of that age group in 2001, according to Edison Media Research/Arbitron. With 185 stations, AOL's radio network, which, like TIME, is part of Time Warner, draws a weekly listenership of 1.5 million (by that measure, Arbitron notes, it's the nation's largest online network). Advertising remains tiny, but that may change. Ronning Lipset, an upstart Internet-radio ad firm in New York City, recently started packaging AOL, Live365.com MSN and Yahoo into a kind of national network, which has a combined audience of at least 250,000 listeners in a quarter hour, the minimum needed to appeal to national-media planners. The firm says the networks will start running audio spots from national advertisers in May.
For now the AM/FM industry doesn't seem too concerned. Arbitron estimates that 228 million Americans ages 12 and up still listen to broadcast radio weekly, and radio remains the top broadcast medium after TV for advertisers who want to reach a mass market. Radio ad sales in Arbitron markets are forecast to rise 5.5% this year, to $14 billion, according to BIA Financial Network, a media consultancy in Chantilly, Va. Yet as more consumers tune to stations like Radioparadise, those numbers could slip. Goldsmith's thoughtful playlists are organized by musical theme, moving from, say, a bluesy Tracy Chapman tune to a Latin-blues Carlos Santana track to a rock-blues number by the Hellecasters. He heeds listener feedback and says the only thing he really cares about is "playing good music," regardless of whether it's a hot single being pitched by a promoter or a classic. That's why his fans are pulling out their wallets to support him.
Of course, George's part is nothing less than the very top of musicianship here. He has a way of reaching in and grabbing my heart, and giving it a good squeeze....
Extremely engaging quality from the very beginning chords. Timely too, in brilliant sunlight just "noticed the floor still needs sweeping". Has to wait 'til guitar finishes weeping, Thank you Radio Paradise. :)
marvelous... love this song... love this whole album...
Everybody in my church loves this song... and this entire album...
White Album – the best rock/pop album ever.
Your grammar.
Seriously?
Really?
Your CRAZY!
Your grammar.
Really?
Your CRAZY!
Me thinks a certain former member, may be a member again..................C'mon Lazarus
I be me... hope you are having a marvelous time right this moment...
love this song...
Well said... miss you...
Me thinks a certain former member, may be a member again..................C'mon Lazarus
ambrebalte wrote:
I was 13. Just moved to a place I didn't like, a village, where people were looking at us "from the suburbs", as perfect strangers. I just lost all my friends, never felt that alone before, outcast. And there was this music teacher who seemed so softly sad, who decided that instead of the usual "flatitudes" we would be better off discovering sounds we could relate to, giving us a good reason to study English simultaneously.
I don't remember if it was just after noon or later, if it was in the winter or in the summer. But I clearly see and feel the sudden suspension of breathes. Never were we so calm, even long after the music finished. Moments of grace last.
I don't remember any other moments in my teen age when we were so moved that we didn't even think about hiding it. It was beyond music, a whole state of mind, like to touch a legend, to be a part of the myth. In this small French village in the deep countryside, beginning of the 70s'.
I wish this was like reddit so I could upvote your comment.