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Length: 2:39
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This wicked world
Searchin' for light in the darkness of insanity.
I ask myself
Is all hope lost?
Is there only pain and hatred, and misery?
And each time I feel like this inside,
There's one thing I wanna know:
What's so funny 'bout peace love & understanding? Ohhhh
What's so funny 'bout peace love & understanding?
And as I walked on
Through troubled times
My spirit gets so downhearted sometimes
So where are the strong
And who are the trusted?
And where is the harmony?
Sweet harmony.
'Cause each time I feel it slippin' away, just makes me wanna cry.
What's so funny 'bout peace love & understanding? Ohhhh
What's so funny 'bout peace love & understanding?
So where are the strong?
And who are the trusted?
And where is the harmony?
Sweet harmony.
'Cause each time I feel it slippin' away, just makes me wanna cry.
What's so funny 'bout peace love & understanding? Ohhhh
What's so funny 'bout peace love & understanding? Ohhhh
What's so funny 'bout peace love & understanding?
Tune out... change station.
Just not in the mood for oldies.
Word that fits this piece: Maudlin.
Adjective
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Nick Lowe wrote and recorded this song around 1974, with his band Brinsley Schwarz. While he did produce Costello's version several years later, he was never a member of The Attractions.
thanks, you got in just ahead of me (and have better spelling of Brinsley Schwarz than I do!)
actually, he wrote it before he met Elvis - he was in a band in the early 70's (Brinsley Scwarzt - sp?) and wrote it for them, but I think they either passed on it, or he decided to keep it for himself. He said it was about the backlash against the hippy values of "peace, love and understanding", that he thought where still relevant.
Nick Lowe wrote and recorded this song around 1974, with his band Brinsley Schwarz. While he did produce Costello's version several years later, he was never a member of The Attractions.
Oh please Nick. You’ve done some great stuff but you’re not even in tune on this one mate and you’re dropping notes.
considering that it was recorded in one take, live to air for a Toronto radio station, I think you could cut him a little slack.
i'd like to hear either one back to back with billy bragg's waiting for the great leap forward.
It's on this album:
As I went to right this comment, I noticed someone else commenting that the lyrics were ridiculous. Listen to them in context to the poor soles lost to senseless shootings in the past week. Maybe the lyrics do make some sense?
There's so much beauty and joy in the world. Why can't we focus on that?
Anything is funny about it - when such values are put into a song!
In my opinion the lyrics are ridiculous!
The guy is an idiot!
Everybody knows there are 666 reasons why L, P and other Bull is nothing but "funny"
RIDICULOUS!!!
He sounds better when he rocks.
Nice troll (I hope).
What a great thing for a guy who, otherwise, might've just struggled to get by - despite his talent and contribution to contemporary music.
He wrote and first recorded this when still with Brinsley Schwartz, the band and the man.
He wrote the bloody words. He can sing them any way he bloody wants.
I love that term 'driveway' song, and I know exactly what you mean. You feel compelled to sit and listen to that song before driving away. Falls into the same category as 'parking lot' songs. You pull into a parking lot, but you wait for a song to end before you get out of your car and go into a store.
Well said mate!
I agree....."Homewrecker" and "The Beast in me" are two of my favorites!!!!
Nick was Elvis' mentor, great friend and most importantly producer. He did play a little bass on a few EC records.
He is also, as noted elsewhere on these boards, a fine fine songwriter and performer - this song being one of his best.
Oh please Nick. You’ve done some great stuff but you’re not even in tune on this one mate and you’re dropping notes.
His voice has more character than anyone else who might be singing in perfect pitch and tune.He's a living legend IMHO!
Oh please Nick. You’ve done some great stuff but you’re not even in tune on this one mate and you’re dropping notes.
Oh please Nick. You’ve done some great stuff but you’re not even in tune on this one mate and you’re dropping notes.
Me too. More heartfelt, less hectic.
but not as good as Curtis Stigers. (nod, nod, wink, wink...)
That's what I was thinking, yes.
Snore? Kidding?
Me too. More heartfelt, less hectic.
That seems, to me, to be the bottom line.
Hes currently Pope bashing his way round England !
Excellent Nick Lowe Song!
asteroids wrote:
Deterministic theories like this has bring to us ideas like creationism, racism or the belief that the Earth is plain and the stars are glued to the ceiling. There is not enough proof to believe that genes are responsible for the 'goodness' or 'evilness' of people, while this have an influence just like many other things, most of the anthropological and psychological research that I have seen so far in regards to human/social behaviour and social moral point out that the decisive factor here is the environment.
Ok... but talking about the song, this song pretty much hits something deep in me, because I feel the same almost every day.
wish I could find this song too, because all I can find is live versions and the clapping annoys me
found it =)
histiocytosisX wrote:
Selfish gene assertion notwithstanding, regarding your second point: with a quick review of the medical literature you might be surprised to find that there is reasonable evidence to suggest that a number of genes are, in fact, associated with aggression, violence &c. Personally, I’d favour a contribution from both genetic predisposition and environmental risk factors. For a good review in a peer-reviewed journal with a relatively high IF:
Viding E. On the nature and nurture of antisocial behavior and violence. Ann NY Acad Sci. 2004;1036:267-77.
Out here in the fields
I fight for my meals
I get my back into my living
I don't need to fight
To prove I'm right
I don't need to be forgiven
Well said!
Well, he did write the song.
Still, nice dreams, and it doesn't mean we can stop working toward them. But I find Dawkins helpful in understanding what's going on.
Maybe societies need both types of people. The peacemakers, nurturers, story-tellers like farmers, nurses, doctors, artists, scientists etc, and unfortunately also the protectors like police, soldiers, butchers etc. Does Dawkins go into that angle?
please?
message me
Deterministic theories like this has bring to us ideas like creationism, racism or the belief that the Earth is plain and the stars are glued to the ceiling. There is not enough proof to believe that genes are responsible for the 'goodness' or 'evilness' of people, while this have an influence just like many other things, most of the anthropological and psychological research that I have seen so far in regards to human/social behaviour and social moral point out that the decisive factor here is the environment.
Ok... but talking about the song, this song pretty much hits something deep in me, because I feel the same almost every day.
wish I could find this song too, because all I can find is live versions and the clapping annoys me
found it =)
Still, nice dreams, and it doesn't mean we can stop working toward them. But I find Dawkins helpful in understanding what's going on.
Yes—-I always wondered what purpose "gentle people" served; that's an interesting theory. I'll have to read the book before I talk more about it.
It was interesting reading about bonobo apes and how the females control the food distribution even though the males are physically more powerful, and yes, it has something to do with their attitude about sex as well as food distribution. It's like we say: "I'm a lover not a fighter;" they are lovers not fighters.
And if gentle people are gentle yet strong in their conviction they can sway their society or tribe for a time by showing examples of how to to change the world without using violence.
please?
Wow, NL covered Indoor Fireworks? I had no idea. Where's it available?
Whew! That's a relief! They used to say "The Devil made me do it!" Now they say "Them ol' selfish genes made me do it!"
Now taking responsibility is optional - except of course if I do, it's them genes made me do that too.
It's like getting the ultimate Get Out of Jail card in a Monopoly game.
SCHWEET!
genuine
Normally I love Nick Lowe and I also love this song, but together? Not so much.
Elvis Presley?
Oh, yeah, Dawkins is rich, I'll say. Ben Stein cornered him in an interview about Intelligent Design and he admitted that one possible explanation of evolution on Earth was the seeding of the planet by Extra-terrestrials. So which kind is he?
The same Ben Stein who championed the traitor "Scooter" Libby (what kind of a name is that for a grown man?), got bounced from a gig as an opinion editor at the NYT (because he refused to quit doing commercials for a shady online agency), and blames Darwinism for the Holocaust?
That's a good one. On his best day, Ben Stein couldn't carry Dr. Dawkin's lunch box, let alone "corner" him. What a laugh!
Oh, yeah, Dawkins is rich, I'll say. Ben Stein cornered him in an interview about Intelligent Design and he admitted that one possible explanation of evolution on Earth was the seeding of the planet by Extra-terrestrials. So which kind is he?
A compromise view is that we were seeded from without, but not necessarily by ET lifeforms. Scientists recently discovered that some meteorites contain amino acids, which are essential to the formation of life. Until then, they'd assumed that the hot soup that coated the early Earth was the only possible source of the amino acids that eventually combined with other stuff to become early lifeforms.
And I've never heard this version ever before.
soulful & sublime...
It was on "The Bodyguard" soundtrack. (I think it was Elvis' version?)
It helped finance his recent albums. Thus, gotta love this song.
Sadly no, it was a version by Curtis Stigers.
Thanks for the tip. I'll check it out. I had never heard Nick's version before. The 70's needed the Elvis version I guess. They couldn't have handled this one at the time. Another example of why this is the only streaming radio I listen to.
Still, nice dreams, and it doesn't mean we can stop working toward them. But I find Dawkins helpful in understanding what's going on.
Oh, yeah, Dawkins is rich, I'll say. Ben Stein cornered him in an interview about Intelligent Design and he admitted that one possible explanation of evolution on Earth was the seeding of the planet by Extra-terrestrials. So which kind is he?
Oh, I can't agree with that — they're two utterly different takes on this, to be sure, but I like 'em both. There's something wonderful about the way spits out the chorus.
Still, nice dreams, and it doesn't mean we can stop working toward them. But I find Dawkins helpful in understanding what's going on.
cool...
"Cool"? What! "COOL"?? We've come to expect more of ya, Romey.
I do like this version. Nick Lowe is a great songwriter. This is definitely a driveway moment song (as they might say on NPR).
You are so right.
Check out "Homewrecker" off of his latest...
c.
I do like this version. Nick Lowe is a great songwriter. This is definitely a driveway moment song (as they might say on NPR).
It's on take five... a must have.
i prefer bill murray's karaoke version in Lost in Translation.
It was on "The Bodyguard" soundtrack. (I think it was Elvis' version?)
It helped finance his recent albums. Thus, gotta love this song.
Get outta my head.
If yo like this, you'll love his latest LP. Nice introspective songs.
c.
What's a good track to get us through and out of the Trump swamp? Something by the Dead Kennedys or the Butthole Surfers? At least some Guns and Roses.