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A wandering eye and a smoking gun
Now some of you would live through me
And lock me up and throw away the key
Or just find a place to hide away
And hope that I'll just go away, huh
But I feel alright, I feel alright tonight
I feel alright, I feel alright tonight
And I'll bring you precious contraband
And ancient tales from distant lands
Of conquerors and concubines
And conjurers from darker times
Betrayal and conspiracy
Sacrilege and heresy
But I feel alright, I feel alright tonight
I feel alright, I feel alright tonight
I got everything you want or need
Your darkest fear, your fondest dream
I ask you questions, tell you lies
Criticize and sympathize
Yeah, but be careful what you wish for, friend
Because I've been to hell and now I'm back again
I feel alright, yeah, I feel alright tonight
Yeah, I feel alright, I feel alright tonight
I feel alright, feel alright
Initially I thought, hell no, but after the chorus I found myself imaging GLOOREEEEUH, and it fit.
Just ask yourself...does it make me feel awright? Yeah? k turn the sumbitchin' radio up. Done.
Keep rawkin', Steve!
Bonus points for the word "sumbitchin' "
What's funny is the Supersuckers play the same club the night before, and they don't have anything on their schedule the next day. Would be amazing if we got a Steve + Supersuckers reunion...
I can hear that, yeah.
It has a few tonal and rhythmic similarities so no not dumb at all.
The guitar strumming style is certainly reminiscent, but it's a different chord progression.
Guh. I think too much. Gotta go dance now.
gonna look into Todd Snider now : )
It's segue, dammit!
Duc1098 wrote:
Now I feel the need to ride a segway from a John Hiatt show to one by Steve Earle.
It's segue, dammit!
Now I feel the need to ride a segway from a John Hiatt show to one by Steve Earle.
Just ask yourself...does it make me feel awright? Yeah? k turn the sumbitchin' radio up. Done.
Keep rawkin', Steve!
It's segue, dammit!
Love me some S.E.
Need some from Transcendental Blues album. Please.
The chord progression is called a V IV I turnaround—the blues (or "Louie, Louie") basic I IV V progression is played in reverse. "Gloria" is probably the most celebrated example, but there are hundreds: "What I Like About You" (Romantics), "R-O-C-K in the USA" (Mellencamp) are popular examples, both slightly changed to V I IV I. This is, like the "Louie, Louie" progression (listen carefully to "Magical Mystery Tour"), is a time honored chord structure that stretches back to the roots of modern rock. No wonder it sounds familiar, eh?
Exactly. Thanks.
(occasionally)
Yes. My thoughts exactly.
Now don't get me wrong, I like John Mellencamp, but Mr. Steve Earle stands alone. He's an American treasure and a woefully underappreciated artist.
___________
I agree — if I never hear Little Pink Houses again, it's too soon, whereas Copperhead Road or Jerusalem are always welcome to my ears — but that doesn't mean that one doesn't sound like the other. For that matter, we have echoes of "Gloria" and Them in here too.
Now don't get me wrong, I like John Mellencamp, but Mr. Steve Earle stands alone. He's an American treasure and a woefully underappreciated artist.
___________
I agree — if I never hear Little Pink Houses again, it's too soon — but that doesn't mean that one doesn't sound like the other. For that matter, we have echoes of "Gloria" and Them in here too.
More Steve Earle, please. Lots of good stuff on Transcendental Blues; title track, Halo 'Round the Moon, Lonelier Than This ...
Mellencamp wishes he had half the talent Steve Earle has.
Jamunca wrote:
Oh, yeah.
Now don't get me wrong, I like John Mellencamp, but Mr. Steve Earle stands alone. He's an American treasure and a woefully underappreciated artist.
(occasionally)
Now I feel alright.
Yea right! That was one great album.
Or Steve Wynn & the Dream Syndicate if want to keep it on this side of the Atlantic. Never a bad thing...
The chord progression is called a V IV I turnaround—the blues (or "Louie, Louie") basic I IV V progression is played in reverse. "Gloria" is probably the most celebrated example, but there are hundreds: "What I Like About You" (Romantics), "R-O-C-K in the USA" (Mellencamp) are popular examples, both slightly changed to V I IV I. This is, like the "Louie, Louie" progression (listen carefully to "Magical Mystery Tour"), is a time honored chord structure that stretches back to the roots of modern rock. No wonder it sounds familiar, eh?
Steve Earle and the Dukes (and the Duchesses) are playing at the Crystal Ballroom tonight - I might have to talk the happy hour crew into going with me. . .
I bet that was an awesome show! I love me some Dukes and Duchesses!
Guh. I think too much. Gotta go dance now.
Steve Earle and the Dukes (and the Duchesses) are playing at the Crystal Ballroom tonight - I might have to talk the happy hour crew into going with me. . .
Yes, he had an ongoing part as an AA councillor.
dating yourself is illegal in texas
but not in Idaho, go figure. . .
Opening notes are, I first thought it was since I just opened up my iTunes player when it started.
A good chunk of are dated memory wise but not it other ways.
+1 YES!
C'mon...even Woody Allen says "geniuses".
Woody Allen? Never heard of him or her or it.
As for Genii:
In its earliest meaning in private cult, the genius of the Roman housefather and the iuno, or juno, of the housemother were worshiped. These certainly were not the souls of the married pair, as is clear both from their names and from the fact that in no early document is there mention of the genius or iuno of a dead person. The genius and iuno were probably the male and female forms of the family’s, or clan’s, power of continuing itself by reproduction, which were in the keeping of the heads of the family for the time being and passed at death to their successors. In this as in all forms of his cult, the genius was often conceived as appearing in the form of a snake, although he is also shown in art as a young man, generally engaged in sacrificing. At every wedding a bed, the lectus genialis, was made for the genius and iuno of the husband and wife, and its presence in the house was a sign of matrimony.
Owing to the rise of individualism and also to the prevalence of Greek ideas concerning a guardian spirit, or daimon, the genius lost its original meaning and came to be a sort of personification of the individual’s natural desires and appetites. Hence the phrases indulgere genio, genium defrudare, signifying, respectively, to lead a pleasurable life, and to lead a stingy life. The development, however, did not stop here. The genius came to be thought of as a sort of guardian angel, a higher self; and, as the Greek daimon was sometimes rationalized into the individual’s character or temper, so also the poet Horace half-seriously said that only the genius knows what makes one person so different from another, adding that he is a god who is born and dies with each one of us. This individual genius was worshipped by each individual, especially on his birthday. A few inscriptions even mention the genius of a dead person, as Christian epitaphs sometimes speak of his angel.
To show reverence for the genius of another or to swear by it was a mark of deep respect; hence, it is not unnatural that the genius of Augustus and of his successors formed objects of popular cult. Thus, to worship the genius Augusti avoided affronting the feeling against worshipping any living emperor, which remained fairly strong in Italy; for, of course, all genii were divine and might properly be worshipped.
As with the Greek daimones, there was a vast variety of genii, or guardian spirits—those of places, genius loci, including buildings (genius balneorum, etc.), and of corporations of all sorts, from the state (genius populi Romani) to small bodies of troops, guilds of tradesmen, and so forth. A very curious development is that one sometimes heard of the genius of a god, even of Jupiter, or of the iuno of a goddess.
Thank you Encyclopaedia Britannica.
dating yourself is illegal in texas
yeah, this song was used during Season 2's wrap up. Earle appeared extensively in Season's 1 and 5 as Bub's sponsor.
Still yet, his political songs resonate especially well with the bailout plans.
Steve has had the same politics throughout his entire career. Just like the rest of us on the Left, he decided he had to speak out while he still could. I am as proud of him as his old mentor Townes Van Zandt would be, if he were still with us.
Just in case you didn't notice, there ain't much "Daddy Yankee", "Kid Rock", "Big and Rich", or "Toby Keith" being played on RP. Maybe there's a "Fox News" equivalent out there somewhere. Naaah, couldn't be. There's no money in it, and ol' Rupert only goes where the money is.
Just trying to help.
Especially the, er, dedication to Lou Dobbs...