Hannover
Song Ratings: 457
Splendora, TX
Tech
Sep 4, 2003
Favorite Song: --
Favorite Band: --
Favorite Album: --
First Concert: --
Comments ( 24 )
Posted 21 years ago by Hannover:
Originally Posted by GregX59: Never considered myself much of a Phish fan, but this is tasty!
Phish is an aquired taste. My wife could never understand why I like them so much (or the Dead) until I dragged her to show. She was instantly converted ;)
Posted 19 years ago by Hannover:
Excellent ! I picked up on the truckers after hearing them on Sirius Outlaw County (Mojo!). I've enjoyed pretty much everything that i've heard by them, glad to see that they made it to RP.
Posted 21 years ago by Hannover:
I didn't like it at all the first time I heard it but it's starting to really grow on me. The lyrics are fantastic.
Posted 19 years ago by Hannover:
I've seen them twice, once at a large outdoor venue (3rd row) and once at a smaller indoor venue (Jones Hall - (last row). Both shows were excellent but had totally different vibes. The outdoor show was lots of drunken dancing and partying while the Jones Hall show had a bunch of stuffy folks in suits and evening dresses. Either way, I'll make sure to get my tickets early for the next tour.
Posted 19 years ago by Hannover:
kctomato wrote:
If you like Leo Kottke check out Adrian Legg. My mouth must have dropped to the floor first time I saw him play. Like Leo, he can sound like two or three people playing at once.
My first experience with Adrian Legg was at a G3 show. He was nothing but a 'filler' act while they did set changes for the big guys. People got up and left when the little bald guy in glasses pulled his bar stool to the edge of the stage and picked up a single acoustic guitar. Nearly every person turned around, stood in awe and then ran back to their seats when Adrian started to play. He stole the show and put Satriani, Johnson & Vai to shame. The other high point of the show was Stu Hamm playing bass for Satriani. Enough rambling about other artists... Kottke kicks mucho ass.
Posted 19 years ago by Hannover:
byrd wrote:
Funny... I was thinking the EXACT same thing...
i take one one one cause you left me and two two two for my family and three three three for my heartache and four four four for my headaches and five five five for my lonely and six six six for my sorrow and seven seven n-no tomorrow and eight eight i forget what eight was for and nine nine nine for a lost god ten ten ten ten for everything everything everything Wait... what was I listening to ?
Posted 19 years ago by Hannover:
apd wrote:
(Though it was used beautifully in the opening scene of "Shawn of the Dead")
Thank you! I thought I recognized this song but I just couldn't place it.
Posted 19 years ago by Hannover:
I had to upgrade this one to an '8' after being able to turn it up and listen at a proper volume Great tune !
Posted 19 years ago by Hannover:
It was thirty years ago today that the Edmund Fitzgerlad sank. Here's an article about it, hope it's not too long.
The mystery of the Big Fitz THREE decades have passed now since the gales of November came early and created the legend of the Edmund Fitzgerald. But the tragic sinking of the grandest ship on the Great Lakes, and the loss of all 29 men aboard her in a fierce storm on Lake Superior, remains the lakes' most famous shipwreck, and on a broader scale, second only to the Titanic in terms of public consciousness and fascination. Unlike the Titanic, which sank in 1912 after colliding with an iceberg in the north Atlantic Ocean, what sent the Fitzgerald to the bottom on Nov. 10, 1975, will never be known with certainty. Speculation still abounds. She had bottomed out earlier in the day, took on too much water, and lost buoyancy, one theory says. Two monster waves overtook the ship from the stern and sent her bow beneath the waves, and she couldn't recover, goes another. She was downbound, fully loaded, and riding low in the water. So swift was the ship's disappearance that she simply vanished from the radar screen of the Arthur Anderson, trailing the Fitz by 10 miles or so, with no time for an SOS or radio call for help. It is the mystery that feeds the legend. The Fitz was not a glamorous cruise liner with swimming pools, rock-climbing walls, and movie theaters. It was big long box with an engine, hauling 25,000 tons of iron ore pellets. But it was also the biggest, longest, and fastest ship out there. At 729 feet, it was longer than Toledo's O-I building at 1 Seagate, is tall - by more than 300 feet. The Fitz drew admiring salutes from other ships, and when the massive vessel pulled slowly and snugly through the Soo locks linking Lake Huron and Lake Superior, she was a tourist attraction. The Toledo area has a special reason to remember the Fitzgerald and the men who died - she was Toledo's ship. Though "Milwaukee" was painted on her stern, Toledo was virtually her home port. For years her customary itinerary was to sail from Toledo to Silver Bay or Two Harbors, Minn., load iron ore from Minnesota's Mesabi range, and bring it back to Toledo to unload. Several members of the crew made their homes in Toledo or nearby, including the ship's veteran captain, Ernest McSorley. The families of the 29 men have formed a bond over the years since the accident. Many of them gather every year on or near the anniversary of the sinking for a memorial service at the Mariners' Church in downtown Detroit. This year the service will be Sunday at 11 a.m. It will mark the 30th time the Rev. Richard W. Ingalls brings together the wives and the sons and the daughters of the victims, to ring the church bell 29 times, once for each crew member, and once more for all the others who've lost their lives on these beautiful but often treacherous lakes. The legend of the Fitz lives on for another reason - singer and songwriter Gordon Lightfoot's haunting ballad, "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald." It is a song which speaks to the power of the lake they call Gitche Gumee. The Fitz lies in 530 feet of water, not far from the relatively safe shelter that Whitefish Point on Michigan's Upper Peninsula might have provided that terrible night had the ship made it. The wreckage lies in two pieces, the stern overturned, the bow section upright where it plowed into the bottom with great force and to devastating effect. To this day, the tragedy is a painful reminder that even a ship as majestic and mighty as the Edmund Fitzgerald could not withstand the fury of nature. We must all stand in awe, and remember those who were lost.
Link
Posted 19 years ago by Hannover:
Mugro wrote:
If you want to hear some interesting covers of Dead tunes, get "Dedicated." This album came out 15 years ago, and has songs such as Janes Addiction covering "Ripple", the Indigo Girls doing "Uncle John's Band", Elvis Costello doing "Ship of Fools", Burning Spear with "Wharf Rat", and Los Lobos doing "Bertha". I have forgotten some of the tunes on there, but it is a great album to get. Those are covers worth hearing. Cracker's is not.
I totally agree. I bought Dedicated when it was first released and I wasn't ready for it. I was a little mini-deadhead and just wasn't ready to appreciate the musical interpretations. I rediscovered the album a few years ago and fell in love with. Bertha is one of my all-time favorite tunes and Los Lobos just rock with it.
Posted 19 years ago by Hannover:
dionysius wrote:
That song, as well as "Soul of a Man" and some others, is simply one of the most soulful, moving things ever recorded.
And for that reason, this version should have never been recorded. I've got nothing (well, not much) against DM but this just doesn't even come close to doing justice for the original.
Posted 19 years ago by Hannover:
Rarely do I turn down the volume on RP but this song made me do it. It may be alright at 3 am in foggy haze but not while I'm trying to work. snore-fest.
Posted 19 years ago by Hannover:
I like Willie's cover but I've got to give credit where credit is due, Jimmy is the man. This song never fails to pick up my mood. Mr. Cliff will be in the CD player on the way home from work tonight.
Posted 19 years ago by Hannover:
As a huge fan of both Willie and Jimmy, I have to smile each time I hear this. It's not perfect, but nothing is. I just take it as it is and enjoy it. Good tune.
Posted 21 years ago by Hannover:
I usually refrain from commenting on the songs that I don't enjoy but this thing is just too painful. :(
Posted 21 years ago by Hannover:
Nice little tune... got my toes tappin' Thanks.
Posted 21 years ago by Hannover:
No sir, I don't like it.
Posted 21 years ago by Hannover:
Great to hear some of the more obscure dead songs. IMHO Go to Heaven was a crappy album full of good songs ... if that makes any sense.
Posted 21 years ago by Hannover:
(pimp)Hell Yes ! (pimp) I'm a huge Zep fan but this one wins, no competition.
Posted 21 years ago by Hannover:
Sweet song Great emotion in his voice.
listen:
The Main Mix