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Total ratings: 318
Length: 3:16
Plays (last 30 days): 0
We can hear you now and later
Calling out and coming through
Radio operator, you're a voice so far from home
With a signal like a heartbeat
Not afraid but so alone
Where are the messages for me
The secret codes for parts unknown
I'll ride the signal to the world
And to the girl in San Antone
Radio operator, do you ever think of me
'Cause I'm a gleam on some horizon
Just too far away to see
Radio operator, there are still messages to send
From the future, from the present
And it never has to end
Where are the messages for me
The secret codes for parts unknown
I'll ride the signal to the world
And to the girl in San Antone
---- Instrumental Interlude ----
Radio operator, I am calling like a friend
From my future, from your memory
And it never has to end
This message will not end
Rosanne Cash @ The Moore Theater, Seattle 5-1-10 by Kirk Stauffer
https://www.flickr.com/photos/kirkstauffer/
© 2010 Kirk Stauffer Photography
All rights reservedFunny thing if you talk to somebody who likes country they will tell that this is NOT country.
of her as just country, more like her own style.
True, she reminds me of Lucinda Williams, she does her own thing.
Johnny and I talked about his military "career" one time back around 1995. Mr Cash was a Morse Code Intercept Operator for the US Air Force Security Service. He told me that the recruiter and testing people told him he had a "musical ear" — meaning that he could learn Morse Code easily. I mentioned that from my time in the military I learned that musicians are the best Morse Code operators. Anyway, I think we can assume that there is a lot in this song about Johnny Cash from the perspective of his daughter.
Cool. Love Cash Sr.'s music. This is not bad either. 6 out of the gate.
of her as just country, more like her own style.
Yep, I'd second that. Country and/or Western usually sparks an immediate reach for the mute button - eat your heart out, Pavlov :) - but it's all part and parcel of an "eclectic" playlist so I'd never ask for C&W to be barred from RP. The good thing about this station is the width of its output and the way it constantly surprises its listeners. If the playlist were to be narrowed to suit the tastes of some listeners it would be a poorer station, IMO.
Talking of mute buttons, Johnny Cash (which is what we called Durex machines when I was a teen ;-)) has just come on, so time to reach...
I think I'd cast this differently. What is it about genres that is so off-putting that folks reach for the MUTE button? When you take a whole genre off your life's experience's table, you deprive yourself of opportunities to expand your knowledge and to learn something new. There are some magnificent and thoughtful artists that we might classify as country, including bluegrass, whose contribution to the artistic and cultural dialog is no less vital than, say, Jimmy Buffet or Metallica: Mary Chapin Carpenter, Roseanne Cash, Johnny Cash, Lucinda Williams, Clint Black, Kris Kristofferson, Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, Chris Hillman, Herb Pederson, Larry and Tony Rice, Alison Krauss, and the list goes on. I wouldn't reach for the MUTE button just because I heard a pedal steel or mandolin any more than I would if I heard the scratch of a turntable or an orchestral string section...
...The good thing about this station is the width of its output and the way it constantly surprises its listeners....
I third that. Music genre are how chimpanzees and record company executives would classify. No help in the personal quest for sublime sound.
Yep, I'd second that. Country and/or Western usually sparks an immediate reach for the mute button - eat your heart out, Pavlov :) - but it's all part and parcel of an "eclectic" playlist so I'd never ask for C&W to be barred from RP. The good thing about this station is the width of its output and the way it constantly surprises its listeners. If the playlist were to be narrowed to suit the tastes of some listeners it would be a poorer station, IMO.
Talking of mute buttons, Johnny Cash (which is what we called Durex machines when I was a teen ;-)) has just come on, so time to reach...
Funny thing if you talk to somebody who likes country they will tell that this is NOT country.
No argument. But that was not the point.