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Do your senses tingle and take a chance
In a trance
While the lonely mingle with circumstance
I've got something to tell you, you make it show
Let me come over, I know you know
When you dance, ooh, I can really love
I can love
I can really love, I can really love
I can love
I can really love, I can really love
Like a mountain that's growing, a river that rolls
Let me come over, I know you know
When you dance, ooh, I can really love
When you dance
Do your senses tingle and take a chance
In a trance
While the lonely mingle with circumstance
I've got something to tell you, you make it show
Let me come over, I know you know
When you dance, ooh, I can really love
If you don't get it by now it is a lost cause. Just PSD or keep listening and maybe one day the marble will find the hole.
I am not sure how helpful that is...but i gotta admit it is a very funny metaphor.
Neil has been around forever and forever and forever and still rocks. Would love to know a bit about how he started. any directions out there? On_The_Beach wrote:
Neil Young began his career as "a folk singer, keepin' managers alive." Ahmet Erdegun put him, Stephen Stills and Richie Furay together to make the should-have-been-a-supergroup Buffalo Springfield in 1966. They released "For What It's Worth", a song that still gets lots of airplay here and elsewhere more than 45 years later. The band's popular songs were by Stills, but Young really could swing his axe, arguably even better than Stills. With 3 terrific vocalist/songwriters, two of whom were seriously talented guitarists, their 3 albums had any number of dynamite songs, not the least of which was Young's "Mr. Soul". The band split primarily because of NY's star turn and the fact that Furay was on his way to becoming a preacher (he has a hip church - oxymoron? - in Colorado, Boulder I think).
Young went solo, first with a "Why-I-left-those-zeroes" disc, eponymously titled, then the truly immortal "Neil Young with Crazy Horse". That's still his best for my money. It's one of the all-time studly rockers. Go buy it if you don't have it. It's not even a little dated, in spite of being 40. He's known for great tunes with awesome guitar riffs and insipid lyrics. His discography must be enormous, but went waaaay downhill after "Harvest" in 1973 (?). Is that a start?
Somebody, anybody - please help me understand Neil Young!
If you don't get it by now it is a lost cause. Just PSD or keep listening and maybe one day the marble will find the hole.
Is your Google broken?
Hey Smacky, Google isn't the same as interacting with fellow listeners. That's why we comment.
Neil has been around forever and forever and forever and still rocks. Would love to know a bit about how he started. any directions out there? On_The_Beach wrote:
Is your Google broken?
Neil has been around forever and forever and forever and still rocks. Would love to know a bit about how he started. any directions out there? On_The_Beach wrote:
Somebody, anybody - please help me understand Neil Young!
I love this song.
Nothing to be embarrassed about.
can't we all just get a bong?
Bong? I'll have a toke..(Bill doesn't have a "stoned" smiley) (Bill should visit the Netherlands )
Great number from Niel. 8.
Who is current now that you can see still pumping out amazing music at an elderly age?
Beck? Pearl Jam?
I'm too old to get to know the answer but I doubt that he will be.
....then go look for some hip-hop ya pinhead...
Where do you start with this guy? He keeps shifting and changing what he wants to do - YES! he has slowed in recent years, but my goodness what a collection of music and the styles are so incredibly varied.
I saw him at his Bridge School Benefit - in Mountain View last year - simply amazing and so incredibly diverse...
I remember our walk back from the concert we all started asking ourselves, "Will the stars of today last as long?" Will we see the Jay-Z's and the Kanye Wests still make amazing music into their 60's
Who is current now that you can see still pumping out amazing music at an elderly age?
Beck? Pearl Jam?
HazzeSwede wrote:
Listen to Mr, Young,always makes me crave the SPROUTS !
Listen to Mr, Young,always makes me crave the SPROUTS !
Thanks, Bill!
I think that's Nils Lofgren. Neil made him play a lot of piano.
It's actually Jack Nitzsche on the piano.
I think that's Nils Lofgren. Neil made him play a lot of piano.
That's enough with the pale male and stale.
Dissing the two greatest singer songwriter's in the history of rock in one short post. Amazing.
can't we all just get a bong?
That's a funny variation on a crackhead...good one "abby_normal"
Might as well just come out and say it - you're negative and a complete douche.
can't we all just get a bong?
Might as well just come out and say it - you're negative and a complete douche.
That's enough with the pale male and stale.
get over it!
Ah, Neil Young!
An excellent reason to switch to the LRC.
I'd recommend NOT to read it though as previously I had him pegged as an icon in my eyes and having never met him I thought he was deeper and a more wonderful a human being than he actually is.
But hey. . . the music is still there and it still resonates with me so no harm done really.