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Let me ask you one question
Is your money that good?
Will it buy you forgiveness
Do you think that it could?
I think you will find
When your death takes its toll
All the money you made
Will never buy back your soul
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#bobdylan #dylan #folk #lyrics #photo #poetry #classicrock #music #studio #quote
Name: Mr. Tamborine Man
Artist: Bob Dylan
Album: Bringing It All Back Home
Year Of Release: 1965
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What I love the most about Bob Dylan’s early recordings is the free-flowing folk verses, that trigger you’re own imagination about what the music could possibly be about. “Mr. Tamborine Man” is another song that fits perfectly into this category. The free-flowing imagery takes it’s form after Dylan attended the Mardi Gras festival in New Orleans. .
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Do you like what you see? Head to @thelegendsofmusictv for more amazing video content! .
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#Music #RockNRoll #BobDylan #FolkRock #Poetry
“Like a rolling stone”, Bob Dylan live in Newcastle (1966)
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The title is not a reference to The Rolling Stones. It is taken from the proverb "a rolling stone gathers no moss." Dylan got the idea from the 1949 Hank Williams song "Lost Highway," which contains the line, "I'm a rolling stone, all alone and lost." Thanks to The Rolling Stones, many associate the phrase with a life of glamor, always on the move, but Williams' song is about a hobo paying the price for his life of sin. Dylan also used the phrase to indicate loneliness and despair: his rolling stone is "without a home, like a complete unknown."
Dylan based the lyrics on a short story he had written about a debutante who becomes a loner when she falls out of high society. The lyrics that made it into the song are only a small part of what was in the story.
Name: War Pigs
Artist: Black Sabbath
Album: Paranoid
Year Of Release: 1970
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Opening “Paranoid” is a song called “War Pigs”, which isn’t any ordinary protest song, it’s “the” greatest protest song (Second to only “Masters Of War” by #BobDylan). If you want to get the attention of ‘the powers that be’, and make a statement about the Vietnam War at the same time, then you’ve got to be able to show some aggression. That’s exactly what Black Sabbath intended when they opened “Paranoid” with this song that changed not only the face of #HeavyMetal but served as the foundation it would be built on. .
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Do you like what you see? Head to @thelegendsofmusic for your daily dose of musical heaven! .
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#Music #HeavyMetal #BlackSabbath #TonyIommi #GeezerButler #BillWard
Credence Clearwater Revival performing Green RiverThis song was written by group leader John Fogerty, who explained in his Storytellers special: "Green River is really about this place where I used to go as a kid on Putah Creek, near Winters, California. I went there with my family every year until I was ten. Lot of happy memories there. I learned how to swim there. There was a rope hanging from the tree. Certainly dragonflies, bullfrogs. There was a little cabin we would stay in owned by a descendant of Buffalo Bill Cody. That's the reference in the song to Cody Jr. ["Up at Cody's camp I spent my days..."]
The actual specific reference, Green River, I got from a soda pop-syrup label. You used to be able to go into a soda fountain, and they had these bottles of flavored syrup. My flavor was called Green River. It was green, lime flavored, and they would empty some out over some ice and pour some of that soda water on it, and you had yourself a Green River."
Dire Straits performing Lady Writer According to the 1984 biography of the band, "Lady Writer" was inspired by Marina Warner, who songwriter Mark Knopfler saw on a TV program, hence the opening line "Lady Writer on the TV..." In 1976, Warner, a highly educated polyglot, published a scholarly book about the cult of the Virgin Mary. For some reason her appearance struck a chord with Knopfler, bringing back painful memories of a love that was no more. There's real venom in the song, and it is evident that any resemblance the talented Miss Warner bore to his former lover was strictly physical.
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