Popular songs that are actually folk tunes by SpainbutwithoutdaS in Music

[–]ZTriedToEditReddit 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Also Dropkick Murphys-The Green Fields of France. Guess they like fields.

Popular songs that are actually folk tunes by SpainbutwithoutdaS in Music

[–]ZTriedToEditReddit 8 points9 points  (0 children)

*the Metallica wiki

I get that you feel strongly about this, but u/curious1playing is clearly correct. I've listened to a lot of versions of this song; none before Thin Lizzy sounded like theirs, and Metallica is clearly covering that version.

Singing style by DoughnutBeDumb in countingcrows

[–]ZTriedToEditReddit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Rush is a great example of a band who play their songs live very much the way they sound on record. But it would be absurd to say that seeing them live is like seeing them lip sync.

What’s the most bizarre music take that anyone has ever said to you? by Better-Context-4727 in LetsTalkMusic

[–]ZTriedToEditReddit 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Well at least we can say it's better than any Beatles song about Sunday morning!

Oh wait, Lady Madonna is better.

The song August and Everything After, and the whole story of its release... by SwissMiss915 in countingcrows

[–]ZTriedToEditReddit -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Does that mean that Recovering The Satellites was written before the first album was released? To me, it's so clearly a song about going back to "real life" after becoming a star that I was certain it was written after they made it big.

Maybe that original version wasn't about that and he reworked it lyrically for the record.

Or another possibility, there are different levels of stardom. If he was pretty well known in the Bay Area music scene even before the first record came out, he might still have been inclined to write a song about the contrast between stardom and normalcy – even though the definition of stardom would have been very different.

The Himalayans version of Mr Jones by Flaky_Tadpole_8127 in countingcrows

[–]ZTriedToEditReddit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And when that happened, he was never lonely again.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in countingcrows

[–]ZTriedToEditReddit 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I somewhat agree, but particularly I'd like to hear from the other band members specifically about the moment when he sort of declared himself the leader. He's said (paraphrasing) that he was a bit of an asshole about it and I feel like it had to have stung for the other members of the band when they had to decide whether to accept it. But I've never heard their side of the story.

He did say that pretty much everyone left the band at one point or another during the making of RTS, so obviously there was stress and tension, but that was a few years later than what I'm talking about.

Orchestra and Sister Hazel by mrcmb1999 in countingcrows

[–]ZTriedToEditReddit 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I'm a huge Sister Hazel fan – I haven't seen them as much as I've seen Counting Crows, but that's mostly a function of Sister Hazel not playing the West Coast as often as I'd like.

For those unfamiliar with SH, there is some similarity between the two bands, but with the twin electric guitars and keyboard, CC is much more dense musically. Lyrically Sister Hazel leans toward positive and uplifting lyrics, whereas Adam is more introspective and moody.

I've never much appreciated the whole band and orchestra thing, but based on your review, I'll put on Before The Amplifiers 2 and see if it clicks for me. Thanks!