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from one of my favorite bands, Wall of Voodoo, from 1982 (a good year). And you get to hear the voice of my favorite punk percussionist, the late Joe Nanini...
[Verse 1: Stan Ridgway]
He got the high sign so he jumped a bus
Along the roads that wind on through
The hot Mojave and the Jericho
He'd start his whole life anew
And what he'd left behind he hadn't valued
Half as much as some things
He never knew
Right around sundown...
[Verse 2: Stan Ridgway]
He got dropped off on a street in town
Where a grey old man looked him up and down and said
"Son, this ain't no Western movie matinee
And you're a long way off from yippee-yi-yay
'Cause I can tell at a glance
You're not from 'round these parts
Got a green look about ya
And that's a gringo for starts
Sometimes the only thing a Western savage understands
Are whiskey and rifles and an unarmed man
Like you.
So you gotta keep on the move
Don't let that fancy paint job fool you."
And then the old-timer pulled him close and said
[Chorus 1: Stan Ridgway]
"You've come a long way, I know
You got a longer drive ahead
Through the bones of the buffalo
Through the claims of the Western dead
And just like the spokes of a wheel
You'll spin 'round with the rest
You'll hear the drums and the brush of steel
You'll hear the call of the west."
Call of the west
You'll hear the call of the west
Call of the west
[Bridge; Spoken: Stan Ridgway]
Harshly awakened by the sound of six rounds
Of light-caliber rifle fire
Followed minutes later by the booming of nine rounds
From a heavier rifle
But you can't close off the wilderness
He heard the snick of a rifle bolt
And found himself peering down the muzzle
Of a weapon held by a drunken liquor store owner
"There's a conflict," he said
"There's a conflict between land and people...
The people have to go
They've come all the way out here to make mining claims
To do automobile body work
To gamble
To take pictures
To not have to do laundry
To own a mini-bike
To have their own CB radios and air conditioning
Good plumbing for sure
And to sell Time Life books and to work in a deli
To have some chili every morning
And maybe... maybe to own their own gas stations again
And to take drugs
Have some crazy sex
But above all, above all, to have a fair shake
To get a piece of the rock and a slice of the pie
And spit out of the window of your car
And not have the wind blow it back in your face"
[Chorus 2: Stan Ridgway]
Now from the high timber line to the deserts dry
Who'll risk dangling from some hangman's tree?
To stake their claims on these prairie plains
While they say this lunch is not had for free?
Just like the spokes of a wheel
Who'll spin 'round with the rest?
They'll hear the drums and the brush of steel
And I'll hear the call of the west
Call of the west
(Yippee-yi-yo, yippee-yi-yo-ki-yay, yippee-yi-yo-ohh)
I'll hear the call of the west
Call of the west
(Yippee-yi-yo, yippee-yi-yo-ki-yay, yippee-yi-yo-ohh)
I'll hear the call of the west
Call of the west
(Yippee-yi-yo, yippee-yi-yo-ki-yay, yippee-yi-yo-ohh)
I'll hear the call of the west
Call of the west
(Yippee-yi-yo, yippee-yi-yo-ki-yay, yippee-yi-yo-ohh)
I'll hear the call of the west
Call of the west
(Yippee-yi-yo, yippee-yi-yo-ki-yay, yippee-yi-yo-ohh)
[Outro; Spoken: Joe Nanini]
("I used to be somebody!
I used to be somebody, do you hear me?
Do you hear me?
I-I've been there!
I used to be somebody, goddamn you!
I've been there before!
Don't walk away!")
[Outro; Spoken: Stan Ridgway]
Well, you—you wanted unleaded?
Unleaded—that's next pump over, so keep on movin', okay?
No, it's out of order....
@usefewersyllables
-
poetry set to music is enchanting.
Thanks for sharing it!
from one of my favorite bands, Wall of Voodoo, from 1982 (a good year). And you get to hear the voice of my favorite punk percussionist, the late Joe Nanini...
[Verse 1: Stan Ridgway]
He got the high sign so he jumped a bus
Along the roads that wind on through
The hot Mojave and the Jericho
He'd start his whole life anew
And what he'd left behind he hadn't valued
Half as much as some things
He never knew
Right around sundown...
[Verse 2: Stan Ridgway]
He got dropped off on a street in town
Where a grey old man looked him up and down and said
"Son, this ain't no Western movie matinee
And you're a long way off from yippee-yi-yay
'Cause I can tell at a glance
You're not from 'round these parts
Got a green look about ya
And that's a gringo for starts
Sometimes the only thing a Western savage understands
Are whiskey and rifles and an unarmed man
Like you.
So you gotta keep on the move
Don't let that fancy paint job fool you."
And then the old-timer pulled him close and said
[Chorus 1: Stan Ridgway]
"You've come a long way, I know
You got a longer drive ahead
Through the bones of the buffalo
Through the claims of the Western dead
And just like the spokes of a wheel
You'll spin 'round with the rest
You'll hear the drums and the brush of steel
You'll hear the call of the west."
Call of the west
You'll hear the call of the west
Call of the west
[Bridge; Spoken: Stan Ridgway]
Harshly awakened by the sound of six rounds
Of light-caliber rifle fire
Followed minutes later by the booming of nine rounds
From a heavier rifle
But you can't close off the wilderness
He heard the snick of a rifle bolt
And found himself peering down the muzzle
Of a weapon held by a drunken liquor store owner
"There's a conflict," he said
"There's a conflict between land and people...
The people have to go
They've come all the way out here to make mining claims
To do automobile body work
To gamble
To take pictures
To not have to do laundry
To own a mini-bike
To have their own CB radios and air conditioning
Good plumbing for sure
And to sell Time Life books and to work in a deli
To have some chili every morning
And maybe... maybe to own their own gas stations again
And to take drugs
Have some crazy sex
But above all, above all, to have a fair shake
To get a piece of the rock and a slice of the pie
And spit out of the window of your car
And not have the wind blow it back in your face"
[Chorus 2: Stan Ridgway]
Now from the high timber line to the deserts dry
Who'll risk dangling from some hangman's tree?
To stake their claims on these prairie plains
While they say this lunch is not had for free?
Just like the spokes of a wheel
Who'll spin 'round with the rest?
They'll hear the drums and the brush of steel
And I'll hear the call of the west
Call of the west
(Yippee-yi-yo, yippee-yi-yo-ki-yay, yippee-yi-yo-ohh)
I'll hear the call of the west
Call of the west
(Yippee-yi-yo, yippee-yi-yo-ki-yay, yippee-yi-yo-ohh)
I'll hear the call of the west
Call of the west
(Yippee-yi-yo, yippee-yi-yo-ki-yay, yippee-yi-yo-ohh)
I'll hear the call of the west
Call of the west
(Yippee-yi-yo, yippee-yi-yo-ki-yay, yippee-yi-yo-ohh)
I'll hear the call of the west
Call of the west
(Yippee-yi-yo, yippee-yi-yo-ki-yay, yippee-yi-yo-ohh)
[Outro; Spoken: Joe Nanini]
("I used to be somebody!
I used to be somebody, do you hear me?
Do you hear me?
I-I've been there!
I used to be somebody, goddamn you!
I've been there before!
Don't walk away!")
[Outro; Spoken: Stan Ridgway]
Well, you—you wanted unleaded?
Unleaded—that's next pump over, so keep on movin', okay?
No, it's out of order....
on steroids (and maybe a few other more recreational chemicals)...
I will admit that they are kind of an acquired taste, but those guys were a huge influence on me as a songwriter. And studying Mr. Nanini completely changed my approach to rock percussion...
#3
-
poetry set to music is enchanting.
Thanks for sharing it!
The lyrics also remind me of the good ole days of driving across the west when I got the right loads.
from one of my favorite bands, Wall of Voodoo, from 1982 (a good year). And you get to hear the voice of my favorite punk percussionist, the late Joe Nanini...
[Verse 1: Stan Ridgway]
He got the high sign so he jumped a bus
Along the roads that wind on through
The hot Mojave and the Jericho
He'd start his whole life anew
And what he'd left behind he hadn't valued
Half as much as some things
He never knew
Right around sundown...
[Verse 2: Stan Ridgway]
He got dropped off on a street in town
Where a grey old man looked him up and down and said
"Son, this ain't no Western movie matinee
And you're a long way off from yippee-yi-yay
'Cause I can tell at a glance
You're not from 'round these parts
Got a green look about ya
And that's a gringo for starts
Sometimes the only thing a Western savage understands
Are whiskey and rifles and an unarmed man
Like you.
So you gotta keep on the move
Don't let that fancy paint job fool you."
And then the old-timer pulled him close and said
[Chorus 1: Stan Ridgway]
"You've come a long way, I know
You got a longer drive ahead
Through the bones of the buffalo
Through the claims of the Western dead
And just like the spokes of a wheel
You'll spin 'round with the rest
You'll hear the drums and the brush of steel
You'll hear the call of the west."
Call of the west
You'll hear the call of the west
Call of the west
[Bridge; Spoken: Stan Ridgway]
Harshly awakened by the sound of six rounds
Of light-caliber rifle fire
Followed minutes later by the booming of nine rounds
From a heavier rifle
But you can't close off the wilderness
He heard the snick of a rifle bolt
And found himself peering down the muzzle
Of a weapon held by a drunken liquor store owner
"There's a conflict," he said
"There's a conflict between land and people...
The people have to go
They've come all the way out here to make mining claims
To do automobile body work
To gamble
To take pictures
To not have to do laundry
To own a mini-bike
To have their own CB radios and air conditioning
Good plumbing for sure
And to sell Time Life books and to work in a deli
To have some chili every morning
And maybe... maybe to own their own gas stations again
And to take drugs
Have some crazy sex
But above all, above all, to have a fair shake
To get a piece of the rock and a slice of the pie
And spit out of the window of your car
And not have the wind blow it back in your face"
[Chorus 2: Stan Ridgway]
Now from the high timber line to the deserts dry
Who'll risk dangling from some hangman's tree?
To stake their claims on these prairie plains
While they say this lunch is not had for free?
Just like the spokes of a wheel
Who'll spin 'round with the rest?
They'll hear the drums and the brush of steel
And I'll hear the call of the west
Call of the west
(Yippee-yi-yo, yippee-yi-yo-ki-yay, yippee-yi-yo-ohh)
I'll hear the call of the west
Call of the west
(Yippee-yi-yo, yippee-yi-yo-ki-yay, yippee-yi-yo-ohh)
I'll hear the call of the west
Call of the west
(Yippee-yi-yo, yippee-yi-yo-ki-yay, yippee-yi-yo-ohh)
I'll hear the call of the west
Call of the west
(Yippee-yi-yo, yippee-yi-yo-ki-yay, yippee-yi-yo-ohh)
I'll hear the call of the west
Call of the west
(Yippee-yi-yo, yippee-yi-yo-ki-yay, yippee-yi-yo-ohh)
[Outro; Spoken: Joe Nanini]
("I used to be somebody!
I used to be somebody, do you hear me?
Do you hear me?
I-I've been there!
I used to be somebody, goddamn you!
I've been there before!
Don't walk away!")
[Outro; Spoken: Stan Ridgway]
Well, you—you wanted unleaded?
Unleaded—that's next pump over, so keep on movin', okay?
No, it's out of order....
As I worked on it, “Drag Queens in Limousines” became an autobiographical story song about coming of age as a gay kid in the South. It’s more or less my story, but over the years it’s become an outsider’s anthem. The song speaks to the outsider in all of us, though when I wrote it I had no idea that people of all persuasions from all over the world would relate to feeling like an outsider. Often times when I am singing it I look out into the audience and I see folks who look a whole lot like insiders wholeheartedly relating to the outsider in this song, singing every word. I’ve learned that insiders feel like outsiders sometimes, and high school was hard for an awful lot of people, not just the gay kids.
I had been listening to this moving Chinese popular song which doesn't sound so upbeat but seemed to be worth the effort to learn from or interpret. The theme seems to be brotherhood. The friendships in life that make an otherwise hard life bearable and worth living.
It's hard for me to find Chinese songs with my very limited ability where an effort to translate them has already been made, making them worthwhile vehicles of understanding. I actually had been pondering this one over the course of a couple of weeks, then an explainer or background short came up on the youtube algorithm this am. What a coinkidink eh? So this guy also describes Affinities in this Life as an appropriate goodbye to tiktok or something like that. A requiem maybe, it looks like Ellison got it; "security" will be managed by Oracle.
I looked for the story on tiktok, because I never used it and wasn't up to speed. Big update over on Yahoo finance today!
I'm still not quite sure when this song commonly translated as Affinities of Life became the goodbye Tiktok song exactly. I'm not sure I get it, entirely.
Here's the video with the English translation. I would translate the title Fate in this Life from what little I know. 非常好 I like it a lot anyway -
Jin Sheng Yuan (今生缘) By Chuan Zi (川子) original song with Lyrics
作詞:川子 lyrics Chuān zǐ 作曲:川子 composition Chuān zǐ
A lot of the comments on this song from non Chinese viewers suggested in English, "even if I don't understand any Chinese, this song was very moving" or words to that effect.
@soryang
.
which posits the Chinese have gained control of the world
referred to as Qin. It has a lot to do with our memories being
controlled by "Mind Banks", which is an inheritance from our
past and forebears. Pretty heavy.
.
the ways in which governments and media manipulate history and
control our collective imagination
I had been listening to this moving Chinese popular song which doesn't sound so upbeat but seemed to be worth the effort to learn from or interpret. The theme seems to be brotherhood. The friendships in life that make an otherwise hard life bearable and worth living.
It's hard for me to find Chinese songs with my very limited ability where an effort to translate them has already been made, making them worthwhile vehicles of understanding. I actually had been pondering this one over the course of a couple of weeks, then an explainer or background short came up on the youtube algorithm this am. What a coinkidink eh? So this guy also describes Affinities in this Life as an appropriate goodbye to tiktok or something like that. A requiem maybe, it looks like Ellison got it; "security" will be managed by Oracle.
I looked for the story on tiktok, because I never used it and wasn't up to speed. Big update over on Yahoo finance today!
I'm still not quite sure when this song commonly translated as Affinities of Life became the goodbye Tiktok song exactly. I'm not sure I get it, entirely.
Here's the video with the English translation. I would translate the title Fate in this Life from what little I know. 非常好 I like it a lot anyway -
Jin Sheng Yuan (今生缘) By Chuan Zi (川子) original song with Lyrics
作詞:川子 lyrics Chuān zǐ 作曲:川子 composition Chuān zǐ
A lot of the comments on this song from non Chinese viewers suggested in English, "even if I don't understand any Chinese, this song was very moving" or words to that effect.
Comments
and for you country fans
.
Zionism is a social disease
Yeah, fun song
I enjoyed it.
Couldn't quite make out all the lyrics, but I'll put in my hearing aids and have another listen.
Thanks for the tune.
Neither Russia nor China is our enemy.
Neither Iran nor Venezuela are threatening America.
Cuba is a dead horse, stop beating it.
Yeah, her voice is smokey
.
In a southern accent, she runs a small
restaurant just north of here to support her
songwriting music jones.
Zionism is a social disease
Here's a favorite
from one of my favorite bands, Wall of Voodoo, from 1982 (a good year). And you get to hear the voice of my favorite punk percussionist, the late Joe Nanini...
Twice bitten, permanently shy.
great lyrics
-
poetry set to music is enchanting.
Thanks for sharing it!
Zionism is a social disease
Americana
on steroids (and maybe a few other more recreational chemicals)...
I will admit that they are kind of an acquired taste, but those guys were a huge influence on me as a songwriter. And studying Mr. Nanini completely changed my approach to rock percussion...
Twice bitten, permanently shy.
Associations
Reminds me of...
The lyrics also remind me of the good ole days of driving across the west when I got the right loads.
己所不欲,勿施于人。
"Outsider's anthem"
Appealing tunes Q! Thanx.
Drag Queens lyrics
We need mo good peoples.
己所不欲,勿施于人。
Synchronicity
I had been listening to this moving Chinese popular song which doesn't sound so upbeat but seemed to be worth the effort to learn from or interpret. The theme seems to be brotherhood. The friendships in life that make an otherwise hard life bearable and worth living.
It's hard for me to find Chinese songs with my very limited ability where an effort to translate them has already been made, making them worthwhile vehicles of understanding. I actually had been pondering this one over the course of a couple of weeks, then an explainer or background short came up on the youtube algorithm this am. What a coinkidink eh? So this guy also describes Affinities in this Life as an appropriate goodbye to tiktok or something like that. A requiem maybe, it looks like Ellison got it; "security" will be managed by Oracle.
I looked for the story on tiktok, because I never used it and wasn't up to speed. Big update over on Yahoo finance today!
Here’s what you should know about the US TikTok deal
So this is similar to the CBS situation isn't it?
I'm still not quite sure when this song commonly translated as Affinities of Life became the goodbye Tiktok song exactly. I'm not sure I get it, entirely.
Here's the video with the English translation. I would translate the title Fate in this Life from what little I know. 非常好 I like it a lot anyway -
Jin Sheng Yuan (今生缘) By Chuan Zi (川子) original song with Lyrics
作詞:川子 lyrics Chuān zǐ 作曲:川子 composition Chuān zǐ
A lot of the comments on this song from non Chinese viewers suggested in English, "even if I don't understand any Chinese, this song was very moving" or words to that effect.
Here's the background on the singer songwriter-
己所不欲,勿施于人。
Which coincides with the novel I am finishing up reading
.
which posits the Chinese have gained control of the world
referred to as Qin. It has a lot to do with our memories being
controlled by "Mind Banks", which is an inheritance from our
past and forebears. Pretty heavy.
.
.
.
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/221452836-these-memories-do-not-belo...
Zionism is a social disease