But I sure as hell know I'm going to be wrong.
dsweeney wrote:I would genuinely like to ask Phil how he himself would describe his classic tune from the "...Grace.." album, musically speaking that is ?
He probably won't answer but I'd be interested in how others would describe it as well. That it is hugely influenced by Irish folk cannot be denied. Yes, it has a more straight rock 4/4 beat to it but still, it leans heavily towards folk and as a famine emigration song this works well I think.
dsweeney wrote: And secondly, " The blackbird " referred to in the lines; " ...and " The blackbird " broke the silence, as you whistled it so sweet..", is this an actual song, or one made up for the lyric ? Is there a real tune like the "...were singing " Galway bay " from FONY ?
DzM wrote:dsweeney wrote: And secondly, " The blackbird " referred to in the lines; " ...and " The blackbird " broke the silence, as you whistled it so sweet..", is this an actual song, or one made up for the lyric ? Is there a real tune like the "...were singing " Galway bay " from FONY ?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackbird_%28song%29
http://tinyurl.com/4uyh6zk
BTW, if you register there will be less risk of other people soiling the good name of "dsweeney" as guest posters, AND each time you post you won't be confronted with a doofy question that tries to verify you're a person ("What's the next number in this sequence," "what month is missing in this sequence," etc).
dsweeney wrote:Shit, " The blackbird " is a Mcartney song ? Bollocks, I hate The Beatles and ESPECIALLY Mcartney. Hopefully it won't spoil it too much for me.
philipchevron wrote:http://www.poguetry.com/grace.htm
It's not the Fabs song, it's the trad, yes trad, tune Brending Being was fond of hearing buskers play in the streets of new York and Dublin, which was known to set him dancing. This latter fact is hotly disputed by Mr MacGowan who is, nevertheless, wrong.
It could indeed also be just a twittering boid. Ambiguity does no harm here.
Have I mentioned I learned the guitar part on the Fabs tune from Mary Hopkin, \who learned it from Paul? I'm pretty sure I have. Fabs rool!
RICHB wrote:philipchevron wrote:http://www.poguetry.com/grace.htm
It's not the Fabs song, it's the trad, yes trad, tune Brending Being was fond of hearing buskers play in the streets of new York and Dublin, which was known to set him dancing. This latter fact is hotly disputed by Mr MacGowan who is, nevertheless, wrong.
It could indeed also be just a twittering boid. Ambiguity does no harm here.
Have I mentioned I learned the guitar part on the Fabs tune from Mary Hopkin, \who learned it from Paul? I'm pretty sure I have. Fabs rool!
Think you may have, did it have something to do with a hotel? (or am i making it up as I go along)
soulfinger wrote:My friend Nick is an actor and some years ago was, entirely by chance, staying in a hotel where the band were staying also. I posted the story of how some men in suits asked Mr Chevron (who was playing guitar in the bar) if he knew any songs by the Beatles - which had caused Nick to choke on his pint. Philip told the Blackbird / Mary Hopkin story in response in the thread.
Have I mentioned I learned the guitar part on the Fabs tune from Mary Hopkin, \who learned it from Paul? I'm pretty sure I have. Fabs rool!
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