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HAPPY VALENTINS DAY..list the greatest love songs ever
vanity | 2/14/11 | Patriot8

Posted on 02/14/2011 3:41:46 PM PST by patriot08

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To: patriot08
I Will Play A Rhapsody - Burton Cummings

My Maria - B.W. Stevenson

If - Bread

Tiny Dancer - Elton John

Nights Are Forever Without You - England Dan & John Ford Coley

All I Wanted - Kansas

Falling - Leblanc & Carr

If You Know What I Mean - Neil Diamond

Dance With Me - Orleans

Please Come To Boston - David Loggins

Love You 'Till the End - The Pogues

Kiss Me - Sixpence None the Richer

121 posted on 02/14/2011 6:50:37 PM PST by OldMissileer (Atlas, Titan, Minuteman, PK. Winners of the Cold War)
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To: patriot08

In Dino’s version, he sings of flying in the blue skies, he painted blue to be as the skies, because of his love for his woman.

At least, that’s how a lady explained it to me. The original Volare is a bit different from Dino’s version. But then, I like his version for it’s love potion quotient.

;-)


122 posted on 02/14/2011 6:54:01 PM PST by Thumper1960 (A modern so-called "Conservative" is a shadow of a wisp of a vertebrate human being.)
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To: patriot08
Try a Little Tenderness - Otis Redding
123 posted on 02/14/2011 6:57:03 PM PST by Hoodat (Yet in all these things we are more than conquerors through Him who loved us. - (Rom 8:37))
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To: patriot08
Greatest, eh?

Millennia of love songs written and performed and we have to narrow it down to one? I'm at home with a cold, so I'm game. Reminds of the verse from the Randy Travis song "Deeper Than the Holler"

"From the backroads to the broadway shows with a million miles between
There's a least a million love songs that people love to sing
And everyone is different and everyone's the same
So this is just another way of sayin' the same thing"

The Beatles are an obvious choice to look at for about a zillion entries, but that is too easy. I'll pick another from that era. Here's a song that outsold even the Beatles in the UK in '65. Written and produced by Tom Springfield (Dusty's brother) who caught this group off the boat from Australia:

The Seekers: "I'll Never Find Another You"

Besides, Judith had a way of making modesty look sexy.

124 posted on 02/14/2011 7:21:07 PM PST by TotusTuus
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To: patriot08
Nat King Cole - When I Fall in Love, though I love Julie London's version
Fleetwood Mac - Songbird
Anouk - Our Own Love
125 posted on 02/14/2011 7:40:42 PM PST by politicalamity
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To: patriot08

“That’s All” performed by Mel Tormé (c. 1965).

Audio:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JhrPxmZsJuU


126 posted on 02/14/2011 7:46:03 PM PST by LibFreeOrDie (Obama promised a gold mine, but will give us the shaft.)
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To: LibFreeOrDie

And here are the lyrics to “That’s All”:

I can only give you love that lasts forever
And a promise to be near each time you call
And the only heart I own
For you and you alone

That’s all
That’s all

I can only give you country walks in springtime
And a hand to hold when leaves begin to fall
And a love whose burning light
Will warm the winter’s night

That’s all
That’s all

There are those I am sure who have told you
They would give you the world for a toy
All I have are these arms to enfold you
And a love even time can’t destroy

If you’re wondering what I’m asking in return, dear
You’ll be glad to know that my demands are small
Say it’s me that you’ll adore
For now and evermore

That’s all
That’s all


127 posted on 02/14/2011 7:48:15 PM PST by LibFreeOrDie (Obama promised a gold mine, but will give us the shaft.)
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To: patriot08

“Beautiful” by Gordon Lightfoot

“The Last Thing On my Mind” by Jose Feliciano

“To Where You Are” sang by Josh Groban-songwriter Richard Marx


128 posted on 02/14/2011 8:00:02 PM PST by dforest
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To: patriot08

Miracle by Jefferson Starship, listen to the lyrics- erotic

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7tCrBF71JCU


129 posted on 02/14/2011 10:00:15 PM PST by IYellAtMyTV (Workday Forecast--Increasing pressure towards afternoon. Rum likely by evening.)
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To: IYellAtMyTV

Yeah...alright.


130 posted on 02/14/2011 10:06:23 PM PST by patriot08 (TEXAS GAL- born and bred and proud of it!)
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To: All

Thanks for the many replies, FRiends.
It’s been fun.


131 posted on 02/14/2011 10:07:14 PM PST by patriot08 (TEXAS GAL- born and bred and proud of it!)
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To: patriot08
That’s better.Maybe there’s hope for you after all. :)

Actually, if I get a second shot . . . I start thinking about Nanci Griffith, who has been one of my favorite singer-songwriters for about thirty years (despite her politics). A fellow Texan.

When she first moved to Nashville, she was startled one Saturday morning by a knock at her door. She found one of the most famous Country/Western songwriters of all time, ancient Harlan Howard, standing there. ("I Fall to Pieces," "Streets of Baltimore" and a few hundred little things like that - the man who one said country music was "three chords and the truth"). Nanci considered herself an unknown.

Harlan looked her up and down and said "I just "I just wanted to meet the girl who had the guts to write a country song about being a streetwalker" ("Working These Corners"). Nanci invited him in, made him some blueberry pancakes and coffee, and they talked as they became friends.

He asked what she was worked on.

She explained that she was writing an album ("Little Love Affairs") where each song was about a different couple and a different aspect of their love. Harlan said he would be proud to write a song for the album.

Nanci didn't know what to say to Nashville's most famous songwriter for the last 40-50 years, but choked out "Mr. Howard? Part of the concept of the album is that it's personal, and I was going to write each song."

Harland laughed and said "Tell you what, little lady. I'm going to write a song about a love relationship that's so unique you won't be able to keep it off the album."

And he did, and he and Nanci became best friends.

The song is called "Never Mind" and is the story of two migrant farm workers who fall in love; she wants the relationship to move to a higher level and perhaps for the two of them to build a family together with her little boy, to leave the life of migrant farm workers if they can. The most poignant line (or funniest line, your choice), is when she explains how she knew he loved her:

"I first saw you picking oranges in Orlando, and all day you kept your ladder close to mine."

Now, if that's not love . . . in migrant farm worker terms . . . I don't know what is. The album's Little Love Affairs by Nanci Griffith. A couple of the other songs, like the Gulf Coast Highway duet, are stone-cold keepers.

132 posted on 02/15/2011 2:57:25 AM PST by Scoutmaster (You knew the job was dangerous when you took it, Fred.)
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To: patriot08

Jimmy Buffett - “Why Don’t We Get Drunk and Screw?”


133 posted on 02/15/2011 4:35:01 AM PST by fredhead (Liberals think globally, reason rectally, act idiotically.)
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To: patriot08

Since you mentioned George, how about “He Stopped Loving Her Today.”


134 posted on 02/15/2011 6:45:53 AM PST by ixtl ( You live and learn; or you don't live long.)
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To: archy

Your ‘wedding march’ is actually “Ode to Joy” from Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony. Check it out.


135 posted on 02/15/2011 6:53:34 AM PST by ixtl ( You live and learn; or you don't live long.)
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To: ixtl

I’m not much of a C/W fan, but I do love George and Tammy.
‘He Stopped Loving Her Today’, IMHO, is the greatest C/W song of all time and George the greatest C/W singer.
I love Tammy Wynette’s ‘Apartment No 9’


136 posted on 02/15/2011 10:14:18 AM PST by patriot08 (TEXAS GAL- born and bred and proud of it!)
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To: Scoutmaster

What an interesting story. Thanks.
Not being too much of a C/W fan, I shall have to look Nanci and the songs up.
(I do love George and Tammy, though.)


137 posted on 02/15/2011 10:18:59 AM PST by patriot08 (TEXAS GAL- born and bred and proud of it!)
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To: All

When I thought about this thread of the greatest love songs ever, I started doing research.
I looked at dozens of ‘top 25, top 50’ greatest love songs lists from many different sources.
My own list of favorites were on every list I looked at- with the exception of a very few.
I was surprised that not a one on FR listed any of these songs as being a great love song.


138 posted on 02/15/2011 10:29:20 AM PST by patriot08 (TEXAS GAL- born and bred and proud of it!)
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To: patriot08
"Unchained Melody" and "Lorena"

Others: "The Wayward Wind," "Please Forgive Me," "Tennessee Waltz."

139 posted on 02/15/2011 10:29:41 AM PST by Dante3
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To: patriot08
Not being too much of a C/W fan, I shall have to look Nanci and the songs up.

Nanci's not a country/western singer. At one point, if you had to categorize her, she was a contemporary folk singer. Then Rolling Stone Magazine called her the "Queen of Rockabilly." There was a long period in the 1980s when she was the biggest US musician in the UK and was famous in Europe. She recorded 'From a Distance' two years before Bette Midler. Nanci's version went triple platinum in Europe.

When she did her tour for the album "Other Voices, Other Rooms," a series of duets of folksongs that had inspired her as a child, she had a huge surprise at Carnegie Hall.

After she was on stage, she was surprised by a huge group of friends who showed up to sing with her. I don't remember the full lineup. Perhaps John Price, Bob Dylan, Odetta, J.I. Allison & Glen D. Hardin (of Buddy Holly and The Crickets), Arlo Guthrie, Harlan Howard, Emmylou Harris, Lucy Kaplansky, Darius Rucker ("Hootie"), Bela Fleck, Ian Tyson (of the 60s folk group Ian & Sylvia). The people who showed up that night to see Nanci got their money's worth.

She's beloved by other musicians and musical artists.

Nanci's something of an unofficial member of Ireland's 'national treasure' group.

You can't really pigeon-hole her as country-western or anything else, except as Nanci Griffith. She was in Nashville because her record label tried to make her CW for a record or so. That was followed by using the same producer from the Rolling Stones' Sticky Fingers album on her next works. Yeah. She's just Nanci.

140 posted on 02/15/2011 11:51:40 AM PST by Scoutmaster (You knew the job was dangerous when you took it, Fred.)
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