Posted on 10/12/2024 1:42:51 PM PDT by DallasBiff
“Bridge over Troubled Water” is the titular song of Simon & Garfunkel’s album of the same name. The single was released on January 26, 1970, though it also appears on the live album Live 1969, which was released in 2008. This song reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart on February 28, 1970, and reigned at the top chart for six continuous weeks. “Bridge over Troubled Water” also topped the adult contemporary chart in the U.S. for six weeks. The single has sold 6 million copies worldwide
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You would really love the SXM interview with Jimmy Webb, but get his book where he tells the whole MacArthur Park story and more.
Like Randy Newman’s version of “Mama Told Me Not To Come.”
I loved “MacArthur Park” when it first came out. For one thing, I was a fan of MacArthur at the time and still am. I also liked the fact that a song about Los Angeles was a worldwide hit.
I have always liked the song. Who knows, maybe I’m a little sappy myself.
Musically, I think it’s excellent, and that includes the poetry in the lyrics.
I love “outdated” music. The only modern music that I find to be listenable is movie music.
Art Garfunkel was an incredible singer.
That’s one of my very favorites.
Here’s another that I don’t know how many times I’ve played. I have a fan piece of art by Caren in my living room showing Jeremy Brett and the second Watson.
Sherlock Holmes - Jeremy Brett Memorial - Auld Lang Syne - James Taylor
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R4Ki4iyxrVU
Thank you for that. I’ve never heard Laura Nyro sing anything before. She was a tragic figure, dying of the same disease that killed her mother, at the same age her mother made it to. She was a remarkable talent, with a tremendously flexible, intuitive imagination, so at home in the time in which she lived (although she might have disagreed with that).
I’ve read about her over the years, and remember hearing her name mentioned on TV, as a child. I guess many musicians admired her, particularly other composers, and for good reason.
Thank you for that! Glad to have been wrong.
Ksenia Buzina is painful to look at, but in a good way.
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