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To: PROCON

When I hear Wichita Lineman, Galveston or By the Time I Get to Phoenix I am transported into the emotions of the story.

Part of that is due to the lyrics, but only if sung by someone of great caliber.

Prayers for Glen Campbell...


8 posted on 09/24/2015 7:54:16 PM PDT by LostInBayport (When there are more people riding in the cart than there are pulling it, the cart stops moving...)
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To: LostInBayport

“I clean my gun and dream of Galveston”.....always liked that line!


25 posted on 09/24/2015 8:16:09 PM PDT by bobby.223 (Retired up in the snowy mountains of the American Redoubt and it's a great life!)
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To: LostInBayport
The Wichita Lineman really does that for me. The music connotes a vast open, lonely area of country with wheat fields and a road, but no farmhouses, anywhere to be seen.

There are few songs that can enwrap me in the song's environment as that one. It even leaves me feeling empty, with a pit in my stomach.

26 posted on 09/24/2015 8:16:49 PM PDT by ConservativeMind ("Humane" = "Don't pen up pets or eat meat, but allow infanticide, abortion, and euthanasia.")
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To: LostInBayport

Glen said when he first heard Galveston (by Don Ho) it was in Glenn’s words, “God awful”. He called Jimmy Webb and told him he’d record it but he was going to speed up the tempo.

We all think of Viet Nam but Webb said he wrote it about a soldier in the Spanish American War.

From SongFacts:

Galveston is a city on the coast of Texas that attracts lots of hurricanes. Webb was on a beach in Galveston when he wrote this. He made up the story about a soldier in the Spanish-American war and the girl he left behind. Most songwriters never find themselves in places like Galveston or Wichita, but Webb found inspiration in the people he encountered in these places.

The Vietnam War was going on when Campbell released this. It was considered an antiwar song.

The Hawaiian singer Don Ho was the first to record this song, releasing it as the B-side of his single “Has Anybody Lost A Love?” in 1968. Ho recalled that when he appeared on Campbell’s show The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour in 1969, he gave Campbell a copy of the single and told him, “I didn’t have any luck with this, maybe you will.”


64 posted on 09/25/2015 9:16:21 AM PDT by VerySadAmerican (Since you're so much smarter than me, don't waste your time insulting me. I won't understand it.)
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