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Check out more Indie Rock: https://odysee.com/@DiggingInTheCrates:6/IndieRock:9
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Orange Juice - Flesh of My Flesh 7" - Polydor - 1983
Check out more Top 100 Rock Songs of 2011: https://odysee.com/@DiggingInTheCrates:6?view=content&t=Top+100+Rock+Songs+of+2011
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Gil Scott Heron and Brian Jackson, " Bridges", 1977, Arista Records
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the first vandie! it's rough and raw and wholesome.
find isobels music+details below! lemme know ur thoughts in comments!
www.andieisalie.com
@andie.isalie on instagram to stay up to date!
Isobel and I have grown up in the Blue Mountains together our whole lives and she is one of my closest most cherished friends! so proud of her and everything she has achieved and represents.
Isobel Knight on Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/artist/68EAQ3CUHE8RYAhGttzHkA?autoplay=true&v=A
Check out more 60s Music: https://odysee.com/@DiggingInTheCrates:6/60sMusic:3?lid=370febd2ca39fecbb8c66ad222a6db3dfda9dc7a
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Dave Clark Five - Glad All Over
Warrant's official music video for 'Heaven'. Click to listen to Warrant on Spotify: http://smarturl.it/WarrSpotify?IQid=WHea
As featured on Best of Warrant. Click to buy the track or album via iTunes: http://smarturl.it/WBOiTunes?IQid=WHea
Google Play: http://smarturl.it/WHPlay?IQid=WHea
Amazon: http://smarturl.it/WBOaz?IQid=WHea
More from Warrant
Cherry Pie: https://youtu.be/OjyZKfdwlng
Uncle Tom's Cabin: https://youtu.be/bx6f68Wd9dc
Sometimes She Cries: https://youtu.be/DAX20LoVgxE
More great metal videos here: http://smarturl.it/UltimateMetal?IQid=WHea
Follow Warrant
Website: http://www.warrantrocks.com/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/warrantrocks
Twitter: https://twitter.com/warrantrocks
Myspace: https://myspace.com/warrantband
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Lyrics:
I've got a picture of your house
And you're standing by the door.
It's black and white and faded,
And it's looking pretty worn.
See the factory that I worked
Silhouetted in the back.
The memories are gray but man they're really coming back.
I don't need to be the king of the world
As long as i'm the hero of this little girl
Heaven isn't too far away
Closer to it everyday
No matter what your friends might say
How I love the way you move
And the sparkle in your eyes
There's a color deep inside them
Like blue suburban skys
When i come home late at night
And you're in bed asleep
I wrap my arms around you
So I can feel you breathe
Check out more Chamber Pop: https://odysee.com/$/discover?t=Chamber%20Pop
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http://www.sylvanesso.com
The distance between Sylvan Esso’s crisp electro-pop and Califone’s dark, shambling indie-folk is shorter and more direct than it might seem. And the cover you’re about to hear—go ahead and click—of Califone’s “Funeral Singers” will quickly make clear that two disparate worlds have been deftly bridged, and that there is peace in the valley. This new version is faithful to the original in ways, gorgeously different in others.
The song is also bigger than Sylvan Esso’s core of Amelia Meath and Nick Sanborn: It began as a spontaneous collaboration with the duo’s recent tour openers Collections of Colonies of Bees, a fun lark to play as an encore together. But their version of “Funeral Singers” immediately revealed something bigger and deeper, which makes sense: The relationship between the bands goes back a long way. Sanborn was briefly a member of Collections, whose evolving, revolving staff centers on Chris Rosenau—an old friend of Sanborn’s and a founding member of Justin Vernon’s Volcano Choir. Volcano Choir brought Sylvan Esso out on their first tour. And Sanborn’s other band from his Milwaukee days, Decibully, opened for Califone—a band that inspired everybody in this equation. You could practically hear the click.
So it became imperative to capture “Funeral Singers” for posterity, and Wilco—another definite but not-exactly-obvious influence on these bands—opened the doors of their home studio, The Loft, at the last minute so that this intimate little opus could be properly committed to tape. Califone’s original, from 2009’s All My Friends Are Funeral Singers, is spare even by that band’s standards: Singer and chief songwriter Tim Rutili plays a rickety acoustic and pulls his words from down deep in his chest, half-slurring his impressionistic tale of giving up but not giving in. A banjo and some half-heard background voices give it color, but it’s unmistakably dark.
Sylvan Esso and friends neatly removed the original’s shaggy five o’clock shadow with an electronic razor, adding a bass throb and nimble rhythmic tones—but kept the warm sound of an acoustic strum at the fore. Also right up front: Meath’s gorgeous voice, which has proved time and again that it can start the party or bring it to its knees—whatever she’s in the mood for. This version injects the original’s gorgeous, soul-bearing resignation with a little more hope: Tim Rutili’s suicidal lighthouse keeper will eventually make the leap, hers might fight off the demons for good.
It’s a neat trick that this spontaneous assemblage of musicians pulled off: They took a little song out of its dusty box, shined it up, made it huge, then somehow willed it back into the tiny emotional woodshed from which it sprang. “Return, return, return to me,” it pleads. In Sylvan Esso’s hands, it’s found a new home.
- Josh Modell