snowball wrote:I'm an oldies person...rock and roll, easy listening, country folk but oldies in all of it not fond of the new stuff... but even of the old some I don't like at all like the Day the Music died... nope don't like it... I always liked the flip side of the record...
on the station here in Q which is a oldies station... occasionally they will play think on a Saturday night it goes to some syndicated station... they play this really looooooooooong song it starts out with some lyrics like what I recall do you know I love you repeated several times and hold my hand then it goes into this lack of a better word instrumental forever I wrote down when it start 12:19 ended at 12:30 then back to the lyrics same ones for another 5 minutes... I am curious who is it and what the name is can't seem to find it though...and no I don't like it
sheila
Cudedog wrote:snowball wrote:I'm an oldies person...rock and roll, easy listening, country folk but oldies in all of it not fond of the new stuff... but even of the old some I don't like at all like the Day the Music died... nope don't like it... I always liked the flip side of the record...
on the station here in Q which is a oldies station... occasionally they will play think on a Saturday night it goes to some syndicated station... they play this really looooooooooong song it starts out with some lyrics like what I recall do you know I love you repeated several times and hold my hand then it goes into this lack of a better word instrumental forever I wrote down when it start 12:19 ended at 12:30 then back to the lyrics same ones for another 5 minutes... I am curious who is it and what the name is can't seem to find it though...and no I don't like it
sheila
Hi Sheila.
I believe the song you are thinking about is "American Pie", by Don McLean:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7yHTpGog0IY
It is an "Oldie", and it is quite long - over eight minutes. And has always been one of my favorites - years ago, I used to play the autoharp, and this is a fairly easy song to play on that instrument.
Probably the "oldie" radio disk jockeys like it because it gives them time "to run down the hall".
Sheila, you jogged my memory! Thanks!
Other favorites of mine are "Hotel California" by The Eagles, "The Boxer" by Simon and Garfunkel, "Mr. Bojangles" by The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, "House of the Rising Sun", by The Animals (! as a teen, I didn't realize this last one was about prostitution!). And, of course, "The Sounds of Silence", also by Simon and Garfunkel.
I have always liked songs that "told a story".
Anne
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