Bdill93
Undisputed King of FOMO
Trying to get me through some boring as hell work.
Probably not for everyone on here
That's a hard no from me
Trying to get me through some boring as hell work.
Probably not for everyone on here
Trying to get me through some boring as hell work.
Probably not for everyone on here
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mPZe7S5GRvvxmKECjHNzoIqGvFGv7MJgU
Best thing I've heard for a long time!Oceanlab's moving and poignant 2008 ambient track, Miracle. A message as true to day as it was 15 years ago when this was released. I have been working my way through the whole Sirens of the Sea album and this is one of 3 tracks that always reach out and grab me.
Justine Suissa's vocals are just ethereal.
"It's too easy to bow your head an pray"... Never a truer word.
"A haunting ballad" is how I would describe that sort of song. Anyone from our generation will remember that song, although it got no higher than number 30 in the charts in 1971.Every so often I am reminded of a song that I loved and this is one that still sends tingles down my spine. And the words…well I hadn’t really listened to them closely…such wistfulness about love and love lost.
If you don’t know it (and even if you do) just spend a little time listening to the words as well as enjoying the beautiful song and Gordon Lightfoot‘s singing…
I’d add Jim Croce as another favourite of mine of the time and style. With Time in a Bottle almost certainly on my Desert Island disc list."A haunting ballad" is how I would describe that sort of song. Anyone from our generation will remember that song, although it got no higher than number 30 in the charts in 1971.
He did top the charts in his native Canada, however.
Another "haunting ballad" that we all remember is Nights In White Satin. Yet that reached only number 19 in the charts in 1967. It was re-released in 1972 and got to number 9.
Windmills Of Your Mind by Noel Harrison is another. Got to number 8 in 1969.
Great songs, but not high single sales.
People seemed to prefer to spend their money on Two Little Boys by Rolf Harris or Ernie by Benny Hill.