Click onhighlightedlyrics to explain. I listened to a lecture of nonsense til dawn By a plagiary poet with dark glasses on He said, "how did you ever dream up that song, the one where the baby dies?" I said "i'll tell you the secret, which one's your good ear?
And sounds of a babyNow you're a happy wifeLiving a happy lifeI wonder if you still remember when you loved me But that was long agoYou left me solo and I went a little crazySo if I scare you knowWell just remember howYou made a sacred vowThe day you said you loved meRemember ...
With lyrics that include "I know I should have thought twice before I kissed her" in the opening, you know you're in for a sleigh ride like none other. It's therefore no surprise that Cyndi Lauper and Swedish rock band the Hives' unconventional Christmas duel describes many marital hiccups...
The Very Best of Jimmy ReedJimmy Reed1 August 1961 Preview Lyrics Bright lights, big city Gone to my baby's head Whoa, bright lights, big city Sign in to View Full Lyrics Performing Artists Jimmy Reed Performer Found Love ABC of the Blues, Vol. 37...
And hope you go crazy.?So don?t fall for that Christ baitIt about as passingAs rock star arrogance.Tomorrow?s a new dayBut it?s that same faceThat you?ll be wearing then.And you don?t have to be content,But you do have to get on with it.(Thanks to Jamie for these lyrics)...
Jerry Lee Lewis Lyrics "Bright Lights, Big City (2014)" (feat. Neil Young & Ivan Neville) Bright lights, big city Gone to my baby's head Bright lights, big city Gone to my baby's head I'd tried to tell the woman But she doesn't believe a word I said ...
专辑类型:Cast Recording / Explicit Lyrics 介质:Audio CD 发行时间:2005-06-21 出版者:Ghostlight 唱片数:1 条形码:0791558198423 豆瓣评分 暂无评分 想听在听听过 评价: 写短评 写乐评 加入豆列 分享到 推荐 曲目· ··· Bright Lights, Big City (Tad, Jamie, Coke Girl, Chorus) Back ...
She would tighten up the lyrics. For example, she’d phrase a line this way: “The evening breeze, caress the treeeees, tenderlyThe trembling trees, embraced the treees…” No gap between the first and second lines. She’d go right into the second line without a break. Now normally ...
Roberta Flack’s “Killing Me Softly” doesn't stir me because—unlike Nancy Wilson’s definitive 1960 recording of “Guess Who I Saw Today,” or Diana Ross’s swirly 1973 “Touch Me in the Morning”—there’s more story in the “Softly” lyrics than in the vocals. Most...