Still here. Still clean. For Susan Griffith, eating pills My brother Shawn, a drunk driver killed In this life My choice remains the same Forever unchanged Submit Corrections Writer(s): Matthew Honeycutt, Isaac Lamb, Nolan Ashley, Eric English ...
Why are we still here? But I don't think it's coincidence And I don't believe in accidents It's time to ask ourselves Why are we still here? Submit Corrections Writer(s): Kurt Larson, Gina Hendricks AZLyrics I Information Society Lyrics album...
Uncle was a simple and straightforward man who usually answered his calls in the living room. Most of the time, Yun Jin could make out eighty percent of the conversation. However, here he was speaking in a low voice in a corner. Yun Jin found it highly unusual. “… Yes, the arra...
I have to again give credit to Daniel there, because he could always find the country element in a song. He could see into it — almost like X-ray vision — and noticed that doing it as a duet like that would bring out a romantic side of the song by further emphasizing the lyrics....
“Waltz for Debby,” the Bill Evans classic here given lyrics by Evans’ friend Gene Lees, continues the theme of childhood in a somewhat happier though still nostalgic vein. His line “they will miss her I know/but then so will I” is given more bounce and less poignancy by the drums...
The lyrics and the vocal quality are different. Sha Sha Jones, who's a great [song]writer who has been writing on our team for years, she's doing some of the leads, which is unusual for Kool & The Gang. [She has a] gorgeous voice. It's harmonically, lyrically and voc...
“OUR UNIVERSE TRULY COMES FROM ALL WALKS OF LIFE WITH THIS TYPE OF DARK GOD AND THE METAPHYSICS BEHIND OUR BAND.” “It’s just everyday life,” Furia laughs, then smiles warmly. “Everything can be turned into a song or can be represented in lyrics. Many times we start with an ide...
My theory is that their deep feelings about the enormity and majesty of the universe and the powerful forces at work here seem to give physicists a particular kind of humility that I admire. Interestingly, Chris shares this quality. Q: What are you working on now?
(and throat), it lands like a late-night confession you weren’t ready to hear. And lyrics like “Why should I leave her? / She wouldn’t know I’ve gone” or “Nobody loves no one” work not in spite of their simplicity, but because of it—they teeter on the edge of parody,...
“the most mythological way,” hinting at certain universal and even eternal cosmic forces in which sexuality is enveloped. Her allusions to ancient deities, combined with lyrics about twisted sexual fantasies delivered robotically over choppy electronic production, speak to the deep-seated need for ...