Songs that MOVE you.
- buddhu
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Songs that MOVE you.
I mean *really* move you to the point of tears or to the point of uncontrollably, beaming joy.
In the Time traveller thread I mentioned 'Grace' as sung by Jim McCann, formerly of The Dubliners. It's not just the song, it's the context.
When doing the song live, Jim used to tell the story of Joseph Plunkett and Grace Gifford. Joseph was one of the men executed after the 1916 Easter Rising. He and Grace were married in Kilmainham Gaol just hours before he was killed, so they were married for so very little time.
Jim used to tell the story to a silent audience and then do the song. It's a real killer, and still makes me cry. On the MP3 I have in my car, which is ripped from the 'Dubliners Live at the Gaiety' DVD, I have left the story on there. The story and song together are incredibly powerful.
My other nomination is Eric Bogle's 'Green Fields of France' AKA 'No Man's Land'. I'm not a fan of Bogle's singing, but the man writes the most heart-rending anti war songs ('Band Played Waltzing Matilda' was also one of his), and done by the right people they are devastating. The Pogues and The Dubs have both done great versions of 'Matilda'.
Last year I saw Finbar Furey play 'Green Fields of France'. It's a song about a guy stopping to rest by a war grave. He reads the name and age of the young soldier and has a conversation with him. There are minor variations in Finbar's version, but the last verse goes:
And I can’t help but wonder, young Willie McBride,
Do all those who lie here know why they died?
Did they really believe when they answered the cause
Did they really believe that this war would end wars?
Well the sorrow, the suffering, the glory, the pain
The killing, the dying, it was all done in vain...
For Willie McBride, it all happened again,
And again, and again, and again, and again
The last two lines, "For Willie McBride, it all happened again, And again, and again, and again, and again", just sum up the total, wasteful, bullsh*t tragedy of it, and the stupidity that stops us learning the lessons that cost us so much.
Finbar puts everything he's got into performing that song, and means every word of it. His voice cracks up at the end and he struggles to get the words out.
Not a dry eye in the house.
We play that song at my local sing-along session. I'm glad I have to concentrate on the mandolin, because if I had to sing it there's no way I'd make it to the end of that last line.
In the Time traveller thread I mentioned 'Grace' as sung by Jim McCann, formerly of The Dubliners. It's not just the song, it's the context.
When doing the song live, Jim used to tell the story of Joseph Plunkett and Grace Gifford. Joseph was one of the men executed after the 1916 Easter Rising. He and Grace were married in Kilmainham Gaol just hours before he was killed, so they were married for so very little time.
Jim used to tell the story to a silent audience and then do the song. It's a real killer, and still makes me cry. On the MP3 I have in my car, which is ripped from the 'Dubliners Live at the Gaiety' DVD, I have left the story on there. The story and song together are incredibly powerful.
My other nomination is Eric Bogle's 'Green Fields of France' AKA 'No Man's Land'. I'm not a fan of Bogle's singing, but the man writes the most heart-rending anti war songs ('Band Played Waltzing Matilda' was also one of his), and done by the right people they are devastating. The Pogues and The Dubs have both done great versions of 'Matilda'.
Last year I saw Finbar Furey play 'Green Fields of France'. It's a song about a guy stopping to rest by a war grave. He reads the name and age of the young soldier and has a conversation with him. There are minor variations in Finbar's version, but the last verse goes:
And I can’t help but wonder, young Willie McBride,
Do all those who lie here know why they died?
Did they really believe when they answered the cause
Did they really believe that this war would end wars?
Well the sorrow, the suffering, the glory, the pain
The killing, the dying, it was all done in vain...
For Willie McBride, it all happened again,
And again, and again, and again, and again
The last two lines, "For Willie McBride, it all happened again, And again, and again, and again, and again", just sum up the total, wasteful, bullsh*t tragedy of it, and the stupidity that stops us learning the lessons that cost us so much.
Finbar puts everything he's got into performing that song, and means every word of it. His voice cracks up at the end and he struggles to get the words out.
Not a dry eye in the house.
We play that song at my local sing-along session. I'm glad I have to concentrate on the mandolin, because if I had to sing it there's no way I'd make it to the end of that last line.
- Joseph E. Smith
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- dubhlinn
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Joni Mitchells "Amelia" and "A case of you" usually do the trick here.
Luke Kellys version of "Song for Ireland" was the last song he ever recorded and although the great voice has faded, the passion and poignancy are still there.
Sandy Dennys "Who knows where the time goes" is another one which usually brings on tears.
Sometimes it's hard to cope with such beauty
Slan,
D.
Luke Kellys version of "Song for Ireland" was the last song he ever recorded and although the great voice has faded, the passion and poignancy are still there.
Sandy Dennys "Who knows where the time goes" is another one which usually brings on tears.
Sometimes it's hard to cope with such beauty
Slan,
D.
And many a poor man that has roved,
Loved and thought himself beloved,
From a glad kindness cannot take his eyes.
W.B.Yeats
Loved and thought himself beloved,
From a glad kindness cannot take his eyes.
W.B.Yeats
- missy
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I'm not sure of the title of the song, but some friends of ours, "Small Potatoes" have a song that talks about a older American woman (who's husband was killed in WWII in the South Pacific) is taken care of by a nurse who is Japanese and survived, as a young girl, the bombing of Hiroshima. I believe the title is "A Thousand Cranes, A Thousand Candles". No matter how many times I hear Jacquie sing it, I break down in tears.
http://www.smallpotatoesmusic.com/
http://www.smallpotatoesmusic.com/
- buddhu
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Great song. I never realised that was Luke's last. I guess the voice must have faded from how it had been when he was in sound health, but you'd never know it. My wife loves that recording.dubhlinn wrote:...Luke Kellys version of "Song for Ireland" was the last song he ever recorded and although the great voice has faded, the passion and poignancy are still there...
The knowledge that Luke was taken so young just adds to the experience of hearing him wring every last morsel of potential from what he sang.
Jesus, if only I could make my time count for as much.
- buddhu
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I kind of hoped there might be a download on the site...missy wrote:I'm not sure of the title of the song, but some friends of ours, "Small Potatoes" have a song that talks about a older American woman (who's husband was killed in WWII in the South Pacific) is taken care of by a nurse who is Japanese and survived, as a young girl, the bombing of Hiroshima. I believe the title is "A Thousand Cranes, A Thousand Candles". No matter how many times I hear Jacquie sing it, I break down in tears.
http://www.smallpotatoesmusic.com/
BTW, if anyone nominates 'Deck of Cards' or 'Seasons in the Sun' then I'm out of here...
- djm
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Too many to mention them all. I can be moved by a great instrumental as much as a song. I absolutely love the playing and the timbre they achieved in the guitar solos on Racing the Sun by Heartsfield. Echoes by Pink Floyd. Lots of stuff, really.
djm
djm
I'd rather be atop the foothills than beneath them.
- Tyler
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That's one of my all time favs, that one is. I really like Diana Krall's version.dubhlinn wrote:Joni Mitchells ....."A case of you" ....
Faithfully by Journey as well, but for good reason; it's my wife's and my song. Also by Journey, Still They Ride.
Give My Love to Rose by Johnny Cash, if I'm in the right mood, can make me choke up when he sings the line "...tell my boy that daddy's so proud of him..."
If Tomorrow Never Comes by Garth Brooks
This one may sound real corny, but I might as well admit to it, but Fade to Black by Metallica; It was one of those comfort songs way back when I was in high school and trying to overcome a plethora of addictions and depression. Today it's a reminder to me of everything I've overcome to be where I am.
Another corny one; Call and Answer by the Barenaked Ladies, but it never really did it for me before my daughter was born.
Also, the title theme to Braveheart really stirs my insides.
“First lesson: money is not wealth; Second lesson: experiences are more valuable than possessions; Third lesson: by the time you arrive at your goal it’s never what you imagined it would be so learn to enjoy the process” - unknown
- Tyler
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A'course!!missy wrote:Tyler Morris wrote: Faithfully by Journey as well, but for good reason; it's my wife's and my song. Also by Journey, Still They Ride.
(you knew I was gonna join in if you started talking Journey!)
“First lesson: money is not wealth; Second lesson: experiences are more valuable than possessions; Third lesson: by the time you arrive at your goal it’s never what you imagined it would be so learn to enjoy the process” - unknown
- emmline
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Re: Songs that MOVE you.
Wow. That's asking a lot. I may just be too much of a stoic to be able to participate here. You are safe though, in that I won't nominate Seasons in the Sun.buddhu wrote:I mean *really* move you to the point of tears or to the point of uncontrollably, beaming joy.
The best response I can come up with does risk breaching the hokey barrier, though...and that would be that I'm often moved by swelling instrumentals, such as movie themes such as some compositions of John Williams. The Jurassic Park theme comes to mind.
I would so love to be able to name something meaningful, edgy and cool, but I'm afraid I'm a bit too dopey.