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Tonight it will not take us home
Gonna go to that deep river
Where the water's moving slow
Feels like there's nothing to explain
(Nothing left to hear)
One more or less it's all the same
Now that it's feeling so much colder
(Coming back again)
Just be glad that it's all over
Now that we've closed our eyes so many times
Tonight I cannot see a thing
Gonna go to that deep river
Where the water's moving slow
Feels like there's nothing to explain
(Nothing left to hear)
And now you know just who to blame
For why you're feeling so much colder
(Coming back again)
Just be glad that it's all over
Gonna go to that deep river
great story!
The Russian soul is felt in the song: The night, the snow, the universal power inside requires realization, but there is nowhere to apply it. And the bear didn't come, you're drinking alone...
wanted to stay the night somewhere cheap, so we drove down a forest road for a bit. the first flat pull off spot was in a clearcut, but we were dead tired, so we cuddled up in the back of the station wagon. And laid there, listening to the trees. They weren't screaming. They were whispering about how much they hated the humans who had done this to them. Unlike me, my girlfriend was no tree hugger, so I was surprised when she turned to me with fear in her eyes. we were able to drive the rest of the night, powered by putting some distance between them and us.
ripoff of that 60's song "going to san francisco?"
18 years?
Must be one of the oldest posts extant
Thinking the same thing
Actually, the name came from the Screaming tree treble booster Lee used to have.
hammer on iron - phenomenal!
Love me some genuine rock, but I prefer some jangle and frantic energy rather the dark, heavy kind seen here...
I seem to recall those boys rolling around on stage like beach balls.
In my experience trees will whine and moan during a nasty wind storm but otherwise they tend to whisper. Most urban people would hear it too if they simply shut up long enough and listened.
If you live in a remote cold climate, you'll hear trees crack so loud it echoes through the bush. It's the sap freezing and expanding,
Be sure to wear some flowers in your hair
I love this song but i too hear that
Every
single
time!
Be sure to wear some flowers in your hair
NICE catch. Indeed. Except for this here too brief guitar break which is way more (Mike Campbell? Slash?...) then Scott McKenzie.
Be sure to wear some flowers in your hair
Thank you kindly sir. Cheers.
In my experience trees will whine and moan during a nasty wind storm but otherwise they tend to whisper. Most urban people would hear it too if they simply shut up long enough and listened.
That's how I've rated it.
Great story, thanks for sharing!
Thanks I left out some good parts.
"Wow, that's a real segway for me. I was just about to post about the times I've seen ST when I saw this post. First time was on their Uncle Anesthesia tour and they were opening for Drivin' n Cryin' at the smallest flippin' bar in Melbourne, Florida called the Wine Gallery (they had beer too). To this day I don't know how the brothers and Lanegan fit on the stage which couldn't have been bigger than 10' x 15'. Didn't really know ST at the time though had heard a few songs on the college radio (WFIT - best college radio ever at that time). This bar was about half the size of your typical 7-11. So ST does their set, I'm impressed, but really there to see DNC. Place is packed shoulder to shoulder, and DNC starts rocking out, I'm up front maybe 2 bodies back from Kevn's mike stand (BTW the stage is a whopping four inches high, so you're basically eye level with the band). Anyway, I'm trying to rockout and get some mild slamming going and this guy next to me nudges me and says "this crowd doesn't know how to rock out" I look over and it's one of the big brothers from ST. So I say something in agreement and he proceeds to slam into my shoulder and I back into his and that got the crowd moving. Fun times."
So after slamming around with the guy from ST for most of DNC's show, they come to the end of their set and we start clamoring for an encore and I take my empty beer mug and start banging it on one of the monitors (it's louder that way). Bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam bam, I get tired of banging the bottom of the mug and in my semi drunk condition, I turn the mug on it's side with my hand through the handle. Bam Bam CRASH. The mug shatters, I see blood, look at my hand and my palm is cut decently just below the base of my thumb and bleeding profusely. Some guy that works there rushes in to help in full panic mode. Takes me back to their little kitchen, and I get a paper towel on it while he looks for anything resembling first aid - no luck, but he finds duct tape. So a folded paper towel for gauze and duct tape bandage it is. He's trying to help and very carefully and oh so SLOWLY is wrapping my hand. I grabbed it from him, a couple of quick wraps around the wrist and once over and around the thumb. Ripped the roll off, said thanks, rushed back to the stage for the encore. Great show, one the best of my life.
Some Mickey Mouse advice.
Do beavers count? Outfitted with parachutes?
https://boisestatepublicradio.org/post/parachuting-beavers-idahos-wilderness-yes-it-really-happened
Wow, that's a real segway for me. I was just about to post about the times I've seen ST when I saw this post. First time was on their Uncle Anesthesia tour and they were opening for Drivin' n Cryin' at the smallest flippin' bar in Melbourne, Florida called the Wine Gallery (they had beer too). To this day I don't know how the brothers and Lanegan fit on the stage which couldn't have been bigger than 10' x 15'. Didn't really know ST at the time though had heard a few songs on the college radio (WFIT - best college radio ever at that time). This bar was about half the size of your typical 7-11. So ST does their set, I'm impressed, but really there to see DNC. Place is packed shoulder to shoulder, and DNC starts rocking out, I'm up front maybe 2 bodies back from Kevn's mike stand (BTW the stage is a whopping four inches high, so you're basically eye level with the band). Anyway, I'm trying to rockout and get some mild slamming going and this guy next to me nudges me and says "this crowd doesn't know how to rock out" I look over and it's one of the big brothers from ST. So I say something in agreement and he proceeds to slam into my shoulder and I back into his and that got the crowd moving. Fun times.
Great story, thanks for sharing!
THIS IS WHAT ROCK SOUNDS LIKE
Does anyone else hear a resemblance to "If you're going to San Francisco (wear some flowers in your hair)"? It's in the chord progressions, not the style of the song itself.
Yes, it is a similar progression, (vi - IV - I - V) which is also used in many other songs. It's funny how reminiscent it is in this tune though. It also vaguely reminds me of "Sister Seagull" by Be Bop Deluxe - different chords though.
This is from that era when Rosanne Barr had a hit tv show and all the department stores sold black combat boots and flannel shirts for women. No need to revisit that time.
Rather than focusing on Roseanne, boots and flannel you could have focused on the music. It was the last great rock and roll era.
Agreed! How about some more cuts from this album? "Butterfly" is a great tune.
They're almost Drivin' N Cryin' underrated.
Wow, that's a real segway for me. I was just about to post about the times I've seen ST when I saw this post. First time was on their Uncle Anesthesia tour and they were opening for Drivin' n Cryin' at the smallest flippin' bar in Melbourne, Florida called the Wine Gallery (they had beer too). To this day I don't know how the brothers and Lanegan fit on the stage which couldn't have been bigger than 10' x 15'. Didn't really know ST at the time though had heard a few songs on the college radio (WFIT - best college radio ever at that time). This bar was about half the size of your typical 7-11. So ST does their set, I'm impressed, but really there to see DNC. Place is packed shoulder to shoulder, and DNC starts rocking out, I'm up front maybe 2 bodies back from Kevn's mike stand (BTW the stage is a whopping four inches high, so you're basically eye level with the band). Anyway, I'm trying to rockout and get some mild slamming going and this guy next to me nudges me and says "this crowd doesn't know how to rock out" I look over and it's one of the big brothers from ST. So I say something in agreement and he proceeds to slam into my shoulder and I back into his and that got the crowd moving. Fun times.
My "first" was Mother Love Bone. A friend had a mixtape (from his older brother, natch) that he presented to us for consideration like a pearl in its shell, still dripping and covered in sea-bottom sand. We were speechless.
Middleton wrote:
What he said.
Definitely what he said...!
Does anyone else hear a resemblance to "If you're going to San Francisco (wear some flowers in your hair)"? It's in the chord progressions, not the style of the song itself.
Good call!
Does anyone else hear a resemblance to "If you're going to San Francisco (wear some flowers in your hair)"? It's in the chord progressions, not the style of the song itself.
This is from that era when Rosanne Barr had a hit tv show and all the department stores sold black combat boots and flannel shirts for women. No need to revisit that time.
Nothing hotter than a woman in flannel and combat boots.
citybiker wrote:
This is from that era when Rosanne Barr had a hit tv show and all the department stores sold black combat boots and flannel shirts for women. No need to revisit that time.
This is from the era before you were born. Go back to bed little guy.
What he said.
This is from that era when Rosanne Barr had a hit tv show and all the department stores sold black combat boots and flannel shirts for women. No need to revisit that time.
Have all his solo work and cannot go wrong with any of them especially Whiskey for the Holy Ghost.
wouldn't that be awesome...
Sounds very screaming!
LOL! Yes, and I have to wonder if you and I are from the same age cohort.
Never really paid attention to the Screaming Trees before.
Sounds alright.
Parts of this song remind me of Neil Young's Heart of Gold... is it my imagination?
I wondered what was familiar in this song, then I read your post below.
I am sorry that I missed out picking up on them before; but much thanks to RP for giving me the chance to catch up at last.
They're almost Drivin' N Cryin' underrated.
I miss Drivin' N Cryin'. A good friend of mine who's a big DNC fan calls them "Drinkin' N Drivin'"
They're almost Drivin' N Cryin' underrated.
Gotta believe that these lyrics are H influenced:
Now that we've closed our eyes so many times
Tonight I cannot see a thing
Gonna go to that deep river
Where the water's moving slow
8
I only have one of their albums (Dust) and the lyrics to "All I Know" from that one seem similarly influenced:
"Bite the thorn that pierce the skin
Come back down to earth again
The cold is creeping deep inside
Disconnect the telephone line"
Not a rarity with Seattle rockers to get mixed up in this stuff — i.e. Layne Staley, Kurt Cobain.
Hell yeah! There was a lot of great stuff to come out of Seattle besides the obvious. The Screaming Trees are one of my favorites as is Green River. Green River is arguably the original Seattle sound band. They date back to the mid-eighties. If I remember right, one of the guys in Pearl Jam was in Green River. Anyway, I'm always psyched to hear this song on RP :-)
Both Stone Gossard and Jeff Ament were in Green River. What about the band that Pearl Jam rose from the ashes of, Mother Love Bone?
I still have Bon Jovi nightmares.
Hell yeah! There was a lot of great stuff to come out of Seattle besides the obvious. The Screaming Trees are one of my favorites as is Green River. Green River is arguably the original Seattle sound band. They date back to the mid-eighties. If I remember right, one of the guys in Pearl Jam was in Green River. Anyway, I'm always psyched to hear this song on RP :-)
Thinking the same thing
Never really paid attention to the Screaming Trees before.
Sounds alright.
Parts of this song remind me of Neil Young's Heart of Gold... is it my imagination?
Gotta believe that these lyrics are H influenced:
Now that we've closed our eyes so many times
Tonight I cannot see a thing
Gonna go to that deep river
Where the water's moving slow
8
Thatza Shame
. . . and quaff some fine Pacific Northwest IPAs. . .
you have NO CLUE about music. you're auditorally retarded and psychologically infantile. comparing the ST's to Hootie is like comparing heroin to Tylenol PM...one kills the pain and takes you to another level of consciousness, while the other kills the pain and puts you to sleep. i challenge you to listen to Lanegan's solo albums "Whiskey For The Holy Ghost" and "The Winding Sheet", or the Screaming Trees albums "Invisible Lantern" and "Uncle Anesthesia", and still have the audacity to mention these artists in the same breath. if you can...you're not only clueless, you're a damn liar.
Whoa - easy, tiger. You may want to step out of the cell, walk around the island, breathe some of that bay salt air, and gaze at the Golden Gate bridge. While these guys' voices and styles are pretty different, I'm not so sure they're so different that megisi's intellectual competence is at issue.
ojay~alcatraz wrote:
you have NO CLUE about music. you're auditorally retarded and psychologically infantile. comparing the ST's to Hootie is like comparing heroin to Tylenol PM...one kills the pain and takes you to another level of consciousness, while the other kills the pain and puts you to sleep. i challenge you to listen to Lanegan's solo albums "Whiskey For The Holy Ghost" and "The Winding Sheet", or the Screaming Trees albums "Invisible Lantern" and "Uncle Anesthesia", and still have the audacity to mention these artists in the same breath. if you can...you're not only clueless, you're a damn liar.
you have NO CLUE about music. you're auditorally retarded and psychologically infantile. comparing the ST's to Hootie is like comparing heroin to Tylenol PM...one kills the pain and takes you to another level of consciousness, while the other kills the pain and puts you to sleep. i challenge you to listen to Lanegan's solo albums "Whiskey For The Holy Ghost" and "The Winding Sheet", or the Screaming Trees albums "Invisible Lantern" and "Uncle Anesthesia", and still have the audacity to mention these artists in the same breath. if you can...you're not only clueless, you're a damn liar.
Gutter Twins. CD is Saturnalia. Awesomeness in an understated Lanegan/Dulli way...
MARK IS AWESOME!
he's a part of an outfit with greg dulli from the afghan whigs. i heard good things.
...oh why can't they just reunite for one tour?
'cause they'd probably kill one another...
Have we all voted yet?
If not, get off yer butt!!!
Lanegan has a great voice, very distinctive.
Shame that he's such a primadonna. I went to a solo gig a couple of years ago, and he really let the audience know how annoyed he was that evening (with the location? something he ate? I'll never know). Anyway, after only 80 minutes or so he just left without a thank-you-and-goodbye and without any encores. The general feeling was that it was probably better for everybody that way, and that next time we'll just stay at home and listen to his CDs.
lanegan. yeah.
There's not a time I tune in that I don't consider donating MORE than my twice-a-year auto amount. Love the Paradise.