Avg rating:
Your rating:
Total ratings: 3562
Length: 3:38
Plays (last 30 days): 4
As she moves from one to the next, her spirit grows thin
And when she falls in love with one, it's hard but it's true
But it's oh so much harder when that man is you
I got lost on the river, but I got found
I got lost on the river, but I didn't drown
One stormy day I was out at sea
The waves they rolled and tumbled over me
I spied dry land and a tall pale tree
I knew that soon that's where I'd like to be
My sweetheart left me for another one
And now I wait for the next rising sun
I got lost on the river, but I got found
I got lost on the river, but I didn't drown
I got lost on the river, but I didn't go down
I got lost on the river, but I got found
HOLY COW! BillG's son Taylor is in this group?!?!
Um ... I don't think so. Checking the Wikipedia page says Taylor is the son of Lenny Goldsmith.
Main Mix - 6
Well I must be listening RP a lot since I heard it at least 4 times last month
The Wikipedia column says: "The New Basement Tapes is a British-American musical supergroup made up of ..." Elvis Costello and a bunch of folks I've never heard of.
Am I getting old, or is the term supergroup being over-used?
I'm with ya', uncle, it is overused. But according to Wikipedia, the definition is very broad: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supergroup_(music)
To expound: if you have attained any fame previously, any group you join thereafter -- that has some other artist of any fame -- 'tis a supergroup! Boom.
The definition of Supergroup should include the criterion that the new group attain some appreciable fame of their own. Some examples come to mind: Blind Faith, Asia (arguably), Traveling Wilburys.
Check out Wikipedia's idea of who the supergroups are: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_musical_supergroups.
Too many just aren't.
sounds like Patty Smith
It might, but it doesn't sound anything like Patti Smith, thank God.
Love learning of new tunes (new to me) through RP.
Thank-you
Am I getting old, or is the term supergroup being over-used?
Not overused in this case, so...
Surrialistic... Dhali... He is resting..
The next day we went to the Country Music Hall of fame and learned more about this country's music including rock and blues.
She is one of the best.
Nice though the bridge movement is unnecessary and distracts as does the banks moving beyond the bridge
We need a single-ended tube amplifier and some high efficiency speaker pair.
Am I getting old, or is the term supergroup being over-used?
Have you heard of My Morning Jacket? Mumford and Sons? Dawes? Not exactly unknowns. I'll admit I'd never heard of the Carolina Chocolate Drops, but that's just one of many, many groups I would have never discovered without Radio Paradise.
Cause we asked for it.
Y'know, if these folks stick with it, they could really go places... Wow.
c.
makes me think of 1950's bible epics
so I just cant take this song seriously
I keep seeing Moses wooing Cleopatra with slaves fanning them, playing harps, and oohing
Am I getting old, or is the term supergroup being over-used?
I absolutely love the idea of this entire album.What T Bone Burnett did with these lost lyrics and the artists who came together to make the music to those lyrics is astounding.
"ooooOOOOOoooooOOOOOooooo..... ooooOOOoooOOOOoooo...."
(starts wondering if they're ghosts now)
Don't worry Timmus, the ghosts are hiding in the new basement, just behind the tapes. The old basement was just getting too scary after #19 got lost on the river that flows through it.
"ooooOOOOOoooooOOOOOooooo..... ooooOOOoooOOOOoooo...."
(starts wondering if they're ghosts now)
Ding! - exactly
I Like!
Gorgeous
I like it, but I have to be in the right mood to appreciate it.
Somehow, I find that hard to believe. Isn't it more like... 207?
Rhiannon Giddens (https://rhiannongiddens.com/)
But right on all other counts. She is great!
LOL. It's just music. It'll pass.
...... Booring.........
One listener's Ho-Hum is another's 'elegaic', and the dividing line is thin and flexible. In my current mood, this counts as elegaic gospel, though I could see how it could be tedious in another context. Ver' nahce, anyhoo - 7 from the chilled Nottingham jury.
...... Booring.........
Ag3nt0rang3 wrote:
that's not much play time, not sure what your problem is.
Simply and respectfully ask RP to take this tune out of rotation for a few years. The song is like fingernails on a chalkboard.
Plays in last 30 days: 8
that's not much play time, not sure what your problem is.
Plays in last 30 days: 8
walkerpub wrote:
Good song. Good delivery.
Thanks for a very mellow Saturday night. I've been listening the last eight-nine hours.
Just floating along the flow of the music.
She does have a lovely and powerful voice and she a very talented musician as well.
Lost On The River: The New Basement Tapes is a music event 47 years in the making. It's an historic album project from five of music's finest artists — Elvis Costello, Rhiannon Giddens (Carolina Chocolate Drops), Taylor Goldsmith (Dawes), Jim James (My Morning Jacket) and Marcus Mumford (Mumford & Sons) — in unique collaboration with a 26-year-old Bob Dylan. Produced by project creator T Bone Burnett, the album was recorded in March, 2014 at Capitol Studios in Hollywood, where the artists and Burnett convened for two weeks to write and create music for a treasure trove of long-lost lyrics handwritten by Bob Dylan in 1967 during the period that generated the recording of the legendary Basement Tapes. The collective completed and recorded dozens of songs, the first 20 of which appear on this deluxe edition.
What an interesting concept. Can't go wrong with T Bone Burnett producing. Added to my Amazon shopping cart.
Thanks for the intro to this!
Thank you for posting this! I was intrigued by this song and was going to go look up info on it myself - but you saved me the trouble. Good stuff!
This is wonderful !
Rhiannon voice is really great....
Lost On The River: The New Basement Tapes is a music event 47 years in the making. It's an historic album project from five of music's finest artists — Elvis Costello, Rhiannon Giddens (Carolina Chocolate Drops), Taylor Goldsmith (Dawes), Jim James (My Morning Jacket) and Marcus Mumford (Mumford & Sons) — in unique collaboration with a 26-year-old Bob Dylan. Produced by project creator T Bone Burnett, the album was recorded in March, 2014 at Capitol Studios in Hollywood, where the artists and Burnett convened for two weeks to write and create music for a treasure trove of long-lost lyrics handwritten by Bob Dylan in 1967 during the period that generated the recording of the legendary Basement Tapes. The collective completed and recorded dozens of songs, the first 20 of which appear on this deluxe edition.
What an interesting concept. Can't go wrong with T Bone Burnett producing. Added to my Amazon shopping cart.
Thanks for the intro to this!