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Traveling Wilburys — End Of The Line
Album: Volume 1
Avg rating:
7.8

Your rating:
Total ratings: 4010









Released: 1988
Length: 3:24
Plays (last 30 days): 6
Well, it's all right, riding around in the breeze
Well, it's all right, if you live the life you please
Well, it's all right, doing the best you can
Well, it's all right, as long as you lend a hand

You can sit around and wait for the phone to ring ''(At the end of the line)''
Waiting for someone to tell you everything ''(At the end of the line)''
Sit around and wonder what tomorrow will bring ''(At the end of the line)''
Maybe a diamond ring

Well, it's all right, even if they say you're wrong
Well, it's all right, sometimes you gotta be strong
Well, it's all right, as long as you got somewhere to lay
Well, it's all right, every day is Judgment Day

Maybe somewhere down the road aways ''(At the end of the line)''
You'll think of me and wonder where I am these days ''(At the end of the line)''
Maybe somewhere down the road when somebody plays ''(At the end of the line)''
[[The Jimi Hendrix Experience:Purple Haze|Purple Haze]]

Well, it's all right, even when push comes to shove
Well, it's all right, if you got someone to love
Well, it's all right, everything'll work out fine
Well, it's all right, we're going to the end of the line

Don't have to be ashamed of the car I drive ''(At the end of the line)''
I'm just glad to be here, happy to be alive ''(At the end of the line)''
It don't matter if you're by my side ''(At the end of the line)''
I'm satisfied

Well, it's all right, even if you're old and gray
Well, it's all right, you still got something to say
Well, it's all right, remember to live and let live
Well, it's all right, the best you can do is forgive

Well, it's all right ''(all right)'', riding around on the breeze
Well, it's all right ''(all right)'', if you live the life you please
Well, it's all right, even if the sun don't shine
Well, it's all right ''(all right)'', we're going to the end of the line
Comments (450)add comment
 itsme_bygolly wrote:

This won't be popular but the Wilburys are a case of where the parts are greater than the whole. Not a criticism, just an observation. Does anyone actually prefer the Wilbuys to each artist in the groups individual artistic efforts? For me, I don't. It's like the artists' endeavors are diluted and compromised by each other. Don't get me wrong. I still listen and enjoy them. Just for me, I preferred each artists' prior work more.




Surely they just felt like doing something easy and fun to get them out of the house, and good for them.  I like the music made by all of these guys, but never found any Wilbury's track to be anything but throwaway silliness.
This is such a great song. I love the way they arrange the vocals, with Tom singing the verses and the choruses shared by George, Jeff, and Roy. It always makes me a little sad at the end when George wraps it up – it reminds me that he, Tom, and Roy are no longer with us.
Only Bob and Jeff left   RIP Roy, George and Tom. Legends one and all
An absolute epic masterpiece!
None of the last 100 songs, including this one, didn't reach an 8. Maybe some people listening picked the wrong station!
Love hearing all these voices together. Sounds better than ever in 2023.
Just bizarre to think that Roy Orbison's been dead for 35 years.
Just realised I've been singing the wrong lyric for the last 30 odd years. I thought it was  'Well it's alright as long as you've got someone to lay"
Pure craftsmanship
Bumped from a 9 to 10

This is great music by great musicians. 
Roy's voice is the best
 jasonthehead wrote:

Another one for my funeral playlist, music helps heal grief, and this one hits the right notes!



We're thinking the same I have told my son when it's time to spread the ashes here is a list of songs to play. This being one of them. 
This reminds me of Dennis Waterman's theme tune to BBC's New Tricks.
 belegato wrote:

Jeff Lynne has a lot to answer for - middle of the road crap. 



Jeff is a living genius !    
Travelling Wilburys was one of the CD's I won, along with a portable CD/Tape deck, in a radio competition. (back in 1988 of course)

It was without doubt, the best of the 10 CD's I got.
The CD/Tape deck was destroyed when my brother put it on the roof of his VW Beetle and drove off, forgetting it was there. 

Good times.

This is one of the few times where I think a dancing, guitar playing banana is appropriate: 
Bill knows he can goose a good song's rating by putting it after meandering nonsense like Death Cab for Cutie. Also, this is just great.
 mach-hog wrote:

Best supergroup ever



I remember when the album came out in 1988. Blown away. Fantastic music. I think I wore out the CD.
Best supergroup ever
Jeff Lynne has a lot to answer for - middle of the road crap. 
 bruceandjenna wrote:


Old Chinese curse (maybe)
"May you live too long."


I believe it was "May you live in interesting times."

A curse indeed.
I really enjoy this piece (the video is especially good), but the idea that this music was made thirty years ago is just ... depressing.
 Queue wrote:
Looking at the picture, and realizing there's only 2 of these guys left...  


Old Chinese curse (maybe)
"May you live too long."
Thanks RP.
The real thing.
Inspires so much joy!! 
Too late now, of course, but for a while I thought it would’ve been *chef’s kiss* perfect to have brought in Randy Newman when Orbison died. 

BTW: if you ever see someone traveling down the road with the license plate WILBURY, wave at me.
 jimmy99s wrote:

Incredible.! God bless George Harrison for cobbling this unlikely band together. Not sure anyone else could have brought together such a group - let alone got such an outstanding pair of albums out of them! 



You are so right. Miss those guys everyday just listening RP.
 Queue wrote:
Looking at the picture, and realizing there's only 2 of these guys left...  


And oddly, it is the two on the left side of the picture who are still with us... 
Been watching "New Tricks". Theme gives the nod to this
Oh man I love Wikipedia, and now I love the Wilburys even more:

"The five musicians also bonded over a shared appreciation of the English comedy troupe Monty Python.[22] Harrison, who had worked with the members of Monty Python on various productions by his company HandMade Films since the late 1970s, particularly appreciated Orbison's gift for impersonation and his ability to recite entire sketches by the troupe."
 itsme_bygolly wrote:
This won't be popular but the Wilburys are a case of where the parts are greater than the whole. Not a criticism, just an observation. Does anyone actually prefer the Wilbuys to each artist in the groups individual artistic efforts? For me, I don't. It's like the artists' endeavors are diluted and compromised by each other. Don't get me wrong. I still listen and enjoy them. Just for me, I preferred each artists' prior work more.
 
I think you have to bear in mind that this a bunch who were past their peak phase, and I would therefore say that the overall effect is greater than the sum of the somewhat elderly and creaking parts, particularly when lubricated with the joie de vivre of doing what the heck they want to do instead of having to revisit (=keep churning out) their previous successes and failing to do them justice! Mark Knopfler did a similar thing with the Notting Hillbillies. Whether the collective result trancends any individual peak  depends on how much a fan you are of the individuals. 
PHENOMENAL 
 itsme_bygolly wrote:
This won't be popular but the Wilburys are a case of where the parts are greater than the whole. Not a criticism, just an observation. Does anyone actually prefer the Wilbuys to each artist in the groups individual artistic efforts? For me, I don't. It's like the artists' endeavors are diluted and compromised by each other. Don't get me wrong. I still listen and enjoy them. Just for me, I preferred each artists' prior work more.
 
I certainly prefer the Wilburys to anything Jeff Lynne ever did on his own or with ELO.
 itsme_bygolly wrote:
This won't be popular but the Wilburys are a case of where the parts are greater than the whole. Not a criticism, just an observation. Does anyone actually prefer the Wilbuys to each artist in the groups individual artistic efforts? For me, I don't. It's like the artists' endeavors are diluted and compromised by each other. Don't get me wrong. I still listen and enjoy them. Just for me, I preferred each artists' prior work more.
 

Totally agree, except for Tom Petty  who is outclassed big time.
They obviously did it for the fun, not to make great music.
This won't be popular but the Wilburys are a case of where the parts are greater than the whole. Not a criticism, just an observation. Does anyone actually prefer the Wilbuys to each artist in the groups individual artistic efforts? For me, I don't. It's like the artists' endeavors are diluted and compromised by each other. Don't get me wrong. I still listen and enjoy them. Just for me, I preferred each artists' prior work more.
Another one for my funeral playlist, music helps heal grief, and this one hits the right notes!
¡¡Excellent song!! Thanks RP.
Looking at the picture, and realizing there's only 2 of these guys left...  
Damn it!!! I can hardly imagine how much fun these guys had making this record. Solid 9 (but tending to 10 !!!)
 Solanus wrote:
It's kind of odd that I really like this song. I am a fan of really only Roy Orbison. I can acknowledge the greatness of all of them individually, but I PSD every Tom Petty song (I've just heard enough of him to not want to hear any more) and almost every Beatles-related tune (same deal), skip past a good chunk of Dylan's performances (sometimes the voice is too much), and have no interest, good or bad, about anything from ELO. This song & much of the album just works, and it doesn't have to make sense logically to do that.
 
How dare you skip a Beatles tune! Heathen!
Nice that every time you play a Wilburys track you are doing a triple tribute. Bless them all. George, Roy and now Tom. Love them all !
 Solanus wrote:
It's kind of odd that I really like this song. I am a fan of really only Roy Orbison. I can acknowledge the greatness of all of them individually, but I PSD every Tom Petty song (I've just heard enough of him to not want to hear any more) and almost every Beatles-related tune (same deal), skip past a good chunk of Dylan's performances (sometimes the voice is too much), and have no interest, good or bad, about anything from ELO. This song & much of the album just works, and it doesn't have to make sense logically to do that.
 
Or....the sum is greater than the parts? 
Or.....this is such a great tune that it has to be liked!  ;-) 

You can just feel the MALIBU vibe coming through...Long Live RP!!
Long Live                                                                                                                                   Radio Paradise
My rating:                                                                                                                              9 -OUTSTANDING
It's kind of odd that I really like this song. I am a fan of really only Roy Orbison. I can acknowledge the greatness of all of them individually, but I PSD every Tom Petty song (I've just heard enough of him to not want to hear any more) and almost every Beatles-related tune (same deal), skip past a good chunk of Dylan's performances (sometimes the voice is too much), and have no interest, good or bad, about anything from ELO. This song & much of the album just works, and it doesn't have to make sense logically to do that.
That was just the tonic needed to kick into this day. Yesterday in the Great 'Merican Sh*t Show was one for the history books, and even though we've gotten acclimated to the Great 'Merican Sh*t Show by now, yesterday had its own unique and rather cruel and brutal edge to it, or so it seemed to me as Julian Assange but more to Ted Kaczynski now got hauled off to the nearest pokey. Strange times indeed. And don't we love 'em?! I'm sure in for full on fascination. But yeah, today's got to be a whole different vibe and attitude. Too much of those kinda yesterdays, well... 
Never really got that.... sorry
I love how humble Jeff Lynne is about this whole enterprise.
Incredible.! God bless George Harrison for cobbling this unlikely band together. Not sure anyone else could have brought together such a group - let alone got such an outstanding pair of albums out of them! 
 lizardking wrote:
I'm surprised at some of the (negative) comments - considering the story behind this "band" and especially the Jimi Hendrix reference, not to mention the awesome tribute to Ray O in the video with an empty (and rocking) rocking chair with his guitar in it.  I don't know, I really like the grove, all the musicians, etc.  It's a 9 for me.  Peace, Love and RnR - in whatever order!
 
I couldn't agree more. I always thought of the Purple Haze lyric as just that, but you gave a new way to think about it. And Roy's guitar in the chair and his picture on the wall, I never noticed it a greasy teenager who really liked the Wilbury's!!!
 Djoy wrote:
Waaaaa, I want more Wilbury music...missing everything about them.
 
Me too! Love me some music where everyone takes a turn!!! 
Waaaaa, I want more Wilbury music...missing everything about them.
Increasing to 9 - O U T S T A N D I N G
Alas, only Bob and Jeff haven't reached the end of the line.   : (
just when you thought it was the end of the line....just be
...satisfied. 
To me 8 - M o s t  E x c e l l e n t   
 stalfnzo wrote:
This song automatically gets 1 point taken away for having Dylan on it. 

 
Just for that...I'm going to bump my 10 → ....shit....

And Dylan's not on this...that's Lucky Wilbury!!

 and now, unfortunately with Tom gone as well...RIP

WonderLizard wrote:
There will be no Wilburys reunion so long as Roy and George remain dead.

 


I still really like this - it's sad, though, like Warren Zevon's "Back in the High Life Again"
Some songs are a sprint, but this is a leisurely stroll enjoying the time.
No power lifting, no shrieking, no twerking, no rapping. 
Extraordinary songwriters enjoying their place in the world. What a great time.
I'm surprised at some of the (negative) comments - considering the story behind this "band" and especially the Jimi Hendrix reference, not to mention the awesome tribute to Ray O in the video with an empty (and rocking) rocking chair with his guitar in it.  I don't know, I really like the grove, all the musicians, etc.  It's a **10 for me.  Long Live RP!!**
Not sure for the hate here, I like it. Musicians getting together and having a good time, nothing wrong with that, just wish Roy was around longer so we could've gotten more from them. 
annoying.
This song automatically gets 1 point taken away for having Dylan on it. 

I hated this band when they got together in the 1980's....

 

.....still do.


Together we're singing it's time to get her,  I'm still working out on when to say I'll be with you again.
There will be no Wilburys reunion so long as Roy and George remain dead.
 grazie wrote:
A bunch of has beens singing a very mediocre song. And this appears to be the best they did since it's the only one that ever gets played. 

 
Grrrrrrrr.how can you be so negative about a group of veterans who have composed music to which millions have rocked,sung, moaned, shouted, cried, loved,married, divorced, given birth, and died.  When I die, sing me away with Layla. They have surely blessed the earth with more gifts than I have, and I'll bet, more gifts than you.

I too miss Roy and George.
An outstanding 'All Star' band!!!!!
Fantastic. That is all.
It is always aright at the end of the line
And then ... back at it again!  
{#Roflol} 

Every end is a beginning! 
liked it back then, like it even more now!  :) 
Priceless.
 AndyJ wrote:

Always enjoyed this song, album, group...

Today, they seem to speak directly to me.  Guess it's the Boomer thing of poet/philosophy coming with instrumental accompaniment and pop or less formal format.  Not mushed up behind cloud of sound. Not so loud it hurts the ears of those who still hear...

And now RP sends DeVotchKa... Same vein, not likely to ever be paired by any other Robot-Radio playing an ever shrinking array of "MY" music... RP has opened my ears to new artists, sounds and I have added a few hundred CDs to my collection... Yep, Boomer Style, buying full album vs. singles... 

Point of this ramble: 1) End of Line is speaking to me today. 2) I love Radio Paradise and tell -all- I meet about the unique value I find. 3) I wish all who listen would spread the word and build the listener base. Course that may lead to buyout offers, OTOH it may lead to well earned rewards for job well done.

Thank You



 
thumbs up Andy oregon dude also and RP is the real deal! 
Always a joy to hear such talented souls sing together.
Printing out these lyrics to put next to my computer for a smile on Mondays....thanks Bill and the Wilburys....I needed that!
Nice!
27 years ago, already? Jaysus! Time warp. 
 
10, for sheer happiness.
Me and my Mom loved this song! 
 Highspirits wrote:

Sitting here on christmas day reading old posts and this one caught my eye. There's something funny and dada or surreal about it, heh?  Carrying a ladder while singing!  Who would have thought it would spark such feelings?
Thanks jamelch, for sharing your moment of magical love inspired by this fun tune and more.   And I am glad that Roy O, George, Tom and Jeff got together and made this heartfelt honest music.

 
Now THAT'S a man that lives up to his name.  Wonderful comment...about someone else's comment.
 jamelch wrote:
One day in I was in Santa Cruz and two guys came out of a store carrying a ladder and singing this song.  It was magical. Love this and love the Wilburys!!

 
Sitting here on christmas day reading old posts and this one caught my eye. There's something funny and dada or surreal about it, heh?  Carrying a ladder while singing!  Who would have thought it would spark such feelings?
Thanks jamelch, for sharing your moment of magical love inspired by this fun tune and more.   And I am glad that Roy O, George, Tom and Jeff got together and made this heartfelt honest music.

Always enjoyed this song, album, group...

Today, they seem to speak directly to me.  Guess it's the Boomer thing of poet/philosophy coming with instrumental accompaniment and pop or less formal format.  Not mushed up behind cloud of sound. Not so loud it hurts the ears of those who still hear...

And now RP sends DeVotchKa... Same vein, not likely to ever be paired by any other Robot-Radio playing an ever shrinking array of "MY" music... RP has opened my ears to new artists, sounds and I have added a few hundred CDs to my collection... Yep, Boomer Style, buying full album vs. singles... 

Point of this ramble: 1) End of Line is speaking to me today. 2) I love Radio Paradise and tell -all- I meet about the unique value I find. 3) I wish all who listen would spread the word and build the listener base. Course that may lead to buyout offers, OTOH it may lead to well earned rewards for job well done.

Thank You



Absolutely !!!   Bill has impeccable taste in music !!!!

 

jayvee2 wrote:
A great, true Supergroup writing fun and memorable ditties and obviously having so much fun as well!
 


Always reminds me of getting set up in Shizuoka, my first stint in Japan, hanging with Tony B from Cali, drinking sake & beer and girl-watching, jamming to this and thinking, Wow, the old rockers were really having fun making this one — &they sure hit it out of the park!
Petty went the full Dylan after the Wilburys. Before he favored Bob(in the Nashville Skyline days, especially) ... after it was like Bob was using Tom's voice.
Lately he is back the the old Tom.
Everybody in my mushrooming multitude of homeless camps loves this song...
A great, true Supergroup writing fun and memorable ditties and obviously having so much fun as well!
Wow. This song sure stirs folks' blood. My band tried to do this one. The lead guitarist fought us like crazy. First, the drummer couldn't keep time. Next, the bass player (that would be me) couldn't keep time. Then our singer and rhythm guitarist couldn't keep time. Turned out that he had the image of the empty rocking chair from the video in his head, and couldn't abide doing a song about a dead, er, rocker. After too many abortive attempts, we gave it up. Still did "Handle With Care." The drummer sang Orbison's parts and did quite well. We even managed to keep the time.
 kcar wrote:

In other words: 

Lebowski from the film
"Yeah, well, you know, that's just, like, your opinion, man."

(Ever notice how you don't see BillG and the Big Lebowski in the same room at the same time? Wonder which phone booth he uses...) 

 
Still at it?  hounding me and other commenters you don't like is not contributing.  I see you are now the new hall monitor.  

Also, quit speaking for the owners of this station.  If they want to comment, then I am sure they will.  Who are you to speak for the owners like you do?  

Why don't you focus on making meaningful contributions to this comment board and stop worrying about snarky or negative comments.  Snark is not going to go away.  Most people who contribute make snarky or negative opinions here.  It's only a few arrogant dipshits who have a problem with it.  Probably 75% of my comments are positive or neutral.

There is this small but quite vocal contingency on the web who simply come to comment boards to police them from snarky or negative comments, or grammar.  THEY DO NOT REALLY CONTRIBUTE.  You people are losers, pure and simple.  Most web commenters are on board with the program.  Your time is coming to an end. 

 

 
{#Wave}... the foot is tapping
 Papasmeg wrote:
Great follow on from the Beatles when I'm 64, but for me the Wilburys don't quite hit the spot. Such an amazing mix of musicians, maybe too much of a good thing?  

 
same 2 in a row today!
alllright 
I love everything about the Wilbury's & sad there's no more...just miss Roy & George.
Love the playful diversity, but have seen here how many folks don't care for them…the ole different strokes philosophy
and wish it was more widespread in this world….
 
how can you hate this, whole album recorded in a weekend, straight in to Classic status.
Ah, the Traveling Horde of Rhythm Guitarists. : )

I was actually just playing this song a few hours ago on my 20+ year old Stratocaster. It was one of the first songs I learned after I got it. 
 h8rhater wrote:

Somebody got beat up in high school.

 
I love you hater hater...I just wish you were not such a wa wa wa wuss about people hating your songs you big cwy baby...dont go being a pussy now like you usually do when someone posts something you dont agree with
Hearing that nice, upbeat intro just makes me melancholy ... sic transit, etc.
A bunch of has beens singing a very mediocre song. And this appears to be the best they did since it's the only one that ever gets played. 
 Poacher wrote:
Dying to see these guys on tour. . . 

 
yeah you'd have to, since two of them are indeed dead...
 rdo wrote:

It would also be pointless to have a comment board without comments that expressed what we really think.  Unlike you, I am in favor of the incivility of the WWW.  The web is the one sanctuary on our planet where we can say what we really think without getting kicked out of the room by the person in charge, the Boss.  The Boss is usually the leader of whatever clique you belong to, whether it be a dinner party where the Boss is a social leader surrounded by sychophants; a professional association where our livlihoods depend on our opinions; or even amongst good friends whose myriad sensibilities we do not want to offend.  All of this conspires to shut us up.  Zip our lips. Hold it in.  But on the WWW, we can say what we think. It is a refuge from the bullies.  Let's keep it that way.  And it's OK if it get's heated now and then.  It's healthy.  A healthy incivility is a good thing.  All opinions are welcome here, even those trolls.   

 
Somebody got beat up in high school.
One day in I was in Santa Cruz and two guys came out of a store carrying a ladder and singing this song.  It was magical. Love this and love the Wilburys!!
Dying to see these guys on tour. . . 
Really looking forward to the day this is no longer in ANY rotation.... Blahhhh
This album is one of my all time favorites. What an awesome collaboration between Bob Dylan, George Harrison, Jeffrey Lynne,  Roy Orbison and Tom Petty. It's allllllllllllllllright!
Great succession of songs tonight while I have to work on a Saturday evening.
 
This is the most disappointing group ever, "Superstar" or otherwise.  Tedium and tediummer.
 gjr wrote:
this could have been a truly GREAT album - if not for Jeff Lynne's insistence on making everything in the world sound like ELO.  You have on one hand, arguably, three of the top ten most influential artists from the sixties plus tom petty and jeff lynne and he somehow still made it sound like ELO.  what a waste of talent.....

 
If Lynn was not there, likely would not have been any album
 sirdroseph wrote:


Oh yes, Dylan, Harrison, Lynne, Orbison and Petty haven't sold anything.  As a matter of fact, it is doubtful most people have even heard of these quirky, indie guys.{#Rolleyes} 
And I might be wrong, but I am pretty sure Harrison was in the Beatles.

 
and Roy was just a very small god....
 oilydwarf wrote:

maybe honesty rather than incivility?

 
Yeah, I did stress honesty in my post...but also…maybe thicker skin, a sense of humor and irony, instead of always looking for reasons to express self-righteous indignation?  If everyone followed all the rules and prohibitions expressed here about what is not civil, then no one would post anything.
this could have been a truly GREAT album - if not for Jeff Lynne's insistence on making everything in the world sound like ELO.  You have on one hand, arguably, three of the top ten most influential artists from the sixties plus tom petty and jeff lynne and he somehow still made it sound like ELO.  what a waste of talent.....
 lemmoth wrote:

Curious rating from you, maybe.  Because most all your high rating are for bands/artists that sold stratospheric amounts of records (U2, Beatles, Radiohead, Grateful Dead) and your poor ratings are reserved for quirky, introspective, quieter sorts.

 

Oh yes, Dylan, Harrison, Lynne, Orbison and Petty haven't sold anything.  As a matter of fact, it is doubtful most people have even heard of these quirky, indie guys.{#Rolleyes} 
And I might be wrong, but I am pretty sure Harrison was in the Beatles.
Maybe somewhere down the road aways
You'll think of me, wonder where I am these days
Maybe somewhere down the road...when somebody plays
Purple Haze

Ha! Great lines, there!
 rdo wrote:

It would also be pointless to have a comment board without comments that expressed what we really think.  Unlike you, I am in favor of the incivility of the WWW.  The web is the one sanctuary on our planet where we can say what we really think without getting kicked out of the room by the person in charge, the Boss.  The Boss is usually the leader of whatever clique you belong to, whether it be a dinner party where the Boss is a social leader surrounded by sychophants; a professional association where our livlihoods depend on our opinions; or even amongst good friends whose myriad sensibilities we do not want to offend.  All of this conspires to shut us up.  Zip our lips. Hold it in.  But on the WWW, we can say what we think. It is a refuge from the bullies.  Let's keep it that way.  And it's OK if it get's heated now and then.  It's healthy.  A healthy incivility is a good thing.  All opinions are welcome here, even those trolls.   
 
We be dancing...  hope you are having a great weekend right this minute...

The online disinhibition effect...

While online, some people self-disclose or act out more frequently or intensely than they would in person. This article explores six factors that interact with each other in creating this online disinhibition effect: dissociative anonymity, invisibility, asynchronicity, solipsistic introjection, dissociative imagination, and minimization of authority. Personality variables also will influence the extent of this disinhibition. Rather than thinking of disinhibition as the revealing of an underlying "true self," we can conceptualize it as a shift to a constellation within self-structure, involving clusters of affect and cognition that differ from the in-person constellation. 
 rdo wrote:

It would also be pointless to have a comment board without comments that expressed what we really think.  Unlike you, I am in favor of the incivility of the WWW.  The web is the one sanctuary on our planet where we can say what we really think without getting kicked out of the room by the person in charge, the Boss.  The Boss is usually the leader of whatever clique you belong to, whether it be a dinner party where the Boss is a social leader surrounded by sychophants; a professional association where our livlihoods depend on our opinions; or even amongst good friends whose myriad sensibilities we do not want to offend.  All of this conspires to shut us up.  Zip our lips. Hold it in.  But on the WWW, we can say what we think. It is a refuge from the bullies.  Let's keep it that way.  And it's OK if it get's heated now and then.  It's healthy.  A healthy incivility is a good thing.  All opinions are welcome here, even those trolls.   
 
maybe honesty rather than incivility?
This music really stands up to the passing of time so well.

I always get a little chill when I hear Roy's part, and hearing George singing with a bunch of his mates is really sweet. These guys were so good together!

Thanks for throwing this in the mix, Bill and Rebecca. {#Cheers}
everyday is judgement day

its not supposed to blow you away, its just SIMPLY brilliant.  always puts a spring in my step.
Great follow on from the Beatles when I'm 64, but for me the Wilburys don't quite hit the spot. Such an amazing mix of musicians, maybe too much of a good thing?