Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Attention poster HomeDawg
Collapse
X
-
Attention poster HomeDawg
Whaddup bro. I'm asking you because you seem to be able to find **** on the net without even trying. I'm looking for a link to a song by Lynard Skynard that came out after 9-11. "Tuesday's Gone" remix. Thanx in advance manTags: None
-
Originally posted by yomonte View PostYou may be right HD. It was Tuesdays Gone but with news of the 9-11 in the background. ****. It was bad dude. It needed a tissue warning. I heard it alot, but not again after I heard it a few times. They called it a remix
I know what your sayin'... that reminds me of "lightning crashes"
"Lightning Crashes" is the name of a song by alternative rock group Live from the Throwing Copper album. While it wasn't officially released as a CD single in the U.S., the song received enough radio airplay to peak at the #12 position on the Billboard Hot 100 Airplay music chart. The song also topped the Modern Rock Tracks and Mainstream Rock Tracks charts, and was also a top 40 hit in the United Kingdom. Because it was not released as a CD single, it was unable to chart on the Billboard Hot 100. Despite this, because of its high charting on the rock charts, it's considered to be the biggest hit of Live's career. Pearl Jam also covered the song in front of a live audience.
Song meaning:
The band dedicated the song to Barbara Lewis, a friend of the band who had been killed by a drunk driver who was fleeing from the police after a robbery. Barbara had many of her organs donated, and the song lyrics reflect how her death enabled others to continue living. After the 1999 Columbine High School massacre, Ed Kowalczyk would frequently dedicate the song to the victims at live shows.
Soon after the Oklahoma City Bombing on April 19, 1995, a local radio station mixed in news clippings, audio clips of President Clinton and Oklahoma Governor Frank Keating responding to the attack, along with other sounds (such as ambulance and fire engine sirens) of that day. To the people of Oklahoma City it was a very powerful way to convey the horrors that they faced on that day.
:cry:
-
You may be right HD. It was Tuesdays Gone but with news of the 9-11 in the background. ****. It was bad dude. It needed a tissue warning. I heard it alot, but not again after I heard it a few times. They called it a remix
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by yomonte View PostHey HD, thanx man. I was kinda wanting the song "Tuesdays gone" with the 9-11 commentating in the background. I heard it alot, but not since 2001. Would very much like to hear it again. Guess I should have been more specific
Ya'll know damn well I cain't spell specific :beer2:
thats gonna be tough.... you need to be even more specific... Who made the commentary? Where was it published? Over the web, radio, tv???? Underground work, they can use anyones music in the background, while doin' a commentary.... :beer2:
Leave a comment:
-
Hey HD, thanx man. I was kinda wanting the song "Tuesdays gone" with the 9-11 commentating in the background. I heard it alot, but not since 2001. Would very much like to hear it again. Guess I should have been more specific
Ya'll know damn well I cain't spell specific :beer2:
Leave a comment:
-
Originally posted by homedawg View Post
Did it really have to take you a whole 10 minutes though?
You're slowing down in your old age!
LOL.
Leave a comment:
-
Homedawg...I would like to request the best picture you can find of Phoebe Cates in the movie Fast Times at Ridgemont High. Thank You. LOL.
Leave a comment:
Leave a comment: