I love this song. Not so much for it's expression of loss, which I certainly understand and I did connect with that, but more for the fact that it does point out that this is a "sweet old world" and that there is plenty in this world to relish and love and enjoy. Yes, maybe a sad song but also it's sweetness of what we have really gets to me.
I first heard this on Launch Yahoo, where random songs get put up. I was working from home, needing background music and wasn't really listening until.........this came on and wow! Says it all about it's emotional strength that I stopped what I was doing and listened. Went straight on to Amazon and ordered an album with this on, and now I found it here. Awesome! Thanks for posting.
Where it is so utterly successful is in not expecting the listener to indulge the singer, to share their burden of grief, to help them through the night as it were, which is so often the object of even a great ballad. Instead she simply draws you in gently, unassumingly, until you realise your very own experiences of profound loss could be - are being - described. Sung as it is here, it cannot be bettered. It's one of the greatest country ballads ever made.
This is one of the most "achingly perfect" sad songs ever. Buy the cd. This YouTube video is nice, but you got to hear it in full sound. Think this cd is one of my favorite Lucinda collections.
I completely agree, the album version is beautiful, I also love the imperfection and humanness of live music. That's why I record shows when I can. EmmyLou's version is just as beautiful, in a very EmmyLou way. :) (and of course you should support the artists and buy their albums :) )
@TeriCMonster Live is where true talent like this really shines. Not buried under a wash of strings and production tricks, but raw and exposed, like the nerves that bore this wonderful song.
Millions of us in love, I hope I heard that right, as I was workin' on my car, back in '92, learning to like Country, along with Iris DeMent. They kill me both.
Perhaps its like feeling for your wallet, its just proof yer souls still in there.
In the unlikely event, you hear this song someday and do not tear up, start looking. Feverishly. You will have lost something and start thinking, or feeling, where you may have left it.
Staggeringly beautiful.. thanks.
TheBitterWeed 2 years ago
It is indeed a sweet old world.
freshflower4 2 years ago
Looking for some truth, dancing with no shoes...
The beat, the rhythm, the blues.
haltmusic 2 years ago 4
I love this song. Not so much for it's expression of loss, which I certainly understand and I did connect with that, but more for the fact that it does point out that this is a "sweet old world" and that there is plenty in this world to relish and love and enjoy. Yes, maybe a sad song but also it's sweetness of what we have really gets to me.
tortolamark 2 years ago
I wonder if this song is about the same person "Pineola" is about. They are both about suicides and were on the 1992 CD. Just a perfect song.
avilleguy 3 years ago
I first heard this on Launch Yahoo, where random songs get put up. I was working from home, needing background music and wasn't really listening until.........this came on and wow! Says it all about it's emotional strength that I stopped what I was doing and listened. Went straight on to Amazon and ordered an album with this on, and now I found it here. Awesome! Thanks for posting.
triocha 3 years ago
Where it is so utterly successful is in not expecting the listener to indulge the singer, to share their burden of grief, to help them through the night as it were, which is so often the object of even a great ballad. Instead she simply draws you in gently, unassumingly, until you realise your very own experiences of profound loss could be - are being - described. Sung as it is here, it cannot be bettered. It's one of the greatest country ballads ever made.
NixonMcvicar 3 years ago
Beautiful... so very moving...
NixonMcvicar 3 years ago
This is one of the most "achingly perfect" sad songs ever. Buy the cd. This YouTube video is nice, but you got to hear it in full sound. Think this cd is one of my favorite Lucinda collections.
mudbelle 3 years ago 2
I completely agree, the album version is beautiful, I also love the imperfection and humanness of live music. That's why I record shows when I can. EmmyLou's version is just as beautiful, in a very EmmyLou way. :) (and of course you should support the artists and buy their albums :) )
TeriCMonster 3 years ago
Teri, thank you so much for this...
NixonMcvicar 3 years ago
Oh this is so good... thank you for posting x
NixonMcvicar 3 years ago
@TeriCMonster Live is where true talent like this really shines. Not buried under a wash of strings and production tricks, but raw and exposed, like the nerves that bore this wonderful song.
daggergblue 3 months ago
Still in tears
88lines44women 3 years ago
Millions of us in love, I hope I heard that right, as I was workin' on my car, back in '92, learning to like Country, along with Iris DeMent. They kill me both.
flamencoprof 3 years ago
"didn't you think you were worth anything?" that kills me. Thanks for posting :)
TeriCMonster 3 years ago
it kills me too... what an astonishingly lovely post.... xxx
NixonMcvicar 3 years ago
I can't believe this song. No matter how many times I hear her singing this it always makes me tear up.
ritornare 4 years ago
ritornare:
Perhaps its like feeling for your wallet, its just proof yer souls still in there.
In the unlikely event, you hear this song someday and do not tear up, start looking. Feverishly. You will have lost something and start thinking, or feeling, where you may have left it.
Peas.
dynamoehummm 3 years ago
Still my absolute favorite of hers. And to finally hear her sing it live, with such sweet sorrow after all these years...
thanks for putting this out there for everyone to see.
brucethehack 4 years ago
THX.
motorcitystevo 4 years ago
Great song.The first time I heard it I was riding alone in the desert after my uncle passed away.
motorcitystevo 4 years ago