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Frokostmusic favorited a video
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Kiss, Kiss, Kiss, Kiss me love, Just one kiss, kiss will do, Kiss, kiss ...
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Kiss, Kiss, Kiss, Kiss me love, Just one kiss, kiss will do, Kiss, kiss kiss, kiss me love, Just one kiss, kiss will do,
Why death, Why Life, Warm hearts, Cold darts,
Kiss, kiss, kiss, kiss me love, I'm bleeding inside,
It's a long, long story to tell, And I can only show my hell,
Touch, touch, touch, touch me love, Just one touch, touch will do, Touch, touch, touch, touch me love, Just one touch, touch will do,
Why me, Why you, Broken mirror, White terror,
Touch, touch, touch, touch me love, I'm shaking inside, It's that faint, faint sound of the childhood bell, Ringing in my soul,
Kiss, kiss, kiss, kiss me love, Just one kiss, kiss will do.
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Frokostmusic favorited a video
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Remember" is a 1970 song appearing on John Lennon's first official ...
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Remember" is a 1970 song appearing on John Lennon's first official solo album release, John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band. The song was influenced by Lennon's primal therapy sessions with Dr. Arthur Janov, and the lyrics reflect things typically remembered in therapy. The memories described are unpleasant ones, of conflict with family, authority and peers. Lennon employs his wit, mentioning how "the hero was never hung, always got away", and parents "wishin' for movie stardom, always playin' a part," instead of being honest and open. At the end of the song, Lennon sings an excerpt from the poem Remember, Remember, The Fifth of November, then an explosion is heard. This is a reference to Guy Fawkes Night, a holiday in Britain celebrated with fireworks. In an interview with Jann Wenner, Lennon said this was part of a lengthy ad-lib and that he later decided this line ought to be the culmination of the song. A 2:44 rehearsal take of "Remember" -- where the tempo of the song is being worked out -- appears on the 1998 box set John Lennon Anthology.
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Frokostmusic favorited a video
(5 days ago)

"I Found Out" is a song by British musician John Lennon, taken...
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"I Found Out" is a song by British musician John Lennon, taken from his 1970 album John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band. The song is angry and intensely bitter, expressing Lennon's disillusionment with a world dominated by what he saw as false religion. In common with another theme on the album, the song is also critical of Lennon's former band The Beatles. During the late 1960s, bandmate George Harrison became interested in Eastern mysticism; Lennon dismisses Harrison's beloved gurus and Hare Krishna mantra as "pie in the sky."[1] Lennon also claims that he's "seen religion from Jesus to Paul." This double reference, to Paul the Apostle and bandmate Paul McCartney, may imply that he believed the Beatles were not loved for their music so much as worshipped as gods. The instrumentation, style, and production of the song are typical of Lennon's Plastic Ono Band era work. The song features a low, rumbling tremolo guitar, thumping drums, a rolling, minimal bass line, and a scathing vocal delivery. The recording is bare-bones, in stark contrast to the heavy production of Lennon's later albums. It is influenced more heavily by blues music than other songs on Plastic Ono Band.
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