Warm House (And An Hour Of Joy): Difference between revisions
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|background = First recorded as a home demo by [[Rusty]] in November 1972. This was [[Rusty]]'s most crowd-pleasing original song. | |background = First recorded as a home demo by [[Rusty]] in November 1972. This was [[Rusty]]'s most crowd-pleasing original song. | ||
|first = [[Concert 1972-01-21 Liverpool |January 21, 1972, Liverpool, England]] | |first = [[Concert 1972-01-21 Liverpool |January 21, 1972, Liverpool, England]] | ||
|last = | |last = [[Concert 2022-09-30 San Francisco (late)|September 30, 2022, San Francisco, CA (early show)]] | ||
}}{{song quote | }}{{song quote | ||
| quote = A lot of the songs I was writing at that time were probably pretty purple and forgettable, but we sang out as if we believed in every word of them. One, called ‘Warm House,’ that owed a big debt to half a dozen [[Neil Young]] songs, was written after I was pursued by some hooligans on my way home from Wallasey late one evening. Allan and I harmonized well on a big open chorus and especially on the tag in which just one word was repeated, over and over. The word was ‘Running…’ | | quote = A lot of the songs I was writing at that time were probably pretty purple and forgettable, but we sang out as if we believed in every word of them. One, called ‘Warm House,’ that owed a big debt to half a dozen [[Neil Young]] songs, was written after I was pursued by some hooligans on my way home from Wallasey late one evening. Allan and I harmonized well on a big open chorus and especially on the tag in which just one word was repeated, over and over. The word was ‘Running…’ |
Latest revision as of 19:50, 1 October 2022
Bitterly then I went to the door |
Background:
“A lot of the songs I was writing at that time were probably pretty purple and forgettable, but we sang out as if we believed in every word of them. One, called ‘Warm House,’ that owed a big debt to half a dozen Neil Young songs, was written after I was pursued by some hooligans on my way home from Wallasey late one evening. Allan and I harmonized well on a big open chorus and especially on the tag in which just one word was repeated, over and over. The word was ‘Running…’” — Unfaithful Music & Disappearing Ink, 2015
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