Sad to hear of his passing, His last recording a duet with swamp dogg (Jerry Williams Jr) poetic and not a bad number to sign off with, great artist. Quite a catchy number. https://youtu.be/dSR3pRtkWWs
Ye - great artist - prolific songwriter and loved by his peers. Had he survived the virus I was looking forward to his take on it. I've been playing his stuff every day since he took ill. Love this one - Souvenirs
Lyrics: All the snow has turned to water Christmas days have come and gone Broken toys and faded colors Are all that's left to linger on I hate graveyards and old pawn shops For they always bring me tears I can't forgive the way they rob me Of my childhood souvenirs Memories they can't be boughten They can't be won at carnivals for free Well it took me years To get those souvenirs And I don't know how they slipped away from me Broken hearts and dirty windows Make life difficult to see That's why last night and this mornin' Always look the same to me I hate reading old love letters For they always bring me tears I can't forgive the way they rob me Of my sweetheart's souvenirs Memories they can't be boughten They can't be won at carnivals for free Well it took me years To get those souvenirs And I don't know how they slipped away from me
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2xhmPectY9U
Ye - great artist - prolific songwriter and loved by his peers. Had he survived the virus I was looking forward to his take on it. I've been playing his stuff every day since he took ill. Love this one - SouvenirsLyrics:All the snow has turned to wat
John Prine’s 50-year career had taken him from the folk clubs of Chicago to sold-out venues in London, Australia, and beyond. But as he planned the schedule for the final leg of his Tree of Forgiveness tour, there was still one place he needed to play: Paris.
The city had never seemed to care for Prine. His down-to-earth folk songs had spread to Ireland, England, and even Scandinavia. But a promoter told his touring manager Mitchell Drosin that there was no point in booking his first-ever show in France; Prine would lose money if he brought his band. “John said, ‘You don’t understand. I want to play Paris, and I want to stay at the George V,’ which is one of the most expensive hotels in the world,” says Drosin. “It’s a Four Seasons, it’s insane. I said, ‘You know, your hotel is more than you’re going to get paid. It’s just going to be a club show. John said, ‘That’s great.’”
Drosin booked a show at Paris’ 500-capacity Café de La Danse, much smaller than the other venues on the tour. Prine loved Paris in ways that even Fiona, his wife and manager, struggled to explain. “He always loved that [Parisians] treated him with disdain, you know?” she says. “He just loved the people and the food and the idea he couldn’t understand a word they were saying. He didn’t have much of an ego.
John Prine’s 50-year career had taken him from the folk clubs of Chicago to sold-out venues in London, Australia, and beyond. But as he planned the schedule for the final leg of his Tree of Forgiveness tour, there was still one place he needed to p
A caller on 5live through the night (Sat) talking about John Prince quite a coincidence, if a recall correctly from Edinburgh was that you bread or crystal?
A caller on 5live through the night (Sat) talking about John Prince quite a coincidence, if a recall correctly from Edinburgh was that you bread or crystal?