No spoken words
Blue Crack Supplier
Like, not love.
While I don't love it as much as I remembered, Let It Be is a really great album.
It's nice that you're getting the experience but I fail to see how doing something for two weeks can accurately demonstrate if this is the proper career for you. You might catch them at a horrid time.....you might catch them at a slow time.....you might catch them with two of their better employees on vacation......you might find that this group of people do their jobs well but don't have time to mentor some kid properly. You might find that these people are incompetent but love to show the rookie kid a good time for his two weeks. And on and on and on.
So, do you mean to tell me that after thinking that this is what you want to do with your life for a long time that if you have a not so decent two weeks (two weeks!!!), at just one workplace, at your age, that you'll possibly elect to walk away from it all? If so, then you likely never really wanted to do it in the first place.....
Not that you're asking but my advice to you is to make the most of it and ask a lot of questions but not to let the experience become some sort of make or break exercise.....hopefully, you love it and that reawakens your previously felt passion for the business.
Really great is a little too strong for me. Not the original, not the Naked version.
Even my own personal tracklist would probably only fall under "very good". And for those who haven't seen it before:
LET IT BE BETTER
1. Two of Us
2. One After 909
3. I Me Mine
4. Don't Let Me Down
5. I've Got a Feeling
6. The Ballad of John and Yoko
7. The Long and Winding Road (Naked version)
**
8. Get Back
9. Dig A Pony
10. Old Brown Shoe
11. Dig It (extended bootleg version)
12. Let It Be (Naked version)
13. Across the Universe (Naked version)
22 for me. And by that I mean, Bob Dylan will have his tour derailed for some reason in the next three weeks because I bought a ticket for his show.Bob Dylan in 4 days, you knaves.
13. Across the Universe (Naked version)
"I feel like there's a lot of joy around," Bono says in his sunroom, swirling his hand in the air. "I don't know what's going on, but everyone's in a great mood. Songs are much more airborne, more light-footed." There are also a lot of them: four new albums' worth. In addition to Songs of Ascent -- a second set of tracks from the No Line sessions -- and Bono and the Edge's score for the Spider-Man musical (finally set to open on Broadway on December 21st), U2 are working on a "rock album," as Bono puts it, "and a club-sounding album." He expects U2 will release a new record, drawn from that body of songs, in time for their return to North America next year. "That's going to be great. Those people are going to have tickets to a whole new show with new songs.
This track is an absolute revelation. I love how the sparse arrangement brings Lennon's vocal to the fore, as I really believe that the song has the most impressive lyrics of any track that I have ever heard.
Very few lyricists are capable of producing genuine poetry, and I think that Lennon does it on this track. Morrissey is the only other one that comes to mind at the moment.