Avg rating:
Your rating:
Total ratings: 2399
Length: 4:39
Plays (last 30 days): 3
And talk of all the things we did today
Here
And laugh about our funny little ways
While we have a few minutes to breathe
Then I know that it's time you must leave
But darling be home soon
I couldn't bear to wait an extra minute if you dawdled
My darling be home soon
It's not just these few hours but I've been waiting since I toddled
For the great relief of having you to talk to
And now
A quarter of my life is almost past
I think I've come to see myself at last
And I see that the time spent confused
Was the time that I spent without you
And I feel myself in bloom
So darling be home soon
I couldn't bear to wait an extra minute if you dawdled
My darling be home soon
It's not just these few hours but I've been waiting since I toddled
For the great relief of having you to talk to
Darling be home soon
I couldn't bear to wait an extra minute if you dawdled
My darling be home soon
It's not just these few hours but I've been waiting since I toddled
For the great relief of having you to talk to
Go
And beat your crazy head against the sky
Try
And see beyond the houses and your eyes
It's ok to shoot the moon
So darling
My darling be home soon
I couldn't bear to wait an extra minute if you dawdled
My darling be home soon
It's not just these few hours but I've been waiting since I toddled
For the great relief of having you to talk to
Now please go watch the transcendent live version of this by Tedeschi Trucks.
thanks for that!!!
Joe managed to take other people's good songs and make them GREAT!
I was just thinking the EXACT same thing.
JS's - a fine version that all other versions are a tribute to.
Come on folks!
This is a great song, recorded many times by many folks
This is not even Joe C's best version!!
Great song. Check out the live version on 'Slade Alive' !
Somewhere, John Sebastian sheds a tear (and gets another royalty check).
Not sure why he would be shedding a tear. Honored to have Joe do such an iconic cover would be more like it (and getting another royalty check).
Perhaps, but people who were fans of "real" music from the 1940s and '50s nostalgically expressed similar grievances about music from the late '60s and early '70s.
Very well stated!!! We are sounding like our parents, griping the same way that they did! I'm 66 yrs old. And ...these damn kids now-a-days! ...Are producing a LOT of great music, if you are open-minded enough to check it out!!! PS: in 40 years, they will be griping about the "new" music! LOL!
Perhaps, but people who were fans of "real" music from the 1940s and '50s nostalgically expressed similar grievances about music from the late '60s and early '70s.
See your point where some in all generations may see the current artists as less real than the what they grew up with. But I can also see why one might think that way for the current generation. There's enough research on current music these days that says the majority of music over time since the last 20 years plus, is getting more and more sounding the same. For example, you're not going to find an unpredictable chord progression you could find in a Stealy Dan number, in today's music. A lot of pop music has become basically one simple formula of a 3-chord progression that has been repeated over and over again.
If anyone was asking, my observation today there are still great artist out there, you just may have to look a little harder to find them.
Man, you're missing a lot.
And speaking of missing things, if you (meaning everyone) haven't seen "20 Feet From Stardom" I would encourage you to check it out.
Man, you're missing a lot.
Love that album - still play it to this day! Saw Slade slay this at the Caird Hall, Dundee in the early 70s.
Good memories
Colston Hall, Bristol, for me. I thought the balcony was going to come down...
Exactly. I bought my first album, on cassette, in the early seventies - "Slade Alive", with a version of this on it. I loved it. So everyone can now get off my lawn, too.
Love that album - still play it to this day! Saw Slade slay this at the Caird Hall, Dundee in the early 70s.
Good memories
And it's a great service to the music fan who gets more mileage out of a song they love.
He not only put his own wonderful spin on so many great songs; but arguably, at times gave us sounds that were equally as good as the originals. What a wonderful performer!
People who were fans of "real" music from the 1940s and '50s nostalgically expressed similar grievances about music from the late '60s and early '70s.
Exactly. I bought my first album, on cassette, in the early seventies - "Slade Alive", with a version of this on it. I loved it. So everyone can now get off my lawn, too.
Well the words rhyme but it's not exactly Shakespeare, is it.
Perhaps, but people who were fans of "real" music from the 1940s and '50s nostalgically expressed similar grievances about music from the late '60s and early '70s.
RIP JOE! I'm sorry to say you were a bit off with your line "a quarter of my life is almost passed" - in fact that would have been wishful thinking for most of us considering you were 25 at the time. And from what I've heard from my late father (may he also RIP) and step-mom who you used to "party" with in the late 70s/early 80s, I think you had your kicks and I'm happy you made it to 70.5 years on this planet.
RIP LEON TOO!
LONG LIVE RP....keep playing the rocking tunes B&R!
+1 ...same here
Did he play the piano? If not, can anyone tell me who played the piano on this track?
it doesn't sound like him to me but of course he could play anything, personnel on the album include;
Chris Stainton – piano, organ, guitar
Leon Russell – piano, organ, guitar
a Leon Russell production
Did he play the piano? If not, can anyone tell me who played the piano on this track?
"spoonf"?
you are correct Sir
why did RP use that abbreviation?
Maybe they forgot what they filed it under and that's why they don't play them?
I also found in the RP vault of songs for the band Spoon that there are two Lovin' Spoonful songs listed
2 Search Results for "spoonf" on Radio Paradise:
Lovin' Spoonful Summer In The City Greatest Hits
The Lovin' Spoonful Daydream Best of The Lovin' Spoonful
"spoonf"?
you are correct Sir
why did RP use that abbreviation?
Maybe they forgot what they filed it under and that's why they don't play them?
which ones? I keep getting this;
.
Sorry — No artists found matching "The Lovin' Spoonful"
TIP: On song titles, search for only a fragment of the name to increase the chances of a match. On artists, use their complete name.
.
.
Sorry — No artists found matching "Lovin' Spoonful"
TIP: On song titles, search for only a fragment of the name to increase the chances of a match. On artists, use their complete name.
2 Search Results for "spoonf" on Radio Paradise:
Lovin' Spoonful Summer In The City Greatest Hits
The Lovin' Spoonful Daydream Best of The Lovin' Spoonful
Actually there are two LS-songs in the library but it has been years since they were last played. Bill, would you please do us a favour?
which ones? I keep getting this;
.
Sorry — No artists found matching "The Lovin' Spoonful"
TIP: On song titles, search for only a fragment of the name to increase the chances of a match. On artists, use their complete name.
.
.
Sorry — No artists found matching "Lovin' Spoonful"
TIP: On song titles, search for only a fragment of the name to increase the chances of a match. On artists, use their complete name.
I looked it up with 3 different spellings there is no Lovin' Spoonful in the RP library
I'm very surprised
Actually there are two LS-songs in the library but it has been years since they were last played. Bill, would you please do us a favour?
KurtfromLaQuinta wrote:
I looked it up with 3 different spellings there is no Lovin' Spoonful in the RP library
I'm very surprised
KurtfromLaQuinta wrote:
Sorry to rain on the love parade here, but I re-listened to this several times on spotify to verify and I am pretty sure the lyric goes:
"It's not just these few hours but I've been waiting since YOU toddled.."
What a difference a word makes... one version is sweet and sentimental, the other brings up serious concerns about pedophilia.
John Sebastion wrote and sang I toddled, Cocker did sing you toddled
I couldn't bear to wait an extra minute if you dawdled
My darling be home soon
It's not just these few hours but I've been waiting since I toddled.."
Sorry to rain on the love parade here, but I re-listened to this several times on spotify to verify and I am pretty sure the lyric goes:
"It's not just these few hours but I've been waiting since YOU toddled.."
What a difference a word makes... one version is sweet and sentimental, the other brings up serious concerns about pedophilia.
This is the verse that always got me all sentimental...
And now
A quarter of my life is almost past
I think I've come to see myself at last
And I see that the time spent confused
Was the time that I spent without you
Absolutely!
I couldn't bear to wait an extra minute if you dawdled
My darling be home soon
It's not just these few hours but I've been waiting since I toddled.."
This is the verse that always got me all sentimental...
And now
A quarter of my life is almost past
I think I've come to see myself at last
And I see that the time spent confused
Was the time that I spent without you
a Leon Russell production
I couldn't bear to wait an extra minute if you dawdled
My darling be home soon
It's not just these few hours but I've been waiting since I toddled.."
Not for me. He is not one of my favorites. But he was a very good person. He lived in Crawford here in Colorado and he did good things for the community, and not what HIS ideas were, but what the people wanted. I respect him for that.
From AMG: One of John Sebastian's greatest later-day Lovin' Spoonful songs, "Darling Be Home Soon" was transformed in this version by Joe Cocker to another level entirely. Lyrically, it's one of the most heartfelt songs about being away from a loved one, written from the point of view of a musician on the road writing a letter. The simple, four-chord melody is positively delicious and is a great example of restraint and subtle power. This performance is buttressed not only by Cocker's vocal but by the entire performance, especially the powerful piano performance, which neatly echoes the work on "Feelin' Alright."
Yes turned the radio on at 7 this morning to be greeted with the news of his passing, such a character and the music world will be a lesser place without him. He certainly was a one off. Gone but never forgotten. RIP Joe.
I liked your Spoonful cover, and most of the rest of 'em as well.
Rhyme you don't hear much... "dawdled" and "tottled"....
It's 0821 with loads of work to do........ and it's just what I needed.
Thanks so much for this.
Can't speak for appy_monkey but I certainly do. You can name any song and it's immediately obvious what it will sound like after Cockerization. I may have to write an app for that - something like "Cockerize it!"
Please don't.
Oh the memories....
This is a great song, recorded many times by many folks
This is not even Joe C's best version!!
Better known as Joe Blow
Well Joe definitely didn´t blow this cover. It sounds great.
Better known as Joe Blow
Pubertal jokes ...
So would you say you are a sucker for Cocker...or a Cockersucker?
... (btw, it's The Lovin' Spoonful)
Lovin' Spoonful = 10cc
And I'm guessing appy_monkey prefers the Beatles plinky "With a Little Help From My Friends" over Joe and the Grease Band's masterpiece at Woodstock!!
Can't speak for appy_monkey but I certainly do. You can name any song and it's immediately obvious what it will sound like after Cockerization. I may have to write an app for that - something like "Cockerize it!"
I agree with you. (btw, it's The Lovin' Spoonful)
I do as well.......he's better as he ages...
And almost no idea what to do with it.