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Total ratings: 1671
Length: 3:33
Plays (last 30 days): 2
Everybody wanna waste your time
Waste your time, yours and mine
A good love is hard to find
Good loving is so hard to feel
You got nothing till you find the real deal
Find the real, there it is
A good love is hard to feel
Don't you rush it, gotta take it slow
You can't listen to the friends you know
'Cause they don't know what you know
But good love is hard to know
Why not just cover TV Dinners?
Cover them with what? Saran Wrap?
(OK, I plead guilty to telling a bad joke.)
little feat like
TV dinners!
Every time.
Why not just cover TV Dinners?
Bit of a stretch to say cover when this is featuring Billy G
Cheers from Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
BTW. Great band, groovy song
Ja toch!
Rotterdam and the Black Keys, two of the most beautiful things <3
So it seems RP has taken off the stat showing how many times a song has been played in the last 30 days? This band and album is seemingly played everyday.
I noticed this as well. I hear Zach Bryan at least 4 times a day.
Ties in nicely with one of the worst shows I ever witnessed. When I saw the Top in the early eighties in Toledo, Billy coud not be bothered to pay solos on a few songs most notably "Heard It On The X". One third of the band missing was very disappointing. And Billy adds nothing to the blackeys.
I'm feeling a ZZ-Top influenced guitar driven riot.
Can't imagine why...c.
Just noticed why. Billy Gibbons was the secret sauce.
I'm feeling a ZZ-Top influenced guitar driven riot.
c.
Really enjoying the new album, dripping with fresh rock infused blues
My fave kind of blues. And blues infused rock, my fave kind of rock.
What a brilliant collaboration! I have it at 9.
The combination of Gibbons' deep blues experience and singular Texas blues-rock chops with Auerbach's Mississippi blues expertise works beautifully. I came across this from a review by Guitar.com that sums it up well:
"Initially turning up to the studio just to hang out, Gibbons was presented with Auerbach’s Gibson Trini Lopez - formerly owned by legendary bluesman Mississippi Fred McDowell. Following a 45-minute jam session with this prized instrument, Good Love was birthed. Gibbons’ approach sounds markedly different to Dan’s in a number of ways. In lieu of Auerbach’s crackling fuzz and intentionally half-baked suggestions of melody, Gibbons’ slick scale runs, coruscating bends and slick flourishes are typically tasty." https://guitar.com/review/albu...What a brilliant collaboration! 9-->10.
The combination of Gibbons' deep blues experience and singular Texas blues-rock chops with Auerbach's Mississippi blues expertise works beautifully. I came across this from a review by Guitar.com that sums it up well:
"Initially turning up to the studio just to hang out, Gibbons was presented with Auerbach’s Gibson Trini Lopez - formerly owned by legendary bluesman Mississippi Fred McDowell. Following a 45-minute jam session with this prized instrument, Good Love was birthed. Gibbons’ approach sounds markedly different to Dan’s in a number of ways. In lieu of Auerbach’s crackling fuzz and intentionally half-baked suggestions of melody, Gibbons’ slick scale runs, coruscating bends and slick flourishes are typically tasty." https://guitar.com/review/albu..."I knew he was in town so I sent him a text, very off-the-cuff. I said,
“If you’re free later, stop by, Pat and I are in the studio,” explains
the guitarist/vocalist. "He just showed up. He brought a bottle of red
wine, no guitars. I handed him a guitar he had never played, and an amp
he never played. He plugged it straight in, turned it all the way up,
and it sounded exactly like Billy Gibbons.
Cheers from Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
BTW. Great band, groovy song