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Length: 5:48
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I did all my best to smile
Till your singing eyes and fingers
Drew me loving to your isle
''Sail to me, sail to me
Let me enfold you
Here I am, here I am
Waiting to hold you''
Did I dream you dreamed about me?
Were you hare when I was fox?
Now my foolish boat is leaning
Broken lovelorn on your rocks
''Touch me not, touch me not
Oh, come back tomorrow
Oh my heart, oh my heart
Shies from the sorrow''
I am puzzled as a newborn baby
I'm as troubled as the tide
Should I stand amist the breakers?
Or should I lie with Death my bride?
''Swim to me, swim to me
Oh, come and let me enfold you
Here I am, here I am
Waiting to hold you''
What is it, Hal?
Blain wants his white fedora back.
Sorry, I'm not buying it....just doesn't compare to the version by This Mortal Coil.
Agree, Liz Fraser's vocals were outstanding.
That is the truth! Artist with no comparison and vocalist of great depth in feeling and texture all through his career. His Desert Island Discs shows him to be a man of breadth.
Here's a link to the BBC blurb about the Robert Plant episode of Desert Island Discs . The page also contains a link to the audio, if you would like to listen.
In 2002, if my math is correct, Plant was 54. Why you would expect him to be still reprising his Led Zep era vocals at that age is beyond me. This is lovely, and a fitting evolution of one of the very best vocalists who has ever graced our world.
It must have been 20 years ago I saw Sir Robert perform this song at the end of his set. Alone on stage, a capella he silenced the entire venue with every breath. My wife a die hard Zep fan was blown away. There were plenty of Zep riffs played that night with his amazing band but this song was a highlight.
What is it, Hal?
Just a moment
...
just a moment
....
Not a patch on the This Mortal Coil version, not by a long, long chalk. Stick to rock, Plantie. 3 from the Nottingham jury.
Edit: sorry, make that a 2 - it really gets worse and more offensive as it goes on. Bring on Liz Fraser and her goose-pimple-inducing ethereal voice.
To be fair, almost anything is better when Liz Fraser sings it .
In 2002, if my math is correct, Plant was 54. Why you would expect him to be still reprising his Led Zep era vocals at that age is beyond me. This is lovely, and a fitting evolution of one of the very best vocalists who has ever graced our world.
That is the truth! Artist with no comparison and vocalist of great depth in feeling and texture all through his career. His Desert Island Discs shows him to be a man of breadth.
In 2002, if my math is correct, Plant was 54. Why you would expect him to be still reprising his Led Zep era vocals at that age is beyond me. This is lovely, and a fitting evolution of one of the very best vocalists who has ever graced our world.
In 1982 I saw Robert fronting The Honeydrippers at Bradford University. Some intellectual in the crowd called for 'Stairway to Heaven.' Despite my having seen Led Zep at Knebworth three years previously I really did not think that Robert should then or should ever be restricted in repertoire. What he has done over the years (lets give him a pass on Now and Zen) has shown he has a voice that can rock and croon with equal melodic quality. I am, and will always be, a fan of the man and not simply the era of Led Zep in which he was a quarter of the whole.
Edit: sorry, make that a 2 - it really gets worse and more offensive as it goes on. Bring on Liz Fraser and her goose-pimple-inducing ethereal voice.
Given this is Robert Plant it distresses me enormously to agree with you fredriley
What is it, Hal?
And now that we've heard it, we know why.
Edit: sorry, make that a 2 - it really gets worse and more offensive as it goes on. Bring on Liz Fraser and her goose-pimple-inducing ethereal voice.
In 2002, if my math is correct, Plant was 54. Why you would expect him to be still reprising his Led Zep era vocals at that age is beyond me. This is lovely, and a fitting evolution of one of the very best vocalists who has ever graced our world.
"…one of the very best vocalists who has ever graced our world."
Sorry, but this sounds strained and tortured to me. He's almost tolerable when he's hiding behind Allison Krause, but this, as much of the early Led Zep stuff—though for different reasons—is unlistenable for me.