you're sitting on the back of my bike, you're pointing at the brightest star in the western sky: that's ours...the feeling of me flying up on my bike...
you're silently listening to George Winston's "Variations on" the kanon by pachelbel", and I'm always happily humming this song "I shall be released"...
In the evening I took out the music documentary directed by MARTIN SCORSESE: The Last Waltz-The Last Waltz...
"Here to help us out Also Ringo Starr and Ronnie Wood...", I don't know if it's Paul Simon or Robbie Robertson's voice. Warm applause from the Winterland stage, and then the camera is Ringo Starr buried behind the drum, and the piano on his shoulders with a slightly shy expression Ronnie Wood(Ron Wood).
The familiar melody begins, how warm and touching. Dylan with a white hat begins to lead:
They say everything can be replaced
Yet every distance is not near.
…
Van Morrison and Robbie Robertson from both sides To get close, especially Robbie Robertson's emotional expression of singing, is really unforgettable. On the other side are Rick Danko, Neil Young, Joni Mitchell... singing in unison...
---'You take the 5:00 pm car and go back to the , don't come back again, I'll send you...'
---'Send me on the road, the last ride? '
You laugh out loud... I look at your profile under the warm sun and your chestnut hair blown by the breeze, it's so beautiful, my heart sinks endlessly...
"I see my light comes shinning
From the west down to the east
Any day now, any day now
I shall be released…” The
big stage scene… The Band has invited so many stars, it must be a fantastic night for the audience off stage… Dylan Sand Or singing with a glue-like voice that he himself wrote for his recovery from a car accident... And The Band performed this song so gracefully and noble in 1968's big pink studio in New York...
--- 'It's impossible ... I 've given up...' ---
'No, you're not dead...' Swaying together, tears in my eyes...Noble and beautiful tune...Martin Scorsese's record of The Band's last show at Easter 1978 became one of the best music documentaries ever made, this great The folk rock band in the late 1960s blended almost all elements of Native American music, including folk, R&B, blues, bluegrass, country...made a real American rock music...the song was finished, and the final scene was The Band's The theme of the 5 members instrumental music playing the final waltz...their graceful state is projected on the screen behind...
Turn off the DVD player, at 12 midnight, I'm lying in bed, Johnny Hartman's low voice comes from the speaker by the bedside:
The very thought of you makes
My heart sing
Like an April breeze
On the wings of spring
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