๐ŸŽต Monthly Song Challenge ๐ŸŽต

Hmmm.. That second song pass would come in handy for when I remember the better song 5 hours later...

But the gif.....
 
Day 4: A song by your favorite artist

Iโ€™ve got to go with Neko Case. Iโ€™ve seen her in concert more than any other artist. Her lyrics, her voiceโ€ฆabsolutely brilliant.
At one show, she said she had a massive bruise on her thigh from tambourining so hard on this song

Man by Neko Case

 
Day 5: A song to cheer a friend up

I said it before, I am a simple man. Yesterday I talked about how I received two new albums as a child, on my tenth birthday. One was Live Killers, by Queen, and that was yesterday. Today we are taking the other one, Out of the Blue, by The Electric Light Orchestra (ELO).

For once, I am not going to bore you with info on the band. This is about how to cheer up a friend. And the song I chose is a banger for that, but it really needs some lead up. Because there needs to be a storm before the clearing. So most of what I am describing comes before.

On vinyl, the third side of Out of the Blue is entitled Concerto for a Rainy Day. It is a four-song suite of almost 20 minutes. I thought of choosing all of it, but that was excessive, even for me. It starts with the sound of hard rain, and a tinny, almost nursery rhyme tune almost buried in it. A thunder crash and a vocoder announces "a concerto for a rainy day." The first song, "Standing in the Rain," is an energetic but mournful song about failure, loss, and disconnection. ("The good intentions and the pain/Lay drowned now in the pouring rain.") The singer is lost. No one sees him, and no matter what he does, nothing changes. Everything is in the pouring rain. The song builds up to a crescendo of pain. Another vocodor line, "Big wheels, keep turning, they turn forever and ever," transitions into the next song.

"Big Wheels" starts as a quiet post-breakup song, a sweet ballad, but with existential angst. That breaking up feels horrible, ("I tried my best, all I could do/But somehow, it was not enough for you"), but it is all part of the big wheels, which just keep rolling. Nothing matters, as it can't change.

The third song is "Summer and Lighting," and is one of my favorite ELO songs. It starts where the last left, with the singer in pain because of unrequited love ("I have waited for your love/For so long, how do I go on?") but in the middle, his feelings change as the storm starts to break. ("It's all around me/Summer and lightning/it must be magic.")

So, we have come through the storm. And that is what makes the day brighter. Here is the TMI section on why this hits me. We lost a child to fetal demise. Nothing we did, nothing we could do. And it was crushing. I deal with depression, and it hit hard. Fucking hard. But after the storm comes the sun. We had another child, and my daughter is now 18. She is the center of my world, and everything that I did right as a person, and worth every sacrifice I made. It doesn't change what I lost. It doesn't remove that pain, still. But after the storm comes blue skies.

"Mr. Blue Sky" is the last song, and the best known. On its own, it is a happy, genius piece of perfect pop, backed by a symphonic score. It is brilliant on its own. But it shines brightest as the closing of the four songs.

So I would tell my friend that while there is the rain, there comes the sun after. It may not feel like it, but this too will pass.

And I will be there for them, through the storm, playing this song.

And this song is a fucking banger!

"Mr. Blue Sky," ELO

 
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Day 5: A song to cheer a friend up

I said it before, I am a simple man. Yesterday I talked about how I received two new albums as a child, on my tenth birthday. One was Live Killers, by Queen, and that was yesterday. Today we are taking the other one, Out of the Blue, by The Electric Light Orchestra (ELO).

For once, I am not going to bore you with info on the band. This is about how to cheer up a friend. And the song I chose is a banger for that, but it really needs some lead up. Because there needs to be a storm before the clearing. So most of what I am describing comes before.

On vinyl, the third side of Out of the Blue is entitled Concerto for a Rainy Day. It is a four-song suite of almost 20 minutes. I thought of choosing all of it, but that was excessive, even for me. It starts with the sound of hard rain, and a tinny, almost nursery rhyme tune almost buried in it. A thunder crash and a vocoder announces "a concerto for a rainy day." The first song, "Standing in the Rain," is an energetic but mournful song about failure, loss, and disconnection. ("The good intentions and the pain/Lay drowned now in the pouring rain.") The singer is lost. No one sees him, and no matter what he does, nothing changes. Everything is in the pouring rain. The song builds up to a crescendo of pain. Another vocodor line, "Big wheels, keep turning, they turn forever and ever," transitions into the next song.

"Big Wheels" starts as a quiet post-breakup song, a sweet ballad, but with existential angst. That breaking up feels horrible, ("I tried my best, all I could do/But somehow, it was not enough for you"), but it is all part of the big wheels, which just keep rolling. Nothing matters, as it can't change.

The third song is "Summer and Lighting," and is one of my favorite ELO songs. It starts where the last left, with the singer in pain because of unrequited love ("I have waited for your love/For so long, how do I go on?") but in the middle, his feelings change as the storm starts to break. ("It's all around me/Summer and lightning/it must be magic.")

So, we have come through the storm. And that is what makes the day brighter. Here is the TMI section on why this hits me. We lost a child to fetal demise. Nothing we did, nothing we could do. And it was crushing. I deal with depression, and it hit hard. Fucking hard. But after the storm comes the sun. We had another child, and my daughter is now 18. She is the center of my world, and everything that I did right as a person, and worth every sacrifice I made. It doesn't change what I lost. It doesn't remove that pain, still. But after the storm comes blue skies.

"Mr. Blue Sky" is the last song, and the best known. On its own, it is a happy, genius piece of perfect pop, backed by a symphonic score. It is brilliant on its own. But it shines brightest as the closing of the four songs.

So I would tell my friend that while there is the rain, there comes the sun after. It may not feel like it, but this too will pass.

And I will be there for them, playing this song.

And this song is a fucking banger!

"Mr. Blue Sky," ELO

Man, Iโ€™m in your time zone.
 
Day 5: A song to cheer a friend up

I said it before, I am a simple man. Yesterday I talked about how I received two new albums as a child, on my tenth birthday. One was Live Killers, by Queen, and that was yesterday. Today we are taking the other one, Out of the Blue, by The Electric Light Orchestra (ELO).

For once, I am not going to bore you with info on the band. This is about how to cheer up a friend. And the song I chose is a banger for that, but it really needs some lead up. Because there needs to be a storm before the clearing. So most of what I am describing comes before.

On vinyl, the third side of Out of the Blue is entitled Concerto for a Rainy Day. It is a four-song suite of almost 20 minutes. I thought of choosing all of it, but that was excessive, even for me. It starts with the sound of hard rain, and a tinny, almost nursery rhyme tune almost buried in it. A thunder crash and a vocoder announces "a concerto for a rainy day." The first song, "Standing in the Rain," is an energetic but mournful song about failure, loss, and disconnection. ("The good intentions and the pain/Lay drowned now in the pouring rain.") The singer is lost. No one sees him, and no matter what he does, nothing changes. Everything is in the pouring rain. The song builds up to a crescendo of pain. Another vocodor line, "Big wheels, keep turning, they turn forever and ever," transitions into the next song.

"Big Wheels" starts as a quiet post-breakup song, a sweet ballad, but with existential angst. That breaking up feels horrible, ("I tried my best, all I could do/But somehow, it was not enough for you"), but it is all part of the big wheels, which just keep rolling. Nothing matters, as it can't change.

The third song is "Summer and Lighting," and is one of my favorite ELO songs. It starts where the last left, with the singer in pain because of unrequited love ("I have waited for your love/For so long, how do I go on?") but in the middle, his feelings change as the storm starts to break. ("It's all around me/Summer and lightning/it must be magic.")

So, we have come through the storm. And that is what makes the day brighter. Here is the TMI section on why this hits me. We lost a child to fetal demise. Nothing we did, nothing we could do. And it was crushing. I deal with depression, and it hit hard. Fucking hard. But after the storm comes the sun. We had another child, and my daughter is now 18. She is the center of my world, and everything that I did right as a person, and worth every sacrifice I made. It doesn't change what I lost. It doesn't remove that pain, still. But after the storm comes blue skies.

"Mr. Blue Sky" is the last song, and the best known. On its own, it is a happy, genius piece of perfect pop, backed by a symphonic score. It is brilliant on its own. But it shines brightest as the closing of the four songs.

So I would tell my friend that while there is the rain, there comes the sun after. It may not feel like it, but this too will pass.

And I will be there for them, playing this song.

And this song is a fucking banger!

"Mr. Blue Sky," ELO

I've nothing to say, to add, other than โค๏ธ and thank you for sharing something that personal
 
Day 5: A song to cheer a friend up

I said it before, I am a simple man. Yesterday I talked about how I received two new albums as a child, on my tenth birthday. One was Live Killers, by Queen, and that was yesterday. Today we are taking the other one, Out of the Blue, by The Electric Light Orchestra (ELO).

For once, I am not going to bore you with info on the band. This is about how to cheer up a friend. And the song I chose is a banger for that, but it really needs some lead up. Because there needs to be a storm before the clearing. So most of what I am describing comes before.

On vinyl, the third side of Out of the Blue is entitled Concerto for a Rainy Day. It is a four-song suite of almost 20 minutes. I thought of choosing all of it, but that was excessive, even for me. It starts with the sound of hard rain, and a tinny, almost nursery rhyme tune almost buried in it. A thunder crash and a vocoder announces "a concerto for a rainy day." The first song, "Standing in the Rain," is an energetic but mournful song about failure, loss, and disconnection. ("The good intentions and the pain/Lay drowned now in the pouring rain.") The singer is lost. No one sees him, and no matter what he does, nothing changes. Everything is in the pouring rain. The song builds up to a crescendo of pain. Another vocodor line, "Big wheels, keep turning, they turn forever and ever," transitions into the next song.

"Big Wheels" starts as a quiet post-breakup song, a sweet ballad, but with existential angst. That breaking up feels horrible, ("I tried my best, all I could do/But somehow, it was not enough for you"), but it is all part of the big wheels, which just keep rolling. Nothing matters, as it can't change.

The third song is "Summer and Lighting," and is one of my favorite ELO songs. It starts where the last left, with the singer in pain because of unrequited love ("I have waited for your love/For so long, how do I go on?") but in the middle, his feelings change as the storm starts to break. ("It's all around me/Summer and lightning/it must be magic.")

So, we have come through the storm. And that is what makes the day brighter. Here is the TMI section on why this hits me. We lost a child to fetal demise. Nothing we did, nothing we could do. And it was crushing. I deal with depression, and it hit hard. Fucking hard. But after the storm comes the sun. We had another child, and my daughter is now 18. She is the center of my world, and everything that I did right as a person, and worth every sacrifice I made. It doesn't change what I lost. It doesn't remove that pain, still. But after the storm comes blue skies.

"Mr. Blue Sky" is the last song, and the best known. On its own, it is a happy, genius piece of perfect pop, backed by a symphonic score. It is brilliant on its own. But it shines brightest as the closing of the four songs.

So I would tell my friend that while there is the rain, there comes the sun after. It may not feel like it, but this too will pass.

And I will be there for them, playing this song.

And this song is a fucking banger!

"Mr. Blue Sky," ELO

๐Ÿซ‚ ๐Ÿซ‚
 
Day 5: A song to cheer a friend up

I said it before, I am a simple man. Yesterday I talked about how I received two new albums as a child, on my tenth birthday. One was Live Killers, by Queen, and that was yesterday. Today we are taking the other one, Out of the Blue, by The Electric Light Orchestra (ELO).

For once, I am not going to bore you with info on the band. This is about how to cheer up a friend. And the song I chose is a banger for that, but it really needs some lead up. Because there needs to be a storm before the clearing. So most of what I am describing comes before.

On vinyl, the third side of Out of the Blue is entitled Concerto for a Rainy Day. It is a four-song suite of almost 20 minutes. I thought of choosing all of it, but that was excessive, even for me. It starts with the sound of hard rain, and a tinny, almost nursery rhyme tune almost buried in it. A thunder crash and a vocoder announces "a concerto for a rainy day." The first song, "Standing in the Rain," is an energetic but mournful song about failure, loss, and disconnection. ("The good intentions and the pain/Lay drowned now in the pouring rain.") The singer is lost. No one sees him, and no matter what he does, nothing changes. Everything is in the pouring rain. The song builds up to a crescendo of pain. Another vocodor line, "Big wheels, keep turning, they turn forever and ever," transitions into the next song.

"Big Wheels" starts as a quiet post-breakup song, a sweet ballad, but with existential angst. That breaking up feels horrible, ("I tried my best, all I could do/But somehow, it was not enough for you"), but it is all part of the big wheels, which just keep rolling. Nothing matters, as it can't change.

The third song is "Summer and Lighting," and is one of my favorite ELO songs. It starts where the last left, with the singer in pain because of unrequited love ("I have waited for your love/For so long, how do I go on?") but in the middle, his feelings change as the storm starts to break. ("It's all around me/Summer and lightning/it must be magic.")

So, we have come through the storm. And that is what makes the day brighter. Here is the TMI section on why this hits me. We lost a child to fetal demise. Nothing we did, nothing we could do. And it was crushing. I deal with depression, and it hit hard. Fucking hard. But after the storm comes the sun. We had another child, and my daughter is now 18. She is the center of my world, and everything that I did right as a person, and worth every sacrifice I made. It doesn't change what I lost. It doesn't remove that pain, still. But after the storm comes blue skies.

"Mr. Blue Sky" is the last song, and the best known. On its own, it is a happy, genius piece of perfect pop, backed by a symphonic score. It is brilliant on its own. But it shines brightest as the closing of the four songs.

So I would tell my friend that while there is the rain, there comes the sun after. It may not feel like it, but this too will pass.

And I will be there for them, playing this song.

And this song is a fucking banger!

"Mr. Blue Sky," ELO

Brilliant choice. โšก๏ธโ›ˆ๏ธโ˜๏ธ๐Ÿฉต๐Ÿ’™๐Ÿฆ
 
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