Author Audioslave
Blood on the Valley Floor
da "King Animal" (2012)
Il ritorno dei Soundgarden, a 13 anni di distanza da "Down on the Upside" e dopo tre album solisti di Chris Cornell e lo scioglimento degli Audioslave.
Una canzone in puro stile Black Sabbath con un testo horror ma pienamente contro la guerra.
Il ritorno dei Soundgarden, a 13 anni di distanza da "Down on the Upside" e dopo tre album solisti di Chris Cornell e lo scioglimento degli Audioslave.
Una canzone in puro stile Black Sabbath con un testo horror ma pienamente contro la guerra.
Mountains all around
(Continues)
(Continues)
2013/9/1 - 00:45
Cochise
[2002]
Parole di Chris Cornell
Musica degli Audioslave
Dal loro debut album, l’eponimo “Audioslave”
Al giovane amico Cesare, che oltre alla grande cultura musicale ha pure un cervello più analitico di uno scanner, è bastato un attimo per accorgersi che nel pur immenso database delle CCG/AWS mancano ancora alcune canzoni degne di nota, come per esempio questa della band di Chris Cornell, Tom Morello e soci.
Per il percorso sul genocidio dei nativi americani.
Grazie Cesare!
“Cochise was the last great American Indian chief to die free and absolutely unconquered. When several members of his family were captured, tortured, and hanged by the U.S. Cavalry, Cochise declared war on the entire Southwest and went on an unholy rampage, a warpath to end all warpaths. He and his warriors drove out thousands of settlers. Cochise the avenger, fearless and resolute, attacked everything... (Continues)
Parole di Chris Cornell
Musica degli Audioslave
Dal loro debut album, l’eponimo “Audioslave”
Al giovane amico Cesare, che oltre alla grande cultura musicale ha pure un cervello più analitico di uno scanner, è bastato un attimo per accorgersi che nel pur immenso database delle CCG/AWS mancano ancora alcune canzoni degne di nota, come per esempio questa della band di Chris Cornell, Tom Morello e soci.
Per il percorso sul genocidio dei nativi americani.
Grazie Cesare!
“Cochise was the last great American Indian chief to die free and absolutely unconquered. When several members of his family were captured, tortured, and hanged by the U.S. Cavalry, Cochise declared war on the entire Southwest and went on an unholy rampage, a warpath to end all warpaths. He and his warriors drove out thousands of settlers. Cochise the avenger, fearless and resolute, attacked everything... (Continues)
I've been watching
(Continues)
(Continues)
Contributed by Dead End 2012/6/21 - 15:58
Song Itineraries:
Native American Genocide
(What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love, and Understanding
da "The New Favourites of Brinsley Schwarz" (1974)
Scritta da Nick Lowe per il suo gruppo, Brinsley Schwarz, la canzone è universalmente nota grazie alla versione di Elvis Costello & The Attractions che la incisero nel 1979.
La canzone è stata incisa anche da Curtis Stigers (la sua versione fa parte della colonna sonora del film "The Bodyguard") dai Wallflowers e recentemente cantata addirittura dagli Audioslave.
(What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love, and Understanding is a song written by English musician Nick Lowe. The song was originally released in 1974 on the album The New Favourites of Brinsley Schwarz by Lowe's band Brinsley Schwarz.
The cover by Elvis Costello & The Attractions is the version of the song that most people know but, strictly speaking, Elvis Costello & The Attractions never recorded this song. It was originally the B side of Lowe's American Squirm and... (Continues)
Scritta da Nick Lowe per il suo gruppo, Brinsley Schwarz, la canzone è universalmente nota grazie alla versione di Elvis Costello & The Attractions che la incisero nel 1979.
La canzone è stata incisa anche da Curtis Stigers (la sua versione fa parte della colonna sonora del film "The Bodyguard") dai Wallflowers e recentemente cantata addirittura dagli Audioslave.
(What's So Funny 'Bout) Peace, Love, and Understanding is a song written by English musician Nick Lowe. The song was originally released in 1974 on the album The New Favourites of Brinsley Schwarz by Lowe's band Brinsley Schwarz.
The cover by Elvis Costello & The Attractions is the version of the song that most people know but, strictly speaking, Elvis Costello & The Attractions never recorded this song. It was originally the B side of Lowe's American Squirm and... (Continues)
As I walk through
(Continues)
(Continues)
2006/1/26 - 00:09
×
Lyrics by Chris Cornell
Music by Audioslave
The song was inspired by the 1980s song "People Who Died," by The Jim Carroll Band, an emotional salute to the casualties of New York drug culture written by poet and singer Jim Carroll, who also wrote the autobiographical The Basketball Diaries. As Chris Cornell explained: "It's a bunch of references to people that I knew that ... were younger than me who've been dead for years and years, up to a couple of years ago."it is also about people who killed themselves before their time has come."
The lyrics also make a reference to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. ("...I've seen fifty-thousand names all engraved on a stone..."). As Cornell has put it: "And then just kind of that juxtaposition of, even though it seems a lot for one person, a young healthy person, to have lost all these friends through various means of stupidity... (Continues)