Please Be Wrong and Country Song Upside-Down both typify the catchy, warm, rustic sound of the album, bright guitars alongside dark, melancholy lyrics.
Meanwhile mid-point Many Worlds is an 8-minute long, slow, piano-based contemplation of the night sky, equally beautiful and languorous, while Story To Tell adopts a late-Beatles/John Lennon slow piano style with added slide guitar. The song is about a man in a bar who meets a woman who has left her. This bar has been here for three decades its changed. 1937, is famous for western swing dancing, country music & iconic saddle bar stools. Great atmosphere, great specials, great food, large selection of Domestics, Imports & Craft Beers and good service. Other standouts include Tired of Taking It Out on You, and A Lifetime to Find, and the beautiful intertwining guitars on Bird Without A Tail / Base of My Skull. It was released in January 1977 as the second and final single from the album Kenny Rogers. Specialties: No Cover Live Country music Saturdays, featuring the biggest dance floor in the northeast, 6 tvs for all the games you want to watch also including one Massive 12 foot by 12 foot screen. Largely acoustic, there’s a bittersweet tone throughout encapsulated in the title track: “I love my country like a little boy / Red, white, and blue/ I love my country, stupid and cruel,” and there are also echoes of mid-late 70s Dylan here from the rolling piano and drawl of opener I Am My Mother, to the folkier Ambulance. The song talks about an easygoing time, where you can just lie on your chair on the beach with a drink in your hand and just enjoy life. This song is from the album of the same name, on which Kenny Chesney launched his island-themed musical style. 'Lovely Cruise' is featured on Buffetts famous 'Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes' album from 1977. Among them are 'A Pirate Looks Forty,' 'Boat Drinks' and 'Son of a Son of a Sailor.' But this one is particularly, well, lovely. With a double-edged title referring to both style and content, the Chicago band return with a strong, 21-track double album of country-edged music brimful with fine melodies, melancholy but sharply pointed lyrics, and a throwback to Jeff Tweedy’s early-90s alt-country days with Uncle Tupelo. Kenny Chesney: 'No Shoes, No Shirt, No Problems'. Jimmy Buffett has a lot of great songs about boats, ships, and sailing.