
JimmyS1969
MOODerator
Do people honestly think that by bashing someone else that maybe it adds credulity to themselves?
Um.. no..
Do people honestly think that by bashing someone else that maybe it adds credulity to themselves?
Do people honestly think that by bashing someone else that maybe it adds credulity to themselves?
This was what I was trying to get at.
There is too much rubbishing of other peoples work without any explanation whatsoever.
Anyone can write She loves you yeah, yeah, yeah. But it has to be written in the right place at the right time, and with the right support.
Only time will tell if the subject matter is relevant, or the words become classic.
Relevant or not, without subject matter of any kind there would be no songs to write.
(Just thought I'd extend on my last reply).
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Um.. no..
Do people honestly think that by bashing someone else that maybe it adds credulity to themselves?
I may not have expressed myself adequately. I was not supporting bashing. I was trying to figure out why folks do.
I thought that maybe making themselves look better by making others look small was the purpose.
..many of us have the opinion that ''she loves you yeah yeah' is stupid lame.
It's "yeah yeah YEAH". Three "yeah"s. Big difference.
That third "yeah" is what made them a faggy boy band. Two yeahs would have been better.
So true. See, I view the lyrical aspect of the chorus of "She loves you" in the context of the whole lyric and for me it's earth shattering for a group of very young twenty somethings, English guys from up north, pop music lyric writing and 1963.Writing and lyrics are subject to anyone's personal opinion. That is what makes us unique in our opinions and why many of us have the opinion that ''she loves you yeah yeah' is stupid lame.
I'm wondering this myself.Did I miss something? Where did this thread go barry?
Did I miss something? Where did this thread go barry?
So true. See, I view the lyrical aspect of the chorus of "She loves you" in the context of the whole lyric and for me it's earth shattering for a group of very young twenty somethings, English guys from up north, pop music lyric writing and 1963.
It's written from the point of view of a guy trying to repair the relationship between a couple that have had a major fallout due to a misunderstanding but both of whom are too damn proud and stubborn to make the first move in repairing things themselves. It's actually a song showing what true friendship is.
The chorus adds a great climactic twist that emphasizes the persuasive aspect of the guy's monologue.