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The version with the Staples from The Last Waltz may be the perfect song.
Man, this one is a challenge. There are a LOT of songs on my No-Skips playlist, and the ones that are most meaningful to me are really hard to explain or have a "You kinda had to be there" element to their stories. They're probably not songs that'll make any Rolling Stone list of top anything, but they are embedded in my heart in a way that wouldn't really make sense to anybody else.
I'll go ahead and try to tell the stories of my top 3:
"Don't Look Back" by Boston:
On the day I graduated from high school, I was alone in the house about a half-hour before the ceremony. My parents and grandparents had already gone to the school. I was just so indescribably happy that this part of my life was over and that I was moving on to whatever was coming next. I put that album on the stereo and cranked it up as loud as those speakers would handle.
Twenty-six years later, I was driving my oldest kid to Tallahashee to start at FSU. That song came on the iPod on shuffle while we were waiting at a light, and the kid noticed the tear forming. I told the story, and the light turned green. As we circled the exit ramp, the bridge to the song started. I just cranked it up and floored it. I shifted into fourth JUST as the guitar kicked in on the solo. We were going about 105 by that point. Kid looked at me. "That … was COOL."
"Downstream" by a band from Missouri called The Rainmakers:
I grew up in a very average part of a very average place. There aren't many songs about Missouri, and for good reason. This one just is the essence of Missouri and makes me homesick whenever I hear it. It's best heard live, where the drum and rhythm guitar are nice and up front.
"Children of Children" by Jason Isbell:
Not like I can pick one Isbell song, but this one …
My parents were 17 and 16 when I was born. I have a clear memory of my mother's 21st birthday. I remember when she got her driver's license, not long after. When I heard "all the years I took from her/just by being born" for the first time, I literally had to be physically lifted from my desk by my partner. That was it — exactly the thing that I felt and never could articulate. Isbell found words for the thing that had wordlessly haunted me my entire life. Because she and my father gave up their early adulthood, I was able to have one.
Again, maybe you had to be there.
My first year of college was spent at Northeast Missouri State (now Truman State) in Kirksville. A friend I made there was from Kansas City and was a big fan of The Rainmakers, so I know the song you're talking about. Pretty good late-1980s Midwestern rock band!Man, this one is a challenge. There are a LOT of songs on my No-Skips playlist, and the ones that are most meaningful to me are really hard to explain or have a "You kinda had to be there" element to their stories. They're probably not songs that'll make any Rolling Stone list of top anything, but they are embedded in my heart in a way that wouldn't really make sense to anybody else.
I'll go ahead and try to tell the stories of my top 3:
"Don't Look Back" by Boston:
On the day I graduated from high school, I was alone in the house about a half-hour before the ceremony. My parents and grandparents had already gone to the school. I was just so indescribably happy that this part of my life was over and that I was moving on to whatever was coming next. I put that album on the stereo and cranked it up as loud as those speakers would handle.
Twenty-six years later, I was driving my oldest kid to Tallahashee to start at FSU. That song came on the iPod on shuffle while we were waiting at a light, and the kid noticed the tear forming. I told the story, and the light turned green. As we circled the exit ramp, the bridge to the song started. I just cranked it up and floored it. I shifted into fourth JUST as the guitar kicked in on the solo. We were going about 105 by that point. Kid looked at me. "That … was COOL."
"Downstream" by a band from Missouri called The Rainmakers:
I grew up in a very average part of a very average place. There aren't many songs about Missouri, and for good reason. This one just is the essence of Missouri and makes me homesick whenever I hear it. It's best heard live, where the drum and rhythm guitar are nice and up front.
"Children of Children" by Jason Isbell:
Not like I can pick one Isbell song, but this one …
My parents were 17 and 16 when I was born. I have a clear memory of my mother's 21st birthday. I remember when she got her driver's license, not long after. When I heard "all the years I took from her/just by being born" for the first time, I literally had to be physically lifted from my desk by my partner. That was it — exactly the thing that I felt and never could articulate. Isbell found words for the thing that had wordlessly haunted me my entire life. Because she and my father gave up their early adulthood, I was able to have one.
Again, maybe you had to be there.
Man, this one is a challenge. There are a LOT of songs on my No-Skips playlist, and the ones that are most meaningful to me are really hard to explain or have a "You kinda had to be there" element to their stories. They're probably not songs that'll make any Rolling Stone list of top anything, but they are embedded in my heart in a way that wouldn't really make sense to anybody else.
I'll go ahead and try to tell the stories of my top 3:
"Don't Look Back" by Boston:
On the day I graduated from high school, I was alone in the house about a half-hour before the ceremony. My parents and grandparents had already gone to the school. I was just so indescribably happy that this part of my life was over and that I was moving on to whatever was coming next. I put that album on the stereo and cranked it up as loud as those speakers would handle.
Twenty-six years later, I was driving my oldest kid to Tallahashee to start at FSU. That song came on the iPod on shuffle while we were waiting at a light, and the kid noticed the tear forming. I told the story, and the light turned green. As we circled the exit ramp, the bridge to the song started. I just cranked it up and floored it. I shifted into fourth JUST as the guitar kicked in on the solo. We were going about 105 by that point. Kid looked at me. "That … was COOL."
"Downstream" by a band from Missouri called The Rainmakers:
I grew up in a very average part of a very average place. There aren't many songs about Missouri, and for good reason. This one just is the essence of Missouri and makes me homesick whenever I hear it. It's best heard live, where the drum and rhythm guitar are nice and up front.
"Children of Children" by Jason Isbell:
Not like I can pick one Isbell song, but this one …
My parents were 17 and 16 when I was born. I have a clear memory of my mother's 21st birthday. I remember when she got her driver's license, not long after. When I heard "all the years I took from her/just by being born" for the first time, I literally had to be physically lifted from my desk by my partner. That was it — exactly the thing that I felt and never could articulate. Isbell found words for the thing that had wordlessly haunted me my entire life. Because she and my father gave up their early adulthood, I was able to have one.
Again, maybe you had to be there.