SWEET EUPHORIA by CHRIS CORNELL Letter by N.T. McQueen
Sitting in the pew of a small, Mexican church and hearing the tears of a broken family while Mother Mary looked down upon them. Same pain, different name.
Sitting in the pew of a small, Mexican church and hearing the tears of a broken family while Mother Mary looked down upon them. Same pain, different name.
Which record could hold our story, and become the beating heart of our home, but never play its music again?
Grandpa never forgot what he saw. He told me years later that he thought the Mobil Refinery on Francis St must have exploded.
Love at first listen. My anthem. Just the call for sanctuary was enough to provide tranquility on some of those crazy mornings. I wasn’t alone.
before I left, I walked up to the boy and told him his music was divine; I was proud to have him with me.
Michael Leach recalls hearing a Jimmy Barnes song, 30 years apart.
Simon’s opener was “America”, first recorded with Art Garfunkel for Bookends in 1968. Now, a half century later, this song had seen Simon progress from youth to old age, from folk rock to wildly creative musical experimentation that spanned the globe.
We had the pleasure of performing at the Port Fairy Literary Weekend on Saturday 3 September, at the Reardon Theatre.
Promo clip for our show next weekend in Albury.
There can’t be too many bands like the Stereo Stories band.