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Artist:Bob Dylan [ more ]
Song:One More Cup Of Coffee
Album:Desire [ info ]
Released:1976
Last Played:Jun 14, 2013 - 11:24
Avg. Rating:7.6  (Total Ratings: 1165)
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Ratings Dist:
1 votes: 33 (2.8%)2 votes: 26 (2.2%)3 votes: 33 (2.8%)4 votes: 23 (2%)5 votes: 46 (3.9%)6 votes: 44 (3.8%)7 votes: 174 (15%)8 votes: 347 (30%)9 votes: 266 (23%)10 votes: 173 (15%)
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281 comments for this song:spacerLog in above to post your comment

Bobert_ParkCity
(Park City Utah)
Posted: May 19, 2012 - 12:59 

 SmackDaddy wrote:


The question is, where are these types of singers now? Where are the ones giving voice to those that believe the Iraq/Afghanistan wars are nothing more than political and corporate grabs for control of oil.
 
Neil Young, Michael Franti - they are out there...  Hard to notice for most because we is living in some seriously apathetic times
Bobert_ParkCity
(Park City Utah)
Posted: May 19, 2012 - 12:52 

Loved it then - love it now. Always made me think of South America, for some reason. Like something out of a Herzog film.
SmackDaddy
(San Diego)
Posted: May 19, 2012 - 12:52 

 uThat_SOB wrote:
 
 
I hearken back to the early 60' s when Dylan's first albums were finding play at underground FM
stations. Albums like.——
The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan—The Times They Are a-Changin—- Highway 61 Revisited—and later Blonde on Blonde 
By 1967 the US was deeply involved a the conflict in Southeast Asia. Friends were coming home
in boxes, and by 1969 Nixon was sure that N.Vietnam could be bombed into peace. By then a dozen of my friends and a first cousin were dead and those of us in that age group who were still at home wanted to stay here. But the draft had started calling guys up, and many of us had decided we didn't see Vietnam as a threat to the US, and certainly not worth the lives of thousands of men who were dying there. Dylan wrote approx. 81 anti-war songs during that time (1962-1974) some of them classics like: "With God on Our Side", A Hard Rain's a Gonna' Fall, Masters of War, "Blowin in the Wind"   and those of us who loved our country but didn't agree with the politics of that war, found a friend in Dylan. He spoke for us, justified us, and unified us. We were by no means the "Chickens" Nixon and co. called us, had any county attacked us, we would have been there to defend in a heartbeat. By 1974  more than 58,000 Americans were killed in Vietnam while over 153,000 were wounded,and the country was sadly divided.But the war was over and it was time for the USA to heal. Those who didn't live through it can't know what people like Dylan meant to us, how he and others like him helped bring an end to the seemingly never-ending caskets covered by US flags being flown back to the states day after day. If Dylan and others like him helped save one life, they accomplished their purpose. I will always be grateful for their support, they will always have a special place in my heart as they did what I wish I could have. They hastened an end to a war that was tearing this country apart and ending the lives of so many of it's finest.. To the day I die, I will be thankful for Dylan's contribution to life, and for the lives of my friends,who are still with me today.
 

The question is, where are these types of singers now? Where are the ones giving voice to those that believe the Iraq/Afghanistan wars are nothing more than political and corporate grabs for control of oil.
jadewahoo
Posted: Mar 30, 2012 - 08:11 

 That_SOB wrote:
 
 
I hearken back to the early 60' s when Dylan's first albums were finding play at underground FM
stations. Albums like.——
The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan—The Times They Are a-Changin—- Highway 61 Revisited—and later Blonde on Blonde 
By 1967 the US was deeply involved a the conflict in Southeast Asia. Friends were coming home
in boxes, and by 1969 Nixon was sure that N.Vietnam could be bombed into peace. By then a dozen of my friends and a first cousin were dead and those of us in that age group who were still at home wanted to stay here. But the draft had started calling guys up, and many of us had decided we didn't see Vietnam as a threat to the US, and certainly not worth the lives of thousands of men who were dying there. Dylan wrote approx. 81 anti-war songs during that time (1962-1974) some of them classics like: "With God on Our Side", A Hard Rain's a Gonna' Fall, Masters of War, "Blowin in the Wind"   and those of us who loved our country but didn't agree with the politics of that war, found a friend in Dylan. He spoke for us, justified us, and unified us. We were by no means the "Chickens" Nixon and co. called us, had any county attacked us, we would have been there to defend in a heartbeat. By 1974  more than 58,000 Americans were killed in Vietnam while over 153,000 were wounded,and the country was sadly divided.But the war was over and it was time for the USA to heal. Those who didn't live through it can't know what people like Dylan meant to us, how he and others like him helped bring an end to the seemingly never-ending caskets covered by US flags being flown back to the states day after day. If Dylan and others like him helped save one life, they accomplished their purpose. I will always be grateful for their support, they will always have a special place in my heart as they did what I wish I could have. They hastened an end to a war that was tearing this country apart and ending the lives of so many of it's finest.. To the day I die, I will be thankful for Dylan's contribution to life, and for the lives of my friends,who are still with me today.
 
Beautifully, passionately, spoken. {#Notworthy}
That_SOB
(In at least 2 places at once)
Posted: Mar 17, 2012 - 04:14 

 
 
I hearken back to the early 60' s when Dylan's first albums were finding play at underground FM
stations. Albums like.——
The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan—The Times They Are a-Changin—- Highway 61 Revisited—and later Blonde on Blonde 
By 1967 the US was deeply involved a the conflict in Southeast Asia. Friends were coming home
in boxes, and by 1969 Nixon was sure that N.Vietnam could be bombed into peace. By then a dozen of my friends and a first cousin were dead and those of us in that age group who were still at home wanted to stay here. But the draft had started calling guys up, and many of us had decided we didn't see Vietnam as a threat to the US, and certainly not worth the lives of thousands of men who were dying there. Dylan wrote approx. 81 anti-war songs during that time (1962-1974) some of them classics like: "With God on Our Side", A Hard Rain's a Gonna' Fall, Masters of War, "Blowin in the Wind"   and those of us who loved our country but didn't agree with the politics of that war, found a friend in Dylan. He spoke for us, justified us, and unified us. We were by no means the "Chickens" Nixon and co. called us, had any county attacked us, we would have been there to defend in a heartbeat. By 1974  more than 58,000 Americans were killed in Vietnam while over 153,000 were wounded,and the country was sadly divided.But the war was over and it was time for the USA to heal. Those who didn't live through it can't know what people like Dylan meant to us, how he and others like him helped bring an end to the seemingly never-ending caskets covered by US flags being flown back to the states day after day. If Dylan and others like him helped save one life, they accomplished their purpose. I will always be grateful for their support, they will always have a special place in my heart as they did what I wish I could have. They hastened an end to a war that was tearing this country apart and ending the lives of so many of it's finest.. To the day I die, I will be thankful for Dylan's contribution to life, and for the lives of my friends,who are still with me today.

dw
(PHill, CA)
Posted: Feb 27, 2012 - 15:47 

Violin reminds me of "It's A Beautiful Day". 
ScottN
(Condo in Gaza full time now. Thank TFSM I saw the divot where the landmine was placed.)
Posted: Jan 13, 2012 - 14:20 

Great song from a great album.  Sreet Legal, also issued near this time gets overlooked often too.
And Emmylou, our treasure, backing vocals—yes.

ri_shelton
(A few clicks up the river)
Posted: Dec 12, 2011 - 19:44 

Oh, to see Dylan in his Rolling Thunder era! The melodies on this album are appealing, the performance stirring, but the poetry in the songs is best-ever! Do, please, add a DESIRE cut to the mix often.
BBOGDA
(Oswego)
Posted: Nov 24, 2011 - 11:59 

Emmy Lou Harris.  Great song!
On_The_Beach
(The Blue Planet)
Posted: Oct 23, 2011 - 23:47 

 RedTopFireBelow wrote:
Not much of a Dylan fan must I really like this tune..   who does the female voice belong to?   anyone know?
 
I'm pretty sure it's Emmylou Harris.

RedTopFireBelow
(Jersey shore, USA)
Posted: Oct 10, 2011 - 13:18 

Not much of a Dylan fan must I really like this tune..   who does the female voice belong to?   anyone know?


Andy_B
(aboard MV "Horizon," east coast Fla)
Posted: Sep 22, 2011 - 05:57 

WonderLizard wrote: "I agree with Cynaera that the gripes and complaints from the younger folks are, well, misplaced, sorta like our peers bitching about Glen Miller, Louis Armstrong, or Django Reinhardt. It's not about undeveloped tastes, bias, or ego. It's about the music. Isn't that why you're listening? And you are listening, aren't you?"

When Dylan and his peers are placed in the time context which they preformed, they were just nothing short of earth-shattering in the music business.  Today's naysayers are ONLY viewing them in TODAY'S context and not in which they emerged.  GOOD music stands the test of time and not to appreciate music of another generation is short-sighted indeed.  And yes, I'm in that over 60 crowd,...as a matter of fact shoving 70 pretty hard.  And frankly, there's a LOT of current, contemporary music that I don't like but I don't foist my preferences nor negativity upon those that do.  Ease up a bit and enjoy. 


MiracleDrug
(Earth)
Posted: Sep 22, 2011 - 05:45 

okay so for some reason Bob felt there was a need for All Along The Watchtower Part Deux...



Snoopy2
(A Snoopy Lovin' House)
Posted: Aug 08, 2011 - 17:23 

The coffee must taste horrible!
WonderLizard
(2,755.46 mi. due east of Paradise)
Posted: Jul 21, 2011 - 12:40 

 Cynaera wrote:
This whole CD was a mainstay in my early days. And shut up, you little twenty/thirty-year olds. You were too young to appreciate it and now, you're still too young to appreciate it. Geez - sometimes it feels really good to be over fifty... {#Lol}
 
Some years ago I watched a documentary about the Rolling Thunder Revue, which of course featured Roger McGuinn, Jack Eliot, Kinky Friedman, T-Bone Burnett, Mick Ronson, and not least Joan Baez. Well, Dylan and Baez get along famously, flirting like a couple of teenagers, when one cute-as-a-button groupie suddenly looks straight into the camera and says, "It's on again." Diamonds and rust indeed.

I agree with Cynaera that the gripes and complaints from the younger folks are, well, misplaced, sorta like our peers bitching about Glen Miller, Louis Armstrong, or Django Reinhardt. It's not about undeveloped tastes, bias, or ego. It's about the music. Isn't that why you're listening? And you are listening, aren't you?

burningmonk
(Spain)
Posted: Jul 21, 2011 - 12:10 

 scarletdancer wrote:
Pure poetry.  And I'm not a Dylan fan nor a coffee drinker.  The song transcends the performers and enters the realm of the sublime.
 
well said scarletdancer!

johnjconn
(chicago land)
Posted: Jul 21, 2011 - 12:08 


Perhaps my favorite Dylan song. 
Great album too. 

Vandal meant to say "horrible, you don't play this more often:

 
vandal wrote:
horrible 
 


bluecshells
(EARTH)
Posted: Jul 21, 2011 - 12:08 

Beautiful!
vandal
(arriving somewhere, but not here. . .)
Posted: Jul 08, 2011 - 08:32 

horrible 
Cynaera
(South of Neanderthal)
Posted: Jun 06, 2011 - 17:06 

This whole CD was a mainstay in my early days. And shut up, you little twenty/thirty-year olds. You were too young to appreciate it and now, you're still too young to appreciate it. Geez - sometimes it feels really good to be over fifty... {#Lol}
Canlistener
(Ontario Canada)
Posted: May 19, 2011 - 04:58 

Are you kidding me, this is inhuman to make someone listen to.  MUTE!
sirdroseph
(Yes)
Posted: May 19, 2011 - 04:57 

9 -> 10
vivakitty
(The Girl Who Wrecks Your Dreams)
Posted: Apr 04, 2011 - 11:27 

 sirdroseph wrote:


I am sorry, but saying that ANYTHING the white stripes do especially a cover of a Dylan tune is better than Dylan is just plain ol' blasphemy!{#Stop}
 
I am consistently and continuously blasphemous on matters Bob Dylan.

sirdroseph
(Yes)
Posted: Mar 17, 2011 - 04:29 

 vivakitty wrote:

Agreed.  If for no other reasons than the violin is replaced by searing guitar and there's no Bob Dylan singing on it.

 

I am sorry, but saying that ANYTHING the white stripes do especially a cover of a Dylan tune is better than Dylan is just plain ol' blasphemy!{#Stop}
drews
(London, Blighty)
Posted: Mar 17, 2011 - 04:29 

Would be a great one from Bob were it not for the quavering voice; sounds like Bob's recovering from a stroke
oldviolin
(Esse quam videri)
Posted: Jan 31, 2011 - 16:38 

there's a place where the sky falls like hot wax on a winter floor...


...your heart is like the ocean, mysterious and dark...
On_The_Beach
(Vancouver BC, Bud)
Posted: Jan 13, 2011 - 19:57 

 a_genuine_find wrote:
{#Curtain} ... 14.1% of listeners rate this 5 or LOWER ...

 
In other words, a whopping 86% of R.P. listeners have excellent taste!

kahaki
(Evansville, IN)
Posted: Jan 13, 2011 - 13:23 

 a_genuine_find wrote:
{#Curtain} ... 14.1% of listeners rate this 5 or LOWER ...
 
must be under 60. hahahahahahaha
a_genuine_find
(not me, Radio P) (3rd stone, sol, orion belt, milkyway)
Posted: Jan 13, 2011 - 13:18 

{#Curtain} ... 14.1% of listeners rate this 5 or LOWER ...

kahaki
(Evansville, IN)
Posted: Jan 13, 2011 - 13:15 

 Jelani wrote:
What's down in "the valley below" that they're getting all dramatic about?
Or is it just all the coffee winding them up? 
 
hahahaha.
chills, babe.
i can picture Bob in the valley. 
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