The Band
The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down
Rock Of Ages
(1972)

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101 comments:lyrics:add your comment
Kaisersosay
Jun 13, 2013 - 11:59
RIP Levon


k-man
Feb 07, 2013 - 15:31
sirdroseph wrote:
Agree, it just doesn't get any better than this. 10.

Yes indeed. This song always puts in seriously emotional state.

and I can't say that of many tunes.


tulfan
Jan 07, 2013 - 07:23
In the words of SNL's Leonard Pinth Garnell: "unrelentingly bad"...


coy
Dec 06, 2012 - 22:23
dang some high flyin comments on this here song



zepher
Nov 05, 2012 - 13:00



Is that freedom rock? The Band documentary on Net Flix, etc is good to watch. Lots of live and studio cuts. Cool the Drummer was the lead singer like the Eagles....






lily34
Nov 05, 2012 - 12:51
oh, i love this so much.
always reminds me of my mom.


ycb661
Oct 05, 2012 - 03:50
Papernapkin wrote:
Hillbilly music.

So? Most modern pop music (apart from Techno) is or at least descended from "Hillbilly music." The Southern and Appalachian cultures and their stories of lost glory, poverty and suffering (both black and white) are about the best American stories. It's always amazing to me that the very white instrument of the banjo is really Africa. "Ain't that America...?"


rdo
Sep 03, 2012 - 15:04
Hannio wrote:


In the politically correct world of Wikipedia what you say is true. But I have been reading The Economist and Der Spiegel for decades. They use "American" exclusively for citizens of the USA, except when they are hypocritically contending that Americans can also refer to all inhabitants of the new world. Which I don't argue against at all, but I doubt you will ever find a Canadian, a Mexican or a Brazilian referred to as an American in the European press. And the original point I was making is that Canadians themselves want to have it both ways. They loathe being referred to as Americans and not specifically Canadians, yet at the same time are offended that the term "American" in common usage (by the rest of the world, not just in the US) doesn't include them.


In Spain I met a truly nice person who, after I introduced myself via e-mail as "an American", responded, not disingenuously, "So where are you from?". I met numerous people in Spain who knew the history of the " Norteamericano/Americano " distinction well enough though. A citizen of Brazil is Brazilian. If I am not American, then what am I? Spain has a convenient way around the debate with the word Estadounidense, which I never once heard used in two years living there. This is the equivalent of saying in English "I am Unitedstatian" instead of "I am American". You're right about the Economist, BTW. In the two other countries I have lived in, Israel (in Hebrew) and Russia, we're Americans, no distinction whatsoever exists - I learned the langauges well.



kingart
Sep 03, 2012 - 14:42
And the Joan Baez cover, from Diamonds and Rust, is good too. But the original is seldom equaled, much less surpassed.


sirdroseph
Apr 20, 2012 - 09:01
Papernapkin wrote:
Hillbilly music.


Agree, it just doesn't get any better than this. 10. {#Notworthy}


wossName
Mar 29, 2012 - 08:39
Otomi wrote:
On the German disambiguation page the continental sense precedes the national sense. Repeating this trial with the adjectives American, americano , américain , and Amerikaner produced similar results.

While this reflects positively on German Wikipedians, I have yet to meet a German who in a regular conversation would interpret the statement "er ist Amerikaner" as "he is from the northern or southern Americas", rather than "he's from the US".


Hannio
Mar 29, 2012 - 08:39
Otomi wrote:

Howdy, Hannio. I thought you might be right, so I designed a simple experiment to put your claim that "the world recognizes the term 'American' as a USA citizen" to the test. I looked up America, América , Amérique , and Amerika in the English, Spanish, French, and German Wikipedia pages. I decided that Wikipedia was a good place to look, because its democratic orientation can give us a glimpse at what people in a given online language community tend to think. The first search, on the English language web page, took me to a disambiguation page where the continental sense of the word (North, Central, and South America plus nearby islands) is listed first, then the United States of America. Searches in the other three languages took me directly to the continental description. On the Spanish disambiguation page we are warned that the Real Academia Española, arbiters of linguistic propriety in this language, discourage the use of "America" in reference to the United States. On the main French page for Amérique it is stated that this word should not be confused with the United States of America. On the German disambiguation page the continental sense precedes the national sense. Repeating this trial with the adjectives American, americano , américain , and Amerikaner produced similar results. This experiment tends to confirm what I thought I knew from experience in my travels and contacts with people from around the world, that outside the USA most people understand the words America, American and their cognates in the continental sense.

- Otomi in pedant mode (sorry, folks, I'll try to lighten up)


In the politically correct world of Wikipedia what you say is true. But I have been reading The Economist and Der Spiegel for decades. They use "American" exclusively for citizens of the USA, except when they are hypocritically contending that Americans can also refer to all inhabitants of the new world. Which I don't argue against at all, but I doubt you will ever find a Canadian, a Mexican or a Brazilian referred to as an American in the European press. And the original point I was making is that Canadians themselves want to have it both ways. They loathe being referred to as Americans and not specifically Canadians, yet at the same time are offended that the term "American" in common usage (by the rest of the world, not just in the US) doesn't include them.


shellbella
Mar 29, 2012 - 08:26
Papernapkin wrote:
And your favorites list is stuck in the 70s.

On_The_Beach wrote:
Papernapkin
Mar 29, 2012 - 08:25
Hillbilly music.


shellbella
Mar 29, 2012 - 08:25
{#Notworthy}


Papernapkin
Mar 29, 2012 - 08:24
And your favorites list is stuck in the 70s.

On_The_Beach wrote:

This from someone who rated a Tori Amos song a 10?! Thanks for the laugh!





scraig
Nov 23, 2011 - 11:17
Is that Adam Sandler on vocals?


(former member)
Nov 23, 2011 - 11:16


Everybody in my hotel room loves this song...





On_The_Beach
Oct 22, 2011 - 21:08
Curley24 wrote:
By far the worst song by the worst band in the history of rock 'n roll. I have never understood the reason we MUST like this band; after all, EVERY pop music critic in every newspaper or magazine would go on and on in love with these guys. I've never met a person who likes the group or any of their songs. . . .

This from someone who rated a Tori Amos song a 10?! Thanks for the laugh! {#Lol}


HazzeSwede
Sep 21, 2011 - 05:00
We have met the band. {#Yes}


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