I just listened to the song to try and help you - I couldn't figure
out what repeated word you were talking about before the listen and
still cannot, after - can you tell me when you think you hear it?
I think mr. Brazee means the Glitter & Doom version where the band
arrangment has some accentuated beats that Tom sings along with. I don`t
percieve them as actual words though, just in the world of "da-dum da-dum."
Ah, the world of boots. Gotcha.
Even a official podcast here:
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=92916923
>I think mr. Brazee means the Glitter & Doom version where the band
>arrangment has some accentuated beats that Tom sings along with. I don`t
>percieve them as actual words though, just in the world of "da-dum da-dum."
That's the version I mean.
>> Ah, the world of boots. Gotcha.
>
>Even a official podcast here:
>
>http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=92916923
That's what I listened to - I'm keeping it until I can buy a CD of
that concert.
Howard -- you are a Waits fan too?
He is a very dangerous thing to a golf game if he gets in your head on the
course...
>> What is the word Tom Waits keeps repeating in "Such A Scream" - it
>> sounds like Faro, Faro; Faro, Faro?
>
>Howard -- you are a Waits fan too?
>
>He is a very dangerous thing to a golf game if he gets in your head on the
>course...
I have a book that included a CD of golf swing rhythms. I copied
them to my iPod, but we can't use iPods while playing.
Waits music wouldn't be ideal for keeping a smooth, unchanging swing
rhythm.
Except for his song, "Come On Up To The Green."
--woodstock
I became a Waits fan in 1976 when "Tom Traubert's Blues (Four Sheets
to the Wind In Copenhagen)" came out.
I started playing golf at my son-in-law's bachelor party in 1997.
Tell me about it --- He has ruined more than one round.... ;-))
I cannot even think about Raindogs without getting a hitch in my swing. --