Linda Ronstadt and the Stone Ponys - Different Drum
Nice laid back version of Linda's first hit. Written by Mike Nesmith of the Monkees.
Canal: Music
Añadido: December 31, 1969 at 3:59 pm
Autor: smile67
Duración: 02:24
Puntuación: 4.71
Reproducciones: 370267
Etiquetas: 60s linda mike monkees nesmith ronstadt singers
Comentarios
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stadalberts (December 31, 1969 at 3:59 pm)
Wonder how the stone pony's felt after she left them flat? Did they ever do any other hit songs?
Nefarioso (December 31, 1969 at 3:59 pm)
I feel pretty sure you will find a manWho will take a lot more than I ever could, or can,And you will settle down with him and I know that you'll be happy.So goodbye, I'll be leavin'And I see no sense to all this this cryin' and grievin'We'll both live a lot longerIf you live without me.(Ah go Red)
bjacko688 (December 31, 1969 at 3:59 pm)
what a beautiful woman... music and time
jdmans (December 31, 1969 at 3:59 pm)
perfection
buffspringfield (December 31, 1969 at 3:59 pm)
great name the stone ponys I remember Linda from the good days shes a honey
mgee63 (December 31, 1969 at 3:59 pm)
she was a major cutie!!!
IABOY4444 (December 31, 1969 at 3:59 pm)
I can't believe anyone would compare the Monkees to the BEATLES! Monkees were a fabricated group. Mike was the only actual musician in the group, hence the later snub. and ALL of their hits were written by other artists, mostly Boyce/Hart. Check out Susanna Hoffs (Bangles) version of differnt drum, she is Great!
gandil408 (December 31, 1969 at 3:59 pm)
Yes, Micky Dolenz was technically a better singer than Davy Jones, ALTHOUGH Jones himself was a darn good singer in his own right. Micky Dolenz had more range than Davy Jones, and Dolenz ALWAYS was the one who did the harmonizing in The Monkees. In fact, if you listen to Dolenz when he harmonizes (sings very high above the lead vocals) he sounds VERY MUCH like Paul McCartney when he harmonized with the Beatles ("If I Fell". "Dr. Robert", "Nowhere Man", etc).
gandil408 (December 31, 1969 at 3:59 pm)
You are DEAD WRONG. The Monkees NEVER faked any of their concerts. In fact, the reason WHY they went on tour was to PROVE that they were not fakers. The group that you are thinking of that faked their concert was JAN AND DEAN. Got that? JAN AND DEAN. They even made a movie about them called "Dead Man's Curve", about their disgraced "concert" when the record skipped, and they kept singing. They were called out right then and there by their audience. NOT THE MONKEES! You can look it up, Einstein.
gandil408 (December 31, 1969 at 3:59 pm)
You are DEAD WRONG. The Monkees NEVER faked any of their concerts. In fact, the reason WHY they went on tour was to PROVE that they were not fakers. The group that you are thinking of that faked their concert was JAN AND DEAN. Got that? JAN AND DEAN. They even made a movie about them called "dead Man's Curve", about their disgraced "concert" when the record skipped, and they kept singing. They were called out right then and there by their audience. NOT THE MONKEES! You can look it up, Einstein.
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