James McMurtry - Rachel's Song (Live on The WDVX Blue Plate Special)

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 12 ก.ย. 2024
  • James McMurtry performs their song "Rachel's Song" Live on The WDVX Blue Plate Special.
    The WDVX Blue Plate Special is a live performance radio show held at noon, Monday through Saturday, at the WDVX studio inside the Knoxville Visitor’s Center. Come and play your part as an audience member in the radio show that’s popular worldwide!
    Listen live at wdvx.com/
    Follow us on Facebook at / wdvxradio
    See more live performances and subscribe to our TH-cam channel at: / wdvxradio
    Audio By: Justin Hembree
    Filmed By: Joseph Jeter
    Edited By: Joseph Jeter
    #jamesmcmurtry #rachelssong #wdvxblueplatespecial

ความคิดเห็น • 9

  • @monoshock57
    @monoshock57 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    One of the best singer song writers ever.

    • @Bas78ad
      @Bas78ad ปีที่แล้ว +1

      couldn't agree more.

  • @tompalaima7274
    @tompalaima7274 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    "Rachel's Song" is THE perfect song by a truly genius song poet. Spare, direct, observant, getting across true realities about human 'suffering' in its literal meaning of carrying underneath life's problems the heavy weight of life's burdens. Four stanzas give us Rachel's story with a powerful economy that is like William Carlos Williams, William Faulkner, Larry McMurtry, Russell Banks. The young boy is at its essential core but has no voice. Rachel and the absent father create for him what the parents in Truffaut's " "Four Hundred Blows" create for Antoine Daniel. Anyone who has any childhood feeling left, can feel what is in the boy's heart and stomach and developing mind as rachel 'sings' her own defiant song.
    The song begins with an eastbound snow-dusted Chesapeake and Ohio coal train and shadows pulling the curtain of the night down along the mountain slopes and ends with those ephemeral snowflakes dancing each one briefly in the light outside the window. McMurtry's genius gives us the snowflakes peeking in at this mother and child family unit briefly hovering and falling on past. For the boy this naturally beautiful image is what? Like much great literature, McMurtry opens us up to feeling for the mother and the boy. And the song leaves us there forever after.
    I am grateful that he played it at the Bugle Boy in LaGrange two nights ago (October 27). It was the first time I have ever heard McMurtry play when he was not in 'liquor sales' as he puts it. That is, without people chattering, bottles and glasses clinging and clunking.His guitar work just gets better and better and his ability to "get the song across," as Bob Dylan puts it, and "not himself" is now refined to perfection, too. To hear McMurty perform is one of life's great blessings.

    • @vroomgrrly
      @vroomgrrly 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Wow. Thanks for this thoughtful explication of the lyrics, literary references and all! For real. Really excellent. Thank you, thank you.
      I only just discovered James McMurtry (son of Larry!), and I'm blown away. Love the way he plays 12-string.

    • @vroomgrrly
      @vroomgrrly 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Have you considered that this might be about a boy whose mother took off, leaving him with his dad who doesn't know what to do with him?

    • @pigskinpoetry
      @pigskinpoetry 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Excellent, thoughtful comment.

    • @benwade7334
      @benwade7334 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@vroomgrrlyThat's my take on the song

  • @knifelyfe6565
    @knifelyfe6565 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Love James tone on the 12 string.

  • @Bas78ad
    @Bas78ad ปีที่แล้ว +1

    What an honest gem. Wish he would be more productive, without loosing momentum/content. Please stay around! Hope you will visit The Netherlands again soon!