This was used to make the first mp3. It was well known for being a good audio test to see how natural a human voice is on a speaker, and the man trying to make it had heard the song on the radio, and immediately knew he should use this song.
For those who don't know: The reason is because mp3 is a lossy format, have worse sound quality than .flac or .wav. It was widespread cause it had low file size. So it had to be tested during coding.
@@argylegrant4073 "significant loss in quality" mp3 is pretty significant, but for the avarage listener, you are right its not. But now everybody has so many spaces it really shouldnt be a standard, drives with many more space.
@@Darkcranio 320 kbps mp3's don't have that much quality loss fully lossless audio files contain many frequencies that aren't audible by the human ear (literally impossible to hear them) it's quite redundant to have audio that only your dog or such could hear :P and even through the nicest speakers, in a quiet room, with a young person with healthy ears, it's still only going to be marginally different.
The best version of this song. Someone feeling somewhat isolated from the world while thinking about fond memories. Life just moves on and you have to stay with it. Amazing.
I could be wrong but i feel like i *understand* this song. Normal day, things can feel melancholy. Other peoples intimacy can make you a bit shy. An aesthetic can remind you of a magical time long ago. And just like that, time to go to work. I saw it in her eyes and i feel seen and just like, I understand this piece of poetic art. And thank you for this. Absolutely fantastic writing.
Even if you are wrong it doesn't matter. Ultimately, if you feel a connection to a song or any medium and you get your own meaning out of it, that's all that should matter to you.
This is a normal day, but the way she draws attention to these little incidents that cause mild, awkward discomfort in our regular interactions is really incredible. The lady on the other side of the window, the intimacy of another couple, the sense of another person watching us, the effort to not notice what we notice (like the woman messing with her skirt/stockings), and so on. Really brilliant. How we handle these awkward situations will make a big difference in our lives. Now I'm going to try to pay more attention to these in my life and think about how to handle them better. So, this is a song that may actually improve my life. Thanks, Suzanne!
I had a lot of trouble accepting the dance remix with this set as my standard. It eventually grew on me, but I think it's easy to see how this set a high bar.
Much more soulful and personal this one. Also, didn’t expect to see youtube’s most famous martial artist here ahahha, love your channel, hope all’s well in Shanghai! :-)
There's something so eerie about this song, even though she's just singing about a normal day. I have a vague memory of hearing this as a child and thinking it was a bit creepy, it might be a false memory though but I don't think it is because I heard this again a few years ago and recognized it, then I heard it again a few months ago and I was just so captivated. This song doesn't even need music, it still has a rhythm and it takes a lot of talent to make acapella this interesting. I can just see everything happening and it feels like I'm inside her thoughts or something...
2pac covered this song and it is actually creepy. Very well done and touching. It's called Dope Fiends Diner if you havent heard it. The song literally makes me tear.
It's literally the beginning of a newer song with no lyrics. Just the a capaella intro she uses. Still, no lyrics. I had to do some digging to find it. The melody was very short so nothing on SoundHound or Shazam. I just had to hunt it down. 🤫💪
Best word I can use to describe this song is disillusionment. Like the characters going through their world in a 3rd person view, drifting through life rather than feeling it. Alienation
Avevo scoperto questa canzone e questa artista quando ero ragazzino circa 30 anni fa. Mi ricordo che questa melodia mi aveva toccato nell'anima, e mi ero innamorato di questa voce dolcissima e anche un po' misteriosa. E anche il suo viso dolce e pulito rispecchia la bellezza delle sue canzoni. Pochi anni fa ha fatto un concerto in provincia di Udine e sono riuscito a vederla e avere il suo autografo. È una poetessa della musica!
I saw Suzanne Vega in concert at the Moore Theater in '87 and she is one of the few artists to sound BETTER in person, no recording can d her Justice. So good in fact, it was on the verge of a life changing experience. Thank you.
I was always like, "Why does listening to the bells of the Cathedral make her think of someone's voice? This version answers it. She is remembering the rendezvous the night before.
That part was about a fellow folksinger and close friend Jack Hardy. They once had a picnic on the steps of the St. John the Divine cathedral eating sandwiches and drinking wine so when the bells rang she remembered his voice.
I remember hearing the radio version of this song when I was a kid and always remembered it as time went by. This is the first time I've heard the acapella version, and it's beautiful yet eerie. To strip away all the music and make something pure like this is rarely seen nowadays. It's very interesting. I hope everyone who has heard the radio version sets out to hear this one too.
I love how all of us who grew up with this song seem to have similar feelings about it. Something about this song hit all of us the same. I wonder why.
Suzanne. I’m aware you’ll never see my comment, but listening to this again has given me goosebumps. I only have your work on vinyl, and I haven’t owned a record player for more than 20 years. I think I’m answering my own question, hello Richer Sounds!
In college years almost half a century ago, I frequented places in the same area for coffee. Sometimes, this was a start-up dose of caffeine, at other times a chance to camp out at a table with free refills and pages of books littered with debris from croissants. Hearing this song a cappella reminds me that I usually went out for coffee by myself, though it would be a stretch to say going out for coffee in NYC was a way to be alone. After all, at one place, I would take in ambient conversations, the trompe l'oeil of mirrors, the windows contrasting my stationary routine with the flux of the street. Being at a place where you can have coffee doesn't necessarily create spectacle, but it can turn you into a kind of spectator. That itself creates the sense of a story. You might even think of it as a narrator in your head, like a double in a mirror, familiar enough to be mistaken for yourself, yet also distanced enough to be a generic stranger. In my own mindful perceptions, I have no distinct memory of church bells. There were at least a couple of times when I went inside the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, the source of bells mentioned in the song, but the landmark was more often a point of reference. Even if I didn't exactly take notice of the cathedral, it could somehow loom at the edge of awareness while I was on the other side of Amsterdam Avenue, at a table with books and coffee in the Hungarian Pastry Shop. And, yes, for the songwriter, the ring of bells without her consciously tuning in, could dial up a personal memory from the past. Though "Tom's Diner" (or Tom's Restaurant) is better known from the "Seinfeld" series, I think of it as just another version of the same prototype, a kind of ancillary landmark. Years later, I noticed a parallel in Boston's "Mission Hill" section of Roxbury, named for a Romanesque Revival basilica whose bells punctually mark time every 15 minutes. There's no Amsterdam Avenue or Broadway here, but there is Tremont Street, with its own mix of people and traffic. And, almost directly across the street from the church entrance, there's another ancillary landmark with its own long history and tables for coffee--"Mike's Donuts." There's a subdued tension in the song between all those mindful perceptions and the singer's invisibility, with her retrospective introspection, while the person who's pouring coffee at the counter looks with anticipation at someone else. In a throng of real-time minutiae, the songwriter' can be visible yet overlooked, physically present yet plunged into the outwardly invisible zone of her past. She's like the "Night Hawks" perched in the famous painting by Hopper, an outward semblance of reticence, impenetrable enough to suggest something else on the other side of a split consciousness.
I am sitting In the morning At the diner On the corner I am waiting At the counter For the man To pour the coffee And he fills it Only halfway And before I even argue He is looking Out the window At somebody Coming in It is always Nice to see you Says the man Behind the counter To the woman Who has come in She is shaking Her umbrella And I look The other way As they are kissing Their hellos I'm pretending Not to see them Instead I pour the milk I open Up the paper There's a story Of an actor Who had died While he was drinking It was no one I had heard of And I'm turning To the horoscope And looking For the funnies When I'm feeling Someone watching me And so I raise my head There's a woman On the outside Looking inside Does she see me? No she does not Really see me Cause she sees Her own reflection And I'm trying Not to notice That she's hitching Up her skirt And while she's Straightening her stockings Her hair Has gotten wet Oh, this rain It will continue Through the morning As I'm listening To the bells Of the cathedral I am thinking Of your voice... And of the midnight picnic Once upon a time Before the rain began... I finish up my coffee It's time to catch the train
For a couple of decades, I was _aware_ that this was an a capella song which had been put to music by someone else after the fact, but I'd only ever heard the one from the charts... Hearing this version for the first time was eerie without the beats and samples, made even creepier by the silent pauses where my brain was expecting the "do do do-do duh-duh do do" bit. I had just gotten used to not hearing it when it came in _right_ at the end, and the smile as she does it makes me think this video was made _after_ the dance-y version because she knows the listener has been waiting the entire song for it...!
I heard this quite unexpectedly on an album cassette I bought in the 80's and instantly fell in love with it. Having since heard the DNA version (which I do like) this takes me back to that time of innocence and SV's voice has a certain kind of vulnerability about it that you lose in the DNA mix...
wow yall, i had the cassette when she first released it was a bonus track at the very end unlisted….i guess i never really understood how many unique peices of music i had as a teen. i even had an original jimi hendrix experience ( the album) album that my uncle got when hendrix was new. wish i still had all of that vinyl…..who remember laurie anderson? or love tractor? jefferrson airplane after bathing at baxters….good times
It was originally released as the first track on side one of "Solitude Standing" in 1987, and listed as such. A shorter instrumental version is reprised as the final track of that album, also listed.
This song makes me feel like I know it but it's my first time listening to it. The nostalgia and feeling of newness it fires up in me is almost eeriely comforting.
Looking at comments, I believe some people are making it all more complex than it needs to be. This is a simple scene, a snippet out of an ordinary day, with details that identify it as a specific day for the author.
🥰J'aime votre chanson et vous aussi beaucoup avec votre version sublime au festival Jazz in Marciac avec Gerry Leonard à la guitare et des arrangements musicaux tellement réussis !! ❤
The first MP3 file was this acapella version. This song was converted to MP3 in 1995 by one of the creators of the format at the Franhoufer Institute and was one of the first high-quality audio files to be shared on the web.
This video gives me pangs of nostalgia, and oddly enough, it's more the red brick building more than anything else. I remember red brick buildings were in a lot of 80s 90s educational programs we'd watch in school and in stuff in PBS. Like, when I see the building, I think of like Reading Rainbow and Bill Nye and realize that that time will never happen again and I was really too young to really live in it, and the haunting melancholy song really compounds the feeling...
What a beautiful, haunting song and made me cry when it first came out. Not sure what Vega's intentions were but have always felt like this song very effectively depicts the difference between the two classically understood types of time: "chronos" (the neverending, pressured march of time as depicted by the steady beat and somewhat mundane daily ritual depicted) and "kairos" (the 'out of time' experience we have with our memories, or connecting with our deeper selves, having meaningful conversations with loved ones, being absorbed in creating art, etc). The slowing up, and actual stopping of the song when a cherished memory is being experienced, reinforces this feeling. Then chronos (the steady beat) takes over again because "it's time to catch the train." I've used this song to explain the difference to people and whatever Vega's meaning is, that's how I experience it.
The thing that gets me the most whenever I hear this song is the fact that, despite all the things and distractions that's taking place at the moment, one can still be transported back in time to hear a familiar voice...before finishing up the coffee and heading for the train.
I fell asleep before turning off the radio on my nightstand. Then I had a series of bizarre dreams. The last of the dreams had a soundtrack, and it was the first half of this - I hadn't heard this before. I woke up at "oh, this rain it will continue" and the first thing I think is "wait, this song is real?" And that's how I discovered Suzanne Vega.
What's amazing to me is how this so perfectly captures that area of the city, and it singles out Tom's Restaurant brilliantly cause it's the worst service I've ever had and they literally only survive on their fame from this song and from Seinfeld. Terrible service, food barely acceptable.
I had no idea it was the diner made famous from Seinfeld! I honestly thought that it was a place created for the show. Then again, when Seinfeld aired I didn't watch it .... because as a girl living in Manhattan, I thought...these apartments don't look like Manhattan at all. So I rejected it until I moved to LA and was dating a Seinfeld fanatic and we watched it every night. GREAT SHOW...as is Larry David's other show "Curb Your Enthusiasm"... I named a Beta fish L.D. because of Larry David...and because I also thought of my fish as a Llittle Dolphin."
@@casmrtblnd Well your gut instincts was right because as I found out some thirty years after Seinfeld first aired, the vast majority of the entire series (over 90%), was filmed in L.A! You and I are opposites because when I found that out, I a New York lover, sort of got away from the show, just never was the same for me after finding that out. Still best sitcom ever!
I wake up hearing the orchestral part of this song and I must play it first thing. My husband liked it too and it always reminds of him. He died before me and this brings back good memories.
This song I can relate to not due to loneliness but due to the chaos of the world. I have so many to accomplish in this world still and its seeming more impossible as I read the news and such. That's my deep connection to this song. As there is a newspaper mentioned in the song
I love everything about this video, the song set suzanne, it just kinda gels altegether it's perfect, the director for the video needs a pat on the back too They all caught a special moment in time
Suzanne Vega in her earlier days was very Edward Hopper. Vega depicts solitude, distance, banality and desolation through her melody and lyrics as Hopper on his canvas.
Always have loved this song since I heard it when I was very young, like 2 or 3yrs old,. An much respect to 2Pac who did in his own version of this classic,. 💯💪🏾
I always knew it from the remix in the early 90’s, and didn’t know the original. I really just purely enjoy this. It’s Awsome. As far a garnishment, First thing I woulda thought of was a bossa nova style guitar accompaniment with nothing else.
This is an old song. She originally tried to sell it as an a capellla & I forget the rest. She's the original singer/songwriter who sang it,,,a cappella! MAD RESPECT! I heard it as an intro to a hip hop or rap song, lately. Did they rip her off? Probably. She's a phenom. Bow down to a musical genius. Don't steal the intro and claim it as your own, vanilla ice. This is uniquely her song! Love it & her!🎉
Who the f cares about original format?! This is an old song and it wasn't popular, originally. Then some punks added some instruments and they got the credit. What about the original writer/singer? It's her song on any format you're listening on. Comprehendre? I had an mp3 I never took out of the box & yet, here I am listening to and watching it. (Mp3 is not the point.)
What an absolute masterpiece👏 I heard that very first version inside of here the very first time... Before, I always only heard there had to be that original version of the song as well - but I always only heard the DNA version... Compared to that second version, I really have to say that this original version is just genious... I can listen to it in repeat - and immediately get caught of Suzanne's incredible voice... Sooo AMAZING❤️ And while listening the voice on and on - and seeing the video with herself always moving around with such beautiful eyes, I immediately fall in love with her... Although the song is just about a normal day, I start dreaming... And start feeling so much better and relaxed... De de deee de de dedeee de... De de deee de de dedeee de... Finally, I really have to say: "Thank you so much, Suzanne Vega, for letting me being part inside your daily life! Your great song!"👏👏👏
This is the best song about breakup I've ever heard! And I feel so dull for not hearing it in the so called "radio version"... Oh, this is just perfect!
Man, oh man, She is brilliant. I bought her first album on cassette back when I was in the navy and I think I fell in love with her. I think I still am.
Some people will say "its just a regular acapella" and i will say "this is the first ever mp3 made"
But the first mp3 wasn't of the acapella version? So it wouldn't be the first mp3 ever made.
@@SpiritLake It was the acapella version though
Source: Wikipedia
This is the version that was the first mp3
i didnt get this one until later. my first were rockafeller skank & mer' strøm #2 lmao
Damn i had no idea
This was used to make the first mp3.
It was well known for being a good audio test to see how natural a human voice is on a speaker, and the man trying to make it had heard the song on the radio, and immediately knew he should use this song.
Thanks! Was looking for this comment.
For those who don't know:
The reason is because mp3 is a lossy format, have worse sound quality than .flac or .wav. It was widespread cause it had low file size. So it had to be tested during coding.
@@DarkcranioLower file size without significant loss in quality, is the real reason the mp3 became a standard.
@@argylegrant4073 "significant loss in quality" mp3 is pretty significant, but for the avarage listener, you are right its not. But now everybody has so many spaces it really shouldnt be a standard, drives with many more space.
@@Darkcranio 320 kbps mp3's don't have that much quality loss
fully lossless audio files contain many frequencies that aren't audible by the human ear (literally impossible to hear them) it's quite redundant to have audio that only your dog or such could hear :P
and even through the nicest speakers, in a quiet room, with a young person with healthy ears, it's still only going to be marginally different.
The best version of this song. Someone feeling somewhat isolated from the world while thinking about fond memories. Life just moves on and you have to stay with it. Amazing.
I could be wrong but i feel like i *understand* this song. Normal day, things can feel melancholy. Other peoples intimacy can make you a bit shy. An aesthetic can remind you of a magical time long ago. And just like that, time to go to work. I saw it in her eyes and i feel seen and just like, I understand this piece of poetic art. And thank you for this. Absolutely fantastic writing.
Even if you are wrong it doesn't matter. Ultimately, if you feel a connection to a song or any medium and you get your own meaning out of it, that's all that should matter to you.
@@foxxcvii7170 yea true
Well said.
A bit shy? This is about bitterness.
Nah you're totally right.
th-cam.com/video/D99PhzEIWuA/w-d-xo.html
Thank you lady for helping invent the MP3
Literally the first digitised song
She didn't invent anything
@@reallomellow she *HELPED*
This is a normal day, but the way she draws attention to these little incidents that cause mild, awkward discomfort in our regular interactions is really incredible. The lady on the other side of the window, the intimacy of another couple, the sense of another person watching us, the effort to not notice what we notice (like the woman messing with her skirt/stockings), and so on. Really brilliant. How we handle these awkward situations will make a big difference in our lives. Now I'm going to try to pay more attention to these in my life and think about how to handle them better.
So, this is a song that may actually improve my life. Thanks, Suzanne!
Thank you
Yes, and you totally missed that it's a love song.
Wow… this song is so different Acappella. First time I’ve heard anything but the radio version! Cool!
I had a lot of trouble accepting the dance remix with this set as my standard. It eventually grew on me, but I think it's easy to see how this set a high bar.
Much more soulful and personal this one. Also, didn’t expect to see youtube’s most famous martial artist here ahahha, love your channel, hope all’s well in Shanghai! :-)
wasnt expecting you here lol
What, it sounds exactly the same just no music
It has same melody like centureis they stole it lol
There's something so eerie about this song, even though she's just singing about a normal day. I have a vague memory of hearing this as a child and thinking it was a bit creepy, it might be a false memory though but I don't think it is because I heard this again a few years ago and recognized it, then I heard it again a few months ago and I was just so captivated. This song doesn't even need music, it still has a rhythm and it takes a lot of talent to make acapella this interesting. I can just see everything happening and it feels like I'm inside her thoughts or something...
omg i feel the same way!!
Yeah me too
It always gave me a nostalgic feeling of being stalked on a rainy day in downtown.
2pac covered this song and it is actually creepy. Very well done and touching. It's called Dope Fiends Diner if you havent heard it. The song literally makes me tear.
its the melody i think. not sure tho
I've no joke been looking for this song for 28 years. So nice to finally find it. Well done Suzanne Vega. A Greatly written and composed song.
Wtf that is a record for searching haha
You can google song texts now btw
It is really good😄
Google "mother of MP3", you'll get the easiest answer.
It's literally the beginning of a newer song with no lyrics. Just the a capaella intro she uses. Still, no lyrics. I had to do some digging to find it. The melody was very short so nothing on SoundHound or Shazam. I just had to hunt it down. 🤫💪
The level of control, finesse and timing is astonishing. I'm never quite sure if it's supposed to be eerie or sort of breezy and light.
both
Best word I can use to describe this song is disillusionment. Like the characters going through their world in a 3rd person view, drifting through life rather than feeling it. Alienation
The facial expressions really make this, you can't just idly listen
She was 23 when this song was written, 25 when it was released the first time, 31 when it became a smash hit. Can you imagine?
Dammm really???
2Pac's version is better. (Dopefiend's Diner)
@@Blackfeet original better
@@Blackfeet 2pac version which I have never heard is NOT the original
I think this is one of the most beautiful, intimate songs ever written. Precisely because it’s about someone’s normal day.
Avevo scoperto questa canzone e questa artista quando ero ragazzino circa 30 anni fa. Mi ricordo che questa melodia mi aveva toccato nell'anima, e mi ero innamorato di questa voce dolcissima e anche un po' misteriosa. E anche il suo viso dolce e pulito rispecchia la bellezza delle sue canzoni. Pochi anni fa ha fatto un concerto in provincia di Udine e sono riuscito a vederla e avere il suo autografo. È una poetessa della musica!
So calming, I would listen her all day long.
As a male server who also serves a lot of coffee, the beginning lines give me the chills
haha
dream job :)
I saw Suzanne Vega in concert at the Moore Theater in '87 and she is one of the few artists to sound BETTER in person, no recording can d her Justice. So good in fact, it was on the verge of a life changing experience. Thank you.
無茶懐かしぃです!'87年に日本のCMで流れてた曲なのですよ👍
何のコマーシャルでしたか?
@@xcx_yt 多分コーヒーに入れる粉のクリーム
@@hiroshim9441 このコマーシャルはTH-camにありますか?
凄く印象的でしたよね。。土曜洋画劇場?の合間のCMで流れてたような。。私は小学生でした。
@@xcx_yt インスタントコーヒーだったと思います。
歌詞全部はわからなくてもコーヒーは聞こえますからね。
The first time I heard this song it was the acapella version and I've never been able to listen to anything but since
Same. Also, memento Mori
Как же она хороша!! Ангел!! Муза! Гений чистой красоты!!!
💯
I was always like, "Why does listening to the bells of the Cathedral make her think of someone's voice? This version answers it. She is remembering the rendezvous the night before.
That part was about a fellow folksinger and close friend Jack Hardy. They once had a picnic on the steps of the St. John the Divine cathedral eating sandwiches and drinking wine so when the bells rang she remembered his voice.
She is a great singer, with a very personal style. I love the times it evoke. I hope you sing again for the public, Suzanne Vega
I was waiting for it to start the whole time lol
I remember hearing the radio version of this song when I was a kid and always remembered it as time went by. This is the first time I've heard the acapella version, and it's beautiful yet eerie. To strip away all the music and make something pure like this is rarely seen nowadays. It's very interesting. I hope everyone who has heard the radio version sets out to hear this one too.
I love how all of us who grew up with this song seem to have similar feelings about it.
Something about this song hit all of us the same.
I wonder why.
The acapella version is the original album version. DNA remixed it and it became popular.
Suzanne. I’m aware you’ll never see my comment, but listening to this again has given me goosebumps. I only have your work on vinyl, and I haven’t owned a record player for more than 20 years. I think I’m answering my own question, hello Richer Sounds!
It is always nice to hear you, Suzanne!
The then for Suzanne's unknown actor who died in the paper was William Holden (1918 -1981; Oscarwinner for Best Actor in 'Stalag 17' (1953)).
Still resonates in 2022. Thanks Vega!
Took me 30 years to know that the Doo doo-doos are basically sound of train rolling haha
@meshugeah Is that what she said?
@@crose7412 no. She said in a interview it's meant me someone singing a tune slight out of sync. Like as they walk
Woowww
@@krisymac3514 thank you for that❤️
The train goes to life Doo doo-doos
In college years almost half a century ago, I frequented places in the same area for coffee. Sometimes, this was a start-up dose of caffeine, at other times a chance to camp out at a table with free refills and pages of books littered with debris from croissants. Hearing this song a cappella reminds me that I usually went out for coffee by myself, though it would be a stretch to say going out for coffee in NYC was a way to be alone. After all, at one place, I would take in ambient conversations, the trompe l'oeil of mirrors, the windows contrasting my stationary routine with the flux of the street.
Being at a place where you can have coffee doesn't necessarily create spectacle, but it can turn you into a kind of spectator. That itself creates the sense of a story. You might even think of it as a narrator in your head, like a double in a mirror, familiar enough to be mistaken for yourself, yet also distanced enough to be a generic stranger. In my own mindful perceptions, I have no distinct memory of church bells. There were at least a couple of times when I went inside the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, the source of bells mentioned in the song, but the landmark was more often a point of reference. Even if I didn't exactly take notice of the cathedral, it could somehow loom at the edge of awareness while I was on the other side of Amsterdam Avenue, at a table with books and coffee in the Hungarian Pastry Shop. And, yes, for the songwriter, the ring of bells without her consciously tuning in, could dial up a personal memory from the past.
Though "Tom's Diner" (or Tom's Restaurant) is better known from the "Seinfeld" series, I think of it as just another version of the same prototype, a kind of ancillary landmark. Years later, I noticed a parallel in Boston's "Mission Hill" section of Roxbury, named for a Romanesque Revival basilica whose bells punctually mark time every 15 minutes. There's no Amsterdam Avenue or Broadway here, but there is Tremont Street, with its own mix of people and traffic. And, almost directly across the street from the church entrance, there's another ancillary landmark with its own long history and tables for coffee--"Mike's Donuts."
There's a subdued tension in the song between all those mindful perceptions and the singer's invisibility, with her retrospective introspection, while the person who's pouring coffee at the counter looks with anticipation at someone else. In a throng of real-time minutiae, the songwriter' can be visible yet overlooked, physically present yet plunged into the outwardly invisible zone of her past. She's like the "Night Hawks" perched in the famous painting by Hopper, an outward semblance of reticence, impenetrable enough to suggest something else on the other side of a split consciousness.
WHY IS THIS SO HYPNOTIC??? LIKE I CAN'T GET IT OUT OF MY HEAD IT'S CRAZY
This song ages like a fine wine
I am sitting
In the morning
At the diner
On the corner
I am waiting
At the counter
For the man
To pour the coffee
And he fills it
Only halfway
And before
I even argue
He is looking
Out the window
At somebody
Coming in
It is always
Nice to see you
Says the man
Behind the counter
To the woman
Who has come in
She is shaking
Her umbrella
And I look
The other way
As they are kissing
Their hellos
I'm pretending
Not to see them
Instead
I pour the milk
I open
Up the paper
There's a story
Of an actor
Who had died
While he was drinking
It was no one
I had heard of
And I'm turning
To the horoscope
And looking
For the funnies
When I'm feeling
Someone watching me
And so
I raise my head
There's a woman
On the outside
Looking inside
Does she see me?
No she does not
Really see me
Cause she sees
Her own reflection
And I'm trying
Not to notice
That she's hitching
Up her skirt
And while she's
Straightening her stockings
Her hair
Has gotten wet
Oh, this rain
It will continue
Through the morning
As I'm listening
To the bells
Of the cathedral
I am thinking
Of your voice...
And of the midnight picnic
Once upon a time
Before the rain began...
I finish up my coffee
It's time to catch the train
you forgot a important of it:
" ta ta ta taa tata tu tu tulutu tu "
@@matrixofdeath And the voice of a 50 year old coal miner haha
Ooh cool not funny
Who Asked
@@CarlosJonathan_891 wasn’t meant to be funny DA 😂
For a couple of decades, I was _aware_ that this was an a capella song which had been put to music by someone else after the fact, but I'd only ever heard the one from the charts... Hearing this version for the first time was eerie without the beats and samples, made even creepier by the silent pauses where my brain was expecting the "do do do-do duh-duh do do" bit. I had just gotten used to not hearing it when it came in _right_ at the end, and the smile as she does it makes me think this video was made _after_ the dance-y version because she knows the listener has been waiting the entire song for it...!
Beautiful voice ✨
Thankyou for this song and the MP3 Succuess! ❤❤❤
Ask any of the current "singers" if they could do this "a capella". You know the answer, right?
Great job, Suzanne Vega. ❤
I heard this quite unexpectedly on an album cassette I bought in the 80's and instantly fell in love with it. Having since heard the DNA version (which I do like) this takes me back to that time of innocence and SV's voice has a certain kind of vulnerability about it that you lose in the DNA mix...
wow yall, i had the cassette when she first released it was a bonus track at the very end unlisted….i guess i never really understood how many unique peices of music i had as a teen. i even had an original jimi hendrix experience ( the album) album that my uncle got when hendrix was new. wish i still had all of that vinyl…..who remember laurie anderson? or love tractor? jefferrson airplane after bathing at baxters….good times
It was originally released as the first track on side one of "Solitude Standing" in 1987, and listed as such. A shorter instrumental version is reprised as the final track of that album, also listed.
This song makes me feel like I know it but it's my first time listening to it. The nostalgia and feeling of newness it fires up in me is almost eeriely comforting.
You most likely now it. The song is 35 years old
This is simply perfection. Understated but clever, sincere and multilayered perfection.
This song stays in my head for days each time I hear it.
Honestly this song is relatable in a lot of ways. It’s get mad weird sitting at a diner alone with other people around.
This is how you tell a song through music. It's actually so beutiful
Do not argue with the man who pours the coffee...
😂 I was looking for a comment like this
СПАСИБА VEGA за все эти года твоей творческой деятельности и я всегда был рядом - слушал ранее ещё тогда, слушаю сейчас и буду слушать дальше!!!!!
I love this song. I wish there were more songs like it. It draws you in. I could listen to it over and over.
i just go ahead and do listen to it over and over
Looking at comments, I believe some people are making it all more complex than it needs to be.
This is a simple scene, a snippet out of an ordinary day,
with details that identify it as a specific day for the author.
Stunning. Thank you for your beautiful songs. This is my favourite.
That was ridiculously soothing to hear🤌🏿🤌🏿🤌🏿
Couldn’t agree more☺️☺️☺️
🥰J'aime votre chanson et vous aussi beaucoup avec votre version sublime au festival Jazz in Marciac avec Gerry Leonard à la guitare et des arrangements musicaux tellement réussis !! ❤
Still gooses me after all these years
The first MP3 file was this acapella version. This song was converted to MP3 in 1995 by one of the creators of the format at the Franhoufer Institute and was one of the first high-quality audio files to be shared on the web.
Teenage year's! It was always a dance 💃 house party favorite.
I love this it sounds so calming.
Always have loved this version most. It just feels so....natural
This video gives me pangs of nostalgia, and oddly enough, it's more the red brick building more than anything else. I remember red brick buildings were in a lot of 80s 90s educational programs we'd watch in school and in stuff in PBS. Like, when I see the building, I think of like Reading Rainbow and Bill Nye and realize that that time will never happen again and I was really too young to really live in it, and the haunting melancholy song really compounds the feeling...
ok - this is the first time I've actually discerned the lyrics. Great work!
What a beautiful, haunting song and made me cry when it first came out. Not sure what Vega's intentions were but have always felt like this song very effectively depicts the difference between the two classically understood types of time: "chronos" (the neverending, pressured march of time as depicted by the steady beat and somewhat mundane daily ritual depicted) and "kairos" (the 'out of time' experience we have with our memories, or connecting with our deeper selves, having meaningful conversations with loved ones, being absorbed in creating art, etc). The slowing up, and actual stopping of the song when a cherished memory is being experienced, reinforces this feeling. Then chronos (the steady beat) takes over again because "it's time to catch the train." I've used this song to explain the difference to people and whatever Vega's meaning is, that's how I experience it.
this song gives me chills and makes me feel nostalgia. her voice is beautiful and the beats make it even better.
Her voice isn't really that good
@@chickenpurple6704 Can we see you sing it?
@@DamnAwesome You do know one doesn't need to have a good singing voice to critique someone's singing, right?
@@nafreal Can we see you sing it?
@@DamnAwesome No?
The thing that gets me the most whenever I hear this song is the fact that, despite all the things and distractions that's taking place at the moment, one can still be transported back in time to hear a familiar voice...before finishing up the coffee and heading for the train.
I fell asleep before turning off the radio on my nightstand. Then I had a series of bizarre dreams. The last of the dreams had a soundtrack, and it was the first half of this - I hadn't heard this before. I woke up at "oh, this rain it will continue" and the first thing I think is "wait, this song is real?" And that's how I discovered Suzanne Vega.
This seems genious, yeh! Better than cover versions. Catching a moment in a life :)
What's amazing to me is how this so perfectly captures that area of the city, and it singles out Tom's Restaurant brilliantly cause it's the worst service I've ever had and they literally only survive on their fame from this song and from Seinfeld. Terrible service, food barely acceptable.
I had no idea it was the diner made famous from Seinfeld! I honestly thought that it was a place created for the show. Then again, when Seinfeld aired I didn't watch it .... because as a girl living in Manhattan, I thought...these apartments don't look like Manhattan at all. So I rejected it until I moved to LA and was dating a Seinfeld fanatic and we watched it every night. GREAT SHOW...as is Larry David's other show "Curb Your Enthusiasm"... I named a Beta fish L.D. because of Larry David...and because I also thought of my fish as a Llittle Dolphin."
Sounds like a place I'd dishwash at
It's also just around the corner from the university Ray, Egon and Peter get kicked out of at the start of the first Ghostbusters movie.
@@casmrtblnd Well your gut instincts was right because as I found out some thirty years after Seinfeld first aired, the vast majority of the entire series (over 90%), was filmed in L.A! You and I are opposites because when I found that out, I a New York lover, sort of got away from the show, just never was the same for me after finding that out.
Still best sitcom ever!
@@davidjstreader Now that is an interesting little tidbit. Your comment made me smile.
雨が降っている時、ふと聞きたくなる。静かに地面や窓や水溜まりで立てる雨音との親和性が高く、それが心地よい。
I wake up hearing the orchestral part of this song and I must play it first thing. My husband liked it too and it always reminds of him. He died before me and this brings back good memories.
this song is my favorite love song. i am always thinking of your voice i notice the beautiful people and their isolation and connection I love you
Such description. It's amazing that nothing rhymes in a normal pattern. Just an amazing job of capturing attention with descriptive lyrics
This song I can relate to not due to loneliness but due to the chaos of the world. I have so many to accomplish in this world still and its seeming more impossible as I read the news and such. That's my deep connection to this song. As there is a newspaper mentioned in the song
I love everything about this video, the song set suzanne, it just kinda gels altegether it's perfect, the director for the video needs a pat on the back too
They all caught a special moment in time
The first song to be compressed into MP3 format, to test the compression algorithm.
Suzanne Vega in her earlier days was very Edward Hopper. Vega depicts solitude, distance, banality and desolation through her melody and lyrics as Hopper on his canvas.
This is so beautiful. It is bring me to tears. I don't understand why this version touches me so.
Always have loved this song since I heard it when I was very young, like 2 or 3yrs old,. An much respect to 2Pac who did in his own version of this classic,. 💯💪🏾
So so so so sooo nice, i feel so good now that i found this coolest version
I listen to that song all the time, but the acapella version is just stunning.
Whenever I need refreshment I come here to listen her...
A serene vibe it holds
Everyday for twenty years I've had this damn song stuck in my head!!!
I don't know why this is so riveting ... but it is .... great stuff
I always knew it from the remix in the early 90’s, and didn’t know the original.
I really just purely enjoy this.
It’s Awsome.
As far a garnishment, First thing I woulda thought of was a bossa nova style guitar accompaniment with nothing else.
No Melodyne or Autotune, just a real voice and ability how it should be! Pure human! Thank you!
A beautiful song and the best version. Suzanne Vega is awesome.
Prefiro a versão DNA
Эта не версия а оригинал
This is an old song. She originally tried to sell it as an a capellla & I forget the rest. She's the original singer/songwriter who sang it,,,a cappella! MAD RESPECT! I heard it as an intro to a hip hop or rap song, lately. Did they rip her off? Probably. She's a phenom. Bow down to a musical genius. Don't steal the intro and claim it as your own, vanilla ice. This is uniquely her song! Love it & her!🎉
Who the f cares about original format?! This is an old song and it wasn't popular, originally. Then some punks added some instruments and they got the credit. What about the original writer/singer? It's her song on any format you're listening on. Comprehendre? I had an mp3 I never took out of the box & yet, here I am listening to and watching it. (Mp3 is not the point.)
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My late good friend Tom Wisker, who had a regular program on WBAI FM radio for many years, used this as his theme song.
The melody and voice that have become legendary
oh great... now i have to read this beautiful womans history and listen to all her songs.
sunlight, in case we never meet again, i miss you.
What an absolute masterpiece👏 I heard that very first version inside of here the very first time...
Before, I always only heard there had to be that original version of the song as well - but I always only heard the DNA version...
Compared to that second version, I really have to say that this original version is just genious... I can listen to it in repeat - and immediately get caught of Suzanne's incredible voice... Sooo AMAZING❤️
And while listening the voice on and on - and seeing the video with herself always moving around with such beautiful eyes, I immediately fall in love with her...
Although the song is just about a normal day, I start dreaming...
And start feeling so much better and relaxed...
De de deee de de dedeee de...
De de deee de de dedeee de...
Finally, I really have to say: "Thank you so much, Suzanne Vega, for letting me being part inside your daily life! Your great song!"👏👏👏
Beautiful song 😊👍❤
The acapella version is the one I love the most.❤
cute smooth timbre voice plus by your verses issue calm of silence own comfort pleasure
Tom's Diner" is a song written in 1982 by American singer and songwriter Suzanne Vega. It was first released as a track on the January 1984.
To the Voice and the Poet, thrilled by the Music, it all flows.
It takes much talent to sing acapella. Good job!
I haven't heard this song in years.
(Glad I found it again)
This is basically like a poem with stream of consciousness.
Its just as beautiful to this day ❤❤❤🥺
Сюзанна Вега такая прекрасная , настоящий бриллиант
This is the best song about breakup I've ever heard! And I feel so dull for not hearing it in the so called "radio version"... Oh, this is just perfect!
Man, oh man, She is brilliant. I bought her first album on cassette back when I was in the navy and I think I fell in love with her. I think I still am.