Yes, you're right.
Speaking of Doolin-Dalton, ever since the first time I heard that song, I always thought they should have arranged the bridge the same way they would with On The Border, what with each member singing a line. I'll bet they considered it before deciding that Glenn would sing the whole thing. In my mind's ear it would sound something like this:
Don: well the towns laid out across the dusty plains
Bernie: like graveyards filled with tombstones waiting for the names
Randy: and a man could use his back or use his brains
Glenn: but some just went stir-crazy lord, 'cause nothing ever changed
I see what you're saying but this verse is telling a story, which the individual lines in On The Border are not - the four singers are just 'making comments'. I see it as a verse, not a bridge (in my opinion this song has no bridge), and I think it would have detracted from the story to have four different people singing it. I am biased of course, as this is my favourite part of the song.
My favourite glenn moments were sometimes his smaller moments- hence the diverse list. he had so many styles and I like the ones where you hear his personality.
1. After the Thrill is Gone
2. Ol 55
3. Outlaw Man
4. Teenage jail
5. New Kid in Town
6. Take it Easy
7. Good Day in Hell
8. James Dean
9. Already Gone
10. Heartache Tonight
Last edited by OntheBorder74; 09-25-2014 at 09:15 AM.
Same Dancers in the Same Old Shoes