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View Full Version : Eagles or solo songs that are good for associating then with a moment in your life.



AlreadyGone95
06-02-2016, 05:34 PM
Over the next week, I have to come up with " A Soundtrack of My Life". I have to choose 8 songs to describe very brief, but important moments in my life. I want to include at least one Eagle or solo song. I've thought of Wasted Time and Busy Being Fabulous, but I don't think that those are the best to use I can use WT if need be. I'm wondering if anyone else can think other Eagles' songs I can possibly use.

Freypower
06-02-2016, 05:42 PM
It's your life (to coin a phrase). Surely only you would know which songs are most appropriate?

Lisa
06-02-2016, 06:57 PM
The Long Run, for an upbeat turn to the theme?
Desperado, for a description of character?

NightMistBlue
06-02-2016, 08:52 PM
Do you really relate to Wasted Time? You're too young for the crushing weight of regret. Save it for the midlife crisis :-)

Take It Easy is a great, positive song. I have a tendency to overthink things so the title is a good mantra for me, as is the reminder to lighten up while I still can.

AlreadyGone95
06-02-2016, 08:52 PM
It's your life (to coin a phrase). Surely only you would know which songs are most appropriate?

I'm tryng to get ideas for songs to possibly use in general. You're right that only I choose what songs are the best to use, but the 2 that I have thought of so far just aren't what I need.( I would have a hard time making the paragraph(s) I need long enough.) I'm hoping that someone may suggest one that I can work with.

AlreadyGone95
06-02-2016, 09:00 PM
Do you really relate to Wasted Time? You're too young for the crushing weight of regret. Save it for the midlife crisis :-)

Take It Easy is a great, positive song. I have a tendency to overthink things so the title is a good mantra for me, as is the reminder to lighten up while I still can.

Yes, I can, though not in love sense the song portrays. When I dropped out of high school, for about a year, I thought that I had wasted time in a sense to work as hard as I did (honor roll student), but fail in the end.

I could make TIE work better for a recent event, and it's a more positive choice. I have 3 songs chosen so far( I need 4 for a rough draft due Tuesday morning). 2 involve sad or negative moments. And the other is positive.

FWIW
06-02-2016, 10:28 PM
Maybe "Livin' Right" could be appropriate, for example if you made some positive changes after dropping out of high school.

Funk 50
06-03-2016, 05:31 AM
Inspired by Richard Bienstock's wonderful Joe Walsh - My Life In 15 Songs article in Rolling Stone magazine, http://www.rollingstone.com/music/lists/joe-walsh-my-life-in-15-songs-20160519 I started compiling the 15 Walsh tracks that meant most to me.

I had to abort and rethink as it was turning into a book. :smile:
I could never pick the tracks retrospectively. I went through Joe's catalog and made a note of what thoughts and memories each track stirred.

For example, Hole In The World always makes me think of the funeral of a much loved relative, Summer 2003, even though I always knew it was about 9/11.

NightMistBlue
06-03-2016, 09:55 AM
OT: oh my goodness, I didn't know Joe was in the Blues Brothers. I'll have to watch it again and look out for him.

Annoying Twit
06-03-2016, 10:21 AM
Yes, I can, though not in love sense the song portrays. When I dropped out of high school, for about a year, I thought that I had wasted time in a sense to work as hard as I did (honor roll student), but fail in the end.

I work in education. Taking a year out can often be a very good thing, as you'll mostly likely have come back with a more mature attitude. And, it also may make a difference that you're where you are by choice, rather than just having drifted along on autopilot.

LuvTim
06-03-2016, 11:28 AM
I work in education. Taking a year out can often be a very good thing, as you'll mostly likely have come back with a more mature attitude. And, it also may make a difference that you're where you are by choice, rather than just having drifted along on autopilot.

Agreed, AT. Absolutely. These students often have a sense of determination and purpose that traditional students may not have yet developed.

shunlvswx
06-03-2016, 11:43 AM
OT: oh my goodness, I didn't know Joe was in the Blues Brothers. I'll have to watch it again and look out for him.

Yes. He's at the end. You have to watch for him because if you blink, you will miss him. Look for the guy who starts to dance all of a sudden. I think he pops up on camera a few times.

AlreadyGone95
06-03-2016, 11:58 AM
I work in education. Taking a year out can often be a very good thing, as you'll mostly likely have come back with a more mature attitude. And, it also may make a difference that you're where you are by choice, rather than just having drifted along on autopilot.

I didn't take a year off, though. I completely dropped out with little or no intention of ever completing my education. At the time, I didn't care. I couldn't handle the imprisoned feeling I felt while being in school. (Luckily, college doesn't have that feeling.) 2 years later, I realized that I could get a GED(General Education Development) in leiu of a high school diploma. (I matured enough to care). It took 2 more years for me to agree to go to college, and I'm still a bit iffy about that. (There's something that is mental that I have a hard time overcoming.)

DJ
06-03-2016, 04:08 PM
I personally relate to All Ready Gone....It describes a lot of my youth relationships. My attitude was well if you don't like me.......I'm All Ready Gone.
:rockguitar:

WalshFan88
06-26-2016, 09:03 PM
Not really the best thread but here goes..

I've recently developed a liking for "Nightingale".

I feel the comments about not wanting to read the paper and the murder movie they call the news. I feel EXACTLY like this about modern media. Every time you turn on the tube, or open the paper - it's so freaking depressing. And I feel the media popularizes this stuff and it gives other people ideas on how to get attention and to be a copycat. I think they should cover the happenings but let them go and not dramatize them for fear of inspiring someone else to do something and also because it's really all about the views. I agree with DH and his comments about the news people in Dirty Laundry. I have a big problem with today's news and media outlets. And this song reminds me of that.

Jeremy Lawrence
06-27-2016, 08:30 AM
I seem to always return to "Already Gone" to get me out of low points (self pity, dealing with failure or rejection).
-jl

UndertheWire
06-27-2016, 09:27 AM
I seem to always return to "Already Gone" to get me out of low points (self pity, dealing with failure or rejection).
-jl
"So oftentimes it happens that we live our lives in chains and never really know we have the key."

About 12 years ago, I wanted to go to New York to see a show at the theatre. This would involved a weekend away from home and family, something I hadn't done since the birth of my first child nearly ten years earlier. I expected resistance from my husband who'd never been left in charge of the children overnight. I could think of all sorts of reasons why it wouldn't work and the whole idea seemed ridiculous. When I finally brought it up, there was very little opposition and I was able to arrange the trip quickly. The worst thing to happen was that the kids missed a day of school. I learned that I was still capable of independent travel and my husband learned that he was capable of taking care of the children. The chains had been my own and I had the key. Alternatively, I was "a prisoner of my own devise".

Another Tempchin line that has an important message of self-sufficiency:
"I know that she won't let me down, 'cos I'm already standing on the ground". I wish I'd taken notice of that when I was young and dating.