Sunday, November 27, 2022

Phoebe Bridges Covers Goodbye to Love: Count Viglione to Record GOODBYE TO LOVE with full band and may use audio from movie Rhythm on the River

COUNT VIGLIONE HAS UTILIZED THE OSCAR LEVANT QUOTE FOR YEARS:

'THERE IS A THIN LINE BETWEEN GENIUS AND INSANITY...AND I HAVE ERASED THAT LINE!"

 We will blast the song into oblivion, April 8, 2023 in Hull.


wow, oscar levant, william frawley from I Love Lucy, Basil Sherlock Holmes Rathbone, Mary Martin from Peter Pan and Bing Crosby

https://youtu.be/b5GgL84tfSA


While visiting London, Richard Carpenter watched a 1940 Bing Crosby film on The Late Movie called Rhythm on the River. Carpenter noticed that the characters kept referring to the struggling songwriter's greatest composition, "Goodbye to Love". Carpenter said, "You never hear it in the movie, they just keep referring to it", and he immediately envisioned the tune and lyrics, starting with:

I'll say goodbye to love.
No one ever cared if I should live or die.
Time and time again, the chance for
Love has passed me by... https://youtu.be/dNvI8ep5Tt0

He said that while the melody in his head kept going, the lyrics stopped "because I'm not a lyricist". He completed the rest of his arrangement upon his return to the United States.[2]

While the Carpenters were working on the song, Carpenter decided that a fuzz guitar solo should be included. Karen Carpenter called guitarist Tony Peluso and asked him to play on the record. Tony remembers: "At first I didn't believe that it was actually Karen Carpenter on the phone but she repeated her name again. ... It was at this point that I realized it was really her and that I was speaking to one of my idols." She told him that she and Richard were working on a song called "Goodbye to Love", that they were familiar with Tony's work with a band called Instant Joy, and that he would be perfect for the sound they were looking for.[3] Peluso first played something soft and sweet, but then Richard Carpenter said:

"No, no, no! Play the melody for five bars and then burn it up! Soar off into the stratosphere! Go ahead! It'll be great!"[4]

John Bettis has said that Richard Carpenter kept calling him, raving about the guitar solo. He was wondering why Richard was going on about the solo until he heard it. The lyricist said he cried when he first heard the song because he had never heard an electric guitar sound like that. He said Tony Peluso "had a certain almost cello sounding guitar growl that worked against the wonderful melancholia of that song". He went on to say the "way it growls at you, especially at the end" was unbelievable.[5] 

 

carpenters

https://youtu.be/ZIvdbtwKheg

 

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