Linda Ronstadt – How Do I Make You
“How Do I Make You” is the sound of bold reinvention—romance turned into a breathless, new-wave chase where desire is urgent, a little reckless, and impossible to play cool. In…
“How Do I Make You” is the sound of bold reinvention—romance turned into a breathless, new-wave chase where desire is urgent, a little reckless, and impossible to play cool. In…
A Lonely Heart Learns to Sing in the Shadows of Another’s Spotlight When Buck Owens released “Second Fiddle” in 1959, it marked more than just his debut on the Billboard…
A burst of comeback joy — “I Can’t Help Myself” is John Fogerty’s shimmying, slightly restless sequel to “Centerfield,” a short, gleeful declaration that the long silence is over and…
A Gentle Farewell to Love’s Inevitability, Whispered Through Autumn’s Last Light When John Denver released “Goodbye Again” in 1972 on his breakthrough album Rocky Mountain High, the song stood as…
A Gentle Reckoning with Time, Memory, and the Quiet Weight of Living Released in 1971 as the title track of John Denver’s breakthrough album, Poems, Prayers & Promises, “Poems, Prayers…
“(I Love You) For Sentimental Reasons” is a love song that doesn’t shout—it remembers, and in remembering, it becomes quietly overwhelming. Linda Ronstadt recorded “(I Love You) For Sentimental Reasons”…
“Dark End of the Street” is the sound of love choosing shadows—a hymn for secret longing, sung with the kind of clarity that makes guilt feel like moonlight on bare…
When Heartache Becomes Habit, Even Sorrow Feels Like Home Released in 1964 as part of Buck Owens’ seminal album Together Again/My Heart Skips a Beat, the poignant “Let the Sad…
A small-town elegy made public — “Lodi” becomes, on this night, a soft benediction: a road-weary confession sung by John Fogerty that turns audience sympathy into shared memory. Put the…
A small, aching moment caught between the final bow and the walk home — “Right After the Dance” is a quiet, wistful snapshot of love’s last fragile hour. Right after…