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Another Larry London original, "Come On" is a very traditional blues with a Freddy Green style bridge (psuedo solo through chromatic chording... very well done and pleasant to listen to). Enjoy this mellow yet strangely excited ephemeral bit of existentialistic sentiment from TWHI. -Nicodemua |
Credits: Come On, Performed and Written by Jake Smigel |
Story Behind the Song
This is a tune that Jake has been playing for a few years now (I think it might have been the first thing he ever wrote), and I have always liked it. We recorded it a few months ago, but due to the limitations of my home setup at the time, (i.e. no phantom power to use my good vocal mike... we recorded the original on a fifteen dollar condnser mike which was used to record the vocals on this recording) Jake wasn't totally happy with it. An interesting note about this version: When we originally went to record the tune, we were at the end of a very long session (midnight or one o'clock) and, after getting all the levels and preparing to record, Jake found that he suddenly couldn't remember how to play the tune. It was utterly hilarious; one minute he played it all the way through while I checked the mikes, the next, the song just dissapeared. We got Joe to do a tune (Hail Santa) in the interim so Jake could cool off and forget that he had forgotten it so he could remember. I'll try to get him to come on here and add his own info about the history of the song as he knows what its about better than I do.
Lyrics
Come on
This train; you can ride
Come on
This train; you can ride
Come on
Everybody, get inside.
The storm
Has moved out over the sea
The storm
Has moved out over the sea
If you won't
Come back, remember me.
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