Friday, December 10, 2010

Hey Rose!

Gerry and the Pacemakers
Ferry Cross the Mersey

8 comments:

American Rose said...

Alright! Glory days! What a beautiful song!

Long live England, long live the English!

Pastorius said...

I had never heard this song before.

IT'S GREAT!

Pastorius said...

Reminds me a bit of Fairport Convention and Nick Drake.

Anonymous said...

Listening to this song brings back wonderful images of a time lost to fading memories. Has me longing for a return to those days of childish innocence. How the hell did we get here . . .from there?

American Rose said...

You gots to be kidding me, Pasto? I'm really surprised. This was a HUGE '60s hit. You must be under 40? I feel old:(

It is great. Definitely a favorite. And then there's the nostalgia factor: it sounds so
'60s.

Pastorius said...

Anonymous,
That's a good question. I often think of that question when I listen to old Big Band and Dixieland. That music was so optimistic. It was like everyone thought a new world was starting. That old music, and Cole Porter and all that, was filled with hope and romance.

Pastorius said...

American Rose,

I'm in my mid-40's.

When I was 11-14, which is when I got into music, my favorites were

Led Zeppelin
Alice Cooper
David Bowie
Elton John
Steely Dan
Pink Floyd

That's what I grew up on.

Not quite old enough for this stuff.

Fairport Convention and Nick Drake were before my time too.

I got into them later.

When I did music in the 80's, I released a CD and I sent it to my Mother who is English. She sent me back a CD by an Englishman named Scott Walker with a note saying my music sounded like that.

Anyway, though I like the Beatles and the Stones, I wasn't really into the more folkie side of English music.

This Gerry and the Pacemakers stuff sounds very rooted in English Folk music.

American Rose said...

Your mother is English! Wow!

I was six/seven when this song was a hit, but I remember it like yesterday. Of course, we were all glued to the radio back then, to the top 40.

Anon, I remember the mid-60s as a time of innocence too. Loved the British invasion and all the great Elvis Presley movies. But it seems as though by 1968 the world had changed forever. I think it all started with JFK's assasination.