I'you ve got itthe blues是...

Still Got The Blues (Live) 歌词_百度知道
Still Got The Blues (Live) 歌词
歌曲名:Still Got The Blues (Live)歌手:Gary Moore专辑:Blues AliveStill Got The BluesGary MooreJoyse,I am missing U — Mike0532Used to be so easy to give my heart away.But I found out the hard way,there's a price you have to pay.I found out that love was no friend of mine.I should have known time after time.So long, it was so long ago,but I've still got the blues for you.Used to be so easy to fall in love again.But I found out the hard way,it's a road that leads to pain.I found that love was more than just a game.You're playin' to win, but you lose just the same.So long, it was so long ago,but I've still got the blues for you.So many years since I've seen your face.Here in my heart, there's an empty spacewhere you used to be.So long, it was so long ago,but I've still got the blues for you.Though the days come and go,there is one thing I know.I've still got the blues for youEnd
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出门在外也不愁Still Got the Blues_Gary Moore_百度知道
Still Got the Blues_Gary Moore
我非常想要这歌的歌词~谁知道的告诉个正确的中文歌名字和词~谢谢!
There is one thing I know ?But I found that the heartache ?but you loose just the same ?But I found that the haeartache ?To give my heart away ;s a roll that leeds to pain ?So long ?there'n time after time ?was the price you have to pay ????So many years since I seal you face ??;s an emty space ?Used to be ?? ?I&#39??You will my heart ?Use to be so easy ???But I&#39?I found that love is more than just a game ?Play and to win ?I found that that love is no friend of mine ?So long ?(SOLO) ?;ve still got the blues for you ??So long ? ?But I&#39??It&#39?????? ??it was so long ago ???还有布鲁斯Gary Moore - Still Got The Blues歌词 ????;ve still got the blues for you ?I should have know&#39??Use to be so easy ?;ve still got the blues for you ????Fall in love again ?? ??it was so long ago ??But I&#39? ?it was so long ago ?? ???? ?Golden days come and go
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出门在外也不愁B. B. King Biography
B. B. King Biography
Born: September 16, 1925
Itta Bena, Mississippi
African American singer, musician, and songwriter
B. B. King is one of the most successful artists in the history of blues
music. Today his ability as a blues guitarist remains unmatched.
Early years
Riley B. King was born on September 16, 1925, between Itta Bena and
Indianola, Mississippi. His parents split up when he was a small child,
and he lived for a few years with his mother in the Mississippi hills.
She died when he was nine, and he was alone until his father, Albert
King, found him a few years later. Working on a cotton plantation in
Indianola, he earned $22.50 a week. "I guess the earliest sound
of blues that I can remember was in the fields while people would be
pickin' cotton or choppin' or somethin'."
King noted in a 1988
Living Blues
interview cited in
Contemporary Musicians.
"When I sing and play now I can hear those same sounds that I
used to hear then as a kid."
King sang gospel music in church and even performed professionally with
Famous St. John Gospel Singers, but he was not allowed to sing the
blues, which was considered "the devil's music."
Still, he listened to recordings by early blues masters, especially
Sonny Boy Williamson, on his aunt's record player. King's
farm boss loaned him money to buy a guitar and sign up for music
lessons, and King quickly developed as a blues player. Soon he was
earning more singing and playing guitar on street corners on Saturday
than he made all week on the plantation. King left Mississippi for
Memphis, Tennessee, which promised the excitement and musical atmosphere
he dreamed of. He settled there for good in 1948.
"Beale Street Blues Boy"
After serving briefly in the army, King moved in with his cousin Booker
(Bukka) White, also a blues guitarist. King's attempts to copy
Bukka's playing helped him develop his own style. He sought out
Sonny Boy Williamson, who had a radio show on WDIA in West Memphis, and
asked to play a song for him. Williamson was so impressed with King that
he offered King his own radio show and a chance to play regularly at
Miss Annie's 16th Street Grill. King was able to advertise his
upcoming concerts on the radio, and soon he and his trio had become
popular. Known on the radio as the "Beale Street Blues
Boy," which was shortened to "Bee-Bee," and then to
his famous initials, King decided he wanted to make records.
King was signed to Bullet Records and in 1949 recorded four songs at the
radio station, including "Miss Martha King" and
"I've Got the Blues." He also continued to perform
in the area. Musician and talent scout Ike Turner (1931–)
connected King with the Kent/Modern
B. B. King.
Reproduced by permission of
AP/Wide World Photos
/RPM record label, and King's King's 1951 single for his
new label, "Three O'Clock Blues," became a hit. He
scored several other hits during these years, and by the mid-1950s he
was playing about three hundred shows a year. He would maintain this
schedule for over twenty years.
Once when King was playing at a dance in Twist, Arkansas, two men got
into a fight and knocked over a heater, starting a fire that spread
through the dancehall. King escaped the burning building, then
remembered his sixty-dollar guitar and ran back in, nearly dying in an
attempt to rescue it. When he discovered that the men who had started
were fighting over a woman named Lucille, he gave the name to his
guitar—"to remind myself never to do anything that
foolish."
Appreciated by rock audiences
Although King distanced himself from rock and roll when the new style
emerged in the 1950s, he soon began to add some of the traits of early
rockers like Little Richard (1932–) and Fats Domino
(1928–) to his act. In 1962 he moved to the ABC label, and in
1965 he put out his first album,
Live at the Regal.
In 1968, after the assassination of civil rights leader Martin Luther
King Jr. (1929&#x), King played an all-night blues benefit with
fellow guitarists Jimi Hendrix (1942&#x) and Buddy Guy
(1936–) to raise money for King's Southern Christian
Leadership Conference.
During the late 1960s, praise for King from English rock musicians such
as Eric Clapton (1945–) and Jimmy Page (1944–) led to
renewed interest in the blues among U.S. audiences. King found himself
playing concerts with bands such as Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath, and
Santana. As African American audiences moved away from the blues, King
began to attract young white listeners. In 1969 "The Thrill Is
Gone" the song won a Grammy in 1971 and became
King's biggest hit. In 1971, with attorney F. Lee Bailey
(1933–), King founded FAIRR (the Foundation for the Advancement
of Inmate Rehabilitation and Recreation), an organization dedicated to
the improvement of prison conditions. King often gave concerts in
prisons, one of which was recorded and released as
Live at San Quentin.
A blues legend
By the 1980s King was recognized as a blues legend. He won a 1984 Grammy
for best traditional blues recording for
Blues n' J
he appeared on the album
Rattle and Hum
with the Irish rock band U2; and he received a Lifetime Achievement
Award at the 1988 Grammy awards ceremony. In the early 1990s King was
inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, received a Presidential
Medal of Freedom from George Bush (1924–), and even earned a star
on Hollywood's Walk of Fame.
Live at San Quentin,
released in 1990, earned him another Grammy. He was also the owner of
B. B. King's Blues Club and Restaurant on Beale Street in
King has been married and divorced twice. He has fifteen children and
has often expressed regret that his heavy touring schedule prevented him
from being around to see them grow up. He was faced with a heartbreaking
situation in 1992 when he played at a jail in Gainesville, F
among the inmates there was his daughter Patty, who was serving time on
drug charges. By the time he reached his late sixties, King had slowed
down his performance schedule somewhat, though he still toured
regularly. In 1994 he played a concert at the Hard Rock Café in
Beijing, China. He was by now playing Lucille the Fifteenth.
"We've spent 40 years together," he said to
"She likes younger men but puts up with me."
In December 1995 King received the 18th annual Kennedy Center Honors
presented by President Bill Clinton (1946–). King said of the
event, "Anytime the most powerful man in the world takes 10 to 15
minutes to sit and talk with me, an old guy from Indianola, Mississippi,
that's a memory imprinted in my head which forever will be
there." In 2000 King was elected to the Mississippi Musicians
Hall of Fame. The same year he received a Heroes Award from the National
Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences. In February 2001 he won
another Grammy in the traditional blues album category for
Riding with the King,
which he recorded with Eric Clapton.
For More Information
Danchin, Sebastian.
Blues Boy: The Life and Music of B. B. King.
Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1998.
King, B. B.
Blues All Around Me: The Autobiography of B.B. King.
New York: Avon Books, 1996.
Rees, Dafydd, and Luke Crampton, eds.
Rock Movers and Shakers.
New York: Billboard Books, 1991.
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