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They left before the sun came up that day
An exit to eternal summer slacking
But where were they going without ever knowing the way
They drank up the wine and they got to talking
They now had more important things to say
And when the car broke down, they started walking
Where were they going without ever knowing the way
Anyone can see the road that they walk on is paved in gold
And it's always summer, they'll never get cold
They'll never get hungry, they'll never get old and gray
You can see their shadows wandering off somewhere
They won't make it home, but they really don't care
They wanted the highway, they're happier there today, today
Their children woke up and they couldn't find 'em
They left before the sun came up that day
They just drove off and left it all behind 'em (leaving it all behind)
Where were they going without ever knowing the way?
Anyone can see the road that they walk on is paved in gold
And it's always summer, they'll never get cold
They'll never get hungry, they'll never get old and gray
You can see their shadows wandering off somewhere
They won't make it home, but they really don't care
They wanted the highway, they're happier there today, today
Anyone can see the road that they walk on is paved in gold
And it's always summer, they'll never get cold
They'll never get hungry, they'll never get old and gray
You can see their shadows wandering off somewhere
They won't make it home, but they really don't care
They wanted the highway, they're happier there today, today
(Leaving it all behind)
wow. that's tragic.
Terrific song, but their only one (?)
Most of the album is decent. I'm partial to "Which Way to the Top?"
Now the song is just tragic.
Had a powerful stroke four days ago, but am already back to normal ... physically. Emotionally? I'm walking down a road paved with gold, basking in the midwinter sunshine, wondering if those I love know how much they've contributed to my most excellent life.
until they walked on roads paved in gold.
exactly.
always thought this was the Wallflowers so 2 is plenty.
Had a powerful stroke four days ago, but am already back to normal ... physically. Emotionally? I'm walking down a road paved with gold, basking in the midwinter sunshine, wondering if those I love know how much they've contributed to my most excellent life.
Ah, that emotional side. My husband has had a number of strokes, serious ones, but didn't affect him physical. Now the EMOTIONAL side ... wow. No one ever warns us about this side effect of strokes. But it's ok. Feeling things is still a blessing in its own way!
Be strong, hope you continue to improve. We're in your corner!!!
Had a powerful stroke four days ago, but am already back to normal ... physically. Emotionally? I'm walking down a road paved with gold, basking in the midwinter sunshine, wondering if those I love know how much they've contributed to my most excellent life.
Nice post, friend. Hope you're doing well. RP helps with these things, I find.
Had a powerful stroke four days ago, but am already back to normal ... physically. Emotionally? I'm walking down a road paved with gold, basking in the midwinter sunshine, wondering if those I love know how much they've contributed to my most excellent life.
Happened to us too.
You're right there. My darling Mum was taken this year after a long spell of gradually drifting away from us. It's lovely to hear a great tune come from such terrible tragedy though. Something positive to learn from, I think.
A 9 from yo boyeee
You're right there. My darling Mum was taken this year after a long spell of gradually drifting away from us. It's lovely to hear a great tune come from such terrible tragedy though. Something positive to learn from, I think.
Maybe it's about society; not a person. However pain is pain and I'm sorry.
Not funny at all. Alzheimer's is a motherfucker.
You're right there. My darling Mum was taken this year after a long spell of gradually drifting away from us. It's lovely to hear a great tune come from such terrible tragedy though. Something positive to learn from, I think.
I did not enjoy her presence,,,,I do not like this song. This song reminds me of her.... 0
omgawd......way too funny
Not funny at all. Alzheimer's is a motherfucker.
If THE WAY is the band´s only song you know (but like the great pop-tune and their overall musical style), listen to their albums.
omgawd......way too funny
That makes so much sense. Sounds like my parents. We had to take dad's keys away at 89 but before that they would get in the Town and Country van and take off. We always worried when they drove from Ohio to FLA and back. They are both in their 90's now - but together and safe.
The story the lyrics tell, or the story that inspired the lyrics?
Oh, come on, Mrs. Elf Destruct. It's not that bad, that it should feel worth it to down vote it. Especially from a 3 to a 2. A 7 to a 6? Sure. It's not that bad.
Nice visual :o) I used to karaoke this one - upstairs smokey bar full of regulars that loved me as much as I loved them. Great times!
ACK! But that's MY problem.
I was thinking the same thing; especially the opening.
ACK! But that's MY problem.
I represent those that are willing to admit that every once in awhile, a great piece of kit comes out of a top 40 band. This is one. I remember trolling the radio as a recent college grad when this song came out, just to look for it.
I loved it then. I love it now.
WonderLizard wrote:
That's almost how I explain my motorcycle to my adult children and their wives: A way to ensure I don't die from cancer.
I can, because it's based on a true story:
This song is based on the true story of Lela and Raymond Howard, an elderly couple from Salado, Texas who drove to a nearby festival and kept going. She had Alzheimer's disease and he was recovering from brain surgery. When they disappeared, a reporter from the Austin American-Statesman wrote a series of articles about the missing couple. Fastball bassist Tony Scalzo came up with the idea for the song after reading the articles (the band is from Austin). He says, "It's a romanticized take on what happened" - he "pictured them taking off to have fun, like they did when they first met." However, he found out after writing the song that the couple had died. They were found dead in Arkansas.
besides... children are evil!
If you don't mind, perhaps there's a different slant on their fatal excursion. Read this story: https://www.biographile.com/memoir-in-a-melody-the-tragic-disappearance-behind-fastballs-the-way/31024/. Maybe, just maybe, Ray decided that he, at 88, and Lela, 85, had not much time left and decided to go out in style--although ending up at the bottom of an Arkansas ravine may not be what some, over even they, consider "style." Still, there's something to be said for going out on your own terms. Scalzo may have gotten it right.
Just for the feel of the music, cant give less than an eight.
I can, because it's based on a true story:
This song is based on the true story of Lela and Raymond Howard, an elderly couple from Salado, Texas who drove to a nearby festival and kept going. She had Alzheimer's disease and he was recovering from brain surgery. When they disappeared, a reporter from the Austin American-Statesman wrote a series of articles about the missing couple. Fastball bassist Tony Scalzo came up with the idea for the song after reading the articles (the band is from Austin). He says, "It's a romanticized take on what happened" - he "pictured them taking off to have fun, like they did when they first met." However, he found out after writing the song that the couple had died. They were found dead in Arkansas.
besides... children are evil!
Oh, wow... Now that you mention it I vaguely remember hearing that. What a really awful story... : (
I suppose it depends on how old their children are!! If the children are over 20 the song has a slightly different context.
I have a 27 year old child living at home so I understand. But it's my house so I'm not leaving, even for endless summer slacking. Now if I woke up some moring and found my adult child had moved out, that would be a different story.
I can, because it's based on a true story:
This song is based on the true story of Lela and Raymond Howard, an elderly couple from Salado, Texas who drove to a nearby festival and kept going. She had Alzheimer's disease and he was recovering from brain surgery. When they disappeared, a reporter from the Austin American-Statesman wrote a series of articles about the missing couple. Fastball bassist Tony Scalzo came up with the idea for the song after reading the articles (the band is from Austin). He says, "It's a romanticized take on what happened" - he "pictured them taking off to have fun, like they did when they first met." However, he found out after writing the song that the couple had died. They were found dead in Arkansas.
besides... children are evil!
Thanks ick for setting Coleen straight on what this song is actually about.
How can anyone with a conscience like this song>?
Perhaps someone with a conscience AND a sense of humor.
How can anyone with a conscience like this song>?
I suppose it depends on how old their children are!! If the children are over 20 the song has a slightly different context.
I don't even want to...no, you know what? I DO want to know how you know what it sounds like in a crocodile uterus. Go ahead, I'm waiting.
How can anyone with a conscience like this song>?
Why on earth would liking a song be the same thing as endorsing the behavior it depicts?
How can anyone with a conscience like this song>?
I can, because it's based on a true story:
This song is based on the true story of Lela and Raymond Howard, an elderly couple from Salado, Texas who drove to a nearby festival and kept going. She had Alzheimer's disease and he was recovering from brain surgery. When they disappeared, a reporter from the Austin American-Statesman wrote a series of articles about the missing couple. Fastball bassist Tony Scalzo came up with the idea for the song after reading the articles (the band is from Austin). He says, "It's a romanticized take on what happened" - he "pictured them taking off to have fun, like they did when they first met." However, he found out after writing the song that the couple had died. They were found dead in Arkansas.
besides... children are evil!
How can anyone with a conscience like this song>?
I can't stand Steve Miller's "Take the Money and Run" for similar reasons. The hero of the song is a murderer and burglar. Woo hoo!
It's about seniors leaving adult children I'm pretty sure… based on a true story… at least that's what somebody told me. So you can enjoy it more now.
This is right. There was an NPR story on it when the song came out.
edited (from Wikipedia):
Scalzo was inspired to write the song in 1997, after reading a news article about Lela and Raymond Howard, an elderly couple who had disappeared in Texas. Though Lela had Alzheimers and Raymond was recovering from brain surgery, the couple had been driving to a local festival. They were discovered two weeks later, dead, at the bottom of a ravine near Hot Springs, Arkansas, hundreds of miles off their intended route. Scalzo chose to imagine that they began reminiscing and decided to become ethereal beings on a permanent romantic trip, the answer to the song's question "where were they going without ever knowing the way?"
It's called interesting subject matter.
A good song is a good song. Sometimes a million people can't be wrong.
How can anyone with a conscience like this song>?
It's called interesting subject matter.
Proclivities
(Paris of the Piedmont)
colleen wrote:
How can anyone with a conscience like this song>?
Songs can be about whatever the author wants - the lyrics blankly tell a story; no actual families were harmed in the composition of this song, and no behavior seems glorified by the lyrics. Many songs are about unpleasant or unsavory subjects - some fictional, some based on true events - it doesn't mean that a listener who may enjoy those tunes is without a conscience. Does liking Hitchcock's "Psycho" or Poe's "The Tell-Tale Heart" make one devoid of a conscience? I don't think we want a world where writers and artists are told what their subject matter should be
How can anyone with a conscience like this song>?
Songs can be about whatever the author wants - the lyrics blankly tell a story; no actual families were harmed in the composition of this song, and no behavior seems glorified by the lyrics. Many songs are about unpleasant or unsavory subjects - some fictional, some based on true events - it doesn't mean that a listener who may enjoy those tunes is without a conscience. Does liking Hitchcock's "Psycho" or Poe's "The Tell-Tale Heart" make one devoid of a conscience? I don't think we want a world where writers and artists are told what their subject matter should be.
Detect??? It came right up and grabbed me.
A Beatles Influence. Like at least 75% of the music that came out concurrent with or after the Beatle's career.
We appear to have lost our grammar skills, hmmm?
They just have a solid sound, and I actually detect a heavy Beatles influence in many of their songs!!
Detect??? It came right up and grabbed me.
A Beatles Influence. Like at least 75% of the music that came out concurrent with or after the Beatle's career.
How can anyone with a conscience like this song>?
They just have a fantastic sound, and I actually detect a heavy Beatles influence in many of their songs!!
A few examples from my iPod's OHW playlist....
Blues Image - Ride Captain Ride
Mungo Jerry - In the Summertime
The Divinyls - I Touch Myself
Norman Greenbaum - Spirit In The Sky
The Knack - My Sharona
The Shocking Blue - Venus
Sinead O'Connor - Nothing Compares 2U
Iron Butterfly - In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida
The Ides of March - Vehicle
Too bad these artists couldn't deliver the one-two punch.
Anyhoo, back to "The Way".... I love how the bass thunders in on the second verse...
Sinead only had one hit?
It's about seniors leaving adult children I'm pretty sure… based on a true story… at least that's what somebody told me. So you can enjoy it more now.
OH. Wish I'd read that before my remark. Very cool! Maybe I can arrange for this song to play on my (88 year old) dad's PC a few times a day. (just kidding)
The lyrics seem to make it clear that they've just completely lost it as far as reality is concerned, so the kid's level of neglect might not be any different if they're home or wandering someplace. This seems like a very spooky song under the carefree surface.
It's about seniors leaving adult children I'm pretty sure… based on a true story… at least that's what somebody told me. So you can enjoy it more now.
No way, it's fun stuff!
I love this song too, and Fastball; it/they take me back to when I was living in DC and bartending because it would come on at the restaurant all the time and it would always make me stop, take notice and sing along. Those were some good times.
Are you saying you would rather not have an album which went platinum? Also, they had about three songs in the Top 20, not one.
I can understand how being a one-hit-wonder can be a bad thing - sudden fame, sudden obscurity, high probability of frittering away any cash gained.
Do that with a bad song, and you also get the scorn of the hoi polloi in the bargain.
But song was a hit for a good reason: it's a fine pop song. Putting out good work and having it, or at least some of it, appreciated by millions can only be satisfying. The folks who wrote this will be probably still be glad to take credit for it when they're in nursing homes.
jkhandy wrote:
better than no hits at all.
spacemoose wrote:
That's an intersting observation. I don't know if I agree with it.
Are you saying you would rather not have an album which went platinum? Also, they had about three songs in the Top 20, not one.
better than no hits at all.
That's an intersting observation. I don't know if I agree with it.
Stratocaster wrote:
A few examples from my iPod's OHW playlist....
Blues Image - Ride Captain Ride
Mungo Jerry - In the Summertime
The Divinyls - I Touch Myself
Norman Greenbaum - Spirit In The Sky
The Knack - My Sharona
The Shocking Blue - Venus
Sinead O'Connor - Nothing Compares 2U
Iron Butterfly - In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida
The Ides of March - Vehicle
Too bad these artists couldn't deliver the one-two punch.
Anyhoo, back to "The Way".... I love how the bass thunders in on the second verse...
better than no hits at all.
A few examples from my iPod's OHW playlist....
Blues Image - Ride Captain Ride
Mungo Jerry - In the Summertime
The Divinyls - I Touch Myself
Norman Greenbaum - Spirit In The Sky
The Knack - My Sharona
The Shocking Blue - Venus
Sinead O'Connor - Nothing Compares 2U
Iron Butterfly - In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida
The Ides of March - Vehicle
Too bad these artists couldn't deliver the one-two punch.
Anyhoo, back to "The Way".... I love how the bass thunders in on the second verse...
The biggest reason that I always think of them every time this comes on is because of how close they were and how much they traveled. They spent their entire early lives working and saving everything they could so they could play in their golden years and they made the most of it.
Several years ago, my grandfather started fighting cancer. He beat it once, but I suppose you never really beat it completely as it came back with a vengeance. I always had a feeling that I was going to hear that they were going somewhere and disappeared together. I figured that the way they lived together would mean that they would want to die together, but unfortunately life didn't give them that option. His last year was terrible, he was bed ridden and pretty much only left the house to go to the doctor. Those last few months, he lived on a hospital bed in his living room while waiting to die.
I truly love my grandmother and am happy I still have her in my life, but after seeing what she had to go through and how she is going to have spend the rest of her life without the love of her life, I almost wish that they had died on the road somewhere. At least they would have been together.
I can only hope I can have that kind of life with my wife.
This is a truly heart-warming story. Thank you for sharing it with us.
Now I feel pretty stupid for thinking this song was about transsexual prostitutes on a road trip for penicillin.
The biggest reason that I always think of them every time this comes on is because of how close they were and how much they traveled. They spent their entire early lives working and saving everything they could so they could play in their golden years and they made the most of it.
Several years ago, my grandfather started fighting cancer. He beat it once, but I suppose you never really beat it completely as it came back with a vengeance. I always had a feeling that I was going to hear that they were going somewhere and disappeared together. I figured that the way they lived together would mean that they would want to die together, but unfortunately life didn't give them that option. His last year was terrible, he was bed ridden and pretty much only left the house to go to the doctor. Those last few months, he lived on a hospital bed in his living room while waiting to die.
I truly love my grandmother and am happy I still have her in my life, but after seeing what she had to go through and how she is going to have spend the rest of her life without the love of her life, I almost wish that they had died on the road somewhere. At least they would have been together.
I can only hope I can have that kind of life with my wife.
This little history makes me feel better on this saturday morning at work.
Thank you.
The biggest reason that I always think of them every time this comes on is because of how close they were and how much they traveled. They spent their entire early lives working and saving everything they could so they could play in their golden years and they made the most of it.
Several years ago, my grandfather started fighting cancer. He beat it once, but I suppose you never really beat it completely as it came back with a vengeance. I always had a feeling that I was going to hear that they were going somewhere and disappeared together. I figured that the way they lived together would mean that they would want to die together, but unfortunately life didn't give them that option. His last year was terrible, he was bed ridden and pretty much only left the house to go to the doctor. Those last few months, he lived on a hospital bed in his living room while waiting to die.
I truly love my grandmother and am happy I still have her in my life, but after seeing what she had to go through and how she is going to have spend the rest of her life without the love of her life, I almost wish that they had died on the road somewhere. At least they would have been together.
I can only hope I can have that kind of life with my wife.
in this is quite fundamental yeah! — I like it - it is a good song!
Another band at that show was Semisonic, who were being marketed rather aggressively that summer. I ended up accidentally seeing them three times that year; as they were the opening act for other bands I was going to see. It was really weird and by the third time it was just surreal, I felt like some sort of inadvertent Semisonic groupie even though I didn't like them.
Back on topic, Fastball's not exactly a one-hit wonder, though this was probably their only top-10. I remember they had another song on the radio, "Fire Escape". I can hardly remember it now but I remember liking it better than this song back then. Gonna have to find it on YouTube or something to refresh my memory.
Oh yeah, they also had the song "Out of my Mind" which was okay.
Edit: beat me to it
I just looked it up and, well, sure changes the way I see the song.
I liked this song and group, too bad they turned out to be One Hit Wonders.
Okay, so now I have to look up the song too...
One hit wonders have their place here! I haven't heard this song in maybe 10 years. I mean, I don't need to hear it again for at least 10 more, but I'm enjoying it for now.
I just looked it up and, well, sure changes the way I see the song.
I liked this song and group, too bad they turned out to be One Hit Wonders.
100% correct.
Well, don't just leave us hanging like that! Let's hear the story!!