23 Oct 99 - 04:07 AM (#127109) Subject: For the Good Times From: murray@mpce.mq.edu.au There seems to be one or two Country/Western threads about, so I have the courage to ask this question. There is a song called "For the Good Times" which I first heard done by Jim Reeves; but which was also covered by Perry Como. I would be interested in any details about it like who wrote it and who originally performed it. I would be interested in the lyrics too. Murray |
23 Oct 99 - 04:27 AM (#127112) Subject: Lyr/Chords Add: FOR THE GOOD TIMES^^ From: katlaughing Murray,this was not lsited as by Jim Reeves, so I went looking elsewhere. Here's what I found at Cowpie (which there is a link to on the Links page. Sorry if the chords didn't wind up in the right places:
HTML "preformatted text" commands added. -JoeClone, 13-Apr-01. |
23 Oct 99 - 11:44 AM (#127160) Subject: RE: For the Good Times From: JedMarum This is a wonderful song, a joy to sing, and it always amazes me but it seems to go over well with every kind of audience. So many people know it, sing along or just listen carefully. I learned this song because I heard a wonderful recording of it (it seems to me it was Eddy Arnold) one dawn as I was sailing out of Appanaugh Rhode Island to Cutty Hunk. My friend Billy Dunlop had taken me, and a few other friends for a three day weekend sailing trip. The other guys all crashed and burned by Midnight, on our first night out, and the wind was so low that Billy wanted to make as much headway as possible. So he and I sat up and sailed all night, and by dawn we were well off shore and watched a magnificient sunrise accompanied by some great country music, in particular For teh Good Times. I determined to learn the song and have sung it ever since. Billy went on, years later to sail the Atlantic in a 9'1" sail boat, and in deed was sailing that same boat around the world when he got lost off the coast of Australia. He was a very interesting character, and a good friend. I never sing that song without remembering him. |
23 Oct 99 - 11:55 AM (#127165) Subject: RE: For the Good Times From: Rick Fielding Wow, I'd forgotten that song. Used to sing it a lot. One night at the Bond Place Hotel in Toronto, I got half way through it, and a woman jumped up with tears in her eyes and ran out of the room. Oops, I thought, but continued the song. One verse later, the man who had been sitting with her got up (also crying) and left as well! Didn't have a clue what to say (or sing) after that, so I went into another Kristofferson song for a medley..it was "Help Me Make It Through The Night"....bad choice! The two of them emerged almost simultaneously from the respective washrooms, took a quick listen, and vamoosed! (together, thank goodness) Like Hank Williams, Kris could get the emotions in high gear. Rick |
23 Oct 99 - 12:26 PM (#127173) Subject: RE: For the Good Times From: katlaughing Hmmmm, yes that voice! Sexy! I love this one and also Jesus Was A Capricorn which I first heard in a Unity Church in Colorado; Some sweet young girl got up and sang it while strumming her guitar. Went out and bought the LP that very day. |
23 Oct 99 - 04:14 PM (#127242) Subject: RE: For the Good Times From: Frankie I think Ray Price first popularized it with his stunning version of it. F |
23 Oct 99 - 04:16 PM (#127245) Subject: RE: For the Good Times From: Frankie I think Ray Price first popularized it with his stunning version of it. F |
23 Oct 99 - 11:48 PM (#127381) Subject: RE: For the Good Times From: murray@mpce.mq.edu.au Thanks for the lyrics kat. I always forget Cowpie! It is also interesting that and "Help Me Make it Through the Night" were both written by the same person. I am not a great C/W fan, but there are some exceptions and these two are amongst them. They transcend the plastic instrumentation used from the 60s on. Liam: Maybe the Eddy Arnold version was what I was confusing with Jim Reeves (all these cowboys look alike :) I have memories whenever I hear it too. The first time I heard it was in the middle of the night on a car radio as I was driving across the US. I had just broken up with a girl and I was alone and liking it. In that mood that only driving on an almost deserted road at night can induce. I was half-listening to the station; but this caught my attention--not quick enough for me to get who sang it or the name. Now I live in a different country, don't drive anymore, and have been happily married for almost 30 years. The song still recreates some of the feeling I had that night. Murray |
23 Oct 99 - 11:54 PM (#127383) Subject: RE: For the Good Times From: katlaughing You're welcome, Murray. Just one thing: I've never really considered any of them to be "cowboys".**BG** Funny thing, I've never thought of Kristofferson as C&W, either, though I guess that is what he is considered to be. Nice story, easy to imagine the way you describe it. kat |
24 Oct 99 - 01:06 AM (#127400) Subject: RE: For the Good Times From: JedMarum murray - I know the feeling. |
24 Oct 99 - 09:43 PM (#127640) Subject: RE: For the Good Times From: murray@mpce.mq.edu.au I was only kidding, kat, when I used the word "cowboy". Actually neither "For the Good Times" nor "Help Me Make it Through the Night" sound like a typical C/W song. Murray |
25 Oct 99 - 12:19 AM (#127686) Subject: RE: For the Good Times From: katlaughing Me, too, Murray.:-) |
25 Oct 99 - 03:06 AM (#127705) Subject: RE: For the Good Times From: bseed(charleskratz) Kristofferson's first two albums have some absolutely wonderful songs on them--in addition to the ones mentioned above. Of course there's "Me and Bobby McGee," but there's also "When I Loved Her," "The Pilgrim," "Jodie and the Kid," "The Silver Tongued Devil and I," "Sunday Morning Coming Down," "The Other Side of Nowhere," and so on. With good, spare country outlaw arrangements. Many of them made up the sound track of Kristofferson's first movie, "Cisco Pike." --seed |
25 Oct 99 - 09:15 AM (#127737) Subject: RE: For the Good Times From: Steve Latimer I sometimes have difficulty with Kris's voice, but find him to be a wonderful songwriter. I really enjoy the Willie Nelson Sings Kristofferson CD. He covers several of the songs mentioned here in his own inimitable style. One of my favourites. |