First published at 19:47 UTC on June 8th, 2022.
Edit for headphones, June 2022. Source file of the edit is the song on the 1969 album "Nashville Skyline" (2003 remastered hybrid sacd).
This song has a real great bass part, just like the album's "Lay Lady Lay" and "Ton…
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Edit for headphones, June 2022. Source file of the edit is the song on the 1969 album "Nashville Skyline" (2003 remastered hybrid sacd).
This song has a real great bass part, just like the album's "Lay Lady Lay" and "Tonight I'll Be Staying Here With You". The rest is - basswise - crap.
About the video: country pie relates to rural photos, so I chose rural photos, but, as a reaction to those videos with just a few photos - repeated over and over - I decided to give this super short song an abundance of 129 photos... good riddance... I don't like those photos anyway.
The final verse of this song says:
shake me up that old peach tree
little Jack Horner’s got nothin’ on me
oh me, oh my, love that country pie
Little Jack Horner appears in English literature from the 18th century onwards. A verse in the song Namby Pamby includes references to Jack. (Jack incidentally is always the name of the strange character in English tales of this time from funny little boys like Jack Horner and Jack Spratt, to characters who have strange adventures – Jack and the Beanstalk – and on to the terrifying Spring Heeled Jack and Jack the Ripper, of the late 19th century.
The most famous version of the rhyme, which certainly in the 20th century all children in England knew, was:
little Jack Horner
sat in the corner
eating a Christmas pie
he put in his thumb
and pulled out a plum
and said "what a good boy am I!"
®© SME on behalf of Columbia
®© therock&rollingsixties
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