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"Goin' Back" has also been recorded by Eydie Gormé (album: It Was a Good Time, 1971), Johnny Logan (album: Straight From the Heart, 1985), Marianne Faithfull (album: Horses and High Heels, 2011), and by Phil Collins in 2010 (Going Back, where it served as the title track).
"I'm Shipping Up to Boston" is a song by the Celtic punk band Dropkick Murphys, with lyrics written by folk singer Woody Guthrie. The original version of the song was released in 2004 on Give 'Em the Boot IV and was re-recorded for their certified gold selling 2005 album, The Warrior's Code .
"Boston and St. John's" by Great Big Sea "Boston Asphalt" by the Dropkick Murphys "Boston Babies" by G.B.H. "Boston Babies" by Slaughter & The Dogs "Boston Band" by Jim's Big Ego "Boston Belongs To Me" by Death Before Dishonor "The Boston Beguine" by Sheldon Harnick "Boston Jail" by Porter Wagoner "A Boston Peace" by Say Anything "Boston Rag ...
‘Going back there I’m sure will bring a smile to my face when I step into that rink,’ Matthew Tkachuk said. Panthers’ return to Boston brings back memories of playoff run’s magical start ...
The Chad Mitchell Trio song "Super Skier", written by Bob Gibson, used the tune and although its lyrics have nothing to do with subways, ends with a call to "get Charlie off the MTA". Boston-based punk rock band Dropkick Murphys wrote a variation, Skinhead on the MBTA, with a skinhead in place of Charlie, on their 1998 album Do or Die.
The three verses of the song are each a plea from the narrator to a woman whom he hopes will join him in, respectively, Boston, Denver, and Los Angeles, with each verse concluding: "She said, 'No – boy would you come home to me'"; the woman's sentiment is elaborated on in the chorus which concludes with the line: "I'm the number one fan of the man from Tennessee".
John Lodge explains the inspiration for its lyrics: "That song was about the freedom which I felt I'd received, both personally and as part of The Moody Blues." [8] He said, "The song was about leaving school and going out into the world and finding out it wasn't what you thought it was and it isn't what you were taught in school. It is ...
The drum parts of this and other early Boston songs were developed by Jim Masdea, but this is the only song on the Boston album on which Masdea plays drums. [2] [4] Scholz plays clavinet and all the guitar parts, including bass guitar, and Brad Delp sings vocals. [4] Boston consistently opened with "Rock and Roll Band" while playing at live ...