Bobby Weir – Sugar Magnolia
Sugar Magnolia — a sun-drenched celebration of love, life, and the fleeting sweetness of the moment Few songs capture the buoyant, wild-hearted spirit of the late 1960s like “Sugar Magnolia”…
Sugar Magnolia — a sun-drenched celebration of love, life, and the fleeting sweetness of the moment Few songs capture the buoyant, wild-hearted spirit of the late 1960s like “Sugar Magnolia”…
Brokedown Palace — a tender farewell carried on the wings of memory “Brokedown Palace” by Bobby Weir is one of those songs that seems to exist outside of time —…
Empty Trainload of Sky — a hymn for the departed, drifting through time like a ghost train at dusk From its opening lines, “Empty Trainload of Sky” by Gillian Welch…
Stay — a fleeting moment held open a little longer, before the night slips away From the first familiar plea — “Won’t you stay, just a little bit longer?” —…
Hello in There — a tender knock on the door of forgotten lives, whispered with grace and compassion When Emmylou Harris sings “Hello in There”, time seems to slow, and…
Baby I Know — a soft-spoken promise of love wrapped in harmony, innocence, and the glow of early-seventies pop There is a particular warmth that drifts out of the opening…
Milk and Honey — a fragile hymn to innocence, exile, and the quiet hope of belonging From its opening lines, “Milk and Honey” feels less like a song and more…
Sloop John B — a familiar folk tale transformed into a timeless voyage of homesickness, harmony, and the longing to go home When The Beach Boys released “Sloop John B”…
Tonight — a fleeting promise of young love, wrapped in harmony and moonlight When The Rubettes released “Tonight” in 1974, it arrived like a soft echo after a thunderclap. The…
When — a timeless question about love, waiting, and the sweet ache of youth remembered Few songs capture the innocence and yearning of first love as gently and enduringly as…