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R.I.P. Tributes (non-Chelsea related)


JaneB

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23 minutes ago, My Blood Is Blue said:

Sven-Goran Eriksson has sadly passed away, aged 76.

He's obviously been unwell, but still extremely sad.

Sven was the England manager for the period of time when I had most interest in the England team.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/articles/clyw3lze152o

Poor Sven, a decent fellow by all accounts and certainly lived a life. 

RIP. 

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In his autobiography titled ‘The Didi Man’, former Manchester City midfielder Dietmar Hamann recalled a conversation he had with Sven-Goran Eriksson during the club’s pre-season tour of Thailand in 2008, which saw the Swede approach him with a bottle of champagne and two glasses at ten o’clock in the morning.

“I looked up and said, ‘Boss, what are we celebrating?’” Hamann wrote. “He turned to me and smiled that gentle smile of his and took on the air of a Buddhist philosopher as he said, ‘Life, Kaiser.’ Then after pausing for dramatic effect, ‘We are celebrating… life.’”

 

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  • 4 weeks later...
Echoes in the mountains.
Apologies, I was only going to quote a line or two as a Tributebut the words sum up the last easy stroll down to the unknown for me at this time
Thank You Kris... for Susan.
 
I have seen the morning burning golden on the mountain in the skies
Aching with the feeling of the freedom of an eagle when she flies
Turning on the world the way she smiled upon my soul as I lay dying
Healing as the colors in the sunshine and the shadows of her eyes
Waking in the morning to the feeling of her fingers on my skin
Wiping out the traces of the people and the places that I've been
Teaching me that yesterday was something that I never thought of trying
Talking of tomorrow and the money love and time we had to spend
Loving her was easier than anything I'll ever do again
Coming close together with a feeling that I've never known before in my time
She ain't ashamed to be a woman or afraid to be a friend
I don't know the answer to the easy way she opened every door in my mind
But dreaming was as easy as believing it was never gonna end
And loving her was easier than anything I'll ever do again
 
 
 
 
I
 
 
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Years ago, in my folk singing days, I started “Me and Bobby McGee” and a girl I’d never met got up on stage uninvited and we played it as a duet. Magic moment. Thanks Kris, and fare thee well.

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  • 2 weeks later...
On 30/09/2024 at 03:21, chara said:
Echoes in the mountains.
Apologies, I was only going to quote a line or two as a Tributebut the words sum up the last easy stroll down to the unknown for me at this time
Thank You Kris... for Susan.
 
I have seen the morning burning golden on the mountain in the skies
Aching with the feeling of the freedom of an eagle when she flies
Turning on the world the way she smiled upon my soul as I lay dying
Healing as the colors in the sunshine and the shadows of her eyes
Waking in the morning to the feeling of her fingers on my skin
Wiping out the traces of the people and the places that I've been
Teaching me that yesterday was something that I never thought of trying
Talking of tomorrow and the money love and time we had to spend
Loving her was easier than anything I'll ever do again
Coming close together with a feeling that I've never known before in my time
She ain't ashamed to be a woman or afraid to be a friend
I don't know the answer to the easy way she opened every door in my mind
But dreaming was as easy as believing it was never gonna end
And loving her was easier than anything I'll ever do again
 
 
 
 
I
 
 


"And there's nothin' short a' dyin'
That's half as lonesome as the sound
Of the sleepin' city sidewalk
And Sunday mornin' comin' down."

My personal favourite KK song, of course made famous by the great Johnny Cash.

 

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@RDCW,,so many lines and so many moods.

"Wiping out the traces of the people and the places I've  been."

"Wearing yesterday's misfortunes like a smile"

"Yesterday is dead and gone and tomorrows out of sight"

Dylan may have got a Nobel prize but Kris was the poet of the generations.

Edited by chara
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16 hours ago, chara said:

Dylan may have got a Nobel prize but Kris was the poet of the generations.

I often feel that Leonard Cohen should have got that prize. For instance, I liked Dylan's "Just Like a Woman" until I heard Nina Simone's version with the twist at the end, turning it from a juvenile moan into a visceral piece about the female experience. But, for me, Dylan went downhill later on. Cohen seemed to maintain the quality of his material, writing about so many different things over the many phases of his career. Or maybe it's just that I relate to it better than I do Dylan. I have not thought about Kris in these terms. I shall have to have a listen.

Edited by Sciatika
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@Sciatika @Michael Tucker

I'll do the same with Cohen as Sciatika said about Kris...and once Dylan began to believe in all his own PR he certainly started a journey up his own exterior place without sun! IMHO,,,

I remember being blown away by "Blood On The Tracks" but I think he lost me after that.

Told it before but Ritchie Havens telling me and my buddy about singing "Just Like A Women" in some Greenwich(NY) bar...finished his set and was speaking to a guy and mentioned how much he liked the song,,:the other stranger said "So do I ,,but then I wrote it!"

And @Ham.... 😁

 

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