This and its not even close.Gota De Limon said:
Amazing Grace
This and its not even close.Gota De Limon said:
Amazing Grace
Yes, but which version? The original or a cover? For me I think the cover by Clapton at the Concert for George is the best.BQ2001 said:
First thing that came into my mine was While My Guitar Gently Weeps
WestTexasAg14 said:
Jeeze this is tough...if we are talking pure music only I can listen to SRV's Little Wing on a continuous loop for the rest of my days.
Lyrically and Instrumentally combined...Jeff Buckley's Hallelujah is damn near perfect:
Burrus86 said:
Mother Ocean....20 million Parrot Heads can't be wrong....
If we're going to include composers, really Beethoven's entire 7th Symphony is something to behold. Mozart's Requiem in D Minor is also something else, that hits really just everything perfectly IMO.Sailor said:
Beehoven - 7th Symphony, 2nd movement.
Connd said:
Simon and garfunkle- America.
Connd said:
Simon and garfunkle- America.
Aust Ag said:
For some reason, I don't think of Mozarts or Beethoven's work as "songs". There were actually songs from their eras, what they did....something entirely different. Is the lyric thing what's getting in my way?
YUP. Especially once you know the back story.Great_I_Am said:This and its not even close.Gota De Limon said:
Amazing Grace
JCRiley09 said:
Okay Texags, someone with time and skills needs to make a Spotify playlist.
OldArmy71 said:
I would count Ode to Joy as a song. Beethoven took Schiller's poem and set it to music; it is sung as part of the 9th Symphony.
But other than that, I personally would not consider movements from symphonies--as beautiful and melodic as they may be--as songs.