ï»żButI've still got the blues for you Used to be so easy to fall in love again But I found out the hard way It's a road that leads to pain I found that love was more than just a game You're playin' to win But you lose just the same So long, it was so long ago But I've still got the blues for you So many years since I've seen your face
Still Got The Blues (For You)" Used to be so easy to give my heart away But I found out the hard way There's a price you have to pay I found out that love was no friend of mine I should have known time after time So long, it was so long ago But I've still got the blues for you Used to be so easy to fall in love again But I found out the hard way
Chorddan Lirik Still Got The Blues - Eric Clapton Versi 1 [Verse 1] Am D Am G C F#m It used to be so easy to give my heart away B But I C B Em But I've still got the blues for you [Verse 2] Am D Bm C F#m It used to be so easy to fall in love again B But I found out the hard way
Vay Tiá»n Nhanh. SportNRLNRL 2023LoadingEven without a game this round, Manly fullback Tom Trbojevic believes he would have been ready for the Bluesâ must-win clash in Brisbane on June the Sea Eaglesâ 58-18 thumping of the Dolphins on Friday, in which Trbojevic scored a double and racked up 231 run metres, would have helped convince NSW coach Brad Fittler â if he needed convincing â that âTurboâ is ready to go.âIf I didnât play tonight [Friday], I still would have felt good to play Origin,â Trbojevic believes the same is true for injured Origin teammate Latrell Mitchell, who wonât have played for a month before game two at Suncorp Stadium.âI think if Latrell is right to go, then he should be in a Blue jersey,â Trbojevic played 68 minutes of the series opener in Adelaide before being taken off due to a suspected category one concussion. After an assessment from an independent doctor, as well as the doctors on the night, Trbojevic was cleared of a concussion and exempt from the NRLâs 11-day stand-down fullback Tom Trbojevic was lethal on Friday night at GettyâObviously, I got a knock to the head which, in the moment, I guess you feel that, but once [I] got up, it felt really good,â Trbojevic said.âObviously, there was the 11-day stand-down policy, so we were just seeing if we could ... get an exemption from that, and it was great we could.âI always thought I should have been playing, but itâs not my decision in the end. Because I felt fine, it would have been disappointing to watch tonight feeling the way I did.âDespite commentators and fans questioning the fullbackâs performance in Origin I, Trbojevic said he didnât feel the need to prove himself before Blues selection.âThereâs obviously a lot of talk, but it was great that we got the result we wanted, and to go out there and play some footy,â Trbojevic said.âMaybe [there was motivation to play another game before Origin], but Iâm a Manly player. I want to play for my team, and I want to go out there, and I donât want to be sitting on the sideline when you feel good.âThe Blues will face Queensland without halfback Nathan Cleary hamstring and hooker Api Koroisau broken jaw, so the odds are stacked against Trbojevic has won in Brisbane before and, although difficult, he said it was not impossible.âItâs still a long time away but, you know, [Iâm] disappointed with how we finished [in Adelaide],â Trbojevic said.âItâs a challenge [to win in Brisbane], thereâs no other way around it â weâve got to win. Weâve got a long week, weâll build that up, and weâll work out how we can be better, and go out there and do a job.âIt is a tough place to win, but itâs definitely doable. Itâs 50,000 Queenslanders there, and theyâre playing at home ... weâve just got to find a way to play our game for 80 minutes and hopefully come out on top.â
How many times have you heard this song If I had what he has, my blues would be gone But, Iæłe got the blues, nothing but the blues, for youI could have been happy with fortune in vain I have everything that a poor man could name But, I still have the blues, nothing but the blues for youSergents all over think that Iæłe found Someone whoæ even give me piece of mine Talkin?the unknown, out of my head I just canæ° remember I think that Iæłe saidGive me chance and take me back YouæŁl see a change in the way I act æ
ause I got the blues, nothing but the blues for youSergents all over think that Iæłe found Someone whoæ even give me piece of mine Talkin?the unknown, out of my head I just canæ° remember I think that Iæłe saidGive me chance and take me back YouæŁl see a change in the way I act I wonæ° have the blues, no, no blues for you
ï»żOscar-winning actor and filmmaker Morgan Freeman is bringing his love and passion for blues music to Ireland this June. As part of The Delta Blues Project, Freeman will be the honorary MC to a unique collaboration between the RTĂ Concert Orchestra and jazz and blues impresario David O'Rourke. Ahead of his appearance, the Academy-award winner talked to RTĂ Arena about his life in Mississippi, co-owning a world-famous blues bar, and about Robert Johnsonâs famous deal with the devil. The actor also shared how he refined his iconic voice, about preparing for iconic acting roles in The Shawshank Redemption and Invictus, and how a Best Actor award he won aged 12 is just as important as his illustrious Oscar... listen above. The Mississippi Delta is the birthplace of blues music. And it is here where Morgan Freemanâs love and appreciation for music style began. "My family history is rooted primarily in Mississippi. The two arms of my family are both rooted here," he says. "Oneâs black, the other is white-based⊠My great-great-grandfather was white and married my great-great-grandmother, who was black, in Mississippi. These things did happen in the 1800s." Morgan Freeman "Blues is actually called the devil's music by the clergy. It isnât." Freeman says that blend of white and black ancestry was very usual for the time. Although Mississippi was segregated in the 1930s, he had a good childhood, with great teachers and parenting, everything a kid would need to grow up.â It wasnât until his early teenage years, however, when Freeman returned home to Mississippi from Chicago, that he got into blues music in a much bigger way. This was also when he found another "home" in acting. Speaking of this time, he says "When you find your niche in life, then thereâs a kind of power that you feel, that you experience. This is where I am very comfortable and have no qualms about what Iâm doing. I know what Iâm doing. And thatâs always my life." Like his acting, did blues music give him a similar sense of home or belonging? "Within music, yes. But my musical tastes were rather eclectic. The only music that I heard that I couldnât quite get into was opera. But everything that stems from the blues, anything rock and roll, pop music, jazz, all have some connection to Delta Blues, believe it or not." Growing up in Greenwood, Mississippi, Freeman has always had an undeniable connection to pioneering bluesman, Robert Johnson. "This is a very unique combination that I guarantee you is going to just really dazzle the audience." When asked about thatâ famous crossroads, where Johnson allegedly sold his soul to the devil for success, Eric Meler, co-owner of the Ground Zero Blues Club, adds that the connection couldnât be closer. "[That crossroad] is behind our club," Eric says. "Itâs literally in the parking lot⊠When Morgan and Bill Luckett co-founded the club, I think it was just incredibly visionary to put it there." While his world-famous blues club may be beside a piece of blues history, Freeman makes no qualms about the origins of that story. "Thatâs pure myth. Iâm not one who believes in the devil, for one thing," he says. Morgan Freeman and Arena's Sean Rocks in conversation "Blues is actually called the devil's music by the clergy. It isnât. The blues is merely lament. [When someoneâs] singing the blues, theyâre singing about how sad they are that their woman left, or theyâre on the streets, donât have enough money, donât have a job. That is all personal lament, for the most part." Reflecting on the time, place, and success of Robert Johnson, does Freeman think blues music was subversive? To a point, yes. He says that if the person heard the lyrics and understood them, then the song is subversive. Otherwise, itâs "slight language." "Iâll bet that you know the separation between the Irish and the English; the Irish had a 'conversational codeâ they could use. The same thing [existed] in the South," he says. Developing his signature voice Upon mentioning the Irish, Arena host SeĂĄn Rocks brought the conversation to one of Freemanâs iconic roles, Red in The Shawshank Redemption, a role originally described in Stephen Kingâs novella as an Irishman. On learning about that fact, Freeman admits he didnât read the book but rather stuck to the script given to him. Has the script always been the starting, middle, and ending point for him as an actor? Tim Robbins and Freeman in The Shawshank Redemption "Absolutely, yes, all my life," he says. "I got on the stage for the first time when I was 8 years old. It was like going back to the womb - right to where I belong. When I was 12 years old, we had these little talent contests of all kinds, with music, bands going against each other, weâd organise drama. And when I was 12 years old, I won my first Best Actor awardâ in Mississippi." That very first award he won, Freeman says, is still up there on par with the Oscar he won for Million Dollar Baby. On reflecting on his career, and although he enjoyed success on the stage at an early age, Freeman notes there wasnât much comment about his signature voice until much later in his life, after his work on the childrenâs TV show The Electric Company. "I said to Mandela, 'If this comes to be, and I get to play you, I'm going to have to know you.â So anytime we were in proximity, for years after that, we got together, and I would hold his hand." "I went to college for about twenty minutes â figuratively speaking," he says. "I was in the theatre department, and I studied voice development and voice diction. And I had a really terrific professor who knew how to put a voice on a person. And thatâs where my voice began to be my voice.â" Before college, Morgan says that he had a deep Southern accent, which was modified and refined to give a more regional "actors voice." But accents are something that he still finds challenging. "I know actors that can just do voices or accents," he says, "but I canât â I have to listen to it, over and over. I did manage to come close to Nelson Mandela in the film Invictus. But that was serious study that got me there." Nelson Mandela, Clint Eastwood, and energy transferenceâ For his role in Invictus, how important was it to match Nelson Mandela's look, sound, and walk? Freeman explains that as soon as he was tied to the project, close access was instrumental to performing the role. "What happened with Mandela was when he published his autobiography Long Walk to Freedom, he was asked by somebody in the press, 'If your book becomes a movie, who would you like to play you?â He named me to do it." The producer at the time, Anant Singh, then put the two men together. Freeman just so happened to be in South Africa at the time and went to meet Mandela at his home in Jo'burg. "I said to Mandela, If this comes to be, and I get to play you, Iâm going to have to know you.â So anytime we were in proximity, for years after that, we got together, and I would hold his hand." "Thatâs energy transference, for me, the actor. If youâre going to play someone, some real person, someone you can get close to â itâs best to touch them. Itâs energy transference. I think that works very well." On speaking of the director of Invictus, Clint Eastwood, Freeman refers to him as one of his favourite directors of all time "I think Clint is an actorâs director. He doesnât direct actors. He directs movies. He hires actors, and itâs your job. And I love that about him that you establish your own character; you play it and do what the scene calls for. [Heâll] have the scene set up. Cameras will be where we want them to be. Lights will be where we want them to be. And go for it." "He never says action, and he never says cut. Heâs his own person on a movie set. Wonderful. I begged him to direct Invictus. Itâs one of the few movies he directed that he wasnât in." The Delta Blues Project in action Still got the blues The conversation on an actorâs freedom ties nicely to The Delta Blues Project's Dublin collaboration with the RTĂ Concert Orchestra, for which Freeman will serve as an honorary MC. Eric Meler explains that "this is highly unique, to take Delta Blues songs and infuse them with orchestral sounds." "Weâre excited. This is going to bridge two generations, two styles of music. Keep in mind these blue artists donât really have set lists. They play instinctively. So this is a very unique combination that I guarantee you is going to just really dazzle the audience." The Delta Blues Project is on Sunday, June 11th, at OâReilly Hall, UCD, Dublin - find out more here, and listen to more from RTĂ Arena here.
lirik stil got the blues