Se você tem muitos problemas mas tem Deus, você pode passar por qualquer coisa, não importa em que tipo de bagunça sua vida esteja, você pode fazer grandes coisas em sua vida.
war of the foxes - richard silken / waterloo - ABBA / euripides’ medea - the little theatre / anne carson / the three fates - luca cambiaso / the oresteia - aeschylus / road to hell II - hadestown / when i met you - mira lightner / andersen’s fairy tale anthology
tonight the super booper, beams are gonna find me, shining like the sun (super-per, booper-per), smiling having fun (super-per, booper-per), feeling like a number one
does anyone else feel music so deeply in their soul that half their life revolves around it and it’s the only thing that can truly save you in your darkest moments?
Some people might not see a marketing value for established brands making pinball machines these days, but the Toy Story 4 pinball machine is the only reason I knew there was a fourth Toy Story.
Also, I learned a lot from Craig Bobby’s The Pinball Show report on the new Abba pinball machine about the band Abba, which is it turns out is not just the Canadian equivalent of Billy Joel.
when Frida Lyngstad first heard the backing track for "Dancing Queen", she began to cry. "And that was before me and Agnetha had even sung on it! I knew it was absolutely the best song ABBA had ever done", she said. Agnetha Faltskog added: "It’s often difficult to know what will be a hit. The exception was “Dancing Queen.” We all knew it was going to be massive"
Allee Willis said of "September": "The, kind of, go-to phrase that Maurice used in every song he wrote was ‘ba-dee-ya,’ so right from the beginning he was singing, ‘Ba-dee-ya, say, do you remember / Ba-dee-ya, dancing in September.’ And I said, ‘We are going to change 'ba-dee-ya’ to real words, right?‘ And finally, when it was so obvious that he was not going to do it, I just said, 'What the fuck does 'ba-dee-ya’ mean?‘ And he essentially said, 'Who the fuck cares?’ I learned my greatest lesson ever in songwriting from him, which was never let the lyric get in the way of the groove"