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5 Reasons Carole King Should Be in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
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5 Reasons Carole King Should Be in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
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How to sum up fifty years?
Let the piano tell it. That instrument, invented circa 1700, lasted two hundred and seventy-one years until Carole King came along to sit there and flip it around just so.
It was made to support that voice. Those extremes of volume, that high note that wavers on the edge of breaking the microphone and the booth (or the track entire), and then the drop into softness that takes the whole band with it â thatâs her. Kingâs phrasing opens up space between how the feeling feels and how one says it. She renders it a bit ghostly. Itâs in that way, in her liveness, she always veers a hair off the beat; the whole song could go under if she let it.
화성에 띄우는 헬리콥터… 지구밖 첫 동력비행 도전
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The sound of someone finding their way in the world : Carole King s 1971 album Tapestry
The sky was blue, the breeze was cool, the Hollywood Hills twinkled in the sun. And as she sped towards Laurel Canyon with the roof down, 26-year-old Carole King could feel life hurtling forward to met her at a headlong pace.
“I turned right onto Laurel Canyon and revelled in the rush of wind blowing through my hair,” the singer-songwriter would write of her first experiences of LA in her 2012 memoir, A Natural Woman. “Other drivers were cruising up and down the canyon without a specific destination. I was going to the West Coast office of Columbia Music.”