
In this very emotional edition of Cover-licious, I pay tribute to those salty droplets of water that only love could have summoned. The tears of love, the only ones that really matter. Crying - Roy Orbison I had to include Roy Orbison's beautiful original of this song. His powerful voice is so full of emotion in this song that you believe that he was feeling that pain each time he sang this song. There is no other like [...]
A friend of mine told me if I could find her the song Llorando , the one on Mulholland Drive movie... so, when I was searching I realized this one was a cover of the famous song (for everybody but not for me ) "Crying" by Roy Orbison . Of all the covers I found, the acapella spanish version of Rebekah del Río is the best without a doubt. Una amiga me dijo que le consiguiera la canción Llorando que salía en [...]

Lightnin' Hopkins -- Feel So Bad Acoustic country-blues with Hopkins' distinctive reedy voice and some banging piano backup. [ Blues Kingpins ] Waylon Jennings -- Crying Jennings is not quite up to the melody; his reach isn't as agile as Orbison's, his touch not as deft. He's like a blackhat hacker whose social engineering fails and so he decides to brute force it. It's inelegant but it works. [ Country Giant @ emusic] [...]

A slit ant-filled ear on a bed of grass. A monstrous baby with bulbous eyes. A red-suited dwarf in a red-curtained dream . David Lynch's images have been indelible ever since his full-length debut Eraserhead in 1977. They've not only been stunning, but terrifying, curious and charged with surrealistic mystery. They touch on the complexities of sex and violence with just as much complexity. And they're absolutely, sometimes painfully unique, elevating Lynch to a level of other visual masters such as Stanley Kubrick, Luis Buñuel and Krzysztof Kieslowski. So it's well-deserved that David Lynch received [...]
In his essay on Mulholland Drive, McGowan concludes that only through recognizing fantasy for what it is, and indulging in it wholly, and wholeheartedly, can we arrive at the experience of silence. Desire never reaches an ultimate conclusion. Nothing begins or ends in reality the way it does in a movie. There are never any real silences. In Wild at Heart, Lula exclaims: "This whole world's