It’s as much as striking when the iron’s hot, as having anything to say.
Songs tell a story with as few words as possible
The thing about song writing: You just have to keep plugging away. A song isn’t like writing a book, But nor does it write itself. Take for instance Don’t Need to Know (Where You Are Tonight). It popped into my mind out of the blue. I didn’t ask any questions, I just started writing it down. As for the cowboy, it may be me and it may be somebody else. Or maybe it became me over time, or maybe its someone I used to know. Or maybe its a story that needed to be told. Songs take on a life of their own even for the people who bring them to life.
Welcome to Bobby Angel’s second studio album, The Green Album.
The full album
The album features some eleven (some say 12) songs that follow are a tribute to nature, and an ode to what the Nature Folk Movement (NFM) is all about. In typical Bobby Angel form, the artist wasn’t even aware he was doing a second album until, in an unexpected wave of inspiration, the final song, entitled Preserved came to life.
Preserved is what the critics are calling a literary and musical masterpiece, a rare gem of a song that both summarizes and challenges everything that came before.
One of it’s many hit songs
Other hit songs on the album include The Lusitania – a statement song meant to unseat the Titanic as the top maritime disaster of our collective consciousness – and the haunting tale of a small patch of woods called Ugliest Forest. Bobby Angel brings it on this album, like only Bobby Angel can.
And more than just hit song after hit song, in the tradition of the Nature Folk Movement (NFM), Bobby Angel sits down or an interview around the campfire after every song as every good nature folk musician does.
More About the Album: The Green Album is Bobby Angel’s second studio LP. His debut album New Pangaea was released in July 2020. Bobby Angel lives very close to a campfire on the outskirts of a Cypress Forest in southern Florida. Click “Read More” to see all the songs and interviews.
What's Buck's biggest topic that he goes back to time and time again?
Correct answer: C
When Buck Buckner hosts his AM radio program In The Bunker With Buck Buckner, the Bigfoot conspiracy is his biggest topic. With all the eye witness accounts, and he has stacks of them, he wants to know: Where's Bigfoot? And why is everybody so quiet about it?
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