Roxy Music — More Than This
Album: Avalon
Avg rating:
Your rating:
Total ratings: 4594
Released: 1982
Length: 4:09
Plays (last 30 days): 3
Avg rating:
Your rating:
Total ratings: 4594
Length: 4:09
Plays (last 30 days): 3
I could feel at the time
There was no way of knowing
Fallen leaves in the night
Who can say where they're blowing?
As free as the wind
Hopefully learning
Why the sea on the tide
Has no way of turning
More than this
You know there's nothing
More than this
Tell me one thing
More than this
Ooh, there's nothing
It was fun for a while
There was no way of knowing
Like a dream in the night
Who can say where we're going?
No care in the world
Maybe I'm learning
Why the sea on the tide
Has no way of turning
More than this
You know there's nothing
More than this
Tell me one thing
More than this
No, there's nothing
More than this
Nothing
More than this
More than this
Nothing
There was no way of knowing
Fallen leaves in the night
Who can say where they're blowing?
As free as the wind
Hopefully learning
Why the sea on the tide
Has no way of turning
More than this
You know there's nothing
More than this
Tell me one thing
More than this
Ooh, there's nothing
It was fun for a while
There was no way of knowing
Like a dream in the night
Who can say where we're going?
No care in the world
Maybe I'm learning
Why the sea on the tide
Has no way of turning
More than this
You know there's nothing
More than this
Tell me one thing
More than this
No, there's nothing
More than this
Nothing
More than this
More than this
Nothing
Comments (408)add comment
One of the best songs/albums from the 80s for sure.
There's something about Brian Ferry's voice that sends my brain into a soothed state.
This is a fabulous song. The epitome of cool. I first listen to this when it came out and have always loved it.
I didn't come across Roxy Music until I was in grad school in the 90s...not sure why, they just never played them on the radio where I was and no one ever mentioned them. This song always grabs me, it's just a really mellow mood with a killer bass line and Ferry's singing is smooth as glass.
My favourite Roxy Music track.
Just bloody lovely.
Just bloody lovely.
Timeless....
EXCELLENT! Thanx RP!
danmc wrote:
But what do you think of the hat on my falcon?
the first most interesting man in the world.
But what do you think of the hat on my falcon?
the first most interesting man in the world.
Well, it's all about memory lane tonight...... love love love
I was alas too young to see Roxy live in their 70s heyday but finally got a chance to do so at the Garden for their 50th Anniversary tour in 2022. What a treat! Ferry is of course an undisputed pop god now but new respect for Manzanera and especially Mackay who gives them that extra sauce to stand out from the crowd.
I can smell the clove cigarettes and feel the hips sway as we stargaze
Avalon was my go-to beginning-of-long-road-trip album for years, still is sometimes. Best Roxy LP to my ears and this is the best song off it. 10 from me.
might be my favorite album, and likely the best cut on that album. I just do not get tired of this. I wish there was an extended version.
The great Phil Manzanera.. What a fine axe man, so evident on this lovely, mellow track.
everettwa wrote:
Na...I don't think so.
I've always enjoyed this. It's a classic. But I heard the Charlie Hunter/Norah Jones version and I think I like it better. Slower, lighter production.
Na...I don't think so.
Mark This Song as part of a vast selection as to why the 80's will always be Halcyon Daze for music!.........................................
................
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louielouie wrote:
Wonder if there was a way for us to start rating songs above 10
Gave it my '10' years ago. Can I vote again? RP, a keeper forever.
Wonder if there was a way for us to start rating songs above 10
Gave it my '10' years ago. Can I vote again? RP, a keeper forever.
The definition of a “10” on Radio Paradise.
I've always enjoyed this. It's a classic. But I heard the Charlie Hunter/Norah Jones version and I think I like it better. Slower, lighter production. Steamier, too.
cosmiclint wrote:
Wish I could give you 10 thumbs up. A great moment.
I always think of Bill Murray singing this in Lost in Translation. Never fails to bring a smile.
Wish I could give you 10 thumbs up. A great moment.
Where's the "repeat" tab?
ROXY is my youth and now days. Thank you!
But what do you think of the hat on my falcon?
I always think of Bill Murray singing this in Lost in Translation. Never fails to bring a smile.
Will always love this song. Always a 10 for me.
Retrograde-orbit wrote:
If you don't have "The High Road" you should probably recuse yourself from the conversation.
I get misty eyed, whenever I hear this song or Avalon, just knowing this was Roxy Music's swansong. If you have to go out, go out on top (see also the Jam).
If you don't have "The High Road" you should probably recuse yourself from the conversation.
Oddly enough, I like 10K Maniac's cover more than the original.
Just popped this CD into my car the other day...timeless for me! Best song on it, but there are some other really nice tunes...
robus wrote:
Going to see Bryan Ferry at the end of this month, on my birthday in fact. Hope it's as good as your show.
Saw Bryan Ferry live in Portland, OR earlier this year. A great night but the audience was decidedly split between the old Roxy Music (pre ~1979) and the new Roxy Music. Needless to say the musical selection was quite varied so every one left feeling happy. A great backing band really helped to bring new life to old favorites.
Going to see Bryan Ferry at the end of this month, on my birthday in fact. Hope it's as good as your show.
One of the 10 best artist, for my taste.
David Bowie and Depeche mode are on that list.
David Bowie and Depeche mode are on that list.
This is the song that made me fall for Roxy Music
I get misty eyed, whenever I hear this song or Avalon, just knowing this was Roxy Music's swansong. If you have to go out, go out on top (see also the Jam).
Truly pop perfection. One of my faves since it was released.
You know who else LOVES this song? Steve Jones from the Sex Pistols!
Nothing evokes the sweet melancholy of 80's teenage life more than this. And Avalon.
Still like Bill Murray's version over Roxy Music, just sayin'....
Total tuuuuuuuuunnnnnnnnneeeeeeee!!!! 9/10
Absolutely the best track on a great record.
Bought this LP during freshman year in college, when it was released and everyone who heard it coming from my dorm room loved it. Played this record to death. Still like it.
Great Album.
I just saw Bryan Ferry in concert last week and the show was heavily Roxy Music with some tasteful solo work too. Great band, performance, and mutual appreciation between the band, audience, and Mr. Ferry. Superb...
Musical honey. Love it.
The whole album is great.
The whole album is great.
What a voice....and he was a bit of eye candy in his days....
End to end, one of the most beautiful albums of all time. If you feel the same way, I highly recommend finding a way to hear the 5.1 SACD release from about 10 years ago.
coloradojohn wrote:
Please take me next time.
I will always remember getting way above Standard Orbit with this blaring on the Mitsubishi Auto-Reverse in the cherry '61 Impala up behind Lost Gulch Overlook, looking out upon a sea of clouds into a sky very much like this one, being conscious of the Flow of Time...
Please take me next time.
An album that never gets old
marvelous, as always.
It's More Than Knowing.
First note... and it's turned all the way up!
Just fucking cool.
I came to Roxy late, after their Brian Eno/mid-70s critical heyday. Still love their last two albums though. It's pop for sure but pop done right
coloradojohn wrote:
"...getting way above Standard Orbit": Ha, I don't think I've quite ever heard it referred to in those terms before, or, maybe I just don't remember...
I will always remember getting way above Standard Orbit with this blaring on the Mitsubishi Auto-Reverse in the cherry '61 Impala up behind Lost Gulch Overlook, looking out upon a sea of clouds into a sky very much like this one, being conscious of the Flow of Time...
"...getting way above Standard Orbit": Ha, I don't think I've quite ever heard it referred to in those terms before, or, maybe I just don't remember...
acupunk wrote:
The first album I ever heard on CD in 1983, it is there with the best and my collection spans the 60's to now.
This album is a masterpiece from first track to last. Great headphone album...
The first album I ever heard on CD in 1983, it is there with the best and my collection spans the 60's to now.
This has to be Roxy Musics finest album and almost certainly one of my top 10 albums.
It's great knowing how much Bryan Ferry influenced Nile Rodgers, who in turn drove the direction of music throughout the 80s and beyond. Lots of significance in this branch of the musical family tree.
i LOVE this song forever
Music for an evening on the far stretches of the barrier reef...Thanks for the memory.
11!
I will always remember getting way above Standard Orbit with this blaring on the Mitsubishi Auto-Reverse in the cherry '61 Impala up behind Lost Gulch Overlook, looking out upon a sea of clouds into a sky very much like this one, being conscious of the Flow of Time...
Love is the drug....
This album is a masterpiece from first track to last. Great headphone album...
coloradojohn wrote:
"YOU BETCHA COLORADOJOHN!!!"
——
Yup...for sure! The pimples may fade, but not the Passions of The Heart, and are we doomed to dare to always and forever hope that there's More Than This? Good comment, and very apropos of the Eternal conundrum...
Yup...for sure! The pimples may fade, but not the Passions of The Heart, and are we doomed to dare to always and forever hope that there's More Than This? Good comment, and very apropos of the Eternal conundrum...
"YOU BETCHA COLORADOJOHN!!!"
paultron wrote:
Was hoping for a laugh, but the link to your Sideshow Bob video is dead. Try again! Thanks.
roxy music just does not do it for me, and their music literally seems to follow me everywhere. malls, radio, you name it. makes me feel like sideshow bob
Was hoping for a laugh, but the link to your Sideshow Bob video is dead. Try again! Thanks.
hayduke2 wrote:
Yup...for sure! The pimples may fade, but not the Passions of The Heart, and are we doomed to dare to always and forever hope that there's More Than This? Good comment, and very apropos of the Eternal conundrum...
flashback to driving off a sorrow filled last date in my used but cool '69 Mercury Cougar, Ferry coming thru the late night FM college station with all the assurances necessary to get back out there, she's waiting for a sappy romantic hero just like pimply faced me, dag-gummit
——Yup...for sure! The pimples may fade, but not the Passions of The Heart, and are we doomed to dare to always and forever hope that there's More Than This? Good comment, and very apropos of the Eternal conundrum...
Saw Bryan Ferry live in Portland, OR earlier this year. A great night but the audience was decidedly split between the old Roxy Music (pre ~1979) and the new Roxy Music. Needless to say the musical selection was quite varied so every one left feeling happy. A great backing band really helped to bring new life to old favorites.
Perfect. Heavenly.
Hippostar wrote:
"Thanks... this is hard... "
Haha, I was just thinking about this scene. Cheers!
"Thanks... this is hard... "
Haha, I was just thinking about this scene. Cheers!
Brings me back to good times and great people!! Ahhhh....
its just so suave. can't believe Ray Ban sunglasses haven't bought it to shill their goods. thank the Lord.
When this came out I hated it. Just not screaming rock n roll enough. Thank you to the person that convinced me that I was an idiot and got me listening to a whole new genre (for me). Stunning.
10, next
Cyclehawk wrote:
You can say that again
A masterpiece that holds up very well, even 30 years later.
You can say that again
The best 10 -> 11
Ah....a happy sound.... Thank you for choosing this one Bill
this reminds me of summer time weekends and Dave and Joan
PLC wrote:
AND you're in London!? I hope you have taken it upon yourself to educate the lost soul!
My colleague, sitting next to me, born in 1986 (!) has never heard of Roxy Music... Youth is wasted on the young.
AND you're in London!? I hope you have taken it upon yourself to educate the lost soul!
My colleague, sitting next to me, born in 1986 (!) has never heard of Roxy Music... Youth is wasted on the young.
There are few efforts that I turn to more often than this one. This was simply a tremendous swan song...
Can't get enough of this album. Thanks RP
Thanks for playing Roxy Music - always makes me happy to hear their smooth sound.
Luv it a lot. 9
Regardless of that below, keep playin' this tune RP! Never tiring.
Is it the voice or the music that makes this the greatest seduction album of all time?
Cyclehawk wrote:
completely agree - gives me chills to this day
A masterpiece that holds up very well, even 30 years later.
completely agree - gives me chills to this day
Flyingsorcha wrote:
I used to buy their earlier music just for the album covers......some of you might know what I mean.
Love the cover art!
I used to buy their earlier music just for the album covers......some of you might know what I mean.
A masterpiece that holds up very well, even 30 years later.
Nice!
was anyone else raised in the jungle by Bryan Ferry?
Great song from an outstanding collection
groom wrote:
I don't think it would make that far to be able to fall into obscurity.
slackpacker wrote:
slackpacker wrote:
I guess this falls into one of those songs where you had to be there when it was popular to appreciate. If this was released today, it would fade into obscurity.
dputlak wrote:
I think it would be as popular as any Chirs Isaak sound if released today. It has the same feeling/sound as many of his CI's songs.
dputlak wrote:
A truly great tune. Sounds as good today as it did in '82.
I think it would be as popular as any Chirs Isaak sound if released today. It has the same feeling/sound as many of his CI's songs.
Grammarcop wrote:
It appears that its identification as make-out music is well-founded
Reminds me of a special weekend in NYC with my wife.
It appears that its identification as make-out music is well-founded
A bit tired. Some sons you can hear over and over throughout the years and still enjoy. This one should be retired.
I don't think it would make that far to be able to fall into obscurity.
slackpacker wrote:
slackpacker wrote:
I guess this falls into one of those songs where you had to be there when it was popular to appreciate. If this was released today, it would fade into obscurity.
dputlak wrote:
dputlak wrote:
A truly great tune. Sounds as good today as it did in '82.
"Thanks... this is hard... "
One of my all time favorite groups.
flashback to driving off a sorrow filled last date in my used but cool '69 Mercury Cougar, Ferry coming thru the late night FM college station with all the assurances necessary to get back out there, she's waiting for a sappy romantic hero just like pimply faced me, dag-gummit
An under-appreciated album at a rating of 8.0. One of the great concept works of pop music.
slackpacker wrote:
Somewhat like Beethoven's 5th, then?
I guess this falls into one of those songs where you had to be there when it was popular to appreciate. If this was released today, it would fade into obscurity.
dputlak wrote:
dputlak wrote:
A truly great tune. Sounds as good today as it did in '82.
Somewhat like Beethoven's 5th, then?
Still a great song..
roxy music just does not do it for me, and their music literally seems to follow me everywhere. malls, radio, you name it. makes me feel like sideshow bob
Lovely piece, for lounge lizard dancing close romance music.
stargazer1 wrote:
That's like preferring sugar free brownie...and decaf coffee with artificial sweetener and powdered creamer over a true bakery brownie and a fresh ground dark roast cup of java.
This is good, but I actually prefer the 10,0000 Maniacs' cover.
That's like preferring sugar free brownie...and decaf coffee with artificial sweetener and powdered creamer over a true bakery brownie and a fresh ground dark roast cup of java.
I guess this falls into one of those songs where you had to be there when it was popular to appreciate. If this was released today, it would fade into obscurity.
dputlak wrote:
dputlak wrote:
A truly great tune. Sounds as good today as it did in '82.
sajitjacob wrote:
It is kind of ageless isn't it? Still sounds great.
Unlike me, this tune has defied the ravages of time.
It is kind of ageless isn't it? Still sounds great.
Unlike me, this tune has defied the ravages of time.
A truly great tune. Sounds as good today as it did in '82.
EdmoJoe wrote:
Sublime, always has been, always will be.
There's something so ethereal about the melody, especially the synth part, that hits me right in my emotion bone. Dr Oz, should I have this looked at, or should I just turn the volume up?
This is good, but I actually prefer the 10,0000 Maniacs' cover.
Sublime, always has been, always will be.
Reminds me of a special weekend in NYC with my wife.
Love the cover art!
Bryan Ferry is quite possibly the coolest guy to walk the earth.
I was born in 1984, but this is one of the first songs I ever remember hearing — usually driving in my aunts navy blue Buick on our way to Caldor.
This is a beautiful piece and it should be a 10, but because it just peters out at the ending, I have to give it a 9.
spiritfla wrote:
Absolutely!!
A Gem indeed.
Absolutely!!