Avg rating:
Your rating:
Total ratings: 3855
Length: 2:36
Plays (last 30 days): 0
I'll be sittin' when the evening comes
watching the ships roll in
and then I watch them roll away again, yeah
I'm sittin' on the dock of the bay
watching the tide roll away
I'm sittin' on the dock of the bay
wasting time
I left my home in Georgia
headed for the Frisco Bay
because I've had nothin' to live for
and look like nothin's gonna come my way
So I'm just gonna sit on the dock of the bay
watchin' the tide roll away
I'm sittin' on the dock of the bay
wasting time
Looks like nothin's gonna change
Everything still remains the same
I can't do what ten people tell me to do
So I guess I'll remain the same
Sitting here resting my bones
And this loneliness won't leave me alone
It's 2,000 miles I've roamed
Just to make this dock my home now
I'm just gonna sit at the dock of the bay
watchin' the tide roll away
I'm sittin' on the dock of the bay
wasting time
I had rated this a 9. What the hell was I thinking? It's a 10 if there ever was one.
Yeah I agree, I just upped my vote as well
i would play this over and over when i was a little girl. my parents had that huge stereo contraption thing (console?) and at 5 i was allowed, VERY CAREFULLY, to play records. i specifically remember sitting at a window staring outside listening to this. still love it.
I was also lucky @ a young age to have cool parents with an awesome LP catalog. Dad wired speakers throughout the house and also outside so whatever was playing could be heard literally anywhere. Then someone would just shout out "flip the stack" when it was time for the A sides to become B sides.
Fond fond memories.
FUCKING
REDDING
With all due respect, as someone who's lived his entire life in the Bay Area and who just spent yesterday at the beach watching the tides of the Bay roll out, Otis does say "Frisco" ("I left my home in Georgia...Headed for the Frisco Bay") and yes, it is noticeable because no one here ever says that. So, I have to agree with MinMan and share his pet peeve. That said, Otis gets a pass (and MinMan did not criticize him directly) because he is someone from another place who truly appreciated the beauty of the Bay. No one can deny what a wonderful song this is despite the use of the "frisco" word; and besides, I think he would have been stuck with a poetic dilemma if he didn't use it.
Being an actual native of SF and not from some rich neighborhood (grew up in the southern area of the city), we all called it Frisco and still do. In the urban area where I’m from as well as the local hip hop culture in the 80s/90s, we always used Frisco. If not that, then it’s The City (with Oakland being The Town). All these out-of-towners who are now claiming SF who attempt to correct people on the nicknames, especially this one, need to get over themselves and respect the actual locals and culture we had before all of this hipster craziness. I’ll call it whatever I want, which is Frisco!
At no point does the singer claim to be a native of Frisco. He was from Georgia. It's in the song, for Pete's sake.
... people who don't listen, just one of my pet peeves.
With all due respect, as someone who's lived his entire life in the Bay Area and who just spent yesterday at the beach watching the tides of the Bay roll out, Otis does say "Frisco" ("I left my home in Georgia...Headed for the Frisco Bay") and yes, it is noticeable because no one here ever says that. So, I have to agree with MinMan and share his pet peeve. That said, Otis gets a pass (and MinMan did not criticize him directly) because he is someone from another place who truly appreciated the beauty of the Bay. No one can deny what a wonderful song this is despite the use of the "frisco" word; and besides, I think he would have been stuck with a poetic dilemma if he didn't use it.
At no point does the singer claim to be a native of Frisco. He was from Georgia. It's in the song, for Pete's sake.
... people who don't listen, just one of my pet peeves.
c.
Otis Redding was not a native of the SF Bay area; the lyrics should make that clear.
1986 was a long time ago.
https://www.smithsonianmag.com...
10 -GODLIKE
This morning's New York Times celebrates the 50th anniversary of the release of this enduring masterpiece.
"As a singer, range is great, but you got to learn to sing the right notes the right way. Otis was one of the masters of that ... "
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/23/arts/music/otis-redding-sittin-on-dock-bay-anniversary.html
I gave up noodling to this song myself, because I cannot sound like Otis, (Hell, who can?), I wouldn't even pretend to know what a guitar was if Steve was in the room; and inasmuch as I love it, I couldn't ever come anywhere close to replicating the utter perfection of this creation and performance.
What he said. That cut is 50 years old and still Godlike.
you need PSD button, lol AVERAGE rating 9 out of 1300 + hmmm you are in the MINORITY
Brilliant song, but since when is being in the minority some sort of wrongdoing?
I gave up noodling to this song myself, because I cannot sound like Otis, (Hell, who can?), I wouldn't even pretend to know what a guitar was if Steve was in the room; and inasmuch as I love it, I couldn't ever come anywhere close to replicating the utter perfection of this creation and performance.
you need PSD button, lol AVERAGE rating 9 out of 1300 + hmmm you are in the MINORITY
I used to work for a gentleman who I think would want you all to know that Mr. Redding is a little confused here. No matter what he says this is not what he was doing
Forever ruined by Top Gun.
Thanks for the Amy Winehouse flip again. It was great.
Everybody in my church loves this song...
Reminds me of drinking beers in La Jolla, CA. Good enough for a 10 in that respect.
Three years later, the relationship was over. Going to France, leaving the madness behind, I stopped for a pizza at a restaurant in a tiny village in the middle of the French Alps. It turned out the place had live music that evening.
The band opened with this song...
Life's strange and beautiful like that I guess. :-)
9
Today has been blessed with great tunes from RP! Thanks for tugging my heart strings and letting my soul sing along. Love it!
BTW no natives of The SF Bay Area have ever called it "Frisco"... just one of my pet peeves.
Kindly note the song is about a guy who moved there from Georgia. So, he ain't no native of The SF Bay Area. ;)
SNAP Ziggy!!!
BTW no natives of The SF Bay Area have ever called it "Frisco"... just one of my pet peeves.
Kindly note the song is about a guy who moved there from Georgia. So, he ain't no native of The SF Bay Area. ;)
BTW no natives of The SF Bay Area have ever called it "Frisco"... just one of my pet peeves.
This really is a great song...
You so funny, but yea this is a great song...
Jimmy Cliff - Sitting In Limbo
Otis Taylor - Ten Million Slaves
BTW no natives of The SF Bay Area have ever called it "Frisco"... just one of my pet peeves.
Word. We call it "The City." Frisco is a little resort town on North Carolina's Outer Banks.
unclemrbig wrote:
BTW no natives of The SF Bay Area have ever called it "Frisco"... just one of my pet peeves.
only solution is lobotomy
A bottle in front of me, or a frontal lobotomy.
Tree_Hugger wrote:
My same thought too!!!!
only solution is lobotomy
That dumb movie was the way I first heard this song. Of course I was six when it came out in theaters and I thought it was far from dumb at the time (eww, their tongues are touching, gross). But long term the best part of seeing that movie was being introduced to Otis.
This song is good for the ears...
..and good for the soul
bless you, City of Macon
This recording wasn't even released until after his death. The "story" I had always heard was that he still considered the song "unfinished" and that the whistling at the end was filler for some more lyrics that he hadn't finished yet and was apparently going to punch in later. I don't know if that part is really true or just one of those "myths", I just remember hearing it many times.
Man could get funky, too..."Tramp" will get your booty shakin'. He makes me proud to be from the Georgia woods...
Tree_Hugger wrote:
My same thought too!!!!
Stax records rules...
After Otis passed, Cropper could not bear to hear this song. Don't know if he can now...
i loved this as a kid just as much as i do today.
I just sang along this one..
Could be the greatest pop song of all time.
Pop?