Machine - There But For The Grace Of God Go I (RCA Victor Records 1979) descargar videos gratis


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Duración: 07:21
Subido: 2012/11/26

"There But For The Grace Of God Go I" was a song written by August Darnell & Kevin Nance.

Machine was an American funk disco group, formed by Jay Stovall in 1967. The band started in Brooklyn, NY with the intent to create the disco equivalent of R&B message songs. The band released its self-titled debut album in 1979, which produced its most famous single "There But for the Grace of God Go I". The song describes two Latino parents named Carlos and Carmen Vidal who move out of the Bronx to protect their baby daughter. In their new surroundings, their daughter is cut off from her own heritage and becomes self-destructive from the Vidals' cosseting, and they find she is the type of person from whom all their peers are trying to protect their own children."There But for the Grace of God Go I" reached number 77 on the Billboard Hot 100 And spent ten weeks on the chart. Slant Magazine later named it the sixth greatest dance song.

The group released its second and final album Moving On in 1980 with two accompanying singles, but the album suffered from poor sales. Machine disbanded the following year, and Darnell went on to form Kid Creole and the Coconuts, who released a cover of "There But for the Grace of God Go I" in 1980. In 2009, three of the band's original members, Jay Stovall, Kevin Nance, and Clare Bathé, reformed the act for a tour.

There was a controversy when the song was released, due to a line from the song that was thought to be racist. The radio edit omitted it. In the first verse, the parents of the girl want to "find a place far away... with no blacks, no Jews, and no gays." This in no way is a reflection on the song being racist but of the racism and homophobia of the parents portrayed in the songs lyrics.

Carlo and Carmen Vidal just had a child

A lovely girl with a crooked smile

Now they gotta split 'cause the Bronx ain't fit

For a kid to grow up in

Let's find a place they say, somewhere far away

With no blacks, no Jews and no gays

Chorus:

There but for the grace of God go I

There but for the grace of God go I

Poppy and the family left the dirty streets

To find a quiet place overseas

And year after year the kid has to hear

The do's and don'ts and the dears

And when she's ten years old she digs that rock 'n' roll

But Poppy bans it from home

Chorus

There but for the grace of God go I

There but for the grace of God go I

There but for the grace of God go I

There but for the grace of God go I

There but for the grace of God go I

Baby, she turns out to be a natural freak

Gaining weight and loosing sleep

And when she's sweet sixteen she packs her things and leaves

With a man she met on the street

Carmen starts to bawl, with her head to the wall

Too much love is worse than none at all

Chorus

There but for the grace of God go I

There but for the grace of God go I

Carlo and Carmen Vidal just had a child

A lovely girl with a crooked smile

Now they gotta split 'cause the Bronx ain't fit

For a kid to grow up in

Let's find a place they say, somewhere far away

With no blacks, no Jews and no gays

Chorus

There but for the grace of God go I

There but for the grace of God go I

Poppy and the family left the dirty streets

To find a quiet place overseas

And year after year the kid has to hear

The do's and don'ts and the dears

And when she's ten years old she digs that rock 'n' roll

But Poppy bans it from home

Chorus

There but for the grace of God go I

There but for the grace of God go I

Baby, she turns out to be a natural freak

Gaining weight and loosing sleep

And when she's sweet sixteen she packs her things and leaves

With a man she met on the street

Carmen starts to bawl, with her head to the wall

Too much love is worse than none at all

Chorus

There but for the grace of God go I

There but for the grace of God go I

Comentarios

8 years ago

joe bell

my mom is carmen vidal. she isnt from the bronx she is from bedford styvasent which is in brooklyn. carlos is just a made up guy. my mom grew up in the struggle big time lol they grew up poor and worked real hard to get where they are now. they partied like they were famous. and alot of the people in her crew became famous. carmen happens to be a very sucesful women lol but literally came from nothing. like literally nothing lol thats what this song is about. coming from the struggle to get to a higher ground.

8 years ago

Thereyago o

It was a hit. There go I.

8 years ago

Thereyago o

I was in 3rd grade and we had a class party. I played this. The teacher turned the music off and berated me in front of my class. She didn't know it was just a story. It pissed me off though.

8 years ago

Robert Sambello

E-L-I-T-I-S-M!!!!

8 years ago

trintube68

This brings back memories of being a kid, listening to music on my clock radio well past my bedtime. Nostalgia is like a time machine. 

8 years ago

DonDraperism

The song is not about an upper middle class couple. Read the lyrics as the couple's name is Carlos and Carmen Vidal and they live in the Bronx on the dirty streets. It's about self hatred of one's own identity.

9 years ago

Chris Frat

That is one intense tune! So much energy... LOVE it! 

9 years ago

Robert Bonavoglia

BRROOOOOOOOOOOOOOKLYN!!!!!

9 years ago

Robert Bonavoglia

2 versions where only upper class kids play. Instead of no blacks , noJews, And No Gays.

9 years ago

Robert Bonavoglia

MOVE!!

9 years ago

killbill venom

Oy Vay Herb did you hear vat they said?

9 years ago

Renato Kawasaki

I waited 36 Y-E-A-R-S to find this song, believe it or not !!!classic !

9 years ago

TheLupinThird

Tommy regisford remix (1994) unidisc

9 years ago

Penelope Baker

I love this.. wow....this was music folks... Still listen to it...smiles

9 years ago

Waylon Jones

I say it all the time. I,m about Love 4 Life.Waylon D Jones. and There But For The Grace Of God go I.Carver class of 1985 Blk. 4

9 years ago

Thimothy Collier

I just love the rhythm and beat, and the way they sing the words, words are of the way and rules that most society is living by, a harsh reality, of which I will show us man to change, or the Lord, shall bring this change, and I tell you all, you all would rather that man brings this change to us rather than the Lord, brings it to us

9 years ago

David Carlton

This song is sung from the perspective of an upper middle-class couple who flee the inner city to the suburbs (nicely reflecting the "white flight" that happened in nyc in the 60s and 70s) hoping to raise their child to be the same kind of asshole they are, failing spectacularly in the process. that infamous line gets right to the heart of what "white flight" was about: the racism and homophobia of middle-class white baby boomers. this song is fucking great and people who deem it racist are morons.

9 years ago

dcaseng

I can't fathom how people could allow such great music to disappear and gain an image of being a fad.Disco is one of the greatest forms of music to ever grace mankind's ears. I hope it makes a comeback someday.

9 years ago

Tarkeema Lewis-Figueroa

this track should've been banned in NYC period! or burned. if we destroyed Sinead shit for tearing up the pope's pic. this was totally Anti- everybody!

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