Transcript:
Dad: Since it's Hispanic heritage month... Dad: I want you guys to hear the old traditional songs I listened to as a boy! Radio: She love you! yeah! yeah! yeah! Gracie: Note the narrative verse. Gracie: A folk song staple for hundreds of years.
Templo S.U.D. about 10 years ago
¿La música de los Beatles es música hispana tradicional?
Dobie Takahama about 10 years ago
This strip is Getting Better all the time. I wonder if the next one will be awesome… well, Tomorrow Never Knows.
cdward about 10 years ago
Just to pick a tiny nit, but how old is Papi? I’ve got to be older than him, and I was just a kid when the Beatles broke up. Sure, they were giants of rock, and sure this is a timeless, great song, but I’m guessing Sergio isn’t 50 yet, which means he wasn’t even born when it came out.
Observer fo Irony about 10 years ago
@AlexikakosI do but it would usually starts with a ‘c’ and when there is too much fiber it tends to run fast.
Observer fo Irony about 10 years ago
@mugensWrong, my opinions never mattered but that had not stopped me from having them before.
Darsan54 Premium Member about 10 years ago
Now, I feel old.
Comic Minister Premium Member about 10 years ago
Agreed Gracie.
Petemejia77 about 10 years ago
Makes me think of the begining of “Selina”.
barister about 10 years ago
This is very bad. Such a rich and beautiful history and all they have to show for it is four English boys. I apologize Celia Cruz, Jose Feliciano, Willie Colon, and to you too Tito Puente. Gracias Tonga, Salsa, Rumba y Conga. Yo te amor Puerto Rico.
bcathey1960 about 10 years ago
He’s revisiting the past – next thing you know he’ll be playing “Yesterday”….
SoulDigester about 10 years ago
If music lyrics were supposed to be of a high quality they would need no music and they could once again be considered poetry… or in another words – bad poetry needs music so it could be called lyrics and become valued though in the best case it’s average.
english.ann about 10 years ago
I don’t know if the Beatles ever sang their songs in Spanish, but they did sing at least two of them in German (Komm gib mir deine Hand, Sie lieb dich, which literally mean, Come give me your hand and She loves you. I just happened to hear them singing Sie Lieb Dich on a radio at a job one day; someone else had chosen the station, and he hadn’t chosen a German station, either.
Packratjohn Premium Member about 10 years ago
50 years ago this year… where has the time gone? I was “only” 13 in 64.