Easy come, easy go
But we’re the same age and I feel so old
You might have this figured out without a doubt
You know how to live
You know how to live
You know how to live
You know how to live
Waste my time on blues and heartache
Cause blues and heartache won’t do me no good
And you’ll do fine loving just for its own sake
Going out and flirting beats staying in and hurting
You know how to live
You know how to live
You know how to live
You know how to live
But when you call me late at night
And you been drinking alone
And I hear you hesitate on the telephone
You are losing your cool
Who you trying to fool?
credits
from A Remedy,
released July 9, 2015
Arr. Mary Kenney and Harry D'Agostino
Jay Rodriguez- Reeds
supported by 4 fans who also own “Jimmy (You Know How to Live)”
it's such a beautiful album of grieving and loss and acceptance. it speaks to a particular kind of grief -- not a grieving of one who is lost, but the grieving for one who is still present and still causing pain. i love the last song most because while it could end in pain, or end with the narrators decision to permanently push this person out of their life and that would be justified, it doesn't. instead, it offers something. what is offered? acceptance. hope. and a chance for redemption janmisha
Released in 2001, “The Convincer” is a gentle gem in the Nick Lowe catalog; an anniversary edition provides opportunity for rediscovery. Bandcamp New & Notable Sep 20, 2021
Erudite chamber pop that hearkens back to the elegant and experimental production of the 1960s, swinging from melancholia to playfulness. Bandcamp New & Notable May 13, 2016