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Chris
09-11-2013, 02:39 PM
http://i.snag.gy/fUsGH.jpg

Peter1469
09-11-2013, 03:49 PM
I was at Camp Casey, Korea when that happened....

Agravan
09-11-2013, 04:05 PM
I was in Allentown, PA when this happened. My brother in law was in NYC and saw the towers collapse.

fyrenza
09-11-2013, 04:57 PM
RIP, gentle citizens.

BB-35
09-11-2013, 05:30 PM
http://i.snag.gy/fUsGH.jpg

Never,NEVER ever.

Cigar
09-11-2013, 08:39 PM
I was on my way to Wrigleville for a noon Cub Game. The tickets are framed, the game was canceled.

oceanloverOH
09-11-2013, 08:44 PM
Alan Jackson wrote and recorded Where Were You When the World Stopped Turning? to express his feelings in the aftermath of this tragedy. A beautiful, heartfelt song, that can still bring me to tears a dozen years later.....


http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=o2NXDJ4FabE

From Wikipedia:
Jackson wanted to write a song expressing his thoughts and emotions, but he found it hard to do so for many weeks. "I didn't want to write a patriotic song", Jackson said. "And I didn't want it to be vengeful, either. But I didn't want to forget about how I felt and how I knew other people felt that day."

Finally, on the Sunday morning of October 28, 2001, he woke up at 4 a.m. with the melody, opening lines and chorus going through his mind. He hastily got out of bed, still in his underwear, and sang them into a hand-held recorder so he would not forget them. Later that morning, when his wife and children had gone to Sunday school, he sat down in his study and completed the lyrics.

The verses focused on others' reactions in the form of questions. One verse asks, "Did you lay down at night and think of tomorrow?/Go out and buy you a gun?/Did you turn off that violent old movie you're watchin'/And turn on I Love Lucy reruns?" In between, he asks about the locations of people when the tragedy played out, "Were you in the yard with your wife and children?/Or workin' on some stage in LA?" In the chorus, Jackson tries to sum up his own feelings, first by calling himself merely "a singer of simple songs", and "not a real political man", and finally by paraphrasing the Biblical New Testament's first letter of Paul to the Corinthians, chapter 13, verse 13: "Faith, hope and love are some good things He gave us/And the greatest is love."

Initially, he felt squeamish about recording it, much less releasing it, because he disliked the idea of capitalizing on a tragedy. But after he played it for his wife Denise and for his producer, Keith Stegall, and it met with their approval, Jackson went into the studio to record "Where Were You" that week. On Stegall's advice, Jackson played the finished track for a group of executives at his record label. "We just kind of looked at one another", RCA Label Group chairman Joe Galante said later. "Nobody spoke for a full minute."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Where_W...opped_Turning)

Agravan
09-11-2013, 10:13 PM
Alan Jackson wrote and recorded Where Were You When the World Stopped Turning? to express his feelings in the aftermath of this tragedy. A beautiful, heartfelt song, that can still bring me to tears a dozen years later.....


http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=o2NXDJ4FabE

From Wikipedia:
Jackson wanted to write a song expressing his thoughts and emotions, but he found it hard to do so for many weeks. "I didn't want to write a patriotic song", Jackson said. "And I didn't want it to be vengeful, either. But I didn't want to forget about how I felt and how I knew other people felt that day."

Finally, on the Sunday morning of October 28, 2001, he woke up at 4 a.m. with the melody, opening lines and chorus going through his mind. He hastily got out of bed, still in his underwear, and sang them into a hand-held recorder so he would not forget them. Later that morning, when his wife and children had gone to Sunday school, he sat down in his study and completed the lyrics.

The verses focused on others' reactions in the form of questions. One verse asks, "Did you lay down at night and think of tomorrow?/Go out and buy you a gun?/Did you turn off that violent old movie you're watchin'/And turn on I Love Lucy reruns?" In between, he asks about the locations of people when the tragedy played out, "Were you in the yard with your wife and children?/Or workin' on some stage in LA?" In the chorus, Jackson tries to sum up his own feelings, first by calling himself merely "a singer of simple songs", and "not a real political man", and finally by paraphrasing the Biblical New Testament's first letter of Paul to the Corinthians, chapter 13, verse 13: "Faith, hope and love are some good things He gave us/And the greatest is love."

Initially, he felt squeamish about recording it, much less releasing it, because he disliked the idea of capitalizing on a tragedy. But after he played it for his wife Denise and for his producer, Keith Stegall, and it met with their approval, Jackson went into the studio to record "Where Were You" that week. On Stegall's advice, Jackson played the finished track for a group of executives at his record label. "We just kind of looked at one another", RCA Label Group chairman Joe Galante said later. "Nobody spoke for a full minute."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Where_W...opped_Turning)

Beautiful song.