Grandmaster Flash & F5 -Yesterday 6:30:25 2.20 PM cover art

Grandmaster Flash & F5 -Yesterday 6:30:25 2.20 PM

Grandmaster Flash & F5 -Yesterday 6:30:25 2.20 PM

Listen for free

View show details

About this listen

Story by Gail Nobles
Voices by Gail Nobles
Keyboardist: Gail Nobles
Photo: Wikipedia-Public Domain

Gail Nobles here, comin’ At ya straight from podcasting to your speakers! Today, we ain't rockin' around the clock, we're diggin' deep into something different. Something…well, *real*. We're talkin' about Grandmaster Flash and The Furious Five, and not just any track, but a tune that's got a raw, almost vulnerable feel – "Yesterday."

Some folks might scratch their heads. Flash and the Furious Five? Vulnerability? What's this about? Well, hold your horses, because even the toughest crews can drop their guard. This ain't your usual party rocker. This ain't "White Lines." This is *real life*, spilled out in lyrics.

Let's break it down. Verse one hits you right between the eyes. "You don't look at me the way you used to do. How I Wish you would. You don't say to me the things that you used to. How I wish you would. This ain't about Cadillacs and fly girls. This is about a relationship gone sour. It's about that feeling, that gut punch, when you know the spark has faded.

Now, the beauty of this, and where it gets its power, is in its simplicity. "How I wish you would…" He repeats it, hammering home that sense of longing, that desperate desire to rewind the clock. This isn't some lyrical acrobatics; it's pure, unfiltered emotion. It’s that yearning for what once was.

And then that chorus hits you like a shot: "Yesterday, I was a man of pain." This guy’s not afraid to show some scars. He’s admitting to being lost, to feeling adrift. "I bet I didn't know where I was going." Now, isn’t that something, folks? Grandmaster Flash and The Furious Five, admitting uncertainty? It's a stark contrast to the bravado often associated with the early hip-hop scene.

The lyrics said, "Now I wish that I could find the words to say, 'Honey, I love you.'" He can't *find* the words. They’re locked up inside. He’s struggling to express the very thing that could save the relationship. It’s about communication breakdown, about the pain of feeling disconnected from the person you love.

"Yesterday," in the context of Grandmaster Flash and The Furious Five, might seem like an anomaly. But it shows the depth and range these artists possessed. It tells us that even amidst the beats and the rhymes, there's always room for the human heart, broken and yearning. This ain't just music. It's a slice of life, served up raw and unfiltered. And that's what makes it good. That's what makes it REAL.

Alright, that’s all the time we got. This is Gail Nobles, podcasting off! Until next time, stay cool. Thank you for listening to Heartily.
No reviews yet