David Cassidy – I Saw Her Standing There
“I Saw Her Standing There” in David Cassidy’s hands is a joyous return to first loves and first records—proof that beneath the teen-idol mythology, there was always a real rocker…
“I Saw Her Standing There” in David Cassidy’s hands is a joyous return to first loves and first records—proof that beneath the teen-idol mythology, there was always a real rocker…
“Love, Love the Lady” is David Cassidy slipping off the spotlight’s costume and choosing something quieter: a grown man’s hymn to steadiness, when simple affection becomes the only shelter that…
“How Love Was True” is a small, early Bee Gees time-capsule—three brothers singing as if love were a first draft of destiny, already slipping into memory even while it’s happening.…
“Silver Bells” in Neil Diamond’s hands becomes a winter postcard from the city—bright shop windows, tired feet, and a heart that still believes the season can soften the world. Some…
“Hi-Heel Sneakers” is David Cassidy stepping into an old blues suit and wearing it with grown-up ease—turning nightlife bravado into a wink that still hides a bruise. The most important…
“I Never Saw You Coming” is the quiet sting of being blindsided—when love doesn’t end with thunder, but with a door closing so softly you only notice the silence afterward.…
“Prisoner” is David Cassidy singing about love as a beautiful captivity—when the heart keeps surrendering, not because it must, but because it still believes. In 1990, the world met a…
“Acapulco” is Neil Diamond letting the soul slip its leash—an imagined shoreline where desire feels simple, and the heart pretends (for 2 minutes and change) that it can start over.…
“Living a Lie” is David Cassidy staring at adulthood’s quiet masks—when love turns into performance, and the hardest truth is admitting you’ve both been pretending. What makes “Living a Lie”…
A Call for Empathy in an Age of Isolation When David Cassidy released “Message To The World” in 1990 on his album Didn’t You Used to Be?, it marked not…