Great story from a great era.<p>And as I was reading this I was humming Springsteen to myself<p><i>"Glory days, well, they'll pass you by<p>Glory days, in the wink of a young girl's eye<p>Glory days, glory days"</i><p>Turns out directlyrics doesn't have those lyrics. Google however returned them at top of the search homepage.<p>And... wow!<p>TIL there is a version of this great song with a verse that was not included in the original 80s version.<p><i>"My old man worked twenty years on the line<p>And they let him go<p>Now everywhere he goes out looking for work<p>They just tell him that he's too old"</i><p>Here's the video: <a href="https://youtu.be/P5-IoEcolp8" rel="nofollow">https://youtu.be/P5-IoEcolp8</a><p><i>Glory days!</i>
Great story. I worked as your competitor with metrolyrics about 5 years ago. It was a lot more interesting than I thought it would be. I think you put the correct amount of effort in, added some value and moved on nicely. Much kudos
how much has rapgenius taken away from you? i know i used to land up in one of many crappy lyrics sites, such as yours, because those seem to be the only places to find them but these days i mostly stick to rapgenius for its clean interface. i imagine rapgenius's rise must have done some damage with their clearly superior technology?
I found one line from that article really funny:<p>> an LA-based company that was run by a self-proclaimed co-founder of MySpace<p>I've met several people in southern california that say they are myspace co-founders. Why on earth is myspace the go-to mark for them?
Read the whole article waiting to find out how he got the lyrics and was disappointed. An article on a website selling content should at least include the source of the content.