+ So you could create a new playlist, add the song to that playlist, and then play either that song from the playlist or the playlist itself, and it'll play the one song and stop. + If that playlist only has one song, it will play that song and then stop. If you're viewing Playlists, and drill down into a playlist, and then play a song, Up Next will fill up with up to 20 randomly selected songs from that same playlist, and then continue to select remaining songs from that playlist until all are played and then stop. Same for viewing by Albums, Genres, Composers, etc. + If that album only has one song, it will play that song and then stop. If you're viewing Artists, and drill down into an album, and then play a song, Up Next will fill up with up to 20 randomly selected songs from that same album, and then continue to select remaining songs from that album until all are played and then stop. If you're viewing Songs, and play a song, Up Next will fill up with 20 randomly selected songs from your entire music library (and then continue to select songs from your entire music library). And the songs that it included in Up Next seems to be context sensitive: Everything I tried always triggered Up Next with additional songs. I have Repeat turned off as well.įor a single song though, that's a tough one. I just tried it and kept tapping forward to cycle through all its songs, and after the last song finished, it stopped. To see what else Candlebox has been up to since their debut hit, check out what Martin had to say on their latest single, “Let Me Down Easy,” in our interview with him here.For a playlist, near as I can tell, just starting a playlist by tapping its thumbnail will play all its songs and then stop. And Martin said he couldn’t be happier to have had “Far Behind” be ‘that’ song for Candlebox. It’s a song he never tires of playing and hundreds, if not thousands of shows later, Martin still thinks of Wood every time, it has lost no meaning. “That sat with me my entire life, upĪnd looking back on near thirty years since the song was written, Martin says it’s one of those songs that you can only hope to ever write as a musician. Don’t give a fuck what anyone thinks about it.’ “I ‘Do what you want to fuckingĭo, how you want to do it. With his honest and invaluable words of advice. Go on to influence Martin’s life and music long after he departed this world, Of role model in the Seattle music scene.Īn enormous human being,” Martin said in an Artist Waves interview. Gave his life to heroin, Martin remembers meeting Wood when he was 16 and stillĪ drummer, long before he would front Candlebox and looking up to him as a kind Martin’s conscience and packed more onto the song’s connotation. Wood passed away in 1990 from an overdose, so that too weighed on Was about more than just a broken friendship. The heroin addiction and how I spoke to Andy. The lyric was ‘Andy I didn’t mean to treat you bad’ because the song was about The style of broad lyric writing would ultimately become a staple in Martin’s “Far Behind,” though the sudden lyric change was said to have been spontaneous, Record, like “Cover Me,” which was about a discussion on religion between himĪnd his bandmate, though the lyrics never clearly alluded to such an idea. Vagueness in lyricism, is an approach Martin also took on other hits from the Interpreted in any way,” Martin told American Songwriter. Want to be that obvious and changed the lyrics to ‘now maybe’ so it could be And with only twelve hours to record in the studio, Which is where the chorus in “Far Behind” would getĪnyone the song was about Wood, and no one would know the difference, since heĬhanged the lyrics, last minute during the recording session. Martin would go on to neglect their friendship and say things he would Had been friends for many years, but when Wood began using heroin, their
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