Love For Free - John Popper

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Love For Free Lyrics

Goodbye to you, goodbye
I'll never love anyone more
I may never love at all anymore
But if I could let you go

Then I have loved you well
And I mean to love you the best that I can
With all that I am, so go
With everything I am, so go

Have I loved so well, I can't really tell?
But if you can't love for free
The second star to the right you don't see
Hail and farewell to thee
'Cause you can try but you can't love me

I hope that you'll remember why
I hope that you'll remember me
Meet me in subconscious memory
But if I could let you know

I don't think it's so bad
I just don't know how to and I don't want to leave
I've made too much believe to go
I've made far too much believe to go

I don't think it's so bad but still it makes me sad
But if you can't love for free
The second star to the right you don't see
Hail and farewell to thee
You can try but you can't love me

I don't think it's so bad but still it makes me sad
But if you can't love for free
And the second star to the right you don't see
Hail and farewell to thee
'Cause you can try but you can't love me

And if you can't love for free
And the second star to the right you don't see
Hail and farewell to thee
'Cause you can try but it just won't be

You can try, but you'll never see
You can try to be hopeful
You can try to think you're free
But if you're trying then you can't love me

Lyrics provided by LyricsEver.com
John Popper (born March 29, 1967 in Cleveland, Ohio) is the frontman and a founding member of the jam band Blues Traveler. He performs harmonica and vocals. He is widely considered a harmonica virtuoso, and is listed by harmonica manufacturer Hohner as a "Featured Artist", an accolade reserved for only the best and most successful harmonica players.

He frequently works as a guest musician for other bands. He has known to have performed with Dave Matthews Band, Karl Denson, and even with the Hungarian Ambassador to the United States.

Popper also played on Pocket Full of Kryptonite, the Spin Doctors' most successful album. His harmonica music can be heard in the feature film Blues Brothers 2000 (in which Blues Traveler appears). His harmonica was also featured on "What Would You Say", the second track on the Dave Matthews Band album, Under the Table and Dreaming.

John Popper was obese for most of the band's history. After undergoing angioplasty surgery in July 1999, he continued to have health problems having weighed near 400 lbs. In 2000, he underwent gastric bypass surgery, which led to a dramatic weight reduction.

He is an outspoken supporter of the Libertarian Party . Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

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John Popper