![]() ![]() I was 25 when I lost her and now I'm 35 and I am the happiest man in the world. She was one of a kind and she was the one for me, God brought her to me! It took me a very long time to get her back, I worked really hard to prove to her that I changed and I never stopped until today. It was the most stupid thing I've done and it was a waste of time. I was so stupid that I used to think that I can get someone similar to her, first I tried to get a girl that looks similar to her from the outside and then I looked for a girl who had a similar personality to hers. I broke her heart, I felt so bad that I made her feel so much pain because I was immature and it was hard for me to realize that I was so stupid to not realize that soulmates do exist and she was the one for me. I agree with you! Very good Interpretation! This song really speaks to me, I was just that guy that the song talks about, I fell in love with a wonderful girl, deep inside I knew that she was the one but I was scared of that feeling and so I was still going out with other girls on the side. I will learn, I will learn to love the skies I'm underĪnd I will learn, I will learn to love the skies I'm under It was one of those rare experiences where the record company and the band really let me do what I wanted to do.You heard my voice, I came out of the woods by choiceĪnd I will remember the words that you saidĪnd I won't remember the words that you said “I’m obviously so excited that everybody is watching it. “The band loved it – they didn’t want to change a thing,” Jones said. When Jones showed Mumford & Sons the finished product, it was a hit. Forte and Sudeikis also shared a bit of extra risk with their on-screen kiss, as Forte was fighting off an illness the day of the shoot. When the band wrecked their instruments in the video, Forte smashed his bass with enough force to destroy nearby banjos, leaving the ensemble one banjo short for the foursome’s banjo dance until a member of the crew had to track down a replacement. The banjos were a problem toward the end of the shoot. “That was another disappointment for Ed,” Jones said, noting that Helms hoped to play some banjo for the video. Bateman instead doubled as Marshall, with Marshall playing the banjo in close-ups. Helms, who plays the banjo, had hoped to portray Mumford musician Winston Marshall, but the actor looked more like pianist Ben Lovett. Jones shot the video in one day at the Golden Oak Ranch in Newhall, California, in late April. The band asked if they would have any input on the casting, but Jones told them it was too late. The 50 Best Songs of 2012: Mumford & Sons, ‘I Will Wait’īoth the label and Mumford & Sons liked his idea, though the band would have preferred to go with “Babel” instead of “Hopeless Wanderer.” “I said it just wouldn’t work,” said Jones, who lined up the comedians for the video by calling Sudeikis, whom he had met at an earlier photo shoot. When the band’s label began soliciting ideas for a new music video soon after, Jones submitted his concept for having well-known comedians acting as the band. Jones, who directed the Wilco documentary I Am Trying to Break Your Heart, originally met Mumford & Sons at a Rolling Stone cover shoot earlier this year. It’s one of a few interesting tidbits that director Sam Jones shared with the Los Angeles Timesin a recent interview, including how he tapped actors Ed Helms, Jason Bateman, Jason Sudeikis and Will Forte for the video. Mumford & Sons’ funny new video for “Hopeless Wanderer” has swept the Internet this week, but the folk band actually wanted to use a different track from their latest album, Babel. ![]()
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