I Had Too Much To Dream Last Night (1967)
I Had Too Much To Dream Last Night – sung by The Electric Prunes
(This song is the basis for my music 'video' for the year 1967)
Discussion: This song was the first one i thought of to "perform" as a "music video".
The dream sequences must be created for viewing with no glasses required 3 D video - and filmed in zero gravity !
3D TV (1985) display with NO glasses; adapters or post processing; similar to - but better than - this patent: file:///C:/Users/Stephen/Downloads/3D%20TV%20Patent.pdf
Words & Music by Annette Tucker and Nancie Mantz:
Last night your shadow fell upon my lonely room
I touched your golden hair and tasted your perfume...
Your eyes were filled with love the way they used to be
Your gentle hand reached out to comfort me
Then came the dawn
And you were gone
You were gone, gone, gone...
I had too much to dream last night
Too much to dream
I'm not ready to face the light...
I had too much to dream
Last night
Last night...
The room was empty as I staggered from my bed
I could not bear the image racing through my head...
You were so real that I could feel your eagerness
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And when you raised your lips for me to kiss
[then] Came the dawn
And you were gone
You were gone, gone, gone
[Repeat chorus 2X]
Oh, too much to dream
Oh, too much to dream
Too much to dream last night
Oh, too much to dream
[Repeat to fade]
3D TV Patent (1985) - This system i need does NOT use any: glasses; adapters or post processing.
https://patents.google.com/patent/EP0099406A4/pt-PT
1985 3D TV system i need was based on University Professors finding out how one-eyed ski jumpers like Jerry can compete:
This story was featured on the CBS Evening News in 1985; i cant find any URL however.
Jerry Kenneth Martin (born August 18, 1950) is an American former ski jumper. In September 1971, Martin lost the right eye in an accident. Yet he won the national ski jumping title in 1971, 1973, and 1975, and competed at the 1970 and 1974 world championships. In 1971 he set the Pine Mountain jump record at 345 feet (105 m).
?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerry_Martin_(ski_jumper)