2007 studio album by No Angels
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Sintonía: "Deja Vu" - Chinese Man1.- "We´ve Been Here Before" (feat. Stogie T, Isadora & Miscellaneous), "¡Que Sí!", "Too Late" (feat. Stogie T, KT Gorique & FP (ASM) y "Where I Go" (feat. General Elektrics), extraídas del último álbum de Chinese Man, titulado "We´ve Been Here Before" (SPPF, 2024). Todas las músicas compuestas e interpretadas por Chinese Man2.- "Sweetness", "The 15th" y "Emerge", extraídas del primer disco de Fisherspooner, titulado "#1" (2000/2003, Capitol Records). Todas las músicas compuestas e interpretadas por Fisherspooner3.- "Musical Mayday", "Duet", "Making Love On Your Side" y "Telephone", del 4º LP de Howie B, titulado "Folk" (Polydor, 2001). Todas las músicas compuestas e interpretadas por Howie BEscuchar audio
We were very fortunate to have Arrows in Action on the podcast to talk about their new album, "I Think I've Been Here Before". Enjoy!Arrows in Action Socials: Twitter: https://x.com/ArrowsInActionInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/arrowsinactionFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/ArrowsinAction/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@arrowsinactionYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/ArrowsInActionApple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/artist/arrows-in-action/1093697130Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/467o5z7PYxbXFAGA0mvhAQWebsite: https://arrowsinaction.com/Grab some GNP Merch!: https://goodnoisepodcast.creator-spring.com/Check out the recording gear we use: https://www.amazon.com/shop/goodnoisepodcastSupport the show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/goodnoisepodcastGood Noise Podcast Socials:Twitter: https://twitter.com/good_noise_castInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/goodnoisepodcast/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/goodnoisepodDiscord: https://discord.gg/nDAQKwTYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCFHKPdUxxe1MaGNWoFtjoJASpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/04IMtdIrCIvbIr7g6ttZHiAll other streaming platforms: https://linktr.ee/goodnoisepodcastBandcamp: https://goodnoiserecords.bandcamp.com/
Dave Lee / Maurissa Rose - I've Been Here Before,The Thompson Project - Messin' With My Mind (Crackazat Extended Remix),Round One - I'm Your My Brother (Club Version),Cafe 432 (feat. Tracey Jane Campbell) - Look Out,Elléot - Tutti Flutti,Franky Rizardo (feat. Eunice Collins) - Out The Fire (At The Hotel),House Bros - Love What You Feel (feat. Joy Malcom), T. Markakis - Take A Ride,Lee Wilson/Rudi'Kastic - I Refuse (DJ Spinna Galactic Soul Mix),McFadden & Whitehead - I Heard It In A Love Song (D.P.V. Remix), Dina Carroll - Ain't No Man,David Morales - Life Is A Song (Philly Mix),Chris Baxter and Foster Rogue feat. Vula - Came So Close (2025 Mix),Tristan/Irma Derby - Changes,Tom Browne - Brighter Tomorrow,Lafayette - Sol De Verão,Alexander Flood (feat. Erica Tucceri) - Sidestep,Lonnie Liston Smith - Love Is The Answer,Folamour - These Are Just Places To Me Now,Tony Rallo & The Midnight Band - Holding On (Derick Kaye ReWork),The SOS Band - Groovin',
Spiritual congregations have a lengthy tradition of offering critiques of what they believe to be societal ills, and UUs and Humanists are no different. Theodore Parker, John Dietrich, Carl Storm, and Kendyl Gibbons — the last three were settled ministers here at First Unitarian Society — all witnessed deeply challenging times, and offered words of… Read More »We’ve Been Here Before The post We’ve Been Here Before appeared first on First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis.
Suzy Krause's latest speculative fiction novel, I Think We've Been Here Before (Radiant Press, 2024) is a compulsively readable and cosy story. Marlen and Hilda Jorgensen's family has received two significant pieces of news: one, Marlen has been diagnosed with a terminal illness. Two, a cosmic blast is set to render humanity extinct within a matter of months. It seems the coming Christmas on their Saskatchewan farm will be their last. Preparing for the inevitable, they navigate the time they have left together. Marlen and Hilda have channeled their energy into improbably prophetic works of art. Hilda's elderly father receives a longed-for visitor from his past, her sister refuses to believe the world is ending, and her teenaged nephew is missing. All the while, her daughter struggles to find her way home from Berlin with the help of an oddly familiar stranger. For everyone, there's an unsettling feeling that this unprecedented reality is something they remember. About Suzy Krause: Suzy Krause is the bestselling author of Sorry I Missed You and Valencia and Valentine. She grew up on a little farm in rural Saskatchewan and now lives in Regina, where she writes novels inspired by crappy jobs, creepy houses, personal metaphorical apocalypses, and favorite songs. Her work has been translated into Russian and Estonian. About Hollay Ghadery: Hollay Ghadery is an Iranian-Canadian multi-genre writer living in Ontario on Anishinaabe land. She has her MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Guelph. Fuse, her memoir of mixed-race identity and mental health, was released by Guernica Editions in 2021 and won the 2023 Canadian Bookclub Award for Nonfiction/Memoir. Her collection of poetry, Rebellion Box was released by Radiant Press in 2023, and her collection of short fiction, Widow Fantasies, was released with Gordon Hill Press in fall 2024. Her debut novel, The Unraveling of Ou, is due out with Palimpsest Press in 2026, and her children's book, Being with the Birds, with Guernica Editions in 2027. Hollay is the host of the 105.5 FM Bookclub, as well as a co-host on HOWL on CIUT 89.5 FM. She is also a book publicist, the Regional Chair of the League of Canadian Poets and a co-chair of the League's BIPOC committee, as well as the Poet Laureate of Scugog Township. Learn more about Hollay at www.hollayghadery.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Suzy Krause's latest speculative fiction novel, I Think We've Been Here Before (Radiant Press, 2024) is a compulsively readable and cosy story. Marlen and Hilda Jorgensen's family has received two significant pieces of news: one, Marlen has been diagnosed with a terminal illness. Two, a cosmic blast is set to render humanity extinct within a matter of months. It seems the coming Christmas on their Saskatchewan farm will be their last. Preparing for the inevitable, they navigate the time they have left together. Marlen and Hilda have channeled their energy into improbably prophetic works of art. Hilda's elderly father receives a longed-for visitor from his past, her sister refuses to believe the world is ending, and her teenaged nephew is missing. All the while, her daughter struggles to find her way home from Berlin with the help of an oddly familiar stranger. For everyone, there's an unsettling feeling that this unprecedented reality is something they remember. About Suzy Krause: Suzy Krause is the bestselling author of Sorry I Missed You and Valencia and Valentine. She grew up on a little farm in rural Saskatchewan and now lives in Regina, where she writes novels inspired by crappy jobs, creepy houses, personal metaphorical apocalypses, and favorite songs. Her work has been translated into Russian and Estonian. About Hollay Ghadery: Hollay Ghadery is an Iranian-Canadian multi-genre writer living in Ontario on Anishinaabe land. She has her MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Guelph. Fuse, her memoir of mixed-race identity and mental health, was released by Guernica Editions in 2021 and won the 2023 Canadian Bookclub Award for Nonfiction/Memoir. Her collection of poetry, Rebellion Box was released by Radiant Press in 2023, and her collection of short fiction, Widow Fantasies, was released with Gordon Hill Press in fall 2024. Her debut novel, The Unraveling of Ou, is due out with Palimpsest Press in 2026, and her children's book, Being with the Birds, with Guernica Editions in 2027. Hollay is the host of the 105.5 FM Bookclub, as well as a co-host on HOWL on CIUT 89.5 FM. She is also a book publicist, the Regional Chair of the League of Canadian Poets and a co-chair of the League's BIPOC committee, as well as the Poet Laureate of Scugog Township. Learn more about Hollay at www.hollayghadery.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/literature
Yard debris from Hurricane Milton gets picked up tomorrow! Just in time for my quarterly application of turf builder/weed killer. So, now you know my weekend plans! The Music Authority Podcast...listen, like, comment, download, share, repeat…heard daily on Podchaser, Deezer, Amazon Music, Audible, Listen Notes, Mixcloud, Player FM, Tune In, Podcast Addict, Cast Box, Radio Public, Pocket Cast, APPLE iTunes, and direct for the source distribution site: *Podcast - https://themusicauthority.transistor.fm/ AND NOW there is a website! themusicauthority.comThe Music Authority Podcast! Special Recorded Network Shows, too! Different than my daily show! Seeing that I'm gone from FB now…Follow me on “X” Jim Prell@TMusicAuthority*Radio Candy Radio Monday Wednesday, & Friday 7PM ET, 4PM PT*Rockin' The KOR Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday at 7PM UK time, 2PM ET, 11AM PT www.koradio.rocks*Pop Radio UK Friday, Saturday, & Sunday 6PM UK, 1PM ET, 10AM PT! *The Sole Of Indie https://soleofindie.rocks/ Monday Through Friday 6-7PM EST!*AltPhillie.Rocks Sunday, Thursday, & Saturday At 11:00AM ET!October 16, 2024, Wednesday, opening salvo…@Orbis 2.0 - TMA SHOW OPEN THEME@The Most - I Love You (@Jack Mehov @Tom O' Riley @Bob Cat)@Brian Jay Cline - Cheatin' Hearts@Terry Draper - Let Us Be One [Bread and Cirkus]@The Newds - I've Been Here Before@20/20 - Remember The Lightning@The Speed Of Sound - Virtual Reality (Part 2) [Museum Of Tomorrow] (@Big Stir Records)@The Flashcubes - Flavor Of The Month [Pop Masters] (@Big Stir Records)@The Cynz - Woman Child (@Jem Records)@Vanilla - Elemental [The Best Power Pop 2020]@Bubble Gum Orchestra - Until You Say Go [The Discovery]@Ken Lintern - Broken Heart [Saying Goodbye]@The Fleshtones - Love Me While You Can [Its Getting Late (and More Songs About Werewolves)] (@Yep Roc Records)@Handsome Jack - Why Do I Love You the Way I Do [Everything's Gonna Be Alright] (@Alive Records)@The Bama Lamas - Hungry Teenage Wolfman@Nick Gilder - Into The 80's@Beebe Gallini - Busy Izzy [XOXOXO Vol.1] (@Rum Bar Records)@Kai Danzberg & @Dana Countryman - My Beautiful Day@Aztec Two-Step - Looking Glass [Adjoining Suites]@Joel Boyea – A Little Push [Please Don't Eat The Daisies]
Lumière sur Chinese Man ! Figure incontournable de la scène française hip-hop et électro, le collectif de DJ's et beatmakers originaire d'Aix-en-Provence fête ses 20 ans de carrière cette année avec un nouvel et troisième album « We've Been Here Before » et une tournée phénoménale en France, mais aussi en Allemagne, en Grande-Bretagne et au Mexique. Chinese Man fera étape à la Commanderie à Dole samedi 19 octobre. Mattéo, DJ du collectif est notre invité.
Greg Kampe - Head Men's Basketball Coach at Oakland University
A Saskatchewan author is releasing a new title today! Suzy Krause, Regina author of I Think We've Been Here Before, joins Evan to talk about her original love story set during the end of the world in Saskatchewan.
Hello, Hello! In this episode, Chris talks with Actor Sara Antonio. They discuss her acting journey and experiences in television and film, sharing insights into scene study techniques, audition strategies, and mental wellness in the industry. Sara also reflects on memorable roles and working alongside icons like Louis Gossett Jr., offering advice he imparted to younger performers. We also talk about: Sara's role on the ABC/Hulu series Will Trent and her approach to character development Inspiration drawn from performances of Tatiana Maslany and Alison Brie Working with icons like Dolly Parton and upcoming projects Tactics for dealing with rejection in the industry and maintaining confidence Tips for fostering empathy in storytelling and audiences Enjoy! Indie Artist Spotlight Artist: Goodvibes Sound Track: I've Been Here Before Goodvibes Sound are Alex and Angus, two friends who live in London and record out of their basement studio in a former corner shop. They make disco-infused indie pop, with lyrical themes touching on love, mindfulness, and modern life in the city. "I've Been Here Before" explores this back-and-forth that we all experience throughout life. While the lyrics discuss feelings of isolation and loneliness, the contrast between mellow verses and catchy high-energy choruses evokes this repetitive cycle. https://www.thegoodvibesinstitute.com/ https://www.instagram.com/goodvibesinstitute/ https://www.tiktok.com/@goodvibesinstitute Support our work - every subscriber, rating, and review matters! #MAKEIT All Links: https://beacons.ai/themakeitpodcast Apple Podcasts: https://link.chtbl.com/makeit Spotify: https://link.chtbl.com/makeitonspotify Subscribe to our newsletter at: www.bonsai.film/subscribe YouTube: https://link.chtbl.com/makeitonyoutube?at=1406156285
You may know Cor.Ece as the LA-based, Grammy-winning co-writer on Beyonce's mind-boggling Renaissance album, but here he intersects with Brooklyn-based DJ, songwriter, and producer Bad Colours for a heart-thumping, propulsive beat on their new project, Been Here Before. The mix is powerful, laden with soulful house and disco, as exemplified on the album's opening banger “Say Yea.”
Pour cet épisode de Hoop Culture, Théophile Haumesser et Pierre-Armand Samama reviennent sur les joueurs français les plus marquants de l'histoire de la NBA. De Tariq Abdul-Wahad à Victor Wembanyama, en passant par Tony Parker ou l'incroyable histoire de Jean-Claude Lefebvre, tour d'horizon des frenchies incontournables.Parce que la culture basket ne s'arrête pas aux lignes du terrain, retrouvez chaque semaine Pierre-Armand Samama et Théophile Haumesser pour parler de tout ce qui fait vibrer le monde du basket en dehors du parquet.Aidez notre ami Ahmed Taofik dans le financement d'un fauteuil roulant électrique : https://www.leetchi.com/fr/c/inspiration-9210048?utm_source=copylink&utm_medium=social_sharingEnvoyez-lui de la force : https://www.instagram.com/ahmed5ebd/Commandez le Mook REVERSE #14 spécial SPURS https://www.basketsession.com/produit/mook-reverse-14-spurs/Commandez le livre Une saison en enfer https://www.basketsession.com/produit/une-saison-en-enfer/Hangtime Radio Show : https://linksta.cc/@Hangtime"Dub, Le blanc qui sautait au-dessus des buildings" : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kEbUZCVjn4oRZA "Ghost Dog" : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OrPJ2sObEigChinese Man "We've Been Here Before" : https://www.chinesemanrecords.com/shop-cmr/weve-been-here-before-chinese-man/Youssef Daoudi et Adrian Matejka "Le dernier debout" : https://www.futuropolis.fr/9782754841863/le-dernier-debout.htmlToute l'actualité de la NBA et du basket 7 jours sur 7 ➡️ https://www.basketsession.com/ Abonnez-vous à la newsletter de nos podcasts ➡️ https://podcast.ausha.co/le-podcast-basketsession?s=1 Suivez-nous sur Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/hoopcult/ Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Today's Song of the Day is “Mars (feat. Life On Planets)” from Cor.Ece & Bad Colours's album Been Here Before, out now.
Vous écoutez Dig Dig Diggers, l'émission des radios Ferarock !Cette semaine, Morgane de Radio Primitive vous fait rencontrer Ella Ronen le temps d'une interview pour découvrir son album The Girl With No Skin. Mélange unique de poésie, de vulnérabilité et de force, Ella Ronen invite son public à explorer les profondeurs de ses propres émotions et à se connecter avec son sentiment d'humanité et d'appartenance.Kristina de Radio Ballade poursuit les découvertes de la semaine des radios Ferarock avec le nouvel album de Chinese Man, We've Been Here Before. Ce n'est pas l'album de la “maturité”, c'est l'album de la flèche du temps. Avec un point de départ, trois amis qui font de la musique chacun de leur côté, qui rassemblent leurs idées et leurs compétences respectives pour créer quelque chose.On clôture cette émission avec la carte blanche de la semaine réalisée par Ludo de Radio Béton, dédiée cette semaine au festival tourangeau No New Festqui aura lieu du 14 au 16 mars au Bateau Ivre.
De la melancolía evocadora de "Cinema Paradiso" en la versión del trío de Marcin Wasilewski a las cautivadoras composiciones de Sofía Comas, pasando por la fusión de folk y jazz en el último disco de Alberto Vilas; colaboraciones entre Erland Cooper y Bill Ryder-Jones o Ambrose Akinmusire, Bill Frisell y Herlin Riley. Wolfgang Muthspiel y Orrin Evans o la atmosférica "Coriolis" del último Penguin Cafe suman excepcionalidades particulares en el Músicas Posibles de hoy. Cinema Paradiso January Marcin Wasilewski TrioCamariñas Once cancións e unha danza Alberto VilasAlalà das Mariñas Once cancións e unha danza Alberto VilasVen bailar, Carmiña Once cancións e unha danza Alberto VilasHaar over Hamnavoe Holm (Variations & B-sides) Cooper, Bill Ryder-JonesHoxa Sound Holm (Variations & B-sides) Erland CooperOwl Song 1 Owl Song Ambrose Akinmusire, Bill Frisell, Herlin RileyAmelia Dance of the Elders Wolfgang Muthspiel, Scott Colley, Brian BladeI Have the Feeling I've Been Here Before The Red Door Orrin EvansCoriolis A Matter of Life... 2021 Penguin Café OrchestraA un pájaro rojo A un pájaro rojo Sofía ComasNunca, nunca A un pájaro rojo Sofía ComasEscuchar audio
El jazz, desde la fusión jazz-bossa nova hasta interpretaciones contemporáneas, emotivas y colaboraciones efervescentes. A pesar de las variaciones estilísticas y artistas, comparten el compromiso con la evolución del género y la rica tradición del jazz. O Grande Amor Stan Getz, João Gilberto Quintet, Antônio Carlos Jobim Getz/Gilberto Mal Du Pays Harold López-Nussa Timba a la Americana I Have the Feeling I've Been Here Before Orrin Evans The Red Door Owl Song 1 Ambrose Akinmusire, Bill Frisell, Herlin Riley Owl Song 1 Where Are You? Joshua Redman, Gabrielle Cavassa where are we 'Round Midnight Bill Evans Trío The Penthouse Session (Live Seattle '66) Basin Street Blues Wynton Marsalis Louis Armstrong's Hot Fives and Hot Sevens Stardust Sant Andreu Jazz Band, Joan Chamorro Jazzing 12 (Vol.1) Escuchar audio
| Artist | Title | Album Name | Album Copyright | Elias Bernet Band | Jumping Jiving Christmas | Christmas Boogie Celebration | Alice Armstrong | Speed Dial | Love , Sex and Death | Howlin' Wolf | Highway 49 (Alternate Take) | The London Howlin' Wolf Sessions (Rarities Edition) | Christone Kingfish Ingram | Been Here Before | Live In London | | Mean Mary (Mary James) | Cardboard Box | I'd Rather Be Merry | | Sumter Bruton & Michael Price | I've Got A Contract On You Baby | Swingmasters Review | Bobby Parker | South Shore Drive | Bobby Parker | | Walter Trout | Mayall's Piano Boogie (Instrumental) | The Blues Came Callin' | Phantom Blues Band | She's Into Something | Blues For Breakfast | | Rev. Edward W. Clayborn | I Heard The Angels Sing | Rev. Edward W. Clayborn – Complete Recorded Works 1926-1928 | Chuck Berry | Johnny B. Goode | Chuck Berry | | James Oliver | Peter Gun | Less Is More | | Kenny Wayne Shepherd | You Can't Love Me | Dirt On My Diamonds Vol 1 | Lettoman (Finland) | Ford Model T | Ford Model T | | Emma Wilson | I'll See You In The Morning | MEMPHIS CALLING ALBUM
Mais oui, Place des Fêtes en direct même le 1ernovembre. On reprend nos habitudes quotidiennes après un mois d'octobre pas malsur les routes finalement... Aujourd'hui dans cette émission, on décortique lamusique du jeu Streets of Rage 4 avec Antoine Gailhanou, on explore les favorisde Jean Fromageau. On fait le plein de nouveautés avec Chinese Man, WalterAstral ou encore Martin Luminet. Et puis on va bavarder avec l'Anglaise Mahaliaqui était hier en concert au Trianon. Mais oui, Place des Fêtes en direct même le 1ernovembre. On reprend nos habitudes quotidiennes après un mois d'octobre pas malsur les routes finalement... Aujourd'hui dans cette émission, on décortique lamusique du jeu Streets of Rage 4 avec Antoine Gailhanou, on explore les favorisde Jean Fromageau. On fait le plein de nouveautés avec Chinese Man, WalterAstral ou encore Martin Luminet. Et puis on va bavarder avec l'Anglaise Mahaliaqui était hier en concert au Trianon. YARD ACT "Dream Job" CHINESE MAN "We've Been Here Before feat. Stogie T, Isadora & Miscellaneous" MARTIN LUMINET "Piège feat. BRÖ" MAHALIA "Terms and Conditions" MAHALIA "IRL" MAHALIA "November (feat. Stormzy)" BASTIEN D. "No Grace feat. Gerard Black" Ça part en fav' : ANTOINE BOURACHOT "Miracle feat. Giacomo Lecchi D'Alessandro)" WALTER ASTRAL "Serpent mental"
Blues Caravan 2023:”With A Little Help From My Friends” Ally Venable, Ashley Sherlock, Will Jacobs”Ohio" Ashley Sherlock”Been Here Before” Ashley Sherlock”I Think That She Knows” Ashley Sherlock”Dear Elizabeth” Ashley Sherlock”Grooving With You” Will Jacobs”Dirty Dog” Will Jacobs”Goldfish Blues” Will Jacobs”Real Gone” Ally Venable”Don't Lose Me” Ally Venable”Tribute To SRV” Ally VenableEscuchar audio
A little bit faster turnaround this time, I'll have two more for you in the next month or two with many more new riddims. Big Up to the La Kalada crew for keeping it irie in BCN, pulled some Sr. Wilson in Catalan for y'all. Also, I see you there listening in South Africa, Big Up Yourselves! Anyone know the riddim Lutan Fyah and Iyah Syte are on near the end of the mix? They are the same, but can only find a common producer, not a riddim. Tracklist: SoulFyah Productions - Carribean Roots Riddim 0:01 Raging Fyah - Raging Fire 1:36 The Skankin' Monks Feat. Kenyatta Hill - Babylon's Big Dog 4:07 Clutcheye - Jah Rule 5:45 Onton Feat. Nafrica - Red Gold And Green 7:38 Bazil - Right Line 10:16 Max Dubster Feat. Pinky Dread - Somebody To Love 12:16 Irie Victory Riddim - Dayone Productions 14:15 * Nature Ellis - Who To Trust 14:16 * Anu Brian Gold - We've Been Here Before 15:57 * Inkline - Work Hard 17:27 Paranoid Feat. Dean Fraser - Mary Jane 19:10 Mary Jane Riddim Instrumental 20:27 Ezekiah Rose Feat. Prince Alla - Happiness 21:14 Zion Head - Jah Watching 23:09 The Yutes & Tarrus Riley - Better Days 25:13 Omar Perry - Chant Down Babylon 27:03 Mighty Mystic - Far From Jamaica 28:51 Stranjah Miller - Zion 30:35 Bobby Hustle & Josh Heinrichs - Fade Away 31:57 Dahvid Slur - The Journey 34:20 David Slur Feat. Jo Mersa Marley - Cyah Kill Rasta 35:55 Mellow Mood - Sweet Like Honey 39:07 Jimmy Rivas Feat. Rik Jam - Jah Loves Me 41:04 Mellow Mood Feat. Sr. Wilson - Starting Mañana 43:48 Dread Kennedy, Shakamon & Bobby Hustle - Chase Dem 46:49 Hatta Atta Ganna Riddim - Open Doors Records 48:04 * Jah Niceness - Nuh Dis Nuh Man 48:15 * Instrumental 50:10 Sr. Wilson - Una Millor Versió 51:28 SoulFyah Productions - Conquering Lion Riddim 53:37 Luciano - Time To Heal The World 54:59 D Day Riddim - Pure Frame Reggae 56:28 * Rackaz Elements - Get Up 56:30 * Courtney McLaughlin - Instrumental 58:39 Free Your Soul Riddim - Romeo Music 59:49 * Black Fyah - Fire Burn Red 1:00:03 * Abka Kaba - Stranger In My Clothes 1:02:09 * Krysi Webb - Sooner Or Later 1:04:01 Dan Gio - Keep Working 1:06:51 Young Garvey - The Way You Move 1:08:21 Tarrus Riley - Baby Blue 1:10:13 Lutan Fyah - Give The Youths Dem A Chance 1:12:13 Karbon - King's Town 1:14:19 Jah Mason - Good Things 1:16:10 Iyah Syte - Stop The Guns 1:18:00
Interview by Haze https://www.instagram.com/mike_tall Recently we linked back up with Florida's Dee Watkins for a brand new “Off The Porch” interview! During our sit down he talked about feeling like 2022 is the year he's really going to blow up, his motivation going into his new project ‘Problem Child 3', his growth as an artist, explains why “Nightmare On Grissholm St” is his hardest music video, directing his own videos, his close relationship with NoCap, compares him to Lil Wayne, being on the Soulfly tour with Rod Wave & NoCap, working with Hotboii on “Been Here Before”, explains why he didn't drop the music video, dealing with being recognized while out in public, explains why rappers should not glorify taking pills, filming his music video for “Beside Me” at his friend Ham's funeral, his reaction to Young Dolph's death, being hospitalized the day before his Rolling Loud performance, going viral looking for a girlfriend on IG Live, his New Orleans influence, his creative music video for “Gucci Bucket Hat”, his next project being aimed for his female fans, goals for 2022, and much more!
This episode features an interview with Marshall Rabil, the co-owner of specialty peanut brand Hubs, who spoke about the brand's efforts to reach younger consumers and the duality of his roles as a steward and modernizer of his family's business. Also, the hosts discussed the news that Bang Energy has filed for bankruptcy and why innovative entrepreneurs are often hamstrung by their own achievements. Show notes: 0:49: The Best Of October Deadlines. Jack's Been Here Before. Expo East And Todd's Dilemma. – Ray was a bit hoarse, but reminded Mike of Man U's prowess and the hosts collectively reminded listeners of upcoming deadlines to submit applications for BevNET and NOSH's Best of 2022 awards along with those for the latest editions of the New Beverage Showdown and NOSH Pitch Slam. They also chatted about how NOSH Live Winter 2022 will offer entrepreneurs a direct connection with investors and other industry leaders and John explained why beverage professionals should be wary of underestimating Jack Owoc and celebrating recent challenges affecting Bang Energy. Later, they offered praise for “shimmering water” brand Loftiwater, while noting the uphill battle it faces and highlighted a few notable new products, including better-for-you candy, buckwheat snacks and breakfast biscuits. 33:00: Interview: Marshall Rabil, Co-Owner, Hubs – Rabil met with Taste Radio editor Ray Latif at BevNET headquarters in Newton, where they riffed on the seafood scene in Massachusetts and Virginia before discussing the origins of the peanut industry in the U.S. and how Hubs has become the standard bearer for specialty peanuts. Rabil also spoke about the company's evolving retail strategy, how new products, brand partnerships and creative marketing initiatives are attracting new consumers, how pricing reflects quality and the elements of Hubs' effective trial strategy. Brands in this episode: Hubs, Pop & Bottle, Bang Energy, La Colombe, Loftiwater, Wholly Veggie, Smart Sweets, Tid Bits, Oomph, Liquid Death, Brazi Bites, Nitro Beverage Co., Lil Bucks, NuttZo, Nguyen Coffee Supply, Jackson's Chips, Paqui, Kanira, Olyra
The ships have come in and retailers have too much merchandise - over supply. Meanwhile due to inflation, demand has lessened = SALES. Clark points to holiday shopping deals, as this year, October is the new November. Bonus - Walmart's new return policy. Also - Clarkonomics returns. Clark sets the table on how The U.S. and world economies got to where we are now and explains the moves that are coming to get inflation under control. October Holiday Sales: Segment 1 Ask Clark: Segment 2 Clarkonomics - Economic Overview: Segment 3 Ask Clark: Segment 4 Mentioned on the show: Introducing Amazon's Prime Early Access Sale—A New Holiday Shopping Event for Members to Save Big October 11 and October 12 Score Discounts on Apple AirPods Pro, iPads, and the Apple Watch 8 at Amazon Before the Prime Early Access Sale Best Online Banks: Free Checking and High-Interest Savings Accounts Buy U.S. Treasury Bonds: A Conservative Way To Beat Your Savings Account Best Cell Phone Plans in 2022: The Cheapest Plan for Every Need Visible Review: 5 Things To Know Before You Sign Up NYTimes.com: Bad News From the Fed? We've Been Here Before. What Is a C.L.U.E Report and Its Impact on Your Insurance Should I Freeze My Credit With Innovis, SageStream, CoreLogic and LexisNexus? Clark Deals 2022 Sweepstakes Clark.com resources Episode transcripts Clark.com daily money newsletter Consumer Action Center Free Helpline: 636-492-5275 Learn more about your ad choices: megaphone.fm/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Welcome to Parallel, the podcast about Counterpart. In this episode, we discuss episode six of season one: Act Like You've Been Here Before. Twitter: @RTOPodcasts, @ThatCoolBlkNerd, @Scarfinger, @Rashanii Become a Patron at http://www.Patreon.com/singlesimulcast Donate to the show at http://www.buymeacoffee.com/sscast Promos: @PCast_Ol
Welcome to Parallel, the podcast about Counterpart. In this episode, we discuss episode six of season one: Act Like You've Been Here Before. Twitter: @RTOPodcasts, @ThatCoolBlkNerd, @Scarfinger, @Rashanii Become a Patron at http://www.Patreon.com/singlesimulcast Donate to the show at http://www.buymeacoffee.com/sscast Promos: @PCast_Ol
The Doors (1991) Movie Review Jim and Jeremy start off with "This Day in Music History", NEW ALBUMS they've been listening to and then they get into the Doors and the Doors Movie starring Val Kilmer from 1991. Musicians/Bands they talk about who have new albums out are: WET LEG FONTAINES D.C. THE INTERUPTORS COLD YEARS JACK WHITE ANN WILSON THE RED HOT CHILI PEPPERS SAM JR. DANA FUCHS ALBERT CASTIGLIA HALESTORM CULT OF LUNA Please subscribe, follow and if you like the podcast please leave them a good review on Apple Podcasts. Jim and Mike Talk Music can be found on Podbean (host site), Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Iheart Radio, Pandora and almost anywhere you listen to podcasts. COPYRIGHT CLAIM: A portion of the songs "Energy" by Scott Holmes Music and "We've Been Here Before" by RozKol used with Royalty Free permission. Thank you for listening
Here's the fourth track from our Year Nine Soundtrack, I Think I've Been Here Before. Enjoy!
We've Been Here Before (3-2-2022) by Country Club Christian Church
Episode 64 – Russia, China, and the US Air Force Stretched Too Thin: We've Been Here Before… Lessons from Korea Episode Summary: In episode 64 of the Aerospace Advantage podcast, Russia, China, and the US Air Force Stretched Too Thin: We've Been Here Before... Lessons from Korea, host John “Slick” Baum, engages with Mitchell's executive director Doug Birkey to discuss his latest report regarding the Air War over Korea and why the lessons from that conflict matter more than ever today. Often lost between WWII and Vietnam, the air war over Korea holds particular relevance for members of today's Air Force as they seek to address a strikingly similar set of challenges—everything from a small, old aircraft inventory to factors like airbase availability and defense, logistics under attack, lack of training capacity, and disagreement with joint counterparts about how best to employ airpower. As Air Force General William Momeyer, a veteran of multiple conflicts including the Korean War, explained, “We mustn't rely entirely upon yesterday's ideas to fight tomorrow's wars, after all, but I hope our airmen won't pay the price in combat again for what some of us have already purchased.” You can find Doug Birkey's paper on the USAF in Korea here. Credits: Host: Lt Col (Ret.) John “Slick” Baum, Senior Fellow, The Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies Producer: Daniel C. Rice Executive Producer: Douglas Birkey Guest: Douglas Birkey, Executive Director, The Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies Links: Subscribe to our Youtube Channel: https://bit.ly/3GbA5Of Website: https://mitchellaerospacepower.org/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/MitchellStudies Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Mitchell.Institute.Aerospace LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/3nzBisb Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/themitchellinstituteforaero/?hl=en #MitchellStudies #AerospaceAdvantage #USAF Thank you for your continued support!
India Policy Watch #1: On Hijab And FreedomInsights on burning policy issues in India— RSJThe hijab row roiling colleges in the Udupi district of Karnataka reached the courts this week. A full bench of the Karnataka High Court ruled on Thursday that all students are restrained from wearing clothes with religious symbolism within classrooms in institutions that have a prescribed dress code or uniform. The bench adjourned the hearing to Monday while requesting the state government to reopen the educational institutions. The government meanwhile declared holidays till Feb 16 to avoid the burden of opening up the colleges in the interim. The order has some interesting passages including this:“It hardly needs to be mentioned that ours is a country of plural cultures, religions, and languages. Being a secular State, it does not identify itself with any religion as its own. Every citizen has the right to profess and practice any faith of choice is true. However, such a right not being absolute is susceptible to reasonable restrictions as provided by the Constitution of India. Whether wearing of hijab in the classroom is part of the essential religious practice of Islam in the light of constitutional guarantees, needs a deeper examination.”This is an old conflict from the time of enlightenment when reason, empiricism and individual liberty were placed on the pedestal by the leading thinkers of the time. Industrialisation, the weakening of traditional social structures because of population shifts to urban centres, and the loosening of the grip of religion in everyday lives meant the questions about the place of religion in civil society and the relation between church and state animated the political and social discourse. Over time though doubts emerged about the benefits of such progressivism. The anxiety over losing a sense of community, the guilt of turning away from one’s religion and a kind of longing for a past that was precious but now lost sowed the roots of cultural conservatism as we know it today. In less diverse societies than India, this battle is framed as that between individual freedom and choice versus the inner order and stability that a society draws from its legacy and culture collectively. This itself has been fraught as we have seen in the backlash against liberalism over the last decade. Things get more complicated in India. There’s the individual freedom to choose and the society that has to contend with that freedom and its impact on it way of life. And then there’s also the community, often in minority, to which the individual belongs which might privilege its desire to conserve its values over both the individual and the society. This is a three-way problem. Should we see the girls wanting to wear hijab in educational institutions as exercising their freedom? Before we even get to whether this freedom has to be circumscribed in certain scenarios like the High Court has opined, should we ask whether we are convinced this choice of hijab is an individual choice? Some of you may ask does that matter. The girl students are themselves saying it is what they want to wear. Who are we to object? But is that choice so obviously individual? Or, is it the choice of another collective, the religious community, that’s imposing it covertly through its own code that’s coercive? Then, in the name of supporting the individual choice of wearing hijab, are we subjugating the choices of many other girls in future who might be coerced into wearing hijab were this battle won by these girls? Is the individual freedom a moral absolute in all circumstances? Or, does this kind of freedom that might mean absence of choice for other girls in choosing not to wear hijab in future that liberals should get behind in force? Our founders in their debates at the constituent assembly contended with these three forces - the primacy of the individual on the back of which the liberal constitution was being written, the communal identity of people that gave their lives meaning and structure over centuries and couldn’t be wished away, and the need for a centripetal force of legal and social system that drew the society closer together. Some kind of a balance was attempted and written into the constitution as fundamental rights. But a lot was left to the leaders and the people to find for themselves through practice, customs and traditions which would differ across regions and communities. It was acknowledged that people will have to be trusted to follow what’s acceptable and what has to be changed in their social realms without imposing a strict rule of law over it. This is why it is futile to argue over cultural issues through the lens of liberty enshrined in the constitution. There are enough exceptions all around us for every stripe of argument to be made for and against it. This is what we see in the hijab row. There are arguments about the individual choice of young Muslim girls and their rights over their bodies. There is a case made about how religious symbols of Sikhs are allowed within educational institutions or how easily we accept the Hindu festivals of Ganesh Puja or Saraswati Puja. And there’s the point made about keeping educational institutions free from overt religious symbolism else we set off on a slippery slope. There’s no easy or right answer. The only answer to this is by asking what was the custom in these schools and colleges before the row started. And to revert to the status quo. Because things only get worse when trying to ‘solve’ such issues. Of course, any attempt to solve this must also be seen in conjunction with the politics that’s dominant in society now. It is difficult to argue on the principle of keeping religious symbolism away from the matters of the state when you have an almost daily spectacle of political leaders flaunting visible religious symbols of the majority denomination deliberately. That’s again a deviation from the status quo that threatens a fragile equilibrium we have maintained since independence. But maybe that’s the intent all along. To keep stirring the pot of communal disharmony to distract us. It isn’t so much about shaking things up and awakening the spirit that brings us together. That’s the ruse used to explain our relative underperformance. In essence, this is that old colonial game to use culture and religion to divide us in a new garb. In his famous essay, Culture and Anarchy (1869), cultural conservative, Matthew Arnold, made two key points about culture that I thought will be useful to bring here. It clarifies why culture is important to claim for social order and what kind of customs take us further in that pursuit of harmony and inner stability. It is a useful test to apply when we claim cultural practices as a manifestation of freedom of choice. Arnold writes:“The whole scope of the essay is to recommend culture as the great help out of our present difficulties; culture being a pursuit of our total perfection by means of getting to know, on all the matters which most concern us, the best which has been thought and said in the world; and through this knowledge, turning a stream of fresh and free thought upon our stock notions and habits, which we now follow staunchly but mechanically, vainly imagining that there is a virtue in following them staunchly which makes up for the mischief of following them mechanically. This, and this alone, is the scope of the following essay. And the culture we recommend is, above all, an inward operation.”Further, he writes:“Thus, in our eyes, the very framework and exterior order of the State, whoever may administer the State, is sacred; and culture is the most resolute enemy of anarchy, because of the great hopes and designs for the State which culture teaches us to nourish. But as, believing in right reason, and having faith in the progress of humanity towards perfection, and ever labouring for this end, we grow to have clearer sight of the ideas of right reason, and of the elements and helps of perfection, and come gradually to fill the framework of the State with them, to fashion its internal composition and all its laws and institutions conformably to them, and to make the State more and more the expression, as we say, of our best self, which is not manifold, and vulgar, and unstable, and contentious, and ever−varying, but one, and noble, and secure, and peaceful, and the same for all mankind,−−with what aversion shall we not then regard anarchy, with what firmness shall we not check it, when there is so much that is so precious which it will endanger.Nevertheless, though for resisting anarchy the lovers of culture may prize and employ fire and strength, yet they must, at the same time, bear constantly in mind that it is not at this moment true, what the majority of people tell us, that the world wants fire and strength more than sweetness and light, and that things are for the most part to be settled first and understood afterwards. We have seen how much of our present perplexities and confusion this untrue notion of the majority of people amongst us has caused, and tends to perpetuate. Therefore the true business of the friends of culture now is, to dissipate this false notion, to spread the belief in right reason and in a firm intelligible law of things, and to get men to try, in preference to staunchly acting with imperfect knowledge, to obtain some sounder basis of knowledge on which to act. This is what the friends and lovers of culture have to do, however the believers in action may grow impatient with us for saying so, and may insist on our lending a hand to their practical operations and showing a commendable interest in them.”It is a point made over several editions in this newsletter. There’s value in custom and tradition of where we are today. It doesn’t need to be changed for an imaginary hoary past, nor do we need a ‘solution’ to a social problem of today that we think will unlock our glorious future. There’s very little to be achieved in stirring things up to assert an identity that might be more collective than individual. The values of liberalism or conservatism aren’t served here. There’s a status quo of culture that’s vital to be maintained so that true progress can be made that will lift the millions out of poverty in India. That’s the right kind of moral imperative to put our weight behind. India Policy Watch #2: What do Calls for Redistribution get Wrong?Insights on burning policy issues in India- Pranay KotasthaneThe last two weeks witnessed a familiar discussion on inequality. The NGO Oxfam International came out with another report Inequality Kills: India Supplement 2022. In response, some commentators questioned the report’s main recommendations (1,2). Regardless, it will continue to be cited and used in support of redistribution and higher rates of taxation. Like many other reports of this genre, it gets the problem definition right but the proposed solutions are simplistic and betray the lack of public finance knowledge. What fascinates me is how calls for more taxes are written, discussed, and debated without an understanding of public finance and public policy fundamentals. So here’s an attempt to rectify this flaw in such reports.To begin with the problem, the Oxfam report argues that "India’s governance structures promote the accumulation of wealth by a few while failing to provide safety nets to the rest of the population." Not much to contest here. The cited evidence — and one that makes for a good narrative — is that "The number of Indian billionaires grew from 102 in 2020 to 142 in 2021, the worst year yet for India during the pandemic. This was also the year when the share of the bottom 50 per cent of the population in national wealth was a mere 6 per cent." Based on this problem statement, the proposed solution is "We call upon the government to redistribute India’s wealth from the super-rich to generate resources for the majority by reintroducing the wealth tax and to generate revenue to invest in the education and health of future generations by imposing a temporary one per cent surcharge on the rich for health and education." Now, let me begin by stating what I agree with this report. It is true that COVID-19 has been unequal in its impact. RSJ has written about the K-shaped recovery here, here, and here in this newsletter. This pandemic has increased the monetary and non-monetary poverty headcount ratio, but we will know for sure only after the next round of the National Family Health Survey. For the next year or so, higher direct transfers to the poor, subsidised food, more credit, and higher employment guarantee scheme expenses are all desperately needed. For the authors, the solution to this rise in poverty is simple: raise more taxes from the rich and distribute that money to the poor. There are at least four problems with this line of thinking.One: We’ve Been Here Before“Taxation is also a major instrument in all modern societies to achieve greater equality of incomes and wealth. It is, therefore, proposed to make our direct tax system serve this purpose by increasing income taxation at higher levels as well as by substantially enhancing the present rates of taxation on wealth and gifts.”The above lines seem to have been taken out straight from the Oxfam report. They aren’t. They are from Indira Gandhi’s 1970-71 budget speech. This line of thinking led to eleven brackets of “progressive” personal income tax, with rates varying from 10 per cent to 85 per cent. Further, a 15% surcharge on the super-rich meant that anyone with an annual income of Rs 2 lakh or more had to pay a marginal tax rate of 97.5 per cent. There was also a wealth tax of 5 per cent. Corporate taxes varied in the range of 45 - 65 per cent. Surely, if the problem of poverty could be solved merely by taxing the rich, garibi would have been hataoed by the 1970s itself. Instead, these confiscatory rates of taxation went against the pursuit of equality in three ways. Unsurprisingly, there was large-scale tax evasion. Who in their right minds will pay such high rates of taxes? I mean, people still fudge their income tax returns. Second, the rich took their businesses outside India, jobs were lost, and we learnt another important lesson: as capital is more mobile than labour, high taxes on capital end up being a tax on labour. Third, these high nominal rates of taxes didn’t translate into more revenue for the government because of various exemptions to companies. The tax policy was flogged in service of so many objectives —each requiring exemptions— that companies could offset much of their taxes against these allowances.So, we have tried these measures before and failed. Not just in India, the highest marginal tax rates in UK and US were at the 90 per cent mark in the 1950s. Gradually, all these countries came to the realisation that redistribution should be one of the goals of the expenditure side of the budget. Raising revenues shouldn’t be tasked with this goal at all. Broadening the base, lowering the tax rates for all individuals and companies, and getting rid of tax exemptions is more progressive than highly progressive taxation. As we have written before, Robinhood Taxes don’t work.Reports asking for higher and newer taxes must explain how their magic potion is going to have different results this time around.Two: The High Costs of Raising New TaxesI doubt whether the authors have tried to understand what it means to raise wealth taxes. Raising any tax is full of friction. Three costs are involved: administrative, compliance, and economic efficiency. The objective of any tax should be to increase revenue while minimising these costs. Wealth taxes fail on all three counts. Measuring wealth is not easy. For instance, estimating the cost of the artwork owned by a rich family requires the tax authority to have expertise in art, thus the administrative costs are significant. Next, people don’t have all their money in easily visible financial assets such as stocks. Some of the assets could be notional (such as equity in early-stage start-ups), some other assets could be outside India and still others in immovables such as real estate. Complying with wealth tax regulations on each of these assets isn’t easy. Finally, such a tax will have economic efficiency costs — people will transfer wealth (notionally) to relatives, take money out of India, and invest in assets that are difficult to value. The burden of proof lies on the authors to show how the proposed taxes will generate more money than the costs required for their implementation.Three: The Government Doesn’t Rely on Taxes AloneMany people seem to think that the government is not spending on support for the poor because its tax revenues are less. Hence the calls for new taxes so that the urgent support to the poor may become viable. Check these lines from the Oxfam report:“Instead, the burden of taxation in India currently rests on the shoulders of India’s middle class and the poor and not addressing the proposal for a one-time tax on the wealthy, for COVID-19 recovery, has resulted in the government using the only other available option i.e., raising funds through indirect tax revenue which penalises the poor.”This again betrays a lack of understanding of government finances. The fuel sustaining the additional government expenditure in the last two years is not tax revenue but debt. In other words, nothing stops the government from spending more on urgent and immediate support for the poor adversely impacted by the pandemic. The additional borrowing will lead to higher taxes in the future, but it can be justifiable given the once-in-a-century situation we are facing now. Four: Law of the Instrument"I suppose it is tempting, if the only tool you have is a hammer, to treat everything as if it were a nail". These memorable words from Abraham Maslow indicate a cognitive bias that is at play in these calls for redistribution. What really hurts many people is to see a select few gain access to immense wealth and power. Redistribution becomes the “hammer” solution to prevent the concentration of money and power in a few hands. But if the core problem is to solve the phenomenon of the super-rich gaining more money and power, other better solutions exist. In recent times, it is indeed the case that market concentration has increased across industries in India. So, if the super-rich are using anti-competitive means to eliminate competition and gain monopoly power, we need better competition laws, not more wealth taxes. Second, if the government wants more money from the super-rich, all it needs to do is to free the tax policy from the burden of several exemptions provided for other goals such as balancing regional development, increasing investment, generating employment, or promoting small-sector industries. A policy that tries to attain several objectives at once achieves none.Growth, not Redistribution is the AnswerThese four problems apart, inequality crusaders must realise that taking money from the billionaires through a new surcharge is not going to make any significant dent in poverty in India. The only solution is economic growth, as we have discussed many times before in this newsletter. Much of the global inequality is between countries and not within countries. Across countries, variations in many important dimensions — literacy, life satisfaction, and health outcomes— can be explained by one single variable: incomes. Tackling inequality then essentially means increasing the incomes of poorer countries rapidly. Economic growth is a moral imperative. HomeWorkReading and listening recommendations on public policy matters[Article] Meanwhile, France has moved to ban hijab in competitive sports. "We must have the courage, wherever possible to do so, to preserve the unity and cohesion of the Republic," said Jaqueline Eustache-Brinio, a senator from the right-wing Les Républicains party.[Article] Do not miss this excellent article on global inequality and its implications for economic growth by Max Roser.[Paper] To understand and appreciate India’s experience with tax policies, read this India Policy Forum 2005-06 paper by Rao & Rao.[Article] Rajesh Rajagopalan has a characteristically clear-minded article on the implications of the Russia-Ukraine conflict on India. In this one article, he demolishes many myths governing India’s relationship with Russia. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit publicpolicy.substack.com
1月29日(土)前半にお届けした作品: 1 Toru Dodo – JAfro #百々徹 / Kampala Highway(2012年のアルバム「JAfro」から) 2 UoU #UoU / Hanauta(2010年のアルバム「Home」から) 3 Kiyoshi Kitagawa #北川潔 / Believe It or Not(2020年のアルバム「Spring Night」から) 4 Mamiko Taira #平麻美子 / I Have The Feeling I've Been Here Before(2004年録音・2022年単発リリース) 5 Jun … Continue reading →
*** This is the shortened 'audio' version of a longer 'video' interview. To hear the original and entire interview, click here: https://israelnewstalkradio.com/ive-been-here-before-reincarnation-and-the-holocaust-w-sara-yoheved-rigler/ ==== Sara Yoheved Rigler has discovered a SECRET SOCIETY. Qualifications for membership include Holocaust-related recurring dreams, panic attacks, fearsome flashbacks, and phobias in children born after 1945. ….And you don't even have to be Jewish. Rigler's ground-breaking, meticulously researched book provides evidence that is as startling as it is mysteriously affirming. In this interview, the author talks with Tamar about her childhood, unexplained phenomena, and the many other people who have experienced this and why. Visit her website at: SaraRigler.com * Join Sara for this upcoming LIVE event on International Holocaust Day (27th of January 2022) with others who have ‘Been Here Before', as they share AMAZING stories at: tinyurl.com/2p8tn7cy The Tamar Yonah Show 25JAN2022 - PODCAST
ABOUT THIS EPISODE Sara Yoheved RIgler is a person whose spiritual journey has taken her down an unconventional path. From her studies in India with a guru who was both a mystic and an acclaimed Sanskrit scholar, to her 15 years living in the oldest ashram in America, to becoming an observant Jew and moving to Jerusalem, Sara has absorbed wisdom from the many facets of her life. She is an acclaimed international lecturer, and has published six books, the most recent titled “I've Been Here Before”, which examines the evidence that those that walk among us may be reincarnated souls of Jewish children murdered during the Holocaust. Provocative and thought provoking, Sara Yocheved Rigler is a “Jew You Should Know”. -------------------- EPISODE TIME STAMPS 4:10 Sara's background, growing up in Philadelphia 4:51 College, then a trip to India, where she meets a mystic 8:36 Life at Brandeis, and the beginnings of an examination of a spiritual path 12:08 Sara returns from India, then joins an ashram in Massachusetts 14:56 Maintaining Jewish traditions within an ashram 19:55 Life and spiritual growth while residing at the ashram 21:11 Jerusalem calls, and with it, a new calling 41:29 Sara discusses her reasons for writing “I've Been Here Before” 45:50 The process of writing about relationships and personal growth 49:50 Discussion of upcoming projects, and the importance of acknowledging the soul and afterlife CONNECT WITH Sara Yoheved Rigler Information about Sara's books, the Kesher Wife Webinar, and more can be found at SaraRigler.com. Her latest book, “I've Been Here Before” can be found at menuchapublishers.com ABOUT THIS PODCAST Jews You Should Know introduces the broader community to interesting and inspiring Jewish men and women making a difference in our world. Some are already famous, some not yet so. But each is a Jew You Should Know. The host, Rabbi Ari Koretzky, is Executive Director of MEOR Maryland (www.meormd.org), a premier Jewish outreach and educational organization. MEOR operates nationally on twenty campuses and in Manhattan; visit the national website at www.meor.org. Please visit www.JewsYouShouldKnow.com follow us on Twitter, LinkedIn or on Facebook. Have feedback for the show, or suggestions for future guests? E-mail us at JewsYouShouldKnow@gmail.com. Want to support this podcast? Visit Patreon.com. A small monthly contribution goes a long way!!
Pastor Bryan preaches about "We've Been Here Before" in our Lean In Series from November-21-2021
| Artist | Title | Album Name | Album Copyright | The Head Hunters Blues Band | Big Legged Woman (Bonus Track) | Cold Cuts | | | Lady A | For The People In The Back (All I Got) | Satisfyin' | | | Little G Weevil | Roll And Boogie | Live Acoustic Session | John-Paul Jones Group | Blue Ruin (Right Now)| Broke In Bridge City | | Rusty Ends Blues Band | Don't Call It Love | Rusty Ends Blues Band | Gov't Mule | (Brother Bill) Last Clean Shirt | Heavy Load Blues | | James P Johnson | Caprice Rag | Early Harlem Piano Volume 2 | Matt Backer | Life And Soul | BACKERNALIA | | Lightnin' Hopkins | 01 14 Short Haired Woman | Get Off My Toe | | Junior Wells | It's Too Late Brother | Southside Blues Jam | | Sunset Jubilees | Who | This May Be My Last Time (CD2) Raw African American Gospel On | Rory Block | Stand By Me | Shout Sister Shout | | The 2.19 | 13 Old Days Comin Back | Revelator | | | When Rivers Meet | Lost And Found | Saving Grace | | Jessie Lee & The Alchemists | The Same | Let it Shine | | Memphissippi Sounds | High & Low | Memphissippi | | Chuck Berry | Merry Christmas Baby | The Ultimate Collection cd 2 | Champs | Train To Nowhere | Great Rock 'n Roll Instrumentals, Vol. 1 CD 1 | Elias Bernet Band | Overload | Better Off With The Blues | Mark Harrison | Lowlife Avenue | The Road to Liberty Pt2 | Blueground Undergrass | 08 Clock Goes On | Various-Landslide Records 40th Anniversary CD 2 | Dionne Bennett | Let It Rain | Sugar Hip Yah Yah | | Stacy Mitchhart | Feels Like I've Been Here Before | Printers Alley - MP3 | | Tommy Z | Snooty Funk | Sometimes |
#Hero4Hire Episode 7 You've Been Here Before ! Your Time Is Now ! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Welcome to Off Topic! A place where you are free to be random! This episode is revisiting the chicken vs egg battle, where we divided into poo attacking us, cancelling chickens and more! Here are all the social media to all those who were in the podcast! Jada || https://www.instagram.com/1jadaok/ Josh || https://soundcloud.app.goo.gl/ioKGwTX... || https://www.dibiz.com/joshatkinson || https://www.instagram.com/joshatkinso... Micheal || https://www.instagram.com/droid_acid If you are interested in joining this podcast follow the Facebook page (link below) to learn more:https://www.facebook.com/TopicsNeverR... If you have any feedback about this episode (good or bad) please relay it by filling out this very short form: https://forms.gle/5YHqgvcGWx4xAVuf6 Songs used in the podcast (in order of playing) To see how to support the artist go to this link: https://youtu.be/j3guRQsT_9E 1. And So It Begins by Artificial Music 2. Vibe Check by After the Fall 3. Midnight Frost by After The Fall 4. Been Here Before by NO MIC 5. Winter Lights by After The Fall 6. Deep by KaizanBlu 7. Elevator Music/Muzak by Bensound
Welcome to Off Topic! A place where you are free to be random! This episode goes into the topics of conspiracy theories where we end up talking about pandemics, the apocalypse and the CIA trying to mind control people Here are all the social media to all those who were in the podcast! Jada || https://www.instagram.com/1jadaok/ Josh || https://soundcloud.app.goo.gl/ioKGwTX... || https://www.instagram.com/joshatkinso... If you are interested in joining this podcast follow the Facebook page (link below) to learn more:https://www.facebook.com/TopicsNeverR... If you have any feedback about this episode (good or bad) please relay it by filling out this very short form: https://forms.gle/5YHqgvcGWx4xAVuf6 Songs used in the podcast (in order of playing) To see how to support the artist go to this link: https://youtu.be/XcacV093_nc 1. The Jigg is Up by RAGE 2. Midnight Frost by After The Fall 3. Let it happen by South London HiFi 4. Been Here Before by NO MIC 5. Poppin Off The Rip by RAGE 6. Kyoto by Pratzapp & Another Kid 7. Flows Inside Me by Homie Cat
If you are interested in joining this podcast follow the Facebook page (link below) to learn more. www.facebook.com/TopicsNeverReallyEnds If you have any feedback about this episode (good or bad) please relay it by filling out this very short form: https://forms.gle/5YHqgvcGWx4xAVuf6 Songs used in the podcast (in order of playing) To see how to support them go to this link: https://youtu.be/PmcrKhWbGJg 1. Near the Horizon by After the Fall 2. No Good Right by Freedom Trail Studio 3. Been Here Before by NO MIC 4. Night Snow by Asher Fulero 5. Ornament by After the Fall 6. Undone by After the Fall 7. Elevator Music/Muzak by Bensound
Episode 203: I'm An OG, I've Been Here Before by Loud Speakers Network
Hanging and jamming with indie rock solo artist, Steff Suede. All the way from Denver, Colorado, baby. Take a seat and hangout, take your shoes off while youre at it. Set List: "Hesitation", "Backseat Rolling", "Change of Scenery", "Been Here Before"
Enjoying the show? Please support BFF.FM with a donation. Playlist 0′0″ Nocturn by Ital Tek on Dream Boundary (Planet Mu) 2′55″ Conejo Malo by Meth Math on Pompi ( AWAL ) 6′10″ Rider 2 (Sittin' On Nothing) by GILA on Rider 2 (Sittin' On Nothing) - Single (Lex Records ) 9′30″ Hope by K-LONE & Ill Chill on Rare Jewels (Wisdom Teeth) 14′0″ Smokers Jacket (top down mix) by Cofaxx on Smokers Jacket (top down mix) (256 recordings ) 18′5″ Revegetation Area 2002 by Andras on Chill Pill II (Public Possession ) 20′35″ I've Been Here Before by Whitesquare on Seventy Days of Déjà Vu (Life And Death ) 24′20″ Haunter by Yard Nule on Haunter - Single (DIRTH ) 27′20″ mutation -Priori Refuzz by RAMZi on cocoons (FATI records) 31′50″ Acid At 7/11 by Yung Lean on Starz (YEAR0001) 34′50″ Yowl by E L L E on Yowl - Single (E L L E worldwide ) 37′40″ Psychic Bb by Ava Lux on Princess Heaven (Queen of Swamps ) 42′27″ Days of Sadness (Lstngt Remix) by Wind Atlas & LSTNGT on Arche - Fossil (Remixes) (Conjunto Vacio) 47′0″ See Ya (Single Edit) by The Bilinda Butchers on See Ya - Single (ZOOM LENS) 51′0″ About You Now by OTTO on World Greetings (PLZ Make It Ruins ) 54′20″ Anyone Around by Jessy Lanza on All the Time (Hyperdub ) 57′5″ Mountain by Damian Lazarus on Mountain - Single (Higher Ground) 61′50″ A Leap (feat. Achico) by XTAL on A Leap (feat. Achico) - Single ( Jun Records ) 65′18″ Digital Native f/ Takako Minekawa by Magic Touch on Private Lesson (Total Stasis ) 68′58″ Out of Space by Populous & Cuushe on W (Wonderwheel Recordings ) 71′50″ Secret in Japan by Maria Usbeck on Envejeciendo (Cascine) 74′30″ If This Is I Don't Know What Isn'T by тпсб on Whities 031 - Single ( Whities ) 78′52″ Coy Dub by Maral on Mahur Club (Astral Plane Recordings ) 81′10″ La Si by Ditti on Khao Peeyo (curuba ) 85′44″ Sada Koyama by Señora on Señora (Hug Records) 91′50″ Buzz by NA DJ on Manara International Presents: The Ultimate Spice Mix (Night Slugs) 95′56″ Jalebi by M.O.S. on Jalebi - Single (Shanti Radio Moscow) 103′55″ Tutu by Laroz on Summer Sol V (sol selectas ) 108′20″ Mumbai by Jose Manuel on Phat Phil Cooper Presents NuNorthern Soul Winter Warmers (NuNorthern Soul) 114′20″ Gayatri by Mente Orgánica on Gayatri - Single (Echoes from Venus) The next Transfiguration is on Sunday, September 6th at 2:00 pm. Check out the full archives on the website.
Hi and welcome to Kaleidoscope Teen Magazine’s podcast. My name is Madalyn Salkowsky and I am a human being. First I'd like to start off by saying how proud I am of you for tuning into this podcast and wanting to further your knowledge on some problems in the world today. This podcast will be about societal and systemic racism and how we as Americans can be the best versions of ourselves. RESOURCES: Instagram accounts- @blklivesmatter, @privtoprog, @antiracism_collective, @talkspace, @civilrightsorg, @aoc, @idontmind Podcasts you can listen to - A Decade Of watching Black People Die, We’ve Been Here Before, “I can’t breathe.” Again. Instagram live I loved is now in the IGTV section of Melissa Benoist’s Instagram titled, “COFFEE LIVE”. You can go to chnge.org and sign endless petitions, and there are multiple documentaries you can watch to further educate yourself. - Madalyn Salkowsky
Our “Shocked To Love” Movies Top 5 finished the show after we began with how Scorsese’s “Killers of the Flower Moon” went to Apple. What’s the future of the streaming wars now that Apple threw its weight around with prestige films? + Another fun Top 5 list & our stories. What is This Episode - Top of Show APPLE TEAMS W/ PARAMOUNT FOR KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON: How Did Apple Get a Chance To Be Involved? - 2:33 What This Means For The Movie - 6:03 Paramount’s Been Here Before - 9:03 What’s It “Cost” To Be a Prestige Studio? - 11:14 MMO’S TOP 5 “SHOCKED TO LOVE” MOVIES: Explanation - 18:30 5s - 19:01 (Featuring The World of The Master) 4s - 26:19 (Ft. Some 2019 Surprises) 3s - 33:10 (Ft. Galaxies Far, Far Away) 2s - 42:45 (Ft. 2 Different Red Heads) 1s - 51:15 (Ft. 3[?!] of the All Time GOATS) Your Homework/PLEASE LEAVE US 5*’S - 59:42 What’s Next From MMO/Words of Wisdom - 1:00:35 We’ve often done breaking news episodes, we’ve often done fun Top 5 countdowns, and this is a combination of both those formats. So we began with a rundown of all the angles of the story to Scorsese’s latest partnership with Apple TV+ and how his next film, Killers of the Flower Moon was purchased by the streamer with a lot of help & guidance still coming from Paramount. What is Apple’s grand plan? How does it differ from what Netflix & Amazon Prime has done? We break it all down and compare the various plans Apple has applied to its eventual Oscar chase. They’ve teamed with A24 on Sophia Coppola’s “On The Rocks,” starring Bill Murray & Rashida Jones, and they’ve purchased the distribution rights to the Tom Hanks battleship film, Greyhound. Now they’ve taken their biggest swing yet on the Leonardo DiCaprio / Robert De Niro starrer for Martin Scorsese. Then Mike & I tacked on another fun Top 5, which we hope connects to Killers of the Flower Moon project in our Shocked To Love Movies countdown. Which films opened up entire new horizons for us in the movie world? Which plagued productions totally redeemed themselves? How many ME-problems can we explain about ourselves in one episode? Find out by listening to this rundown. If you’re enjoying our show, please take a few moments to leave us a 5 star rating on Apple Podcasts. Those go a long way to helping us build the MMO brand, and we thank you. Also, stay tuned as we’ll be reviewing some new films with Shirley, Da 5 Bloods, and The King of Staten Island. As always, we want to know what you think. Send us your lists on films you were shocked to love, & we’ll share them on the next MMOW. We’re @MMandOscar on Twitter, and we are on Instagram, Facebook, Reddit, and Gmail. You can subscribe / rate / review / like / share / & listen to us on Apple Podcasts, Soundcloud, Stitcher, Google Play, Tune In, Spotify, and just about wherever you might listen. We’re Mike, Mike, & Oscar, and we’re making awards season year round, without the stuffiness. Thanks for listening.
To kick off our Navigating Our World podcast, Brown Advisory CEO Mike Hankin shares his thoughts on why NOW is especially important during this crisis, and on the responsibility of business leaders to address the polarization around challenging issues -- including capitalism, climate change and more -- without taking sides. Please visit https://www.brownadvisory.com/now2020 to listen to our first episode: We've Been Here Before (and Made It Through): A Conversation with Jon Meacham, historian and Pulitzer Prize-winning author.
Pastor Tara Beth Leach | Acts 2:42-47 NIV | Through pandemics, persecution, and war, the church has thrived and flourished throughout history. Although the church has often gathered in houses of worship, we are not a building. We are a people called to love God, love one another, and love our neighbors. During Covid-19, the church must wrestle with once again what it means to be the church without a building and without programs. Throughout this series we will look at the early church in the book of Acts and rediscover what it means to live the simple call of ... Read More The post We Are_:We’ve Been Here Before appeared first on PazNaz.
We look forward to having you join us on our Navigating Our World podcast journey. Please visit the Navigating Our World website to listen to our first episode: We've Been Here Before (and Made It Through): A Conversation with Jon Meacham, historian and Pulitzer Prize-winning author. The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the speaker(s) and do not necessarily reflect those of Brown Advisory. These views are not intended to be and should not be relied upon as investment advice and are not intended to be a forecast of future events or a guarantee of future results. The information provided in this podcast is not intended to be and should not be considered a recommendation or suggestion to engage in or refrain from a particular course of action or to make or hold a particular investment or pursue a particular investment strategy, including whether or not to buy, sell, or hold any of the securities mentioned. It should not be assumed that investments in such securities have been or will be profitable. There is a risk that some or all of the capital invested in any such securities may be lost. This piece is intended solely for our clients and prospective clients, is for informational purposes only, and is not individually tailored for or directed to any particular client or prospective client.
https://lofstrom.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/Lofstrom+loop+208+(11.04.2020).mp3 link 01. Herbie Hancock — Rockit 02. Sports Team — Here’s The Thing 03. Tony Molina — Been Here Before 04. Hot Chip — Positive 05. Foster The People — Imagination 06. David Bowie — Rebel Rebel 07. The Strokes — One Way Trigger 08. Louis Cole — It’s So Easy 09. Daft Punk … Продолжить чтение Lofstrom loop 208
THIS IS SIDE TWO OF THIS EPISODEThis is Side TWO of our discussion with Mantis about his theory regarding Severian's description of the First Severian in the final chapter of Citadel of the Autarch. If you haven't listened to Side ONE, go HERE first.-You can also get episodes on your podcast app or on our Youtube channel.If you have problems accessing the podcast on your favorite platform, let us know. Questions, comments, corrections, additions, alternate theories?Connect with us on on Facebook...or on Twitter @rereadingwolfe...or on Instagram: rereadingwolfepodcast...or on Reddit: rereadingwolfepodcast -Outro from "Been Here Before" by Kingfish IngramLogo art by SonOfWitzOutros and alternate outros are cued on the Rereading Wolfe Podcast Spotify playlist IF the songs are available on Spotify.
No specific chapterThis is Side One of our discussion with Mantis about his theory regarding Severian's description of the First Severian in the final chapter of Citadel of the Autarch. Because Severian's reveal as Mantis's frames it has the potential to affect every chapter of "The Book of the New Sun" there's no really good chapter in which to bring it up. So we placed it here upon Severian's exile, just before Severian is thrust into the wider world. -Links:Craig's Reddit post on the MegatheriansGoonhandz Reddit posts: one two and three and an interpretation of Eschatology and Genesis hereStephen Frug's commentsNigel's discussion of connectivity between tBotNS and A Voyage To Arcturus -You can also get episodes on your podcast app or on our Youtube channel.If you have problems accessing the podcast on your favorite platform, let us know.Questions, comments, corrections, additions, alternate theories?Connect with us on on Facebook...or on Twitter @rereadingwolfe...or on Instagram: rereadingwolfepodcast...or on Reddit: rereadingwolfepodcast -Intro from "The Alligator", Annihilation soundtrack by Ben Salisbury and Geoff BarrowStephen Frug theme from "The Frug" by Rilo KileyMusical Interlude from "Hey, Mr. DJ, I Thought You Said We Had a Deal" by They Might Be GiantsOutro from "Been Here Before" by Kingfish IngramLogo art by SonOfWitzOutros and alternate outros are cued on the Rereading Wolfe Podcast Spotify playlist IF the songs are available on Spotify.
S2E44: Stormy Storms…What’s in Your Bag Baby?Grim has a ton of fun beer tasting and chatting with Stormy about shit posting, art, our favorite happy hour / happy place - The Record Archive, music and her introduction into metal, and so much more. *Also available on Spotify, Google Play, iTunes, Stitcher* Special Thanks To:Stormy StormsSulaco (NY), SONG: So Be It: https://www.facebook.com/sulacoband/Craymeco (NY), SONG: Thanatophobia: https://brandonrileysmusic.bandcamp.com/album/dreadStunner (FL), SONG: Off the Rails: https://www.facebook.com/StunnerNWOTHM/Nokturnal Frost (MN), SONG: Trials of the Northern Witch https://www.facebook.com/NokturnalFrost666/Warforged (IL), SONG: We’ve Been Here Before: https://www.facebook.com/WarforgedBand/ Khemmis (CO), SONG: Isolation https://www.facebook.com/khemmisdoom/Rezet (Germany), SONG: Treadmill to Hell: https://www.facebook.com/rezetband/Suum (Italy), SONG: The Silence of Agony: https://www.facebook.com/suumdoom/ Go buy stuff! Stormymade: https://www.facebook.com/stormymadestormymade/Upcoming:Metal Meltdown w/ Hallucination Realized @ Record Archive: https://www.facebook.com/events/959205614479252/Ricky Rotten Presents: Valentine’s Day Massacre @ Photo City: https://www.facebook.com/events/547376719450443/An Anti-Valentine’s Event: Noise@ The Brew Haus: https://www.facebook.com/events/1311918202529033/
To get live links to the music we play and resources we offer, visit This show includes the following songs: Cassandra Vohs-Demann - Moon Jess Novak - After All 23rd Hour - Sidelines Aren't For You Laura Musgrave - How to Let Go Laurie Swyers - Feel's Like We've Been Here Before feat. Mary Dick Jackie Morris - Yesterday's Game Wanda Gronhovd - She Didn't Know Dawn O'Keefe Williams - Little One Jaquie Daniels - I Know Which Way To Go Suzanne's Band - Down In Mexico For Music Biz Resources Visit Visit our Sponsor Louis Antony DeLise at: Visit our Sponsor Bandzoogle at:
Akshay Nanavati is a Marine Corps Veteran, speaker, adventurer, entrepreneur and author of Fearvana: The Revolutionary Science of How to Turn Fear into Health, Wealth and Happiness. Our conversation centers around the intersection of fear with self-awareness, "enlightenment" & growth. We unpack what fear is, where it comes from, how we can embody it in a positive way and how to distinguish between fear and intuition. Find Akshay at Fearvana.com Akshay's Book Recommendations: Man's Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl and More Beautiful Than Before by Steve Leder Song featured: "I've Been Here Before" by The Franklin Electric How to support the show: Rate, review and subscribe to the podcast on iTunes! Support my work on Patreon and get access to bonus episodes & more! Find me on Instagram Get full access to A Millennial's Guide to Saving the World at anyakaats.substack.com/subscribe
Sam Hughes speaks with composer Petri Alanko, about his recent work on CONTROL, his process and his unique approach to thinking about music composition as well as much more! Petri Alanko (aka Lowland) is a BAFTA nominated Finnish composer, musician and producer. His dynamic repertoire ranges from the haunting orchestral/electronic score for Remedy Entertainment's psycho-thriller, Alan Wake, to elegant and sophisticated classical arrangements for Imaginaerum The Movie, based on the album by symphonic metal band Nightwish. His latest opus is the twisted and ominuous electronic sci-fi score for Remedy's next cinematic blockbuster, Control (composed in co-operation with Martin Stig Andersen), and he composed music for Remedy's critically acclaimed Quantum Break, filled with beautiful haunting and electronic thematic works. Several other titles are currently waiting for their release. Alanko's solo album, “We've Been Here Before”, under his moniker “Lowland” was released in 28th August, 2018. Special thanks to Callum Tennick for editing. Want to sponsor an episode? E-mail Sam at sam@thesoundarchitect.co.uk for your sponsorship to be read out on the podcast. This episode and so much more at: www.thesoundarchitect.co.uk Twitter: @SoundDesignUK Facebook: facebook.com/thesoundarchitect.co.uk Instagram: thesoundarchitectofficial Stay up to date via our Monthly Newsletter as well: www.thesoundarchitect.co.uk/newsletter --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thesoundarchitect/message
The post We’ve Been Here Before appeared first on On Good Ground International Ministries.
If you've ever wanted to feel better about life, or exactly where you are, then do we have the how to go in circles, without going insane, show for you! Today we'll talk about spiraling upwards, what it means, what it looks like, and why, though you might feel like you've gone backwards, you're actually move up, and perfectly right on path! Spiraling Upwards Self-Improvement and Self-Help Topics Include: What we can learn about Thanksgiving and rats How Sir Meowsers and Lumi came to Michael from his meditations How Jessica brought Michael to Taos New Mexico How Michael and Jessica are getting pulled back to Colorado What it means to return places, and why it doesn't mean your stuck Why revisiting experiences in life doesn't mean you haven't changed. What it means to spiral upwards? Why our experiences matter on our journey? What it means that you're a new person? What it means to focus on opening your heart, feeling the flow of energy, and surrendering? What it means to be in the period of the void? What it means to connect (and listen to) your heart? What's the importance of getting your guest in “the zone” What it means to entrain with the music (and noise) around you HOW TO GET 20% off in the Inspire Nation store – Coupon Code INSPIRE20 Store URL: https://inspirenationshow.myshopify.com/ You can get 10% more off as a Backstage Pass member – sign up at https://www.patreon.com/inspirenation What it means to spiral up the mountain. When it's important to ask for help? Why what we resist persists, and what it means to make peace with your circles. Why doubling-back around may be exactly what you needed and where you need to be. What it means to go home and to find your home. For More Info Visit: FireItUpWithCJ.com and www.InspireNationShow.com CJ Liu On How to Recognize and Celebrate Our Growth, Even When We've Been Here Before! Health | Inspiration | Motivation | Spiritual | Spirituality | Inspirational | Motivational | Improvement | Self-Help | Inspire For More Info Visit: InspireNationShow.com
"Ralome" - Plaid "The Payoff Mix" - Steinski "Change in Speak" - De La Soul "I Am Waiting" - The Rolling Stones "Is This What I Get For Loving You?" - The Ronettes "Baby Six String" - Dressy Bessy "Watch That Man" - David Bowie "The Sprout and the Bean" - Joanna Newsom "Bob McKinney" - Henry Thomas "One More Time Around" - The Majestic Arrows "Comedy Central" - Clipse "Gonna Make It Alone" - Dion "Return of the Funky Man" - Lord Finesse "The Beginning (feat. Coin Locker Kid)" - Quakers "Strange Ritual" - David Byrne "Michelle" - The Free Design "Superfight" - 2562 "The Navajo Know" - Pixies "So Nice (Summer Samba)" - Astrud Gilberto "Don't Look Away" - The Who "Maiden" - Vic Chesnutt "Still Dreaming (feat. Kanye West)" - Nas "You've Been Here Before" - Amanda Mair "I'll Be Your Shelter (Just Like a Shelter)" - The Housemartins