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Las olas suenan a Jazz en esa nueva edición del Festival Internacional que han disfrutado unas cuantas generaciones. Su directora Susana Carmona nos explica el contexto y la apuesta por la innovación de las grandes voces actuales como Ekep Nkwelle o Camille Thurman, que van a estar presentes. El compositor John Dubuclet recibe el premio Jazzterrasmann de este año, Pau Casares nos presenta a sus hijos y su familia en un trabajo compartido que titulan "Sobretaula a casa"y Nadya Makoeva junto a Jumble Sounds llenan de swing las sesiones golfas. Es que se acerca la primavera, lo celebramos escuchando a: EKEP NKWELLE- From the Start; JOHN DUBUCLET- Filibuster; PAU CASARES- Just Over in the Gloryland; NADYA MAKOEVA & JUMBLE SOUNDS; TOFUL MARTINEZ- Ain’t Just Like a Women; XAVI CASTILLO- Personatges; CAMILLE THURMAN- The Nearness of You; Ella FITZGERALD & LOUIS ARMSTRONG- Dream A Little Dream Of Me. Escuchar audio
51 games down, one to go – the World Cup Final. It's a historic occasion. Whoever comes out on top – Italy or Brazil – will be the first nation to win the World Cup four times. Memories of 1970 are evoked but the idea of Brazil's pragmatic class of '94 emulating Pelé and co is laughable. Italy, meanwhile, seem to be running out of players, with Roberto Baggio playing despite carrying a hamstring injury that blunts his effectiveness. The much-hyped showdown between Romario and Baggio fails to materialise. The blistering heat is inimical to quality football. The match turns out to be a dull, disappointing climax to a great tournament. It finishes goalless and goes to penalties – a tiebreaking method that almost creates a moral panic from journalists and commentators as the greatest competition in the world is reduced to a shootout. Italian and Brazilian national anthems are from https://nationalanthems.info/ Thanks for your listening support in 2024. Subscribe to World Cup Rambling on your podcast platform. TWITTER/X @MatthewOkot @WorldCupRamble
The penultimate episode of the series and we've got the semi-finals. Roberto Baggio produces one of the best individual performances of the tournament, to give Italy a 2-1 victory over Bulgaria in New York. However, it's a day of mixed fortunes for The Divine Ponytail, as a hamstring injury leaves him in a race against time to make the final. Meanwhile, across in Los Angeles, Romario's goal finishes off a tired Sweden and gives Brazil a place in the final for the first time since 1970. Playing the semi-finals on the same day on opposite coasts is a self-inflicted error from the American organisers, handing a massive advantage to the winners in Los Angeles. There's also the third-place play-off, with Sweden signing off in style, finishing as the tournament's highest scorers and claiming the bronze medal. Subscribe to World Cup Rambling on your podcast platform. TWITTER/X @MatthewOkot @WorldCupRamble
We've reached the quarter-finals of USA 94, a set of games which feature dramatic late twists. It's The Baggio Show in Boston as Italy beat Spain, with Dino opening the scoring and Roberto grabbing a late winner. Brazil unveil a famous celebration but their march to glory is threatened by a Dutch comeback until Branco (liberated from the subs bench) produces a thunderbolt free-kick. Sweden versus Romania is an intriguing battle between two dark horses, with the game exploding into life late in the second half and going all the way to penalties. However, the tournament's ultimate shock comes at the Giants Stadium where Germany, the reigning World Champions, are sent packing by a double whammy from Bulgaria. Subscribe to World Cup Rambling on your podcast platform. TWITTER/X @MatthewOkot @WorldCupRamble
We're back with the last 16 of USA 94. Klinsmann and Voller come up with the old magic as Germany find their touch. Spain produce a performance that suggests they might finally be ready to end their decades of underachievement (yeah right). Sweden's Three Amigos – Brolin, Dahlin, Andersson – end Saudi Arabia's dream run. Romania and Argentina produce a match for the ages. Packie Bonner's butter fingers end Ireland's hopes of a second successive quarter-final. Independence Day is memorable in more ways than one as Team USA face the might of Brazil. Roberto Baggio's divine intervention finally kickstarts Italy's campaign. Bulgaria break new ground as Mexico break the goal frame. Hanging over the last 16 is the brutal murder of Andres Escobar and arguments over refereeing standards, as some games are plagued by controversial decisions, with FIFA giving several referees their marching orders. Subscribe to World Cup Rambling on your podcast platform. TWITTER/X @MatthewOkot @WorldCupRamble
O tempo voa e voa bem depressa. Três décadas passaram desde o Mundial de 1994, um dos torneios favoritos na memória do Rui e do Pedro. Jogos inesquecíveis, personagens secundárias elevadas à condição de ídolo e seleções surpreendentes, com a Bulgária, a Suécia e a Roménia à frente de todas. Tudo abriu no desconcertante pé direito de Diana Ross e fechou na chuteira de Roberto Baggio a disparar para as nuvens do Rose Bowl. O Brasil festejou o 'penta' e dedicou-o a Ayrton Senna, falecido meses antes. Um Mundial para recordar e saborear ao longo de quase uma hora. No 'Domingo Desportivo' fala-se de Thomas Ravelli, o excêntrico guarda-redes da excelente Suécia, e há uma invasão do estúdio perpetrada por Luís Rocha Rodrigues, diretor de informação do zerozero. No 'Música, Maestro' temos o «Gloryland», a música oficial do Mundial-94 e interpretada por Daryl Hall.
This month, the group stage of USA 94 reaches a conclusion with many teams jockeying for position. Stefan Effenberg efffectively ends his international career as the Germans have a narrow escape against South Korea, the Group of Death reaches gridlock, Saudi Arabia come up with arguably the goal of the tournament, Oleg Salenko and Roger Milla produce a day of records in San Francisco. However, the real scandal and drama is saved for Group D, where Diego Maradona fails a drug test (a shocking moment yet, with hindsight, almost inevitable) and a pair of injury-time goals completely change the complexion of the final standings. Thanks for listening. World Cup Rambling will return in September. Subscribe to World Cup Rambling on your podcast platform. TWITTER/X @MatthewOkot @WorldCupRamble
This month we've got the second set of group games, which produced some notable matches and moments. Team USA triggering a soccer boom with a victory that will have fatal consequences elsewhere, Roy Hodgson's swaggering Swiss putting the skids under Romania, a touchline explosion involving Jack Charlton and John Aldridge, Bulgaria ending one of the most embarrassing streaks in World Cup history, Arrigo Sacchi gambling his career with a brave substitution, Diego Maradona equalling the all-time World Cup appearances record, and much more. Subscribe to World Cup Rambling on your podcast platform. TWITTER/X @MatthewOkot @WorldCupRamble
This month we'll look at the opening pair of matches in each group at USA 94. There was a raft of new laws on tackling, offside and the back pass, which FIFA hoped would liven up the show, after the stodginess of Italia 90. The gaudy opening ceremony, and Diana Ross's penalty miss (which foreshadowed the climax of the tournament), fuelled the scepticism about taking the World Cup to a country that knew nothing of soccer but everything of crass hype and empty razzmatazz. Yet once the actual football got under way, all the fears fell away. A memorable first set of games saw dark horses Romania stun the much-hyped Colombians, Jack Charlton's Republic of Ireland enjoy their finest hour, the rise of new forces from Asia, Nigeria's Super Eagles swooping down in style, Diego Maradona returning in typically exuberant fashion, and much more. Subscribe to World Cup Rambling on your podcast platform. TWITTER/X @MatthewOkot @WorldCupRamble
Series 4 of World Cup Rambling and it's time to get in the DeLorean and go back thirty years for a mammoth odyssey through USA 94 - a very underrated tournament. We start the series by looking at why football (or "soccer") failed to take a hold in the United States, then having a look at the rise and fall of the North American Soccer League, America's failed bid to host the 1986 World Cup and, ultimately, the successful bid to host the 1994 World Cup, with the pitfalls on the path as the American organisers tried to deliver on the promises they made to FIFA. There will also be the customary whistle-stop tour through the 24 finalists. Thanks to https://nationalanthems.info for the national anthems. Subscribe to World Cup Rambling on your podcast platform. TWITTER @MatthewOkot @WorldCupRamble
In this vibrant episode of the Nosy AF Podcast, I had the pleasure of chatting with the incredibly talented artist Meg Franklin. Meg's journey from the picturesque landscapes of Georgia to the bustling art scene of New York and back again is a tale of passion, creativity, and the pursuit of an artist's dream. Meg shared her experiences of living in New York for 15 years, her eventual return to Georgia, and the accidental acquisition of a bunch of cats. We delved into her dream of ditching the regular job to paint full-time, free from the distractions of office life. Throughout the episode, we explored Meg's artistic process, including her transition from painting on velvet to using vibrant colors on black backgrounds. Meg's work is influenced by the color palettes of her childhood, Muppets, and even the movie Fantasia, which she watches repeatedly for inspiration. We also touched on the importance of networking in New York and how Meg has adapted to connecting with the art world digitally since moving back to Georgia. Meg's insights into what makes a good painting and her criteria for her own work provided a fascinating glimpse into the mind of an artist. Meg and I discussed the benefits of art residencies, like the one we both attended at Pooch Cove, and how such experiences can rejuvenate an artist's creativity. We also touched on the darker side of the art world, including the recent tragedy involving the Titanic submarine expedition near Newfoundland, where we had our residency. As always, I aim to bring you closer to the lives of fascinating individuals, and Meg Franklin's story is no exception. Her blend of humor, artistic insight, and candid sharing made for an inspiring and entertaining episode. So grab your paintbrushes, and let's dive into the colorful world of Meg Franklin on this episode of Nosy AF. Remember to stay connected and let me know your thoughts on the episode. And if you're curious about my own art and film projects, check out my website at MissGraham.com. Until next time, keep being curious and nosy about the world around you! Topics discussed: Meg's Vibrant Color Palette The Necessity of New York for Artistic Success The Importance of Artist Friendships I made this bio about Meg:(well me and Chat GPT did) Meg Franklin, a painter originally from Georgia, embarked on a creative journey that led her to New York, where she resided for about 15 years. Despite her rich educational background, including an MFA in Painting from the New York Academy of Art in 2013, an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Florida in 2007, and a BA in English from Washington and Lee University in 2004, Meg felt the magnetic pull of her Southern roots. Now back in Georgia, she finds inspiration for her art in the serene charm of her home state. Meg's artistic achievements are highlighted by solo and two-person exhibitions, such as the collaborative "Appetite of Ghosts" with Marcia Resnick at Turn Gallery, New York, NY, in 2019, and solo shows like "Gloryland" at Occulus Gallery, Pacific Design Center, Los Angeles, CA, and "Small, Small World" at Marvin Gardens, Ridgewood, NY, both in 2018. Her contributions extend to various group exhibitions, showcasing her work in cities like London, San Francisco, and Brooklyn. In addition to her visual accomplishments, Meg has left her mark in literary circles. Noteworthy publications include features in "The Coastal Post," where Jen Shepard explored "The Hazy Identity of Objects" in November 2017, and "The Cluster Mag," which showcased "Not-Men" in May 2013. Roxy Kirshenbaum delved into Meg's artistry in "The Artists: Meg Franklin" for "The WILD Magazine" in the same year. Maria Teicher provided insights "Inside the Studio with Meg Franklin" on the NYAA Blog in November 2012, giving readers a glimpse into Meg's creative process. Despite the twists and turns of her artistic journey, Meg Franklin continues to seek authenticity and fulfillment in her art, guided by her experiences and the charm of her Southern surroundings. Connect with Meg Instagram: @gabooldra Connect with Stephanie Instagram: @stephaniegraham @noseyafpod Check out my art and projects More Episodes at noseyaf.com Leave me feedback or send me a message Support the Show! Rate and Review the show Share noseyAF with your friends Buy a pin Buy a print Join the noseyAF newsletter Partner with the show
Welcome to the NFT Jungle is a podcast dedicated to NFTs as well as navigating the NFT space so that you can be equipped to make good decisions in this crazy world of NFTs! ❤️ Welcome To The NFT Jungle is the OFFICIAL podcast for “MetaJungle”. The MetaJungle team is developing platform tools to make your NFT experiences better. Join the MetaJungle Discord for free access to information, tools, and resources that will make your NFT collecting a success!
“Just Over in the Glory Land” is a hymn that was written in 1906 by James Acuff. This song is a celebration of the home that the Lord is preparing for those that believe in him, a home where there will be no sickness, sorrow or affliction.
Tune up your banjo! In this ep, Mat and Tim break down their history with and love for bluegrass music – and explain why it gives them hope for the future of pop.SONGS PLAYED:The Osborne Brothers - Rocky TopBill Monroe and the Bluegrass Boys - Blue Moon of KentuckyThe Charley Family - Over in the GlorylandPatty Loveless and Ricky Skaggs - Daniel PrayedBill Monroe and the Bluegrass Boys - Footprints in the SnowPunch Brothers - Down Along the Dixie LineVarious Artists - I'll Fly AwayJ.D. Crowe & The New South - Old Home PlacePunch Brothers - JulepPunch Brothers - Passepied (Debussy)Punch Brothers - My Oh MyPunch Brothers - Flippen (The Flip)Billy Strings - Know It AllPunch Brothers - FamiliaritySoggy Bottom Boys - I Am a Man of Constant SorrowJake Blount - Once There Was No SunBéla Fleck - Slippery Eel (feat. Billy Strings & Chris Thile)Sponsored by Marriott.
The Fulton Fall Gospel Singing was a big hit Saturday evening. The event was held at the Morris Allday No. 1 Fire Station. At top, veterans and first responders were recognized in the opening ceremonies as the pledge to the flag was given. Above, the gospel groups Gloryland and the Revelators joined together for a number. There were other groups and individuals to perform. A highlight of the evening was the drawing for the “Split the Pot” fundraiser. Nearly ,000 in tickets were sold with the fire department splitting the proceeds with the holder of the winning ticket. From left...Article Link
"I am on my way to GLORYLAND and the Spirit of God - the Wind of God, the Ruach of God, will see to it that I get there."
WHAT DID JESUS MEAN BY "MANY MANSIONS? Some of our church theology is somewhat like a gossip circle; the news is passed on from generation to generation, and each time, it changes. By the time you and I come along, a fair amount of church theology needs to be redefined. Take, for instance, John 14:2. Jesus said, in my father's house are many mansions, (King James version) I'm going to prepare a place for you that where I am there, ye may also be. OK, that sounds pretty biblical, seeing that we have heard that repeatedly. But is that really what it means? By the time I came along, every Christian would have a three-story castle just over in the Gloryland. Whatever that Gloryland thing is, I never found out. I suppose it is a slang word for heaven. In reality, Jesus was not talking about you hunkering down in some stately mansion on an eternal retirement plan. Let me say that verse again in layman's language. "in the place that my father abides, there are many different realms for you to work and to fulfill your destiny in, and I am going there now to finalize the covenant so that as I am in that realm, you will also be." For most Christians, the vision of heaven is like an eternal country club where we play games all day and sit around and tell stories. In reality, this experience we're having on earth is just preparation for our eternal purpose that God has, which is to rule and dominate the cosmos. Listen again to John 3:16 God so loved the cosmos (World) that he gave his only begotten son. Again we hear that same word in mark 16:15 Go into all the cosmos (World) and preach the gospel. In this modern age of technology, we are just now getting a small glimpse of how enormous God's cosmos is. I believe that's what Jesus was talking about when he said there are many realms for you to go to. We've come through the age of the church where they sang songs like, "Lord give me just a little cabin in the corner of Gloryland." How pathetic is that when God wants us to rule, dominate, conquer and preach the gospel to his entire creation? Like that famous statement out of the Wizard of Oz," you ain't in Kansas anymore." YOU CAN GIVE HERE=http://www.georgewatkinsministries.com/help-us.html WEBSITE= http://www.georgewatkinsministries.com/home-page.html FACEBOOK=https://www.facebook.com/FaithProducerstv/ Faith Producers address: PO Bx 1006 Mt Vernon, WA 98273 FAITHPRODUCERS INTERNATIONAL PODCAST https://faithproducers.podbean.com/ INSTAGRAM DRGEORGEWATKINS https://www.instagram.com/drgeorgewatkins/
Watch it on Youtube Read more Bible-Believing-Truth at https://realbiblebelievers.com
As it's a summer without a men's tournament, let Alive and Kicking take you back to the summer of 1994 and relive USA 94. A landmark World Cup hosted by America and seen as one of the most colourful tournaments in its illustrious history. Joining Ash Rose and Ed Chambers of the Football Tavern, is author Matthew Evans who has just released a book on that very tournament. The guys chat through their favourite moments of the tournament and reminisce over Brazilian strikers, cult kits and some of the most iconic images the World Cup has ever seen. All that, plus natter on Mick Stockwell, 'miserable' Terry Phelan and what American Joe Cole wishes he was. Keep it 90s! Follow the team! Alive and Kicking @AK90S Ash Rose @AshRoseUK Ed Chambers @Tavernfootball Matthew Evans @the_mevs and his book @USA94book
416. Are Ye Able? 427. We've a Story to Tell to the Nations 434. Just Over in the Gloryland
Well, I'm back in the land of vegemite, budgie-smugglers and drop-bears, after two busy but invigorating weeks in the US.I never quite managed that second ‘Postcard from America', reality having collided viciously with my optimism. This week's post is the next best thing: a postcard from a weary but happy returned traveller, with some brief reflections on his sojourn in a strange land.I don't say ‘strange land' in any pejorative sense. It's just that America is different in so many ways, and sometimes disorienting for an Australian evangelical Christian. At one level, there's so much that seems familiar and immediately recognizable—perhaps because of our shared British heritage or simply because we consume so much American culture (in its popular and Christian forms).And yet the differences also keep slapping you in the face.Some of them are negatives. They put sweet jam on chicken-and-salad sandwiches. The coffee is mostly terrible. They never put the handbrake on when they park the car. But let's try to be American about this, which is to say grateful and positive.That's the first thing that strikes me, every time I visit the US (which I've done perhaps 15 times over the past two decades). The positivity. American evangelical Christians have an easy thankfulness about them that I don't tire of experiencing. There's no embarrassment in thanking you for the good or helpful things you've done, nor any awkwardness about receiving such praise or affirmation with humility.In fact, my US colleague Marty Sweeney is sure that I keep coming back to the States each year just so as I can get my annual dose of positive affirmation, to keep me going for the next 12 months. He's probably right. I think I get nearly as much warm and genuine thanks, encouragement and general affirmation during my two-week American trips than in the other 11½ Australian months.Now, any kind of thankful positivity (including the American variety) can become cloying or fake or unrealistic or even manipulative. But I think my Australian instinct is therefore to dial it down just in case.Insofar as walking and growing in the truth of Christ Jesus the Lord means ‘abounding in thanksgiving' (Col 2:6-7), I'm always rebuked and encouraged by my American brothers to abound a bit more.The flipside of thankfulness is generosity. I'm grateful to have received; I'm glad to be able to give. Perhaps Americans and American churches are wealthier or better resourced than their Australian counterparts. I'm sure that's true in some cases. But I'm always bowled over by the graciousness of their hosting, the thoughtful way they provide for guests, and the generosity of the honoraria that they give to visiting speakers. We're not talking chocolates and $50 Coles vouchers. It has been common for me to have been given a thank you note with US$1000 enclosed, just for preaching one Sunday at a church, or for delivering a single talk at a conference. (And in case you think that's the reason I keep going back to the US each year, the money all goes to defraying the costs of the trip!)It's interesting to think why cultures are different; how they get to be the way they are — whether we're thinking of churches, families, communities, or even nations. Culture is ‘the whole way we do things around here', and it's formed over time by a thousand words, habits, decisions, actions, structures, traditions, and so on. How did American Christian culture get to be (in general) more thankful and generous than our culture? Why for that matter did the culture of Sydney-based evangelicalism develop in the way that it did, such that a book that fairly plainly described its ministry culture (The Trellis and the Vine) should become such a fresh and powerful statement for American evangelicalism about some of its shortcomings? Who can say?But I'm sure that the gospel and the work of God's Spirit over time in a particular place has a great deal to do with it. And so when I notice the strengths of other Christian cultures (as well as their weaknesses), it challenges me all over again to keep shifting our culture in a godly direction, through trusting and applying that same Word by that same Spirit.I guess that's why God gives us each other.One final observation from this recent trip. One of the conference gatherings I attended met in a hotel. There was no overhead projection in the room; no piano or musical instruments; just a very plain, large, hotel conference room. On the basis of this, I assumed that there wouldn't be any singing during our meetings.How wrong I was. What ensued was in fact the most edifying and heart-warming Christian singing I've experienced in a very long time.We pulled out some printed sheets containing music and words, and turned to a particular song. Someone at the front sang a note for us to start on and then off we went. Just voices, about 180 of us, raised together, singing to each other, singing with thankfulness and rejoicing to God.We sang some classic old hymns (Jesus paid it all; What a friend we have in Jesus). We sang some more modern songs (All glory be to Christ; Christ is mine forevermore). We clapped our way through some traditional African-American songs (Gloryland; I cannot tell it all). All of it was unaccompanied, with some clever people singing harmonies at various points.It was certainly minimalist. And yet it was maximally powerful and encouraging, because the sound was the sound of Christian voices addressing one another in psalms, hymns and spiritual songs.I couldn't help thinking about how different this was from the singing I usually experience in Australian churches, where the sound is usually the sound of a well-amplified band, with 4-5 instruments and 2-3 singers. Underneath or above the wall of sound coming from the stage can be heard the echo of the congregation's voices, like a live recording at a rock concert where you can hear the audience singing along in the chorus.I have some theories about how we've ended up at this point (another time!), but the contrast between the two kinds of singing is striking. Have we been sleep-walking towards a style of church singing where the dominant sound in the room is the sound of the band? Has our singing culture become one where the congregation is swept along and emotionally moved by the power and volume of the music itself, rather than spoken to, edified and uplifted by the sound of brothers and sisters singing?To be quite clear, the majority of American evangelical church singing is also at the loud, amplified-band end of the spectrum (as far as I have observed). But this recent experience of a very different kind of singing—one where the voices of the congregation actually dominated—was both electrifying and unsettling.Even as the hairs on the back of my neck started to resume their normal position, I couldn't help thinking, “Is there any church I know back home that sings like this? And why not?”PSWho would have imagined that Americans had Australian jokes? My friend Marty has two good ones:Q. What do you call an Australian in a suit and tie? A. The defendant.Q. What's the difference between Australia and a tub of yoghurt? A. If you leave them out in the sun for 200 years, only one will develop its own culture.Ouch!It's also nice to come back to Australia and discover what's being going on while you're away—because unless you go out of your way to find out, you won't hear much about Australian politics or sport or life in general while you're travelling in the US.The federal election campaign has ground on, and I was mercifully spared any mention of it for two weeks.I also came back to media reports that the evil arch-conservatives of the Sydney Diocese are preparing to do their worst at the General Synod of the Anglican Church of Australia this week. Something to do with affirming what Christians have believed for 2000 years about marriage and sexuality.If you'd like to pray for that General Synod gathering this week, you could do worse than use the collect that is set down for this week in the Book of Common Prayer (the third Sunday after Easter):Almighty God, who shewest to them that be in error the light of thy truth, to the intent that they may return into the way of righteousness: Grant unto all them that are admitted into the fellowship of Christ's religion, that they may eschew those things that are contrary to their profession, and follow such things as are agreeable to the same; through our Lord Jesus Christ. Amen. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.twoways.news/subscribe
Song and Praise. The Word of God. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/mischelle-wade/support
Jesus reigns as King of kings in the hearts of believers to prepare them to receive the eternal promises of God.
Arrangement by Anthony Burger. This one is always a workout to play. Songs include: Just Over in Glory Land, The Lily of the Valley and Leaning on the Everlasting Arms.For more music by Greg Walker please go to www.gregwalkermusic.com . There is also sheet music available for my original compositions and arrangements.
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Even though we might be seeing the back end of the global Covid-19 Pandemic many of us are still stuck at home wading through endless meetings over Zoom and other teleconferencing platforms. With the hopes of creating a little community spirit and to encourage folks out there to step away from their screens and maybe crack open a book instead, I started a little group called the Joy Trip Reading Project. Each month we're taking a deep dive into stories of primarily Black authors whose work centers around nature and the identity many of us share in common as people who love the great outdoors. In February, for Black History Month, the title we read was Gloryland, by National Park Ranger Shelton Johnson. This novel is the story of a Black American sergeant in the United States Army at the turn of the last century. As a member of the Buffalo Soldiers, the principle character, Elijah Yancy, reveals to us the life and times of the men who were among the world's original protectors of public land at the National Parks of Yosemite and Sequoia. Not enough people know that in 1903 the first superintendent of Sequoia was a Black American U.S. Cavalry officer by the name of Captain Charles Young. Despite the national climate of Jim Crow segregation these men were among our first National Park Rangers During a time when race relation in this country were at their most abysmal, the Buffalo Soldiers fought to preserve the best idea America ever had. Unfortunately, because of some technical difficulties connecting with Ranger Johnson over Zoom I literally had to hold my cellphone up to my computer microphone to conduct this interview. Sorry in advance for the marginal sound quality, but under the circumstances, really can you do? I'm James Edward Mills and you're listening to the Joy Trip Project. [/vc_column_text] [/vc_column_inner][/vc_row_inner] Music courtesy of Artlist featuring the band Muted, Steve Poloni and Ty Simon. [/vc_column][/vc_row] The Joy Trip Project is made possible thanks to support of Seirus Innovation and Outdoor Research. This recording of the Joy Trip Reading Project was created in partnership with University of Wisconsin Madison Nelson Institute For Environmental Studies. Here we acknowledge the ancestral homeland of the Ho-Chunk People on the sacred land known for time and memorial as DeJope. Wherever you are in North American please recognize the native people of the place you now call home. Thanks for listening, but as always, I want to hear from you so please drop me in note in the comments with your questions, comments or criticisms or write to me via email at info@joytripproject.com. You can also find me on Facebook, Instagram or Twitter. If you liked this episode please write me a review on iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify or wherever you download your favorite podcasts. For now, go be joyful and until next time. Take care.
Even though we might be seeing the back end of the global Covid-19 Pandemic many of us are still stuck at home wading through endless meetings over Zoom and other teleconferencing platforms. With the hopes of creating a little community spirit and to encourage folks out there to step away from their screens and maybe crack open a book instead, I started a little group called the Joy Trip Reading Project. Each month we're taking a deep dive into stories of primarily Black authors whose work centers around nature and the identity many of us share in common as people who love the great outdoors. In February, for Black History Month, the title we read was Gloryland, by National Park Ranger Shelton Johnson. This novel is the story of a Black American sergeant in the United States Army at the turn of the last century. As a member of the Buffalo Soldiers, the principle character, Elijah Yancy, reveals to us the life and times of the men who were among the world's original protectors of public land at the National Parks of Yosemite and Sequoia. Not enough people know that in 1903 the first superintendent of Sequoia was a Black American U.S. Cavalry officer by the name of Captain Charles Young. Despite the national climate of Jim Crow segregation these men were among our first National Park Rangers During a time when race relation in this country were at their most abysmal, the Buffalo Soldiers fought to preserve the best idea America ever had. Unfortunately, because of some technical difficulties connecting with Ranger Johnson over Zoom I literally had to hold my cellphone up to my computer microphone to conduct this interview. Sorry in advance for the marginal sound quality, but under the circumstances, really can you do? I'm James Edward Mills and you're listening to the Joy Trip Project. [/vc_column_text] [/vc_column_inner][/vc_row_inner] Music courtesy of Artlist featuring the band Muted, Steve Poloni and Ty Simon. [/vc_column][/vc_row] The Joy Trip Project is made possible thanks to support of Seirus Innovation and Outdoor Research. This recording of the Joy Trip Reading Project was created in partnership with University of Wisconsin Madison Nelson Institute For Environmental Studies. Here we acknowledge the ancestral homeland of the Ho-Chunk People on the sacred land known for time and memorial as DeJope. Wherever you are in North American please recognize the native people of the place you now call home. Thanks for listening, but as always, I want to hear from you so please drop me in note in the comments with your questions, comments or criticisms or write to me via email at info@joytripproject.com. You can also find me on Facebook, Instagram or Twitter. If you liked this episode please write me a review on iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify or wherever you download your favorite podcasts. For now, go be joyful and until next time. Take care.
ANGEL DUST Bleed 1 - Bleed Crashbones LA PUERTA DE ATRÁS Benediction - Scriptures (2020) 2 - Scriptures in Scarlet. Iron Angel - Emerald Eyes (2020)10 - Heaven In Red. Red N' Rebel 7. Should Be A Law. BONFIRE - Fistful Of Fire (2020) Bonfire - 09 - Fire Etude BONFIRE - Fistful Of Fire (2020) Bonfire - 13 - Gloryland. Embellish 2012 - Blindead10 - Waiting The Light Reckless Love - Loaded. DGM - Hope MRC Atrapados en la Nube. VAN HALEN 1995 - Balance 3. Don't Tell Me (What Love Can Do). Zenobia - VI (2020)12 - El Príncipe de la Oscuridad. Pearl Jam - 2020 - Gigaton 8. Take The Long Way. Ozzy Osbourne - No More Tears. AT THE MOOVIES WE DONT ANOTHER HERO s SALTIMBANKIA Contigo hasta el final. U.D.O - Das Musikkorps der Bundeswehr - Neon Diamond (Single)(2020) 2 Neon Diamond EMBOQUE 7-ANIBAL. Armored Saint - Standing on the Shoulders of Giants. AC/DC . Shot In The Dark. Amaranthe - Manifest (2020) 01 Fearless. Avatar2020 - Hunter Gatherer 06 Child. Dee Snider - For The Love of Metal - Live (2020) 2 - Tomorrow´s No Concern (Live) Creye - Siberia. Bon Jovi - 2020 (2020) 6 Let It Rain Majestica - Above the Sky (2019) [320] 8 - The Legend.
President Trump's Masterpiece Press Conference. Issues Four Executive Orders bringing financial aid directly to the people, deferring student loans and protecting against evictions. Democrats react with outrage, as they manipulate Coronavirus to decree the All Mail Ballot and thwart Voter ID measures. So what will Pelosi do next? Sue? Basement Biden rides a bicycle, sans helmet. Come on man! Antifa attacks the elderly in Portland. New York opens its schools. Addenda on the Suspicious Steven Schrage. AG Barr marvels at Trump's stamina: "I've never seen such energy. He's always working." Prayers Up for Trump's personal safety. Meanwhile, the great Turnip Debate continues. Okra too. With Listener Calls & Music via Kygo, Zara Larsson and Lennon Stella. Sacred Song from the Stanley Brothers and Doc Watson. Over In the Gloryland. See omnystudio.com/policies/listener for privacy information.
In 1994 Sounds of Blackness got their global breakthrough when they sang with Daryl Hall, the World Cup Theme song, Gloryland, in Giants Stadium in New Jersey. The Irish football team was playing that night and won. This gave me my cue to do for The Irish Times an interview with Gary Hines, leader of Sounds of Blackness. I loved their latest album, Africa to America: The Journey of the Drum, and the uplifting nature of their music, so the chance to talk with Gary, even over the phone was, well, heaven, to me! But the real blessing came at the end of the interview on a personal level when we had the following exchange. Hines said it could be "on-the-record or off-the-record" but I choose never to use it, until now. What Gary Hyne said to me was one of the finest compliments I had ever received as an interviewer. Joe Jackson: I really enjoy talking with you. Gary Hines: The feeling is mutual. I have done literally thousands of interviews over the past three years with the three albums and this is the most astute – You get it, I guess, is the point. That can be off-the-record on-the-record. I'm just telling you that, man-to-man. I can't tell you how impressed I am with your insight, into – Well, your insight, period. J: Thank you very much. I owe it to a black family in New York who saved me about eighteen years ago when I was down and out. G: I hear you, man. J: They became my buddies and I'll play (pay) it back forever, OK? G: It's all about just people, isn't it J: Isn't it just? Amen to that.
Yosemite Ranger, Shelton Johnson, shares his stories as a Buffalo Soldier re-enactor. In addition, Shelton will talk about his experience hosting Oprah Winfrey and a group of her friends on their first camping experience at Yosemite. Shelton's experience as a four year old standing in the Bavarian Alps planted the seed leading to him becoming a ranger. He talks about his historical novel, Gloryland, which tells the story of Buffalo Soldier Elijah Yancy. Shelton Johnson starred in the Ken Burns docu-series on National Parks. As a result, he is arguably the National Park Service's most famous ranger. Yosemite Ranger Shelton Johnson is a master storyteller. Get his book Gloryland, here.
A Louisiana native, now 25-year East Nashville resident, Kevin Gordon is a touring recording artist and songwriter. Tilt and Shine is his latest release; it was ranked #2 in Paste's Best Roots and Blues Albums of 2018. 2012's Gloryland, garnered high critical praise from The New York Times, USA Today, Rolling Stone, and many others. His songs have been covered by Keith Richards, Levon Helm, Irma Thomas, Ronnie Hawkins, and more. Also a published poet, Gordon earned an MFA degree from the renowned University of Iowa Writers' Workshop. Recorded May 2019 See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Dameans and OYH! Darryl Ducote, Matt Reichert, Buddy Caesar, Gary Daigle, Mike Balhoff, Gary Ault, and Zack Stachowski (NPM 2019, Raleigh) The Dameans occupy a special place in the development of contemporary Catholic music following the Second Vatican Council. They made significant contributions to the growing repertoire of liturgical music, they helped shape the ways communities experienced the liturgy, and they influenced the way composers approached writing and recording music for prayer. Co-hosts Zack Stachowski and Matt Reichert were fortunate to spend time with the members of the Dameans at the 2019 National Association of Pastoral Musicians convention in Raleigh, North Carolina. In this conversation, Gary Ault, Gary Daigle, Darryl Ducote, and Mike Balhoff discuss the origins of the group, their writing and recording process, some of their favorite compositions, and more. So, please open your hymnals to the music of the Dameans!Episode linksFor more information about the Dameans and their compositions, visit GIA Publications. You can join the fun and play along with the 2020 OYH Hymn Tune Madness competition. Also, join us for our second “OYH Live!” event featuring a conversation with Dan Schutte. For more details, visit our “Events” page.You can purchase the song recordings you heard in this episode. All are available from GIA Publications: “Path of Life,” “All That We Have,” “We Praise You,” “O Antiphons,” “Evening Offering,” “God is Everlasting Love,” “The Lord is Near,” “Gloryland,” “Love is Forever,” “Rest in His Peace,” and “Song of Thanksgiving.”You can purchase a recording of “Bridge Over Troubled Water” from iTunes.Don't forget to "subscribe" so you'll never miss an episode! All content of this podcast is property of Look Up Here Productions or its content suppliers and is protected by United States and international copyright laws. For information about the podcast and its use, please contact us.
World War III Fails to Materialize. Our perspective on President Trump's smart foreign policy approaches to Iran. How rattled are the Mullahs? Victor Davis Hanson sketches Trump's determination to avoid the mistakes of predecessors Bush and Obama. Nevertheless, let us beware the War Whisperers of the Military Industrial Complex. The Iranians have now admitted to shooting down the Ukrainian passenger plane -- yet somehow Dems & MSM still blaming Trump. Which side is The Left on these days? Meanwhile, our notes on the indefatigable Devin Nunes. Taking on the Deep State in all the right ways. We study Nunes' strong reaction to the preposterous appointment of FISA-apologist David Kris to investigate FISA abuse. We review Nunes' pursuit of corrupt IGIC Michael Atkinson, now under "active investigation." Why is Adam Schiff hiding the Atkinson testimony? Meanwhile, President Trump offers additional public criticism of swampish FBI Director Chris Wray. What would happen if Trump fired Wray? We'd like to find out. Also, more good news on the Growing MAGA Economy. Trade deficit down 8.2% in November, and an additional 202,000 new jobs in December. Here's how you save the American Middle Class. Over In the Gloryland. Today's Tom Sawyer. With Listener Calls & Music via Avenged Sevenfold, Rush and Neil Peart. Sacred Song from the Stanley Brothers with Doc Watson.
The Gloves Are Off. Gonna Get Wild. Deep State trying to take down President Trump before Team Trump can take down the Deep State. SpyGate Endgame Approaches. No middle ground. Jon Voight says "This Is War." We review President Dwight Eisenhower's foreboding warnings about the "potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power" in America. Yes -- Ike Knew the Deep State. The dangers to our liberties and democratic processes. On this theme, Trump Advisor Stephen Miller takes on the insufferable Chris Wallace. Bureaucratic barnacles undermining the Executive Branch. Six Ways From Sunday. Somehow or other, the US Constitution must prevail. For all the marbles now. James Madison on Human Nature. Nunes on the Ukraine Origins of SpyGate. Giuliani in the ring. Soundtrack for the Indiana Jones "face-melt" scene. Wake Me Up When September Ends. Inevitabile. With Listener Calls & Music via Green Day, America, Giorgia and Eros Ramazzotti. Sacred Song from the Stanley Brothers. Over In the Gloryland. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
"This Week on Gospel Music Today" Ken and Jean Grady host southern gospel news and concert updates. Television! Atlanta, GA, Louisville, KY, Bruce, MS, Phenix City, AL, Beaumont, TX, Atlanta, TX, Morrilton, AR, Waycross, GA, West Plains, MO, Blairsville, GA, Quincy, IL ROKU! FFE TV, AllNations TV Radio! WOTG, WPIL-FM Brian Lester is the guest on Gospel Music Today for the week of July 7. Ken and Jean Grady host southern gospel news and concert updates. The Feature Group is Souls Harbor, and Jean reviews new recordings by The McKameys and Gloryland. An article from Singing News magazine is the subject of this week's News Notes. The show features a World Premiere music video by Mark209, exclusive concert video of The Singing Cookes, recorded by Gospel Music Today's cameras in Somerset, KY, and a visit to the Gospel Music Today Archives for an exclusive video of Gold City Quartet, recorded by Gospel Music Today's cameras in Nashville, TN. Concert Links @ http://www.gospelmusictoday.com/concerts #HOWCEE Radio
Sermon preached on Sunday Evening 06/16/19, Titled "Moving Up To Gloryland" in, 2 Corinthians 5, by Pastor Paul Fedena
Quartet - On This Road To Gloryland by Clays Mill Baptist
This Week on Gospel Music Today http://www.gospelmusictoday.com/concerts Troy and Tammy Burns of The Troy Burns Family are the guests on Gospel Music Today for the week of March 10. Ken and Jean Grady host southern gospel news and concert updates. The Feature Group is The Envoys, and Jean reviews new recordings by Gloryland and Westward Road. An article from SGNScoops.com is the subject of this week's News Notes. The show features singing by Blood Bought and The Rusty Goodman Family,exclusive concert video of The McKameys, recorded by Gospel Music Today's cameras in Chattanooga, TN, and a visit to the Gospel Music Today Archives for an exclusive video of The Old Paths, recorded by Gospel Music Today's cameras in Memphis, TN. Our Story GOSPEL MUSIC TODAY·FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 2018 Southern Gospel television on your computer anytime! On television in these great cities. Check your local listings for day and time: Atlanta, GA / Bruce, MS / Phenix City, AL / Pontotoc, MS / Beaumont, TX / Morrilton, AR / Tyler, TX / Atlanta, TX / West Plains, MO / Waycross, GA. Watch the show anytime on demand at www.gospelmusictoday.com
Lindsay Lane Baptist Church
Holy Manna 00:00That Heavenly Home 03:25I’m Bound for That City 07:50Gettin’ Ready to Leave This World 11:00Just a Little Talk with Jesus 13:30I Feel Like Traveling On 16:0019:30What a Prayer Can Do 24:00I’m Always Around 26:30I Can Tell You the Time 31:00I’m No Stranger to Grace 35:30 I Have All That I Need 38:00There’ll Be No Pain in Gloryland 46:15Victory in Jesus 49:15 I Will Sing Unto the Lord 54:15Wonderful Peace 55:20I’m Going to Die on the Battlefield 1:00:50I Know He Hears 1:03:15Between Here and Sunset 1:06:45Where Could I Go 1:11:45My Home in Heaven Above 1:16:45Sing Hallelujah 1:20:50He Will Pilot me 1:25:15Sweet Hour of Prayer 1:44:00Higher Ground 1:50:00The Life Boat 1:54:00
[00:00:03] Hey everyone. This is Lynn Vartan and you're listening to the apex hour on SUU's Thunder ninety one point one in this show you get more personal time with the guests who visit Southern Utah University from all over. Learning more about their stories and opinions beyond their presentations on stage. We will also give you some new music to listen to and hope to turn you on to new genres. You can find us here every Thursday at 3:00 p.m. on the web at suu.edu/apex or email us at suuapex@icloud.com. But for now. Welcome to this week's show here Thunder ninety one point one [00:00:50] Hi everyone. So this is Lynn Vartan and I am still in Los Angeles so that means this is another best of show. It's actually spring break on campus. But never fear. I have some clips for you. We're going to start with Emily Graslie the great scientist and YouTube sensation who was on campus in February. Listen in. Here you go. [00:01:11] I Want to start by kind of spending this first bit talking about how you came to be who you are today which is such a great story and I know you talked a little bit about it earlier but if you could kind of give us another version of that painter turned scientist story. I would love to hear it. Yeah. So I won't go into all of the details but essentially I was studying landscape painting at the University of Montana in Missoula. [00:01:37] I enrolled in 2007 and for the first about three years that I was there was really heavily focused on landscape painting as my as my source of inspiration and what I was going to do my senior thesis project on for my BFA. And it wasn't until I learned about the campus Zoological Museum which is known as the Philip Allwright Zoological Museum that I really started to turn my attention toward why these museums exist why these research collections are a part of a campus like that who they serve what their role is and then how I could become involved in. So essentially I turned my last semester of college into an internship where I could draw the specimens within the collection and then just gradually became more and more involved in the day to day operations of the museum learning about how the specimens were cataloged and organized but also how how he obtained them you know what research projects they were associated with. And then I was volunteering the preparation lab to actually help process and prepare some of these specimens for the research collection which was a pretty interesting experience going from you know just landscape painting to you know dissecting roadkill for Montana Fish Wildlife and Parks. Did it ever gross you out because I mean I know some people I mean you came from a painting background so maybe it's the cause I know you also grew up on a farm or near farmland that did it ever. Gross You Out. I think it's just been more of a morbid fascination more than anything. Especially when you know a lot of the gross out factor associated with things like specimen preparation. It's more of like a cultural stigma than it is like a natural thing so. [00:03:26] So what we've learned through the program that I do now my YouTube show the brain scoop is actually the younger the viewers are the less biased they have toward these sort of things. It's more of like a cultural and societal pressure that we put on kids girls especially once they're past the age of 8 or 9 to really enforce that gross factor. Don't touch that or that's nasty. Like a lot of the natural inquisitiveness is kind of stifled and so you know once I started learning about the value of these research collections and how I could contribute to growing them and making having a small role in a significant scientific discovery it just. I mean yes sometimes it smells kind of bad and you're dealing with like gross hydrogen peroxide and dealings overkilled but if you can get a sight all those things get really interesting. Yeah. I mean did you did you learn the process. I mean I didn't mean to initially start talking about dissection so much but I'm kind of fascinated by it as the day goes on. Did you have to learn like the exact procedures because it's very tough. I mean that's very step by step right. Or mean how did all that knowledge come. Did somebody show you. Did you read it. Yeah. So so I started volunteering in this museum after I did my internship. I graduated from college and I kept volunteering in the museum and it was a friend of mine who introduced me to the collection who was actually one of the first people to help train me in specimen preparation. [00:04:57] And it happened because the day she showed me to this research collection which I should also clarify. This museum does not have public exhibits purely behind the scenes 24000 specimens mostly northern Rocky Mount Rocky Mountain mammals and birds and and so there was a number of Montana natural heritage projects and Fish and Wildlife projects that they would collect about your specimens and then deposit them in this museum for preparation and volunteers who were part of the wildlife bio programs or the ecology programs at the University Montana would help prepare them. And so she was one of these volunteers in the prep lab and she brought me in. We walked into the prep lab and she handed me this Ziploc bag that had like a soggy mouse in it. The mouse the mouse story the mouse story with the label this informational label about where it was collected when what time of year what the habitat was like the sex of the animal. And this was all part of a larger study looking at the distribution of rodents across western Montana to see at what point of elevation they were occurring. And if that that point of elevation was changing were they going higher you know due to climate change impacting the average median average temperatures of the northern Rocky Mountains. Anyway she hands me this this western jumping mouse Zappa’s princeps is the scientific name and she she asked Do you want to prepare this. And I said Oh no. you know me I deal with paint brushes like this is not my thing. And she's like No I’ll teach you how to do it. [00:06:32] She's like you know did you ever take homework in middle school and I was like yeah she's like you know you do a sewing project where you stitch things together. And I was like yeah she's a guest the same thing. And I was like that remains to be seen but OK. But she walked me through the process of making the first incision and separating the skin from the muscle tissue and removing the bones in a specific order. And you know after about 30 minutes I had I had skin this mammal and had the body separated from the rest of it from the tide. And then you create a little armature out of cotton and wire and a little small dowel and essentially put that back inside of the body and then you pin it onto a board. And it's it's called a study skin. So it's not meant to look like a live taxidermy animal like it was in life but it now it's a research specimen and that to me the most important part of that whole process was that I got to sign my name on the label for this specimen as a source of accountability mostly of a scientist in the future was going to look at this mouse and be like this thing is prepared really weird who's responsible for this. Emily Graslie no Christian name but to me it was almost like I guess I felt a stronger sense of gratification signing my name on that mouse than I ever had signing my name on a piece of artwork. No way. Fascinate was it. It was overwhelming. And I think it's because I mean the seemingly inconsequential mouse was going to be part of a larger history is going to be bigger than myself. [00:08:00] It's part of a research project that's been going on for decades. You know I contributed to science and it wasn't just this whole like kind of existential moment for me where I was like art you seems so selfish and self you know interested and yet here was the way I felt like I could make some kind of tiny positive contribution to my community I could be a part of the history of western Montana. And this all you know from a dead man. And it was really an it came from a Ziploc bag and I came from a Ziploc bag you know and it was really a moment of revelation for me because I went home that night and I didn't tell anybody what I had done. I I I don't think I talked to any my friends for a week because I thought for sure I was so like a sociopath like sociopath or something like a psychopath. Like what kind of person is so fascinated in like taking an animal inside out. And so I really didn't want to talk about it for a long time and started just you know continuing to volunteer in the museum and becoming more and more interested in it. And that's partially why I started documenting the process is almost like seeking validation from anybody. Right. Like my friends or family and they're like Emily that's weird like you don't want to see your dead animal pictures on our Facebook and so instead I started posting them on tumblr and which was a blog site. [00:09:18] I don't know if people still use tumblr today but I had started a blog after that documenting not just the preparation process but a lot of the artwork I was creating in the museum and some of the other projects we were doing and I found an online community like I found a digital community of other museum volunteers or other art majors who wanted to find their own museum collection to volunteer or even people who were you know amateur taxidermists who wanted to help bring some of these animals back to life. And so I built up a following of about 10000 people who started regularly reading my blog about the museum and eventually that that blog helped to develop the web series that I have now with the Field Museum in Chicago. Yeah that is amazing that that moment that you discuss with the changeover and feeling about putting your name on it. Do you does find it to be an artistic project process or do you feel that it's different than the artistic process. Well I would say creating study skins. It helps if you have a background in art. I think you know if you ask any or look at any of the volunteers or interns that we have at the Field Museum specifically a number of them have backgrounds in our. And I think a lot of that has to do with hand eye coordination right. Attention to detail. I ended up teaching or being the teacher for the vertebrate Ostalgie class for graduate students at the University of Montana for a semester because as an art major you're taught to hone your observation skills. [00:10:43] And so when you're teaching graduate archaeology students how to differentiate certain kinds of animal bones whether they're trying to identify them from a faunal assemblage of you know a native tribe that lived in that area 10000 years ago or if it's sometimes we would work with the Montana crime lab and the police department and they would find a Barebone or someone would bring them a limb bone and they find in the middle of the woods and sometimes these hikers would think like I think this is a human arm or did this belong to a child or something and so they take it to our comparative collection and I got to work with the Montana crime lab to as of like a forensic geologist to help them identify where this animal was coming from and we never had a human. It was always like a ham bone. Yeah a bear bone or something like that but I was able to do that because of my background in art and being able to understand that you know morphological differences or the shape or the size differences between different vertebrate species. That's amazing. That's fascinating. I love it. Ok cool. So you got to kind of be like a forensic scientist in a way also like a sleuth. Yeah kind of. You know I was mostly just a facilitator. I was working with the curator of the museum at the time Dave Dyer who was you know really had the background in mythology and asked geology but he taught me a lot. And you know it was really fun to look at some of these cases and he would put out quizzes and you know kind of test your knowledge. It was a really fun game but it was also you know had important educational implications to it as well. That's so interesting. [00:12:14] I know that also in the dissection of animals used to be a requirement in a lot of school programs and then sort of went away and maybe is how do you feel about that being in schools now do you think that's a really important part of the science pedagogy. Well I think it depends on the learner. Ultimately it depends on who it is you're working with as a student. I know from myself personally had I had more opportunities to do more hands on learning experience experiments when I was in middle and high school. I might have felt a little bit more empowered to think that oh science is something that I can do or I can use my observational skills in this way whereas in my educational background growing up in rapid city South Dakota you know we just a lot of it just immediately went to like standardized tests. Right. And now you know naming diagrams and really took a lot of the creativity out of it. From my perspective so I think there's a true value in getting kids to be hands on especially when it comes to things like that. Gross out stigma sort of thing like if you can perpetuate a culture of curiosity and inquisitiveness rather than one that is just wanting to you know make things from the natural world seem as though there are other foreign or alien or bad or gross or weird you know anything that just fosters the the genuine question asking and answering seeking motivations behind it I think is worth supporting. All right well that's a little bit about your back story. [00:13:47] We're going to take a little musical break and when we come back we'll talk a little more about brain scoop with the awesome Web show that you have and also your work at the field museum. So you know me on the show I like to introduce you to different music. The first song we're going to listen to is called Eye to Eye. And it's by Jordan Rakei on the album Wildflower and you are listening to KSUU thunder ninety one point one. I'd like to turn our discussion to the brain scoop. Can you tell us a little bit about how it got started. I know you talked this morning but just for anybody who's listening to just a quick bit of how it kind of got started and then the transfer over to Chicago. [00:18:34] Yes so after I started this blog where I was posting kind of our day to day work on and on about the Zoological Museum at the University of Montana I ended up meeting this man named Hank Green and he's probably best known for being half of the YouTube series vlogbrothers he and his brother John Green are they've been making videos on YouTube for well over ten years now and Super fame. Yeah yeah. I mean it's kind of ridiculous to try and summarize like everything they do because they're such important roles and like the Internet education and just like positive support network community online. But anyway Hank happened to live in Missoula Montana where I was living at the same time. And we ended up getting connected because he was launching a new educational series called Crash Course and they were doing a video about the vertebrate skeleton. So it made a lot of sense for him to come. Actually he reached out to see if he could come film it in the collection. I was volunteering it and I was over the moon are so excited. And so that's how I met Hank and he and I kind of talked on and off over a couple of months and eventually he came back to the museum in sort of long story short I gave him a tour of the collection which he uploaded on there Vlogbrothers channel. You can still watch it today. It's called. Oh she what is that video called thoughts from dead animals. That's what it's called. It's the thoughts from places they do the series called thoughts from places and this was thoughts from the museum so he called it thoughts from dead animals. But anyway you know the response to it was so overwhelming it's nothing like I've ever seen. [00:20:04] I mean in a couple of days it had been watched a quarter of a million times and the overwhelming majority of comments on the video were just like you know we want to see more of Emily and we want to see more the museum and you should give her only her own channel and so just a couple days later he he emailed me and I'll never forget getting that email because he just basically said well people like this would you want to me would you want to have your own YouTube channel I'd help you get it started and I was completely blown away because at that time you know I was recently unemployed like didn't really wasn't the right thing wasn't going super well for me and I would just kind of trying to get into like a Masters museum studies program and figure out what I wanted to do and this was a I thought a great opportunity. I had no expectation for what would happen with it. Had you ever been on the radio or TV or performed. I mean I know you play the violin but had you ever done any of that kind of thing like been on my before. Well not not to that degree no. I mean I took children's theatre you know and I did some drama performances in high school but I was also like a nerdy kid with a mouthful of braces so act like I'd mostly like ran the lights because I couldn't enunciate on stage at all. [00:21:23] And I had done some promo video stuff from the museum but like never really was coached in it you know and and so Hank came to me and he's like wow you know all you can work with one of our producers Michael Aranda and we'll get you started with some basic equipment but then he left the country for a month to go on tour with his brother John to promote the fault in our stars so that John's Young Adult author and so Hank just kind of left me and Michael and left us to our own devices and when he got back like our channel had just blown up. That's amazing. To what do you attribute. I mean you're so comfortable and so charismatic onscreen. I mean is it just the passion for your subject is it just the curiosity to what do you attribute it. Well I would say the passion and the curiosity certainly but like that has to be fostered and just the vote of confidence from somebody like Hank Green. Like someone who has done this who has been doing this who has like founded in established educational programs that had millions of subscribers and he and his brother were then and are still now some of the best known names in like online education for that person to just email you after knowing you for a week and say like I think you'd be good at this and just knowing that they probably don't tell other people that everyday. Yeah it was like you know. AFT I'm a big Hamilton fan now but it's sort of one of those things where you like I'm not throwing away my shot and I just decided like I don't know what this is going to go but I know I'm not going to take just half ass. So we went I just gave it my all and and just kind of went for it. [00:23:03] It sounds like you are that way as a person though. I mean when you do something you go all in. Like you're not just going to volunteer in a museum and bide your time you're going to try to organize the collection. And I mean that kind of. Go get it. This must also be intrinsically and you I do have a lot of grit and that was definitely the case with me and my art program like you know you're supposed to start working on your senior thesis painting before your spring semester right. And and I was already conceptualizing what I wanted to do like the summer before my senior year. And so you know I've just always I've just always had a lot of pride in being a hard worker. Like when I was in high school I got my first job when I was 14 and so I've always worked hard at and I've always put in the hours. But to me like that's what's so gratifying about it is knowing that you really have done your best and put your best foot forward. And so working on a YouTube channel that had an audience that had potential that was going to help me bring this museum that I'd already spent two years trying to bring to the public just like I'm going to go for it. I love it. That's awesome. So now it went before and before I get to Chicago. [00:24:17] For anybody who may be listening and not familiar with the brain scoop how would you describe how would you describe the brain scoop in like two sentences if you had to the brain scoop is an educational YouTube channel that aims to share the behind the scenes work in collections and research with anybody with the world so perfect. Yeah that's great. Well and of course for those of you who may be interested and not familiar with it just google it and you can find tons and tons of videos in a wide variety of different types of subjects and different angles different locations and we can get into that too. So now the brains group is how's the back brain scoop is housed in Chicago in the field museum and tell me about what life is like there. Yes we've been doing the brain scoop for a couple of months before we started to receive quite a bit of media attention. So we'd been written about by NPR Scientific American. There was like a no in a blog from now geographic like is it incredible for me. And eventually we gain the attention of the Field Museum in Chicago and I got invited out to kind of do some videos with them and after a couple of days they just sat me down in this conference room and basically I said like we'd like to bring you on board here and bring your channel with you. And that was amazing to me as someone who just aspired to work in a museum someday in any capacity to have this new position created for me. I mean I have the job title now as chief curiosity correspondent. So that was an amazing experience and so we brought the brain scoop to the Field Museum in July of 2013 and I've been there ever since so about four and a half years now. That's so cool yeah. [00:26:04] What's a typical day in the life like for you. Well to be honest the typical day is not that exciting because you don't believe it. Well it's a lot of like there's so much planning involved and there's so much like production timelines and scheduling and like there is quite a bit of paperwork and budgeting and you know that kind of back and stuff. But but the really special days are when we get to go out in the field or when we get to interview scientists and so just a couple of weeks ago we ended up filming in Berlin Germany at the Museum of Natural History there. And so it was three months of planning and organizing and everything. But once we're there I mean I got to you know got to see one of the best most iconic fossils of all time the Archaeopteryx specimen which is most of the famous most of the transitional species between birds and dinosaurs like it is wow a famous fossil. I got to be in the historic bird collection at the museum there and the museum for Netter kinda was established in 1814 so this museum is over 200 years old and has endured two world wars so isn't it one of the oldest. It must be it's one of the oldest collections. Yeah and certainly you know the building itself was built in the 1980s. But a day like that is just like you're looking at specimens and a collection that are simultaneously Lake scientifically important but also the witnesses to history like the whole eastern wing of this building was completely destroyed by allied bombing in 1945. [00:27:39] And so you're standing in a reconstructed wing of this institution and just thinking about those decades and centuries of history. I mean those are the kind of moments that are really live for and it doesn't matter that I had to spend three months of like paperwork and figuring out import permits for camera equipment or whatever else like you know once you're there you really try to appreciate those moments. Sounds pretty magical. It's it's pretty cool. Well it's time for another musical break. The next piece that I'd like to show you is a piece called Nomada and that's by Kaleema and it's on the album Nomada. And you are listening to the apex hour on Thunder ninety one point one Suu welcome back. This is Lynn Vartan and you're listening to the apex hour here on KSUU you thunder ninety one point one. Today's show is a best of show that bit that you were just listening to was from February and that was when we had the awesome scientist and YouTube sensation and founder of the coolest YouTube channel Brain Scoop Emily Graslie was here with us in February talking about her life and all of her awesome activities and travels. But now we're going to turn our attention to the outdoors. SUU is outdoors nation. And so in the studio. Also in February I was joined with Bridget Eastep and Kevin Koontz talking about all the awesome possibilities that we have here on campus for students faculty staff and community members that have to do with the outdoors. Have a listen. And I want to rejoin our conversation talking about our cool partnership program that's called semester in the park. [00:33:02] So Kevin I think you're going to tell us about that this semester in the parks program. It's again pretty unique to Southern Utah University. I like to think of it as kind of a study abroad but rather than going abroad the students get to live at Bryce Canyon. They get to work at one of the resorts close to there and during the course of the semester they're able to visit all of our surrounding parks and monuments and different public lands. And they have a course load that kind of incorporates the theme the themes of public lands and preservation conservation stewardship and just kind of kind of honing those outdoor skills altogether. It's 15 credit. So it's an entire. I mean as we said it's semester in the park. So how does that work in terms of their normal course start. So you said it's like a study abroad. So does it do they just kind of take that semester. And this is that semester. So it sort of replaces a semester in a way. Yeah. All of the classes are taken like I said as a cohort to all the students have all the same classes together. And yet they spent the whole semester with that group of students and kind of visiting these different amazing places but it's really fun because the professors actually come to you and you have a classroom in Bryce Canyon right off the room. That's amazing. [00:34:36] And from there a lot of the professors are like OK let's go out into the parking and look at the different aspects that the park offers to learn about the content in the courses and they stay where exactly they stay at Ruby’s in which is just right outside the entrance to Bryce Canyon there and they also work right. And it's part of the it's part of the course load really as as the. There's the hospitality kind of portion of that and the students earn a certificate in interdisciplinary Park studies. Oh that's great. So what's an example of the kind of work that they're doing. I mean they're there waiting tables or they're doing it. It does depend on really the student and the experience that they bring in. But again most of the students end up working in hospitality. That's the fancy way of saying you get trained out of bed. Ah I'm doing those pieces of it. But Beason is really also dedicated to the learning experience. So one they do need that work to be done and part of the reason this experience works is because we're able to help them with the shoulder season. So we provide those workers to do the hospitality work that they need to do. But on top of that they're like OK let's give you some experience with guiding tours or you know we've had students that have had hospitality backgrounds so they end up. She also spoke French so that helped. But she also says she ended up working at the front desk. Now there are different things you can do within it but most of them end up changing a lot of that. Yeah. And then how often how many hours a day are they in class. How long is a typical day in this semester in the park parks students of typical days you wake up normal time. [00:36:33] And then you go to work and you work in the morning. OK you get a break and then you go to class in the afternoon and the classes have a different class focus each day. So you'll have English one day and then you'll have suddenly a top floor the next day you'll have criminal justice the next day you'll have Americans in the outdoors the next day and then every other weekend you have to feel blab time with those courses and you'll go and visit Lake Mead or Gold Butte or Zion or great bass bass. So you really get to know the different parks within it but you don't just visit them because you're looking at it through those different lenses and trying to understand the parks like. All right. How does criminal justice help conserve this park. And then how do how in American and the outdoors are really looking out like what's the value of the parks to our society and how can the parks offer that experience to the visitors in the best way. And what's the visitor experience and how are those visitors managed. A lot of the same kind of challenges that Superintendent Jeff Brady spoke about today during his presentation and how the faculty for semester in the parks comes from. Specifically the faculty in the outdoor education area or is it across the boards across the board. So in 2018 in the fall of Laura Walker from English we have Samwell as from Buyology we have Kelly Akunin from outdoor recreation. We have Brian Burton from criminal justice. And then we have Ann Smith also from Alto recreation and then I get help with the field trips. [00:38:14] Cool. And then they cut to weekends there. There were there exploring and learning and then and do they. Is there free time said. I mean do they come back into town. Do you know how they handle the rest of their time I'm just it. It does become again downtime. Well I guess the best way is safe downtime for them to have wives. Right. Which when you're doing an emergency master. Right. Is really appreciated. And it's just time to do your homework to catch up with friends to take the time that you need to make sure that you're rejuvenated and healthy. It's one of the parks likes to do the fun things that are out there. Yeah. Yeah. Such a cool concept. And this this concept we've been doing this for how long. Two years two years. We're going to be offering our third year and it's each fall semesters or just the fall fall or fall semester only. Yep. And again if you my favorite way to do things on the web is just to google it. So if you Google actually use mastering the parks it will take you to that home page and applications are due mid March. So again have been accepted yes. Now's the time right. This is the time to be looking if you're interested in this. I mean totally go check it out. It's only our Kappus 15 students to be able to give the experience that we want to you. So we do need people to actually apply. [00:39:35] But on time so that we can make sure that we get the best cohort possible. Right. So if you're out there and you're feeling super passionate about it get on it right away. Google semester in the parks. See you and take a look at the application. But time is running out it seems like you're probably getting pretty close to having that locked down. So that's such a cool program and I think probably the maybe the only one there maybe something similar but not to this extent. I mean this is just such a special opportunity to have a study abroad but yet also nearby. But yet in a completely different environment in Bryce Canyon. So and earn a certificate in a single semester which is also kind of unique. That's great. And how do you guys feel about it. Some of the topics that we were talking about today do you have any comments on. We were talking about conservation preservation. Do you have any suggestions or thoughts about anything that students or our listeners and I think we should be aware of that we should be doing or advice that you have that you'd like to impart. Oh Bridgette don't talk about the sustainability. Oh yep. Actually you does have a sustainability miner and we've just worked with a group of faculty to rework it but it is a unique lens. And I guess the way that I look at majors and minors is it gives you a perspective to interact with the world. [00:41:04] Some of them you just dedicate to your profession but otherwise you can take the sustainability minor add it to the major that you're doing and just see the world through a different lens. And so you'll be looking at and asking the questions is like how can we help our society be sustainable. And in that it's not just I guess the scarcity part of it but it's being sustainable in here and really being like a healthy society and that is going to be looking at the ways that we use energy the ways that we interact with the outdoors the ways that we build things and utilize resources so that it's not just for our generation but for future generations as well. That's amazing that we have that as well. All right. I'm going to play one last song and then we're going to come back with what is fast turning into everybody's favorite part of the radio show which is asking you guys about what's turning you on right now. Books TV movies all that kind of stuff getting into the nitty gritty and getting some inspiration for our listeners. But before we do that I have one last song and this one is not Valentine related but it's maybe Olympics related. I've been watching a lot of the winter of Olympics and this is a group that I mentioned last week called Grand tapestry that I think is really interesting from their album titled Grand tapestry. And this song is called Champion. And once again you were listening to the APEX hour on Thunder ninety one point one KSUU. [00:47:05] Well welcome back. This is Lynn Vartan you're listening to the apex hour here on KSUU Thunder ninety one point one. That song that you just heard is olympic inspired it's called Champion by grand tapestry on the album Grand tapestry. [00:47:22] We have just a few minutes left here for the Apex Hour this week and we're going to do the thing that everybody seems to be loving which is what's turning you on this week. Some to start with you. Bridget what's turning you on and it couldn't be books movies TV podcasts. What's something you'd like to share that you're really excited about. Well I am going to say that the book that has gotten me to think the most in the last six months is Florence Williams the nature effects and in that I get to talk about my soapbox because it's all about how the outdoors is good for people. Our brains are wired for it. It makes you a better thinker. It makes your body work better it helps you create social bonds it helps you create meaning for your life and so it actually takes the time to go through the research and tell the stories that we all need to be connected to the natural world. And can you tell us the title and author of that book again. Yep it's Florence Williams and that's the nature facts. You were not the first time I've heard of this thing this week. And stay tuned. We may be researching trying to get her out to see you as an apex future speaker. So let's fingers crossed for that. But I also have to say that I really my passion in this world is to connect people to the outdoors and especially for learning and I really have seen it time and time again. [00:48:51] If you're a stressed out student in the library take the time walk around a beautiful campus because we have a park for our campus so I can guarantee you that your brain is going to work better and you're going to be able to focus and and actually enjoy what you're doing and just being stressed out. Midterms are coming up so everybody get outside and take a look around. That's great. Great advice. Thank you Kevin. How about you. What's inspiring you right now. I've been reading glory land by Shelton Johnson. The story of a buffalo soldier who serves in Yosemite National Park before the Park Service existed in the parks were kind of being overseen by the cavalry and kind of regulated that way. So it's a it's a very interesting perspective on early early park maintenance so to speak. That's amazing. Tell us the name and the title and author of the title is Gloryland and author Shelton Johnson. And again another sort of Apex plug right. This has been one that's come down the pike as a suggestion for future events so we may see what we can do to find these people on campus. Well that is so cool. Do you have any final words or any final things you'd like to promote or announce. There are so many great opportunities here and Su you know students often get bogged down with classwork. They feel like oh I wanna go on a trip I just don't have time or I want to go to the park. I just can't get away from this project or this paper or his presentation that I'm working on. [00:50:30] You got you got to make the time really you gotta make the time to do the things that you want to do otherwise you'll never find it. And all up the ante for that is one of the reasons that actually you has the program especially the outdoor ads put in is for people to actually say I want to learn and then you fill in the blank and you create a project to do it and the outer edge projects are the ones that I love so much because it's people that really want to learn or do something and then they figure out how to do it. So we have people that are one of my favorites as he builds a new and in that he wanted to learn woodworking skills so that he could go out and be a better theater teacher. Perfect in it so there's projects like that. And so I think that you find what you want to do and you can turn it into your project. Get that requirement out of the way by doing something that you love while I love it. Thank you guys so much for your time today. I really appreciate getting to know everything we have to offer here for us. Yeah. And so you heard it all if you want to even think from going camping come down and check out the Outdoor Center here in the Sharwan Smith Center right across in the welcome center or if you want to look at class offerings online or get involved with the internship program or semester in the parks. Get busy with your Google and find out ways to get outside and experience our awesome landscape. [00:51:58] Well that wraps up another show for us here at the apex hour on KSUU thunder ninety one point one. That was a best of show you heard past moments from February of 2018 because we are on spring break and I am in Los Angeles saying hello and looking forward to getting back in the studio for more action to come. Thanks for listening until next week. This is Lynn Vartan saying goodbye from the apex hour here on Thunder ninety one point one.
Shelton Johnson returns to the Park Leaders Show for episode 101. If you missed part 1 of his interview, you can listen to it here. In this episode, Shelton talks about the importance of telling stories. Shelton's Buffalo Soldiers program at Yosemite National Park has brought a story back to life that the world nearly forgot. Shelton also discusses making meaningful connections with people. "The surest way to change the future is to change today." - Shelton Johnson Shelton is the author of the novel Gloryland.
Drummer and musician Don Heffington's credit list is so long as to be nearly unprintable. He started out in the early 1970s, and he has had a steady career since, backing up artists of all stripes - from lesser known bands to numerous acts who have become household names. A fractional sampling from his resume includes Bob Dylan, Emmylou Harris, Joe Walsh, Lucinda Williams, The Jayhawks, Buddy Miller, k.d. lang, The Wallflowers, Sheryl Crow, Dwight Yoakam, Joe Cocker and countless others, so it's no wonder his phone continues to ring. It isn't so much flash that he brings to a recording session or live gig, but more of an affable, no-BS approach to making music that makes it easy to have him around. On top of steady session work, one of his current regular gigs is playing drums for the reigning kings and queens of the scene at Los Angeles' Largo, The Watkins Family Hour, where Heffington shares the communal and creative vibe with former Nickel Creek members Sara and Sean Watkins, along with Fiona Apple, Benmont Tench, Greg Leisz and Sebastian Steinberg. But it's Heffington's new album, Gloryland, that allows space to get him out from behind the drumkit and in front of the mic singing almost-spoken word vocals on ten of his quirky but incisive original compositions. Imagine Tom Waits as a tall, lank, well-traveled and friendly train conductor with a mischievous twinkle in his eye.
Drummer and musician Don Heffington’s credit list is so long as to be nearly unprintable. He started out in the early 1970s, and he has had a steady career since, backing up artists of all stripes - from lesser known bands to numerous acts who have become household names. A fractional sampling from his resume includes Bob Dylan, Emmylou Harris, Joe Walsh, Lucinda Williams, The Jayhawks, Buddy Miller, k.d. lang, The Wallflowers, Sheryl Crow, Dwight Yoakam, Joe Cocker and countless others, so it’s no wonder his phone continues to ring. It isn’t so much flash that he brings to a recording session or live gig, but more of an affable, no-BS approach to making music that makes it easy to have him around. On top of steady session work, one of his current regular gigs is playing drums for the reigning kings and queens of the scene at Los Angeles’ Largo, The Watkins Family Hour, where Heffington shares the communal and creative vibe with former Nickel Creek members Sara and Sean Watkins, along with Fiona Apple, Benmont Tench, Greg Leisz and Sebastian Steinberg. But it’s Heffington’s new album, Gloryland, that allows space to get him out from behind the drumkit and in front of the mic singing almost-spoken word vocals on ten of his quirky but incisive original compositions. Imagine Tom Waits as a tall, lank, well-traveled and friendly train conductor with a mischievous twinkle in his eye.
Drummer and musician Don Heffington’s credit list is so long as to be nearly unprintable. He started out in the early 1970s, and he has had a steady career since, backing up artists of all stripes - from lesser known bands to numerous acts who have become household names. A fractional sampling from his resume includes Bob Dylan, Emmylou Harris, Joe Walsh, Lucinda Williams, The Jayhawks, Buddy Miller, k.d. lang, The Wallflowers, Sheryl Crow, Dwight Yoakam, Joe Cocker and countless others, so it’s no wonder his phone continues to ring. It isn’t so much flash that he brings to a recording session or live gig, but more of an affable, no-BS approach to making music that makes it easy to have him around. On top of steady session work, one of his current regular gigs is playing drums for the reigning kings and queens of the scene at Los Angeles’ Largo, The Watkins Family Hour, where Heffington shares the communal and creative vibe with former Nickel Creek members Sara and Sean Watkins, along with Fiona Apple, Benmont Tench, Greg Leisz and Sebastian Steinberg. But it’s Heffington’s new album, Gloryland, that allows space to get him out from behind the drumkit and in front of the mic singing almost-spoken word vocals on ten of his quirky but incisive original compositions. Imagine Tom Waits as a tall, lank, well-traveled and friendly train conductor with a mischievous twinkle in his eye.
Shelton Johnson is a ranger with the National Park Service and has worked for the National Parks for 28 years. After growing up in inner-city Detroit, he found his way to Yellowstone and now Yosemite, where he has been for the past 22 years. He is the author of Gloryland and has shaken hands with both Oprah Winfrey and President Barack Obama.
Pastor Nate talks about how sometimes God allows pain to make us stronger and to show that He is Greater in praise.
Pastor Jacob continues his message on Breaking the Spirit of Barrenness in your life.
Pastor Jacob continues his message on Breaking the Spirit of Barrenness in your life.
Pastor Nate talks on who the I AM is in us.
Pastor Nate talks about giving God praise and glory for all He's done and let the world know who is in control.
Pastor Jacob takes us through putting on the whole armor of God and how to defend ourselves in spiritual warfare.
"Toe Tappin', Hand Clappin', Knee Slappin' , "Picken' and Grinnin" Bluegrass Gospel Song,"JUST OVER IN THE GLORYLAND"Banjos, Traditional Bluegrass Guitar, Shufflin' Fiddles, Dobro, Mandolins, and Classic Bluegrass Acoustic Upright Bass, Handclaps and Tambourine. Also, Lyrics & Guitar Chords below.Blessings to You,Shiloh Worship MusicWww.ShilohWorshipMusic.comJust Over In The GloryLandWritten in 1906 WORDS: James W. Acuff MUSIC: Emmett S. Dean Copyright: Public Domain© 2012 Shiloh Worship MusicVERSE 1:G C GI've a home prepared, where the saints a-bide, Em A7 D7Just over in the Glory-land! G C GAnd I long to be by my Savior's side, Em D7 GJust over in the Glory-land! CHORUS:GJust over in the Gloryland, C GI'll join the happy angel band, Em A7 D7Just over in the Glory-land! GJust over in the Gloryland, C GThere with the mighty host I'll stand, Em D7 GJust over in the Glory-land!VERSE 2:G C GI am on my way to those mansions fair, Em A7 D7Just over in the Gloryland! G C GThere to sing God's praise and His glory share, Em A7 D7Just over in the Gloryland! (REPEAT CHORUS)VERSE 3:G C GWhat a joyful thought that my Lord, I'll see, Em A7 D7Just over in the Gloryland! G C GAnd with kindred saved, there forever be, Em A7 D7Just over in the Gloryland! (REPEAT CHORUS)VERSE 4:G C GWith the blood-washed throng, I will shout and sing, Em A7 D7Just over in the Gloryland! G C GGlad hosannas to Christ, the Lord and King, Em A7 D7Just over in the Gloryland! (REPEAT CHORUS)© 2012 Shiloh Worship Music COPY FREELY;This Music is copyrighted to prevent misuse, however,permission is granted for non-commercial copying-Radio play permitted www.shilohworshipmusic.com
FTB podcast #154 features the new album by KEVIN GORDON called Gloryland. Also new music from KEN WILL MORTON, BUXTON & THE MOONCUSSERS. Here is the RSS feed: http://ftbpodcasts.libsyn.com/rss. Freight Train Boogie podcasts also air weekly on RootHog Radio on Thursday night at 7:00 pm CST and again Friday Morning at 10:00 am CST. Show #154 KEVIN GORDON - Don't Stop Me This Time (Gloryland) CHELSEA CROWELL - I'm Gonna Freeze (Crystal City) DeSOTO RUST - Northern Road (Highway Gothic) KEN WILL MORTON - Broken Windows (Contenders) (mic break) KATIE PEARLMAN - Girls Like Us (Girls Like Us) NEARLY BELOVED - My Memory (Where's Bob?) DANNY BARNES - Poison (Rocket) BUXTON - Box Of Nine (Nothing Here Seems Strange) KEVIN GORDON - Gloryland (Gloryland) (mic break) DAVE CARTER & TRACY GRAMMER - Hard Edge of Livin’ (Little Blue Egg) ROSE COUSINS - The Darkness (We Have Made A Spark) THE KERNAL - Where We're Standing (Farewellhello) DONAL HINELY - Five Bucks (The Famous Rocket Cage) THE MOONCUSSERS - Worcester Boy (Aperitif) (mic break) KEVIN GORDON - Tearing It Down (Gloryland) (March 2nd, 2012) Bill Frater Freight Train Boogie
It's hard to overstate the impact that Dr. Ralph Stanley has had on bluegrass and old-time gospel music. Now 82, he sits atop a 60-year legacy of making music, both as the preeminent purveyor of clawhammer-style banjo picking and as a singer with one of the most widely imitated (but never duplicated) voices in country music. For this short Tiny Desk Concert, Stanley performs three classic songs, all a cappella: "Gloryland," "Turn Back, Turn Back" and "Amazing Grace."