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Battery storage has become a key pillar of the energy transition, driving improvements in grid stability and renewable integration. Understanding how investment and technology have evolved over the last decade is key to grasping the market's growth, the role of private equity, and the challenges and opportunities that lie ahead for large-scale deployment.In this episode of Transmission, Jim Mills, Managing Director of Adaptogen Capital, shares his insights into the growth of the battery storage market and the role of private equity in driving change. From challenges in financing to future market trends, Jim offers a detailed look at the factors shaping the energy transition. Over the course of the conversation you'll hear about:How the battery storage market has changed over the last 10 years, from early-stage development to large-scale deployment.Why private equity has been a key driver in scaling battery infrastructure and attracting institutional capital.Insights into the financial, regulatory, and technological hurdles that have impacted market growth.Jim's take on emerging market trends, including the rise of co-located storage and grid-scale projects.How Adaptogen Capital identifies opportunities and structures deals to mitigate risk and maximize returns.About our guestJim Mills is Managing Director at Adaptogen Capital. Jim has extensive experience in private equity and has successfully raised and deployed funds in the battery storage sector. With a career spanning over two decades, Jim has worked closely with energy developers, investors, and policymakers to navigate the complexities of renewable energy financing and infrastructure development.Adaptogen Capital is an investment firm focused on energy storage projects that support grid stability and the transition to renewable energy. Investing in large-scale battery storage assets and helping to enhance grid flexibility and enable greater integration of renewable power sources. For more information, head to their website. About Modo EnergyModo Energy helps the owners, operators, builders, and financiers of battery energy storage solutions understand the market - and make the most out of their assets.All of our podcasts are available to watch or listen to on the Modo Energy site. To keep up with all of our latest updates, research, analysis, videos, podcasts, data visualizations, live events, and more, follow us on LinkedIn or Twitter. Check out The Energy Academy, our bite-sized video series breaking down how power markets work.
Battery storage has become a key pillar of the energy transition, driving improvements in grid stability and renewable integration. Understanding how investment and technology have evolved over the last decade is key to grasping the market's growth, the role of private equity, and the challenges and opportunities that lie ahead for large-scale deployment.In this episode of Transmission, Jim Mills, Managing Director of Adaptogen Capital, shares his insights into the growth of the battery storage market and the role of private equity in driving change. From challenges in financing to future market trends, Jim offers a detailed look at the factors shaping the energy transition. Over the course of the conversation you'll hear about:How the battery storage market has changed over the last 10 years, from early-stage development to large-scale deployment.Why private equity has been a key driver in scaling battery infrastructure and attracting institutional capital.Insights into the financial, regulatory, and technological hurdles that have impacted market growth.Jim's take on emerging market trends, including the rise of co-located storage and grid-scale projects.How Adaptogen Capital identifies opportunities and structures deals to mitigate risk and maximize returns.About our guestJim Mills is Managing Director at Adaptogen Capital. Jim has extensive experience in private equity and has successfully raised and deployed funds in the battery storage sector. With a career spanning over two decades, Jim has worked closely with energy developers, investors, and policymakers to navigate the complexities of renewable energy financing and infrastructure development.Adaptogen Capital is an investment firm focused on energy storage projects that support grid stability and the transition to renewable energy. Investing in large-scale battery storage assets and helping to enhance grid flexibility and enable greater integration of renewable power sources. For more information, head to their website. About Modo EnergyModo Energy helps the owners, operators, builders, and financiers of battery energy storage solutions understand the market - and make the most out of their assets.All of our podcasts are available to watch or listen to on the Modo Energy site. To keep up with all of our latest updates, research, analysis, videos, podcasts, data visualizations, live events, and more, follow us on LinkedIn or Twitter. Check out The Energy Academy, our bite-sized video series breaking down how power markets work.
Great banjo playing from Jim Mills, wonderful mandolin playing from David Grisman & Sam Bush, with a generous helping of fine picking & singing from the Stanley Brothers, Alison Krauss and lots of others. Pure delight!
A very eclectic collection of the varying shades of bluegrass in this episode, almost as many colours as in an artist's blue palette. Lou Reid, Norman Blake, Jeremy Stephens, Jean-Luc Leroux, the Lonesome River Band, Frank Solivan, the Whitstein Brothers, Bluestone, Claire Lynch, Jim Mills – something for everyone. Enjoy!
www.patreon.com/banjopodcast With the unexpected passing of banjo legend Jim Mills (December 18, 1966 – May 3, 2024), we revisit this interview originally released as Episode #111. This episode features the incomporable Jim Mills, one of the top banjo players of his generation and a purveyor of the traditional Scruggs-style of playing. Jim has won the IBMA Banjo Player of the Year award a record 6 times, as well as numerous Grammy awards. He has also established himself as one of the top experts, collectors, and dealers for Pre-War Gibson Mastertone banjos, a subject which he wrote a book about!
This is the final episode in the series celebrating Earl Scruggs' 100th birthday. My guest for this one is Jim Mills. Jim is a fantastic banjo player, who spent over a decade playing with Ricky Skaggs and Kentucky Thunder. He's also an expert on pre-War Gibson banjos, so is the perfect person to talk about how the banjos Earl played influenced the sound and, as a result, the type of banjo people look for to this day.If you want to find out more about Jim, including infohon his business buying and selling vintage banjos, check out his website prewargibsonbanjos.comIf you haven't checked out parts 1- 3 ( featuring Tony Trischka, Kristin Scott Benson, Jerry Douglas, Alison Brown. Tim O'Brien, Trey Hensley, Kyle Tuttle, Alan Munde and Willow Osborne), go and listen to those too!Happy picking.Matt Support the show===- Sign up to get updates on new episodes - Free fiddle tune chord sheets- Here's a list of all the Bluegrass Jam Along interviews- Follow Bluegrass Jam Along for regular updates: Instagram Facebook - Review us on Apple Podcasts
... a 1 on 1 interview like you have never heard before! #UNFILTERED
... a 1 on 1 interview like you have never heard before! #UNFILTERED
American Drive, the Get Down Boys, Michelle Nixon, Claire Lynch, Hot Rize, John Reischman & the Jaybirds all feature on this episode, along with a tune from Doc Watson with Flatt & Scruggs, a banjo tune from Jim Mills, and the Gibson Brothers to round it all out. What's not to like?
In this episode we interview broadcaster and author Alun Wyn Bevan about the non cricketing history of the ground covering some stories from his 2007 book 'St Helen's Stories'.If you are interested in purchasing a copy of the book you can follow this link to the Amazon site. It is well worth considering purchasing a 'used' copy as the quality is often pretty good. It is a fantastic read and cram packed full of cricketing, rugby and other history not all of which was captured in the episode:https://www.amazon.co.uk/Helens-Stories-Alun-Wyn-Bevan/dp/1843238276Find below an extract from Owen Morgan's article for Dai Sport written in 2019. We will publish some more of it when the cricketing episode is published but if you want to read the full article now you can do so by clicking on the link at the end of the notes:Whether sitting on the sun-drenched boundary watching first class cricket, or standing on the rain lashed terrace enjoying three codes of international football, sports lovers have flocked to St Helen's for over 140 years.And it's not just its vast array of sporting entertainment and longevity that sets the blue plaque venue apart from the rest. The truly historic moments it has witnessed over the years make it an integral part of not just Swansea's but Wales' sporting landscape.The first ever home Welsh rugby international was played at St Helen's back in 1882 when England were the visitors.The ground regularly hosted Wales 15-a-side internationals, attracting crowds of up to 50,000 up until 1954 when it was decided to abandon St Helen's for Cardiff. But perhaps the most notable rugby union matches played at St Helen's came at club level with Swansea RFC as the hosts.When the All Whites beat New Zealand in 1935, it wasn't just the first win by a Welsh club over All Blacks, but the 11-3 success still stands as the biggest winning margin by any Welsh team against the illustrious tourists at club or international level.The historic win was inspired by a pair of Gowerton Grammar School sixth formers - Haydn Tanner and Willie Davies. Afterwards, the visitors' captain Jack Manchester pleaded with the press: "Tell them we have been beaten, but don't tell them it was by a pair of schoolboys."The victory was also notable for the fact that Swansea became the first Welsh club to complete the Southern Hemisphere hat-trick having beaten Australia in 1908 and South Africa in 1912.And, of course, the All Whiles repeated the dose against Australia in 1992, when the Wallabies arrived in Swansea as the reigning World Champions.But it's not only rugby union the ground has hosted. A number of rugby league internationals have been played there . . . the first of which was a 26-10 win over England in 1945.Two World Cup matches were also hosted in 1975 when Wales lost to Australia 18-6 and beat New Zealand 25-24.The latter match saw one of the most notorious incidents in the ground's history when Welsh union and league legend Jim Mills was sent off for stamping on the head of New Zealand prop John Greengrass as the Kiwi prop went over for a try.And it's not just league and union codes of football that have been played at St Helen's. Association football has also featured at the seaside ground.Back in 1894, the Welsh football team, which had previously played the majority of its matches in Wrexham, decided to head down south to play Ireland in the British Home International Championships and ran out 4-1 winners.https://www.dai-sport.com/get-st-helens-sunshine-sea-special-sporting-memories/
For his 99th birth anniversary, WNCW honored the late great Earl Scruggs by sharing portions of interviews with artists who knew him, broadcasting stories ranging from brief encounters in young adulthood, like Sierra Hull's memories of Earl, on to years of friendship and collaboration with guests like John McEuen and Pete Wernick (note: Sierra Hull will also be our featured guest in her upcoming episode). These conversations were rich and deep, and helped me understand Earl Scruggs as the man in ways that were at turns surprising, but always inspiring. I asked everyone here essentially the same two questions: tell us your favorite memories or stories about Earl, and talk about his impact as an artist and how that legacy continues since he has been gone. It all adds up to three and a half hours of audio (!), and it should be no surprise that there is a ton of gold to be mined in all those conversations; here is a synopsis, a sampling of everyone's thoughts, insights and memories. This episode hones in on the stories that reveal Earl Scruggs as a humble genius, a quiet and kind man who was in so many ways the same farm boy and mill worker from the foothills of western North Carolina even after living in a mansion in the heart of Nashville. Plus, there is plenty of talk about the genius and enduring legacy of Earl Scruggs, whose namesake lives on in the form of not only his vast catalog of recordings, his songwriting and revolutionary playing style, but also in the Earl Scruggs Center in his home county, housed in the county courthouse built in 1907 in downtown Shelby NC, as well as the Earl Scruggs Music Festival, which began in 2022 and continues on Labor Day weekend in 2023 in nearby Tryon NC. Earl Scruggs In this episode we welcome Kristin Scott Benson, Travis Book, Alison Brown, Sam Bush, Jeff Hanna, Vince Herman, John McEuen, Jim Mills, Earl's nephew J.T. Scruggs, Pete Wernick, and even my dad, who gives us a glimpse of what a Scruggs family gathering was like in the 1950s. Songs heard in this episode:“Earl's Breakdown” by Flatt & Scruggs“You Are My Flower” by Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, from Will the Circle Be Unbroken, excerpt“Hot Corn Cold Corn” by Flatt and Scruggs, from Flatt and Scruggs at Carnegie Hall, excerpt“Some Of Shelley's Blues” by The Earl Scruggs Revue, excerpt“Foggy Mountain Breakdown” by Flatt & ScruggsThanks for stopping by! Would you share this episode with someone too? It takes just a click to follow us on your podcast platform of choice, and then it will only take a minute to give it a good rating, and on platforms with the option, a review. Great ratings and reviews will make Southern Songs and Stories and the artists it profiles more likely to be found by more people just like you.Southern Songs and Stories is a part of the podcast lineup of Osiris Media, with all of the Osiris shows available here. You can also hear new episodes of this podcast on Bluegrass Planet Radio here. Thanks to Corrie Askew for producing the radio adaptations of this series on public radio WNCW, and to Joshua Meng, who wrote and performed our theme songs. This is Southern Songs and Stories: the music of the South and the artists who make it. - Joe Kendrick
www.patreon.com/banjopodcast This episode features the incomporable Jim Mills, one of the top banjo players of his generation and a purveyor of the traditional Scruggs-style of playing. Jim has won the IBMA Banjo Player of the Year award a record 6 times, as well as numerous Grammy awards. He has also established himself as one of the top experts, collectors, and dealers for Pre-War Gibson Mastertone banjos, a subject which he wrote a book about! Sponsored by Peghead Nation, Elderly Instruments, and GHS Strings. Jim Mills on the web: https://prewargibsonbanjos.com/ Contact the show: pickyfingersbanjopodcast@gmail.com
I so much enjoyed playing some of my ‘favourites' last week that I continued again this week, in the last show for 2022! This episodes' favourites include the Bluegrass Album Band, Seldom Scene, Bill Emerson, Rhonda Vincent, John Hartford, Jean-Luc Leroux, Blue Highway, the Dillards, Doyle Lawson, the HCBB, Jim Mills & Paul Brewster – what's not to like?
This week we feature banjo player Jim Mills. We are calling December 2022 banjo month since Earl Scruggs is on our cover and we feel fortunate to have the opportunity to talk about Earl with some of the best Scruggs style players in the country this month. We are going to kick it off this week talking with Jim about his career in bluegrass, Earl Scruggs, J.D. Crowe, and his vintage Gibson banjo business.
I've dug deep into my LP's to find Bill & James Monroe, Red Allen music from the 1970's; there's some contemporary tracks from Hammertowne, Mike Compton; and some favourites like Claire Lynch, Lonesome River Band, Jim Mills, and others. Something for all tastes.
Season 2 Episode 9: On this episode Cheyenne chats with Jim Mills. Jim is the owner and winemaker at Cabin View Winery in Sandpoint, Idaho. Cabin View Winery is a new winery with the 2019 vintage being the first release. Jim has some really fun and different wines to share. We learn about how Jim got into winemaking and about his experience in Washington wine country as well as time spent in New Zealand. Wine Featured: Cabin View Winery 2019 Syrah Find at: www.cabinviewwinery.com
Great banjo playing from Jim Mills, wonderful mandolin playing from David Grisman & Sam Bush, with a generous helping of fine picking & singing from the Stanley Brothers, Alison Krauss and lots of others. Pure delight!
Segunda entrega de canciones con banjo de protagonista o de base principal. Jim Mills toca para Dolly Parton. El actor y banyista Steve Martin se entiende con Edie Brickell. Los hermanos Avett hermanan el banjo con sus influencias beatlelianas. Bela Fleck y Abigail Washburn forman pareja en el banjo y en la vida. La banyista Alison Brown versiona a Cyndi Lauper. Y el country y bluegrass, la americana más contemporánea nos alcanza con Michael Daves, Old Crow Medicine Show, Henhouse Prowlers, The Brother Brothers, The Duhks o nuestros Young Forest y Redon & Gómez. Y la guinda de la exquisitez. DISCO 1 ALISON BROWN Time After Time (6) DISCO 2 HAYSEED DIXIE Black Or White (8) DISCO 3 THE DUHKS Je Pense A Toi (9) DISCO 4 STEVE MARTIN & EDIE BRICKELL Love Has Come For You (1989 - 4) DISCO 5 THE ELMER SNOWDEN QUARTET Alabama Bound (Cara 2 Corte 3) DISCO 6 HURRAY FOR THE RIFF RAFF Blue Ridge Mountain (1) DISCO 7 OLD CROW MEDICINE SHOW Wagon Wheel (11) DISCO 8 REDON & GÓMEZ El Perro, Lluís And Jean-Marie (9 DISCO 9 DOLLY PARTON Train, Train (8) DISCO 10 THE BROTHER BROTHERS Banjo Song (2) DISCO 11 HENHOUSE PROWLERS Spoiler Alert (1) DISCO 12 BELA FLECK & ABIGAIL WASHBURN Banjo Banjo (1989 - 3) DISCO 13 THE AVETT BROTHERS Will You Return (5) DISCO 14 HACKENSAW BOYS Blue-Eyed Girl (11) DISCO 15 YOUNG FOREST Lost (3) DISCO 15 MICHAEL DAVES Train On The Island (Bluegrass)(12) Escuchar audio
Welcome to the twentieth edition of the County Sales Radio Hour with our host Kinney Rorrer. On this show, we feature new releases and classic recordings of the finest bluegrass and old time music. Recent releases from Merle Monroe, Donna Ulisse, Nothin' Fancy, Volume Five, Will Ridenour & Gabriel Pelli, and Scott Prouty. Plus more great music from the Lilly Brothers & Don Stover, Flatt & Scruggs, the Cox Family, the Skillet Lickers, Doc Watson, the Osborne Brothers, Jim Mills, and lots more! Recordings featured on this program are available for purchase through the County Sales website and the County Sales store located in downtown Floyd, VA. You can also hear the County Sales Radio Hour at Radio Bristol every Monday at 12 noon and again on Saturdays at 3 pm.
California Man Dressed As Santa Gets Stuck In Power Lines | HuffPost Downing Street cat grabs the Brexit limelight with pigeon pounce | Reuters 'World's ugliest orchid' among new species named in 2020 | Reuters Doctor dave Yowie - australiaOrang Pendek - indonesiaBigfootWild manSasquatchYetiSkunk apeWendigohttp://saintclaircountybigfoot.wikifoundry.com/page/List+of+Indian+Names+for+Bigfoot History The common name Sasquatch comes from the Salish Sasquits, while the Algonquin of the north-central region of the continent refer to a Witiko or Wendigo. Other nations tell of a large creature much like a man but imbued with special powers and characteristics. The Ojibway of the Northern Plains believed the Rugaru appeared in times of danger and other nations agreed that the hairy apparition was a messenger of warning, telling man to change his ways.North American settlers started reporting sightings during the late 1800s and into the 1900s with the occasional finding of footprints, sporadic encounters and even a few grainy photos and videos adding to the mystery.Modern US concept can be traced to Humboldt Times (california stories in 1958Loggers blamed acts of vandalism on bigfootOnce Bigfoot's story went public, it became a character in men's adventure magazines and cheap trade paperback novels. In these stories, he—for Bigfoot was definitely a “he”—was a primal, dangerous creature out of the past who lurked in the modern wilderness. By the 1970s, pseudo-documentaries were investigating his existence and films were portraying him as a sexual predatorIn the ‘80s, Bigfoot showed his softer side. He became “associated with environmentalism, and a symbol of the wilderness that we need to preserve,” Buhs says. One big example is the 1987 movie Harry and the Hendersons, which portrayed Bigfoot as a friendly, misunderstood creature in need of protection from John Lithgow and his family. SIGHTINGS https://www.outsideonline.com/2097161/10-most-convincing-bigfoot-sightings Arguably the most famous and influential Bigfoot footage is the 1967 film shot by Roger Patterson and Bob Gimlin in Northern California.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-x3__akoM5w A youth group was camping in the Marble Mountain Wilderness when leader Jim Mills noticed a strange-looking creature skulking along a ridge nearby.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hx-AkdgnKnI British explorer Eric Earle Shipton snapped this photo while trekking through the Himalayas in 1951, alleging that the footprint belonged to a Yeti. In 2014, Christie's Auction house in London capitalized on the worldwide interest in bigfoot and sold the original photo for nearly $5,000.https://www.pinterest.com/pin/562246334719966420/Called “The Independence Day” film, this remarkably clear video shows an alleged adult bigfoot walking through the woods, with a cub in tow. The filmmaker and exact location are unknown, and many skeptics claim that there is a telling visible seam of a gorilla suit.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mQ2kU6e8Huo In October 2012, a group of siblings hiking in Provo Canyon thought they spotted a bear in the woods and started filming. When the creature stood up on two legs, the hikers ran—abruptly ending the shaky video. A year later, the siblings launched a kickstarter campaign to investigate other Utah bigfoot sightings.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ss_Gm_N5C48 In 2007, hunter Rick Jacobs captured some of the most famous bigfoot images to date with a camera mounted to a tree in Pennsylvania's Allegheny National Forest. His camera also captured clear photos of bear cubs, offering evidence that the unidentified animal was not ursine. But skeptics believe the animal is just a bear sick with mange.https://www.denverpost.com/2007/10/31/pa-man-says-he-caught-image-of-bigfoot/ Locals in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, were baffled by a footprint measuring 17.75 inches found near a residential home in 1980. According to the Associated Press, the footprint coincided with reports of strange noises and a strong but unusual odor in the area. In 1994, former U.S. Forest patrolman Paul Freeman claimed he saw a family of bigfoots in Washington's Blue Mountains. The video is shaky and grainy, but has been deemed the real deal by so-styled bigfoot expertshttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ut6GDA0wG3MMississippi resident Josh Highcliff captured video of this potential bigfoot while hunting on his property in 2013. Afraid to go back to the woods, he posted the footage to YouTube asking for help to identify the animal or for a prankster to come forward.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xb9YcIlkl_c A hiker was walking through the Utah Hills near Provo Canyon in 2012 when he spotted a large animal in the woods. As he approached, the animal stood up on two legs and started throwing rocks at him—supposedly a trademark behavior of sasquatches.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oaTOMWY3GPk BFRO SIGHTINGS FROM AROUND THE WORLD AND HISTORYhttps://www.bfro.net/GDB/default.asp GOVERNMENThttps://www.wearethemighty.com/mighty-culture/bigfoot-files-released-by-fbi/
The third episode of the Ellis Rugby Podcast. Ellis Rugby Founder Kevin Ellis interviews the legendary ‘Big Jim' Mills.
Podcasts from the Unitarian Universalist Society of Oneonta, NY
This talk considers the changing public perception of drugs such as cannabis and the factors which have influenced its longevity, including immigration, diplomacy, medical science, and politics. Speaker: Professor Jim Mills, University of Strathclyde
This talk considers the changing public perception of drugs such as cannabis and the factors which have influenced its longevity, including immigration, diplomacy, medical science, and politics. Speaker: Professor Jim Mills, University of Strathclyde
In this Episode Wendy and Topher are joined by the following Guests: Health- Statement from Claudia: I began my fitness journey back in 2008 as a Zumba instructor. Soon after, I got certified in other fitness formats including Piyo, Turbokick, RIPPED, ICG couch by Color, and Group Fitness. I enjoy helping others reach their fitness goals no matter the challenge might be. Come to my class! You'll love the music, but you might hate me by the end. ;) Claudia Aguilar Music- Jim Mills has been genre hopping for many years. A native Arkansan and guitarist, you'll enjoy his sound no matter where you are from. In the Green Zone- Cannacooktv and ark420.com founders return to The Wendy Love Edge Show for some more cooking and recipes with CBD infused products. https://www.420nwa.com/ Sponsors: https://highlandsmortgage.com/mortgage-lenders/bentonville/ https://www.facebook.com/nwanaturallivingllc/ https://cbdamericanshaman.com/ https://www.litsmokingsupplies.com/ https://karashealthcare.com/ https://purelynaturalonline.com/ Credits: Produced, written and created by Wendy Love Edge and Topher Kogen Directed by Adrian Sturdevant Production Consultant and Advisor: Angela Edge Cameras Robyn Adair and Adrian Sturdevant Sound Derek Wieand Booking Mike Kinkle Set Design Out of Hand Artist Collective/Trisha Guting Makeup and Hair Jacqueline Denise of Hair Extensions by Miss J Music: Theme song written by Samantha Hunt and performed by Samantha Hunt, Patti Steel, and Sarah Loethen Interim music by Space Pirates and Rochelle Bradshaw Gratitude to Carmien Tea Many thanks to The Farmers Table Restaurant for nourishing our guests, crew and cast this week. http://www.thefarmerstablecafe.com/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thewendyloveedgeshow/support
If you have ever thought that you were losing your marbles, and you were at Marble Mountain with Jim Mills you may be right. Listen in as Kevin unravels this exceptional Bigfoot sighting in our Cryptids in the News and History and other Oddities segment. In part two, I will be recounting an encounter by a couple of extremely detail-oriented hunters, who were hoping for a Roosevelt Elk and came upon something else in the process. And in our Listener Mail segment, we have some really thought provoking ideas sent in from our listeners that you don't want to miss. So stay tuned and leave us some great feedback. Enjoy the show and we are glad to have you on board. Please see link below to free Audible book offer of Bill's Volume 3 of Bigfoot Terror in the Woods: https://www.audible.com/pd/B07WHJY4RR/?source_code=AUDFPWS0223189MWT-BK-ACX0-161057&ref=acx_bty_BK_ACX0_161057_rh_us https://www.bigfootterrorinthewoods.com/
In this episode, Keith teaches you a very useful technique that he learned from the playing of one of his favorite banjo players, Jim Mills. Jim Mills is an award-winning bluegrass banjo player, best known for his playing with Ricky Skaggs and Kentucky Thunder. Keith discovered his playing by listening to a fantastic album, "The Grass is Blue" by Dolly Parton, and also loves Jim's three solo albums. This playing tip is classified as Intermediate level. You are expected to know the Foggy Mountain Roll, and chord inversions for the G, C, and D chords, in order to fully benefit from this episode. Enjoy! And direct any comments to: pickyfingersbanjopodcast@gmail.com Twitter: @banjopodcast Instagram: @pickyfingersbanjopodcast
Podcasts from the Unitarian Universalist Society of Oneonta, NY
In the debut episode of What's Eric Eating, CultureMap Food Editor and host Eric Sandler is joined by restaurant consultant Nathan Ketcham to discuss the news of the week from the Houston restaurant and bar scene including a recap of the 2017 CultureMap Tastemaker Awards. Eric and Nathan also discuss their visits to the Restaurants of the Week, Helen in the Heights and Salmontin in River Oaks. Then guests, Lee Ellis and Jim Mills of Cherry Pie Hospitality join the show to discuss what it's been like for the first year of Cherry Pie Hospitality restaurant group, their restaurant State Fare winning the CultureMap Tastemaker Award for Best New Restaurant, opening Star Fish Houston just one week ago, creating Star Fish Houston's menu to be seafood centric, whether they plan on replicating their success with restaurant openings in other areas, and much more! #WhatsEricEating #EricSandler #NathanKetcham #LeeEllis #JimMills #CherryPieHospitality #StarfishHouston #HelenintheHeights #Salmontin #CultureMap #TastemakerAwards #StateFare #PiPizza #LeesFriedChickenandDonuts #Houston #PetiteSweets #Food #Restaurant #Bar
PRO WRESTLING RADIO. CRAZY, CONTROVERSIAL AND COOL! HOSTED BY "WHITETRASH" JOHNNY LOGAN AND "BIG" JIM MILLS.
PRO WRESTLING RADIO. CRAZY, CONTROVERSIAL AND COOL! HOSTED BY "WHITETRASH" JOHNNY LOGAN AND "BIG" JIM MILLS.
TO P ROPE RADIO PRESENTS "SUNDAYNIGHT SHOWDOWN" AS WE HAVE OUR TRADITIONAL ROUNDATABLE AS OUR SUBJECT WILL BE THE CHANGE IN PROFESSIONAL AND WE WILL BE TALKING TO BIG JIM ABOUT HIS THOUGHTS ON WOMENS WRESTLING AND HOW IT MAY BE THE FUTURE OF WRESTLING BE SURE TO TUNE IN @ HTTP://WWW.BLOGTALKRADIO.COM/ALL-TIMEGREAT OR CALL IN @ 1-347-934-0137