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George Christie BioGeorge Christie is a dynamic and uniquely informed Criminal Justice Expert who turned his life around after a four-decade stint as President of the Hells Angels Ventura County. He founded Felony Prison Consultants (www.felonyprisonconsultants.com) in order to share the information he gathered during his several incarcerations with those seeking real-life advice. Christie, whose show Outlaw Chronicles: Hells Angels premiered on The History Channel (Link to Trailer) in August to millions of viewers, has appeared as a guest advisor on numerous television shows including 60 minutes, Larry King, CBS News and most recently on CNN .The Altamont Speedway Free Festival was a counterculture-era rock concert held on Saturday, December 6, 1969, at the Altamont Speedway in northern California, between Tracy and Livermore. The event is best known for considerable violence, including the death of Meredith Hunter and three accidental deaths: two caused by a hit-and-run car accident and one by drowning in an irrigation canal. Four births were reported during the event.[2] Scores were injured, numerous cars were stolen and then abandoned, and there was extensive property damage.[3][4]The concert featured, in order of appearance: Santana, Jefferson Airplane, The Flying Burrito Brothers, and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, with the Rolling Stones taking the stage as the final act.[5] The Grateful Dead were also scheduled to perform, but declined to play shortly before their scheduled appearance due to the increasing violence at the venue.[6] "That's the way things went at Altamont—so badly that the Grateful Dead, prime organizers and movers of the festival, didn't even get to play," staff at Rolling Stone magazine wrote in a detailed narrative on the event,[5] terming it in an additional follow-up piece "rock and roll's all-time worst day, December 6th, a day when everything went perfectly wrong."[7]Approximately 300,000 people attended the concert, and some anticipated that it would be a "Woodstock West."[8] Filmmakers Albert and David Maysles shot footage of the event and incorporated it into a documentary film titled Gimme Shelter (1970).Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-opperman-report--1198501/support.
[00:00:00] Vonna Laue: I started working when I was 13 at Dairy Queen. And if you work at a fast food restaurant, at least at that time, more than six or nine months, you're in a leadership position and you've got a crew that works with you. So I had that opportunity. And one of the biggest things looking back on it, and I didn't actually realize that until our girls got involved, but 4H was huge in my life. And at the time it was fun. I used to horse show and did a lot of the competitions at the county and state level. But when I then took our daughter to a 4H meeting and realized, wow, this is where I learned a lot of my leadership skills. They operate with Robert's rules of order and the kids run the meetings and they're elected to positions. And so I had that opportunity at a really young age. +++++++++++++ [00:00:55] Tommy Thomas: Our guest today is Vonna Laue. Vonna is a distinguished leader in the nonprofit sector, particularly known for her extensive work with churches and ministries. Early in her career, she served as a partner for a national CPA firm specializing in audit, tax, and advisory services for the nonprofit sector. She later took on the role as Executive Vice President at the Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability, where she focused on enhancing trust within the church and ministry communities. Her experience is widely recognized. She has authored multiple articles, co-authored three books, frequently speaks at national and regional conferences, and in 2010, she was inducted into the Church Management Hall of Fame, underscoring her significant contributions to the field. [00:01:45] Tommy Thomas: Vonna, Welcome to NextGen Nonprofit Leadership. [00:01:48] Vonna Laue: Tommy, thanks for having me. It's great to be here. [00:01:50] Tommy Thomas: I've been looking forward to this for a long time. I first met you; I don't know how many years ago it was, but, Rich Stearns, the then President of World Vision had asked me to help him find some board members. [00:02:02] Tommy Thomas: He gave me some parameters and you were the one of the ones that identified. So, I guess that was our first encounter. [00:02:12] Vonna Laue: It was and that was 2016. [00:02:14] Tommy Thomas: In the words of Crosby, Stills, Nash Young, so much water has passed underneath the bridge since then. [00:02:24] Vonna Laue: Amen to that. [00:02:26] Tommy Thomas: Let's give us a few start up questions. I'm always curious, and I don't know these things about you. Before we get too deep into your professional career, take me into your childhood. What was childhood like? [00:02:39] Vonna Laue: I always enjoy telling people that think about birth order, that I'm a fairly complicated person because I was an only child and that automatically raises some red flags for some people. [00:02:53] Vonna Laue: And then when I was eight, my parents divorced and both remarried within about a one-year timeframe, and I became a middle child in two families. So, if you're gonna play the birth order game, I'm gonna give you a lot of information to mull over in that. [00:03:09] Tommy Thomas: Where was your childhood geographically? [00:03:13] Vonna Laue: Absolutely. I grew up in South Dakota, which is one of the smallest populated states in the country. There were two stop lights in the town my mom was in and one stop light in the town my dad was in. We may get into it more, but I had the privilege of going to a Christian school. And so, I tell people there were three in my graduating high school class. It was a definitely small-town America, and everyone knew what you were doing pretty much all the time. [00:03:46] Tommy Thomas: Now we've heard these stories; Even my parents who were raised in Alabama and Georgia, they didn't have the snow part, but they had the part about walking to school five to six miles a day uphill. In South Dakota, did you have to walk to school in the snow several miles a day? [00:04:03] Vonna Laue: I walked to the bus stop, and because I went to a Christian school, we wore skirts and dresses every day. And it didn't matter if it was 20 above or 20 below. And they also didn't have snow days when I was a kid. You went to school unless it was absolutely catastrophic. So yeah, I walked to the bus stop in the snow, in a skirt, many times, every winter. [00:04:30] Tommy Thomas: Thinking back, what was the greatest gift you think your parents gave to you? [00:04:36] Vonna Laue: Actually, it was that very thing of education. When my parents, even when they were still married and we were living in a small town, they wanted me to get an education. And the best way to do that in their mind was through the local Christian school. And so, while my parents were in a mainline denomination and didn't have a relationship with Christ, that's where I went to school. And those three years and the education and the relationships that the Lord gave me there were critical for me. [00:05:09] Vonna Laue: And then when life changed drastically and over the next four years, we moved multiple times and were in different education settings. I kept begging to go back to a Christian school. And so ultimately my seventh-grade year was able to do that, in a different Christian school. And again, they agreed to that because of the education that they felt like I would receive there, but it was through that I came to Christ. So, I'm a big proponent of Christian education. And subsequently, my parents, grandparents came to Christ. They didn't know it at the time, they weren't doing it for that reason, but that was by far the biggest gift they gave me. [00:05:50] Tommy Thomas: You turned out at least initially as a CPA, was that a dream from high school? [00:05:57] Vonna Laue: It wasn't. I don't remember, sometimes there are people that remember what they wanted to do in elementary school and that's what they did. We sponsored cadets at the Air Force Academy, and one of those wanted to be a fighter pilot from the time he was five years old, had every plane hanging in his room and to this day he is a fighter pilot. That wasn't me. I didn't have that idea when I was little. When I got into middle school, I was volunteering at a hospital and thought I'd go into nursing and then wasn't really wild about nursing. And so, when I initially started taking college classes, I thought that I would major in chemistry and physics. [00:06:37] Vonna Laue: And had a semester that I was able to go to Bible college in Minnesota and wanted to take that opportunity. I knew that I couldn't finish there, but wanted to go and take some foundational courses and take things that would transfer back to a state university in South Dakota. And when I went, one of the classes that I took was an accounting class. And I took that class and I thought, this is easy. And then I looked around and realized, not everybody in this class thinks this is easy. Maybe there's something to that. And so, it was then, and I to this day wish that I had gone back to that professor, and just let him know the way that changed the course of my career. [00:07:23] Tommy Thomas: Gosh, I remember my two accounting courses in graduate school. I couldn't say that they were easy. Probably the first one was easier. We were taught our first accounting course by the CFO of Coca Cola Bottling Company in Birmingham. He brought stuff from the office every day to the classroom at night. I think that made accounting maybe a little bit more tolerable for me. [00:07:45] Vonna Laue: Yeah. Real world application, I think does make it at least a lot more enjoyable. ++++++++++++++ [00:07:50] Tommy Thomas: What's something that people are always surprised to find out about you? [00:07:53] Vonna Laue: I usually can pull a few of those out. I would say the one I would share with you and your listeners today is, I was apparently the nation's youngest emergency medical technician and always will be because they passed a regulation not long after I got licensed, but I was 13 when I licensed as an EMT. [00:08:14] Vonna Laue: So that usually surprises people. [00:08:17] Tommy Thomas: That's a good conversation starter. [00:08:21] Vonna Laue: I thought you might like that one. [00:08:23] Tommy Thomas: So, you're out of college now. You're in accounting. Can you think back to your first management job and when you had somebody reporting to you? What can you tell us about that? [00:08:37] Vonna Laue: I'm thankful. I'm going to back up a little bit just in the leadership journey because I'm thankful for the opportunities I had even when it wasn't my career, if you will. I started working when I was 13 at Dairy Queen. And if you work at a fast-food restaurant, at least at that time, more than six or nine months, you're in a leadership position and you've got a crew that works with you. So, I had that opportunity. And one of the biggest things that looking back on it, and I didn't realize that until our girls got involved, but 4H was huge in my life. And at the time it was fun. I used to horse show and did a lot of the competitions at the county and state level. [00:09:23] Vonna Laue: But when I then took our daughter to a 4H meeting and realized, wow, this is where I learned a lot of my leadership skills. They operate with Robert's rules of order and the kids run the meetings and they're elected to positions. And so, I have that opportunity at a really young age. Obviously when I came into the CPA firm, I served there 20 years and over the course of that time, started as a staff accountant and just worked my way up from there into a senior role and a manager role, a partner role, and then ultimately when I left the firm, left as the managing partner at the time of the national firm, so a lot of opportunities and challenges along the way in that, but I think probably the biggest thing is just how important people are and the way that you treat them and the relationships that you develop with them, not in a way that you're manipulative. But in a way that you truly are investing in them, that will serve you and your organization well, but it goes with them wherever they go beyond there. [00:10:37] Vonna Laue: So I look at that as an opportunity to make an investment long-term in a person. [00:10:42] Tommy Thomas: So if we could go back to that last three or four years in the CPA world, and here you are the managing partner, and you let me come into your staff meeting one day and after about five minutes, we dismissed you and I was talking to the staff and I asked them, what's the most exciting thing about working for Vonna? What do you think they would have said? [00:11:04] Vonna Laue: It's a great and scary thought all at the same time. I think that I would take them on the people journey with me, if you will. When I left and moved from our Colorado offices to the California offices, one of the things that really blessed me was one of the staff people that I worked with said, when you traveled with Vonna, she invested in the people in the hotel. When we would go to visit the same client year after year, the hotel clerks knew her because she would take time to visit with them and invest in them. I think sometimes that was annoying to people, and sometimes it was good, but created some interesting and maybe even exciting things along the way. [00:11:52] Vonna Laue: We had a brand-new staff accountant one time, and we were driving back from an audit between Denver and Colorado Springs, and there was a wreck that happened right in front of us. And this poor staff accountant hadn't worked there for a week or two, and I pulled over and threw him the keys to the car and my cell phone and told him to call 911. And I just got out, and he had no idea what this accountant was doing. So I created some excitement, I think, just by the different ways that I would interact with people. [00:12:22] Tommy Thomas: If I flip that coin, what would they say was the most challenging aspect of working for you? [00:12:29] Vonna Laue: I tend to do a lot of different things. I think you've come to know that about me over the years, Tommy. And I try very hard to let people know that my busyness is my problem and not theirs, but I think that people often are concerned that they're a bother or they're concerned they can't get time. So, I try to work with the people closest to me frequently on how best to manage. And I'm sure that's not an easy thing. [00:13:07] Tommy Thomas: Successful people are often asked, what makes you so successful? I'd like to frame the question this way, what's a factor that's helped you succeed that people from the outside probably wouldn't be aware of? [00:13:20] Vonna Laue: I'll start off with the primary one beyond the obvious one and everyone's the Lord, right? And then, and I 100 percent agree with that. If God had only ever given me what I prayed for, I'd have sure missed out on an incredible amount of opportunity. So that is a given. Quite honestly. My husband is very instrumental in my success and a lot of people don't know that because Brian's behind the scenes and most people don't know him, but I talk about being raised in a small town and we still laugh about it to this day, but I was terrified to be around people. We went to a football game one time that had a couple thousand people at it. [00:14:08] Vonna Laue: And I said, would you go get me popcorn? And he said, you can get it yourself. And he wasn't being rude or mean. He just knew that I needed to grow. And I was like, no, I don't need it. And he's like go get your popcorn. And he just has had the foresight over the years to stretch and grow me. And now I think this year I will have probably seven international trips, have the opportunity to speak to hundreds of people at a time, just amazing opportunities and that's a big part of it. But on a personal front, I think that the key to that is being willing to be stretched. That's not easy. It's a lot easier to go with the routine, to go with the things that are known. But when you're willing to open yourself up to opportunities to be stretched, to take advantage of uncomfortable situations, you get a lot more opportunity that follows. ++++++++++++++++ [00:15:11] Tommy Thomas: I'm going to make the assumption here that you've had some good mentors in life. Can you take us down that rabbit trail? [00:15:17] Vonna Laue: I love to talk about mentoring. One of the things that I found throughout a good portion of my career was that it was really hard for me to find a mentor. And the reason that I say that is because I could find godly women who would invest in me personally and spiritually, but many of them had the perspective of a stay-at-home mom and that they didn't understand why I had the desire to have a career. I love my girls who are grown now, but always laughed that they would not have wanted me at home with them all the time because I don't care that you're two. You should be able to organize your closet by short sleeve, long sleeve, skirts, dresses, get it organized. So, I had that challenge, with those women that I wanted to speak into that portion of my life. And then when I looked for someone who professionally could invest and develop me, there was almost the opposite of that. [00:16:21] Vonna Laue: And it was, you got to give everything you have to the job. You're never going to get ahead if you try to balance family. Now, obviously both of those I'm saying to an extreme, but I just had a really difficult time for a long time finding someone who understood my faith and commitment to family, as well as my desire to be excellent in my career. And over time, I have done that. Tammy Heim has been a great mentor to me and a good balance of those things. And there have been others, but it has given me a commitment that we find that for other people. So, two things I would say, one is I have a distinction of my own between coaching and mentoring. Coaching I believe is professional in nature. [00:17:10] Vonna Laue: Men and women can work together in a coaching situation. I personally believe that mentoring often flows over into more personal aspects of your life. And it's a holistic approach to family and work and all of those things. And my idea with mentoring is that it should be the same gender, because I don't want to be talking about the difficulties I'm having at home with a male counterpart. That just isn't appropriate to me. So, I differentiate those two things based on that. And I know not everyone does, but over the last couple of years have had just the extreme privilege of starting some peer mentoring groups for young ladies. And each group is three young women in similar stages of life, but in different roles and in different organizations. [00:18:00] Vonna Laue: So, they don't come in and fix each other's problems by, oh, you need this software, or you need this vendor. They really listen and help each other problem solve. And then each group has a seasoned leader in it that can contribute maybe some of the stories that she's encountered over time, or even just to be the brakes like, but you could do that, but you might consider what could happen as a result. [00:18:25] Vonna Laue: Two years ago, we started with two of those groups, we're just wrapping up the second year with five, and next month will start 10 groups committed for the following year. So excited about the opportunity to invest in other young women. [00:18:42] Tommy Thomas: So, let me take that just a little bit further and we may come back to it later. Board service has been a big part of your life, certainly in the last 20 years. In your mentoring, are you talking to these women about board service and the pros and cons and if you serve, what's your best contribution kind of thing and trying to give them some opportunities to do that, right? [00:19:09] Vonna Laue: The first board I served on was not World Vision. I want to remind people, both young people who are getting into board service, get involved in a local community board, whether that is. I served our hospital in Colorado Springs on their governmental committee. Whether it's a local chapter of some organization, the church network and Christian Leadership Alliance served on some of those, taking the opportunities to get involved in that at a more local level and then work your way up just like you would in almost anything else you do. You don't take up woodworking and become a master craftsman overnight. You start small. So, encouraging them to do that and then encouraging boards and leaders to give young people opportunity and don't expect them to come in with 25 years of experience. [00:20:10] Vonna Laue: You open the opportunities for them to come in and the things that they will contribute to your board discussions you can't imagine. So, I'm excited about what the future looks like. [00:20:27] Tommy Thomas: So, going back to personal leadership for a minute, in the book, It's How You Play the Game: The 12 Leadership Principles of Dean Smith, leadership principle #10 is making failure your friend. Can you share something from your life where this has been in play? [00:20:45] Vonna Laue: Nobody likes to fail, but it absolutely is true and the things that you learn from that and I look back on my time as Managing Partner at the firm and what a blessing that was and how gracious those partners were with me, because I would say, at least one of my biggest failures was just in how I handled the people involved there. And I just got done saying I love people and I do, but I will say all of those leaders are incredibly successful people and, no, I don't mean anything bad by this for those that are in a professional service firm, but it is so true that it's like herding cats because they all have their own realm and their own domain. [00:21:33] Vonna Laue: And they're really good at that. And I wasn't really good at bringing them all together at times and helping us find a strategic vision to go forward in, in one direction where we were all pulling in the same way. And so when I hear that quote, that's one of the things that I think about. And that's been a benefit to me in the years after that to look at, how do we get people to pull in the same direction when they have vested interests in a number of different ways? And now I serve in a mission sending organization. And there's some similarity there when you've got global workers that have their own domain in many parts of the world. God used that to equip me for some of the decisions that have to be made in this setting. +++++++++++++++ [00:22:16] Tommy Thomas: Going back to your mentoring thing for a minute, are you introducing failure to these young women? [00:22:23] Vonna Laue: I would say what I have found is that they're introducing some of their own failures and learning from each other and encouraging each other and the opportunity that it provides those of us that are the season leaders is to say, hey, like this isn't a bad thing. This is difficult. And you would have wanted to avoid this, but this is part of your growing and part of your maturing as a leader and to provide some insights there and embrace it and let them learn from each other. I would say that's probably been the best part of the failure within those groups. [00:23:03] Tommy Thomas: Frederick Wilcox said progress always involves risk. You can't steal second base with your foot on first. What's the biggest risk you've ever taken and how did it turn out? [00:23:17] Vonna Laue: One of the things that I have thought about over the years and comes from the lessons that I've talked about where I was glad, I didn't know, taking the Managing Partner role was a huge risk at the time. I remember vividly sitting with my husband and saying that if I take this role, there's no going back. Like you don't just leave that and go back into the setting where you were before. And we prayed about it and really felt like that's what we were supposed to do. And that was a huge blessing. [00:23:52] Vonna Laue: It was a challenge, like I've just said, but it was a huge blessing. And then, even bigger than that was the year that I left the firm and that was God saying, you've done what I've called you to do here, and now it's time to leave. And I had three arguments for the Lord, and Tommy, I don't know if you've ever argued with the Lord. If you haven't, I don't suggest it. You're not going to win. So just save your breath. But I had three arguments for him. Number one was I was a lifer. I've told everyone for years, I'm at this firm until retirement. I love it. I'm here. And he said, no. And I said, my second argument was this is economically stupid because he wasn't calling me to something. [00:24:42] Vonna Laue: He was calling me away from something. And he reminded me of that cattle on a thousand hills. And I was like, ah, yep. He's got that too. And then my third argument was just a little more logistical and operational. And that was that our oldest was headed to college, but our youngest was headed to high school. And I just said to him, Lord, you can interrupt. My husbands in my life, but let's not mess with our daughter going into high school. Give me four more years and maybe, and he said, no. And so, without having a job, I was supposed to give 12 months' notice. I went to the partners September 1st of that year and said to them, I believe this is a matter of obedience. [00:25:23] Vonna Laue: And I think if I don't do it, it's going to be detrimental to the firm and detrimental to our family. And they were gracious and agreed. And so, I wrapped up in four months. I had 150 or so meetings to tell clients I was leaving, and the firm was fine, network people, that I had connections with that I was moving on. And of course, what's the first question everyone asks you is, so what are you going to do? And this left-brain analytical type A personality had to look at them all 150 times and say, I don't know. And that was a challenge, but it was exactly what God called us to do at that point in time. And I'm glad that while I'm not always faithful and following through, I'm glad that we did that. ++++++++++++++++ [00:26:14] Tommy Thomas: Join us next week as we continue this conversation with Vonna Laue. Vonna shares insights from her new book, Glad I Didn't Know, which explores lessons learned from life's challenges and unexpected blessings. She discusses the importance of having people who speak truth into a leader's life, the critical role of team dynamics, and the necessity of balancing personal and professional health. Vonna also reflects on the increasing significance of risk management and the impact of artificial intelligence in the nonprofit sector. Tune in for an engaging discussion on leadership, resilience, and growth. Links and Resources JobfitMatters Website NextGen Nonprofit Leadership with Tommy Thomas The Perfect Search - What every board needs to know about hiring their next CEO Connect tthomas@jobfitmatters.com Follow Tommy on LinkedIn Listen to NextGen Nonprofit Leadership with Tommy Thomas on: Apple Podcasts | Spotify
Nueva entrega de Música de Contrabando (16/5/24) semanario de actualidad musicalEntrevistas:- Al Dual finaliza su gira en el T. Villa de Molina y pone rumbo a los USA- Jesús Cobarro nos adelanta el nuevo album de Noise Box, "Daño", que tiene prevista su salida el 8 -N- Perdón nos visitan para estrenar su nuevo single, "Tiempo libre" con participación de Aiko El Grupo, y desvelamos los entresijos de su fichaje con Sonido Muchacho, y la inminente aparición de su primer LP.Noticias:Bruce Springsteen celebra el 40 aniversario de su histórico álbum Born In The U.S.A. con una edición especial en vinilo .El documental “Road Diary” de Bruce Springsteen llegará en octubre. Kevin Parker vende todos los derechos de Tame Impala. Suzanne Vega visita Inca, Madrid y Valencia en julio. The Psychedelic Furs, gira española de cinco fechas en septiembre. Brian Wilson será tutelado por un juez Nos han dejado: el saxofonista y compositor David Sanborn, el batería Dennis Thompson, último miembro clásico de MC5, y John Barbata, batería de un notable número de bandas como The Turtles, Jefferson Airplane, Jefferson Starship y Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. Moby publica un nuevo tema, “Where Is Your Pride?”, inspirado en el poema del mismo nombre del difunto escritor Benjamin Zephaniah. Andrés Calamaro ofrecerá catorce conciertos por varias ciudades de España dando forma a su gira "AGENDA 1999". The Smile amplían aforo para su concierto en Valencia. ‘I Had Some Help', el nuevo single de Post Malone, cuenta con la participación de Morgan Wallen, el rey actual del country.Novedades discográficas: Bunbury y Arde Bogotá, León Benavente, La Búsqueda, Los Campesinos, Isobel Campbell, Travis se alían con Coldplay y The Killers, Ropero, .Menta, Kings of Leon, Dr Explosion, Richard Hawley, Nada Surf, Mediapunta, Sistema Nervioso, Kokoshka, Los Nikis de la Pradera, Justice + Tame Impala, Christine and The Queens, Montana, Ibibio Sound Machine, Gold Lake, Los Estanques, Everyone Says It, Nico B, Soge Culebra, Liz Lawrence, Cassandra Jenkins, Fernando Rubio.Agenda de conciertos:Al Dual, Sara Zamora, Pepe y Vizio, Mamá Music Fest (Greskand), Morodo, Avalanch, Vista Alegre Emerge (Regular Crowd), Wakame, Melenas, Juan Sebastián Trío, Chambao, Funzo & Baby Loud...
This episode is with the band Venice. We were able to reconnect with the band at this year's NAMM show. Venice is known mostly for their amazing harmonys, ones you might hear from Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, The Eagles or Steely Dan. But they have made a mark for themselves in the music world. Following their sisters (and Aunts) the Lennon Sisters, this band has been together since the 80s, impressing the likes of Jackson Browne, David Crosby & Steely Dan. They have worked with such great as Cher, Stevie Nickes, Bruce Springsteen, Elton John, Brian Wilson, Sting & Phil Collins. Infact they were chosen as the backup vocals for Roger Water's The Wall tour from 2010 - 2013. The band has a new album titled "Stained Glass" which features 16 new songs written by the band and recorded in Micahel Lennon's backyard during the pandemic. We were lucky enough to get all 4 members on this interview: Marky, Kipp, Michael & Pat! Please enjoy, and if you do like it, find two previous episodes - a two part with Kipp Lennon back in 2020.
Atlanta, GA based multi-instrumentalist singer songwriter Jeremy Wilms (J.Wilms) brings us Neil Young and his seminal 1970 release 'After The Gold Rush'. We take a deep dive into a record that has influenced Jeremy's - and countless others - songwriting and STILL, on occasion, makes him cry. Songs featured in this episode: After The Goldrush - Linda Ronstadt; The Fighter, All The Roads, Hey My - Jeremy Wilms; Carry On, Woodstock - Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young; Rockin' In The Free World, Tell Me Why, After The Gold Rush, Only Love Can Break Your Heart, Southern Man - Neil Young; Sweet Home Alabama - Lynyrd Skynyrd; The South's Gonna Do It Again - Charlie Daniels Band; Till The Morning Comes - Neil Young; Oh Lonesome Me - Don Gibson; Oh Lonesome Me, Don't Let It Bring You Down, Birds, Birds (Demo - Neil Young & Graham Nash), Birds (Mono - Neil Young Archives Vol. 1), When You Dance I Can Really Love, I Believe In You, Cripple Creek Ferry - Neil Young; Dead Flowers - Townes Van Zandt; Yes I Know - Jeremy Wilms
‘Los niños en la Literatura', capítulo dedicado a la niñez y que hoy Patricia del Río nos ofrece una vasta gama de novelas donde los pequeños son los protagonistas y, sobre todo, el papel que juega la infancia en la sociedad a lo largo de la historia de la humanidad. El escritor inglés, Charles Dickens, es quizás quién más ha reflejado la problemática infantil en sus novelas ‘Oliver Twist', ‘David Copperfield' y ‘Grandes esperanzas', que son una muestra de la dureza con que eran tratados los niños y las niñas en la Inglaterra del siglo XVIII. También ‘El señor de las moscas', de William Golding; ‘Perú', de Gordon Lish; y ‘Anna', de Niccolò Ammaniti. La literatura peruana no es ajena a esta realidad; nuestro poeta mayor, César Vallejo, lo pone de manifiesto en ‘Paco Yunque', el niño víctima de bullyng; así como José María Arguedas en ‘Los ríos profundos' y Enrique Congrains en ‘El niño de junto al cielo. Hacemos referencia también a Alfredo Bryce Echenique, autor de ‘Un mundo para Julius', que también ha sido llevada al cine; a Mario Guibellini, en ‘La canción del capitán Garfio', y Juan Carlos Ortecho de ‘La fe de ayer'. En el séptimo arte, recomendamos las películas ‘Cinema paradiso' y ‘La vida es bella'. El invitado de la semana es el escritor Santiago Roncagliolo, quien en ‘El año que nació el demonio', nos remonta a la Lima virreinal del siglo XVII, ciudad enlodada por el crimen y la corrupción, con la disyuntiva de distinguir los caminos que separan el bien del mal. Las canciones alusivas son ‘Teach your children', Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young; ‘Canción para un niño en la calle', Diego El Cigala; ‘Santa Rosa', Daniel Drexler; ‘Se buscan valientes'; ‘Mi verdad', Maná & Shakira; ‘For children Vol. 1, Sz. 42: Nro 3 quasi adagio', Bela Bartok; ‘For children Vol. 1, Sz. 42: Nro 13 Ballade; For children Vol. 1, Sz. 42: Nro 19 Allegretto; Cinema paradiso', Ennio Morricone; y‘La pequeña', Miki Gonzales. Todo esto y mucho más en Letras en el tiempo, este domingo a las 19:00 h por RPP. Escúchanos también por rpp.pe y podcast del programa en las diversas plataformas. Edición de audio: Andrés Rodríguez ||| Episodio 30 – Cuarta temporada 2023.
‘Los niños en la Literatura', capítulo dedicado a la niñez y que hoy Patricia del Río nos ofrece una vasta gama de novelas donde los pequeños son los protagonistas y, sobre todo, el papel que juega la infancia en la sociedad a lo largo de la historia de la humanidad. El escritor inglés, Charles Dickens, es quizás quién más ha reflejado la problemática infantil en sus novelas ‘Oliver Twist', ‘David Copperfield' y ‘Grandes esperanzas', que son una muestra de la dureza con que eran tratados los niños y las niñas en la Inglaterra del siglo XVIII. También ‘El señor de las moscas', de William Golding; ‘Perú', de Gordon Lish; y ‘Anna', de Niccolò Ammaniti. La literatura peruana no es ajena a esta realidad; nuestro poeta mayor, César Vallejo, lo pone de manifiesto en ‘Paco Yunque', el niño víctima de bullyng; así como José María Arguedas en ‘Los ríos profundos' y Enrique Congrains en ‘El niño de junto al cielo. Hacemos referencia también a Alfredo Bryce Echenique, autor de ‘Un mundo para Julius', que también ha sido llevada al cine; a Mario Guibellini, en ‘La canción del capitán Garfio', y Juan Carlos Ortecho de ‘La fe de ayer'. En el séptimo arte, recomendamos las películas ‘Cinema paradiso' y ‘La vida es bella'. El invitado de la semana es el escritor Santiago Roncagliolo, quien en ‘El año que nació el demonio', nos remonta a la Lima virreinal del siglo XVII, ciudad enlodada por el crimen y la corrupción, con la disyuntiva de distinguir los caminos que separan el bien del mal. Las canciones alusivas son ‘Teach your children', Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young; ‘Canción para un niño en la calle', Diego El Cigala; ‘Santa Rosa', Daniel Drexler; ‘Se buscan valientes'; ‘Mi verdad', Maná & Shakira; ‘For children Vol. 1, Sz. 42: Nro 3 quasi adagio', Bela Bartok; ‘For children Vol. 1, Sz. 42: Nro 13 Ballade; For children Vol. 1, Sz. 42: Nro 19 Allegretto; Cinema paradiso', Ennio Morricone; y‘La pequeña', Miki Gonzales. Todo esto y mucho más en Letras en el tiempo, este domingo a las 19:00 h por RPP. Escúchanos también por rpp.pe y podcast del programa en las diversas plataformas. Edición de audio: Andrés Rodríguez ||| Episodio 30 – Cuarta temporada 2023.
"Marijuana Magic: Enhancing Exercise and Easing PainLarry Mishkin discusses the debut of the song "Sugaree" by the Grateful Dead, sharing interesting facts about its origins and performance history. Additionally, he presents three stories from Marijuana Moment, highlighting how medical marijuana is linked to reduced pain and lower opioid dependency in chronic pain patients, enhances the runner's high and reduces pain during exercise, and improves the quality of life for military veterans while reducing their prescription drug use. Produced by PodConx Deadhead Cannabis Show - https://podconx.com/podcasts/deadhead-cannabis-showLarry Mishkin - https://podconx.com/guests/larry-mishkinRob Hunt - https://podconx.com/guests/rob-huntJay Blakesberg - https://podconx.com/guests/jay-blakesbergRecorded on Squadcast July 31, 1971: Astronauts Drive on the Moon1971: Apollo 15 astronauts David Scott and James Irwin drive the Lunar Roving Vehicle on the surface of the moon. It's the first off-planet automobile ride. Rumor has it that sometime during the show, Jerry stopped playing, pointed to the moon, and said, “just think, right now there are men sleeping on THAT” Confession, I listened to almost the entire show and was not able to locate that moment so I cannot confirm Jerry said it, but it sounds like something he might say and either way is just another cool Dead story to pass along. INTRO: Sugaree Track No. 3 Start – 1:14 Sugaree" is a song with lyrics by long-time Grateful Dead lyricist Robert Hunter and music by guitaristJerry Garcia.[1] It was written for Jerry Garcia's first solo album Garcia, which was released in January 1972. As with the songs on the rest of the album, Garcia plays every instrument himself except drums, played by Bill Kreutzmann, including acoustic guitar, bass guitar, and an electric guitar played through a Leslie speaker. Released as a single from the Garcia album, "Sugaree" peaked at #94 on the Billboard Hot 100 in April 1972 and was Garcia's only single ever on that chart.[2]The song was first performed live by the Grateful Dead on July 31, 1971, at the Yale Bowl at Yale University,Even though it was on Jerry's solo album, it was clearly a Dead song from the start and here it is debuted by the Dead six months before the Garcia album's release. Maybe not the best version ever, but it is the first. Ultimately played 361 times by the Dead. Last played on July 8, 1995, the penultimate Dead show Always one of good buddy Mikey's favorite Dead songs, “What's shaking Sugaree?”. Shout out to Mikey, Alex, Andy, Lynn, Harold who just saw Tedeschi Truck this past weekend at Red Rocks. My wife and I had to miss it this year, but I know they all rocked out. And, they were joined by Lori and Monte, more good Chicago friends, and Lori was part of the group at the Joanie Jam with Judy and Andy. So lots of great musical cross relationships developing all the time. THAT IS WHY WE GO TO SHOWS! SHOW #1: Mr. Charlie Track No. 4 Start – 1:15 This is also the breakout version of this song. It was played a total of 50 times after its debut on 7/31/71 in New Haven, the same show at which Sugaree debuted. It was played at all 22 shows of the Europe '72 tour, including its last performance on May 26, 1972 at the Lyceum Ballroom in London, the last show of that famous tour. Lyrics by Robert Hunter, music by Pigpen. It was Pig's song and as his time in the band dwindled, so did some of his tunes. No post-Pig resurrection of the song by the band.Never released on a studio album, there are rumors of a planned album following Workingman's and American Beauty that would have included this song as well as Bertha, He's Gone, Loser, Brown Eyed Women, Ramble on Rose, Tennessee Jed, The Stranger (Two Souls in Communion), etc. Might have even been enough tunes for a double album. Story is that the Dead abandoned it when they decided to get out of their Warner Bros. record deal. SHOW #2: Hard to Handle Track No. 12 Start – 1:06 "Hard to Handle" is a 1968 song written by American soul singer Otis Redding along with Al Bell and Allen Jones. Originally recorded by Redding, it was released in 1968 as the B-side to "Amen" (shortly after the singer's sudden death in 1967). The song also appears on the 1968 album The Immortal Otis Redding. Redding's version reached number 38 on the Billboard R&B chart and number 51 on the pop chart.[1]American rock band the Black Crowes covered the song for their 1990 debut album, Shake Your Money Maker, reaching number 26 on the Billboard Hot 100 with their rendition.Hard To Handle was performed by the Grateful Dead about 90 times between March 15, 1969 at the Black and White Ball, opened the show with it (The ball is the Bay Area's largest black-tie street party and a tradition since 1956 - a night for high society and just plain folks to mingle in gowns and tuxedoes around Civic Center Plaza to listen to music. ) and August 1971. It was subsequently performed only twice, on December 30 and 31, 1982, with Etta James taking the vocals and support from the Tower of Power horns.Another fun Pig lead that, like most of his other songs, died with him. SHOW #3: Sugar Magnolia Track No. 24 3:10 – 4:23Still relatively new in the Dead's repertoire, I like the musical jam in this version and so does the crowd. We all know the lyrics but it is this kind of jamming that made this a Dead standard and favorite among Deadheads. This version is still early enough that it appears in the middle of the second set, not yet having moved to its almost always spot as a second set closer. Always sad when they get to the obvious set closer, but when it was Sugar Mag we all felt a lot better. Notes from Deadheads mentioned this as one of the highlights of the show. SHOW #4: Darkness Jam Track No. 28 0:56 – 2:06the 'Darkness' jam from the 1969 Youngbloods song, Darkness, Darkness which was done a few times in 1970; the most well-known version is in the 9/19/70 Not Fade Away where it's very clear. (They also do the China Cat riff in that NFA, which they did frequently (and at greater length) in the fall of 1971.). Played 4 times by the Dead in concert. This is the LAST one. Darkness Darkness - Darkness, Darkness" is a song written by Jesse Colin Young in 1969, which has been covered by many artists. Young's band The Youngbloods released a version on their 1969 album Elephant Mountain. They released a version of the song as a single twice: in 1969, which reached #124 on the Billboard chart,[1] and in 1970, which reached #86 on the chart.[2] One of the various themed jams played by the Dead in their early years also including:Feelin' Groovy Jam - is basically four chords based on the 1966 Simon & Garfunkel song, and was frequently done in Dark Stars from '69-'72.Tighten Up Jam - The Tighten Up jam was a very common Latin-style jam theme in 1970. It's often called a proto-Eyes jam since Weir plays two repeating jazzy chords that are rhythmically similar to the opening of Eyes of the World; but they were commonly thought to be from Archie Bell & the Drells' 1968 tune.Mind Left Body Jam: The Mind Left Body jam originated in the Planet Earth Rock n Roll Orchestra (PERRO) sessions (The Planet Earth Rock and Roll Orchestra (PERRO) is a nickname given to some artists who recorded together in the early 1970s.[1] They were predominantly members of Jefferson Airplane, the Grateful Dead, Quicksilver Messenger Service, and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young .[2] ), where we can hear an early, faster version of the four descending chords. Paul Kantner took this riff for his 1973 song 'Your Mind Has Left Your Body,' which Garcia played pedal steel on. Garcia in turn adapted it into a Grateful Dead theme, which first showed up on occasion in '72, but started regularly entering the jams in fall '73. It added a transcendental feeling to many shows up through '74Spanish Jam: Weir based the Spanish Jam on the song 'Solea' on Miles Davis' album Sketches of Spain, sometime in late '67 when the Dead started recording Anthem of the Sun. As it was, a little bit of the Spanish Jam actually got on the album, in the form of a short Davis-flavored trumpet break from Phil in the middle of Born Cross-Eyed (after the verse, "Think I'll come back here again, every now and then, from time to time"). For a moment, it seems like Garcia and the band are about to break into the Spanish Jam, but they quickly cut back to the song.... OUTRO: Uncle John's Band Track No. 30 1:28 – 2:44 An early version of an all time classic. Already a crowd favorite, clapping, sing along. Can't go wrong with an Uncle John's Band at the end of a show – actually closed out with Johnny B. Goode – no encore. Other great stories of this show at Yale, runs in with the cops, gate crashers, gallons of electric Kool Aid at the gates. Just another typical Dead show, but at one of the country's most prestigious schools. Even the Ivies loved the Dead. Still working on stories John Mayer says goodbye: “These tours with @deadandcompany exist on an almost otherworldly plane – everyone, on stage and in the crowd, meets up in this shared dream, and on the last night, after the final note is struck, we leave it all on the stage. We bow, we hug, we share our love for one another and then… we disappear. I fly through the dead of night and wake up at home, where my ears ring, my heart sings, and I'm left with this mix of fatigue, joy, accomplishment, and deep appreciation for what I was able to be a part of,” Mayer shared. “I can feel the connected, collective experience of thousands of others who wake up feeling the same. I'll never get over the profound beauty and uniqueness of this, and we'll never in our lifetime see the likes of @bobweir@mickeyhart and @billkreutzmann, playing beyond all perceived limitations and expectations. It's nothing short of remarkable. Thank you one and all for allowing me a seat on this transcendent ride. ” “Dead & Company is still a band – we just don't know what the next show will be,” Mayer wrote on social media. “I speak for us all when I say that I look forward to being shown the next shaft of light… I know we will all move towards it together.”
At long last! Lynyrd Skynyrd is our Featured Artist this week! Frank and I love this southern rock band and we're happy to bring this episode to you. Also this week, a great 1-Hit Wonder from the summer of '73, and our Hall of Fame albums will be Alan Parsons Project "I Robot" and Badfinger's "Straight Up. Our "Cover vs. Cover" comes from the early 70s with a song written by Joni Mitchell and sung by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, then covered by British artist Matthews Southern Comfort. It'll be a great show!!
Life and political podcast. Brought to you from The Divided States of America. A BS session to open the show. Oklahoma City National Memorial. Hot Topics: McCarthy wants House ethics to handle George Santos. Some good news: Canadian Family Turns Old School into Hydroponic Farm Growing Fresh Veggies Even in Winter For the Whole Town. The rest of the news: China says ready to smash Taiwan self-rule as US prepares major arms package, sends advisers. Off the rails with Graham Nash and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. 13-year-old Ohio boy dies after attempting the TikTok "Benadryl Challenge". Videos of the Week: Rudy Giuliani allegedly offers to SELL PARDONS for $2 million a pop & split money with Donald Trump Let's talk about the Republican investigation into Biden.... Republicans completely SHORT-CIRCUIT after Trump gets BAD NEWS in Court Grab 'Em By The Money! | Christopher Titus | Armageddon Update
From the mid-1960s to the early 1970s, there was a large counterculture movement in the United States. It was a time when the war in Vietnam was escalating and there was vast social tension in society overall. But it was also a time of free love, experimentation, alternative lifestyles, and some terrific music! It was from an area just outside of Los Angeles, California – an area known as Laurel Canyon – that Rock and Roll's first supergroup arose: Crosby, Still, Nash & Young. Indie recording artist Jon Tyler Wiley joins Team Derringer as they debate when and where the founding members of CSN first lifted their voices in harmony. Listen in as Laura, Paul, Alton, and Dave pick their favorite CSNY band member and share their favorite songs written by David Crosby, Stephen Stills, Graham Nash, and/or Neil Young. Today's special guest will even provide you with a musical treat you're sure to love. For more information about Derringer Discoveries, Team Derringer, or our music promotion affiliate, Turnip Music Radio, please visit https://www.derringerdiscoveries.com. Sign up for our free newsletter at https://www.derringerdiscoveries.com/subscribe. We hope you will share this podcast with others. Let us know what you think of this episode on one of our social media channels: Instagram, Facebook, and/or Twitter. You can even drop us an email at feedback@derringerdiscoveries.com. We'd love to hear from you! Thanks for listening to Derringer Discoveries - A Music Adventure Podcast. © 2023 Derringer Discoveries | All Rights Reserved
From the mid-1960s to the early 1970s, there was a large counterculture movement in the United States. It was a time when the war in Vietnam was escalating and there was vast social tension in society overall. But it was also a time of free love, experimentation, alternative lifestyles, and some terrific music! It was from an area just outside of Los Angeles, California – an area known as Laurel Canyon – that Rock and Roll's first supergroup arose: Crosby, Still, Nash & Young. Indie recording artist Jon Tyler Wiley joins Team Derringer as they debate when and where the founding members of CSN first lifted their voices in harmony. Listen in as Laura, Paul, Alton, and Dave pick their favorite CSNY band member and share their favorite songs written by David Crosby, Stephen Stills, Graham Nash, and/or Neil Young. Today's special guest will even provide you with a musical treat you're sure to love. For more information about Derringer Discoveries, Team Derringer, or our music promotion affiliate, Turnip Music Radio, please visit https://www.derringerdiscoveries.com. Sign up for our free newsletter at https://www.derringerdiscoveries.com/subscribe. We hope you will share this podcast with others. Let us know what you think of this episode on one of our social media channels: Instagram, Facebook, and/or Twitter. You can even drop us an email at feedback@derringerdiscoveries.com. We'd love to hear from you! Thanks for listening to Derringer Discoveries - A Music Adventure Podcast. © 2023 Derringer Discoveries | All Rights Reserved
“Let me make the songs of a nation,” the Scottish patriot Andrew Fletcher once declared, “and I care not who makes its laws.” The eminent political journalist Ronald Brownstein makes a similar case in his recent book Rock Me on the Water — 1974: The Year Los Angeles Transformed Movies, Music, Television, and Politics. Brownstein's narrative history traces the spectacular cultural pinnacles achieved in Los Angeles in 1974 in the separate industries of movies, music, and television — though often the artists responsible for those breakthroughs were working only blocks apart. These achievements helped Los Angeles in that year to exert “more influence over popular culture than any other city in America,” according to Brownstein, and indeed “the city dominated popular culture more than it ever had before, or would again.” Ultimately the breakthroughs that took place in LA in 1974 would not only transform the culture industries, they would act as a conduit channeling the radical ideas of the 1960s into the American mainstream. In this podcast interview, CNN senior political analyst and Atlantic senior editor Brownstein discusses the creative summits achieved in LA in 1974. In Hollywood, these included the release of “New Wave” masterpieces such as Chinatown, The Godfather Part II, and The Conversation, along with the filming of other notable works including Nashville and Jaws. On television, 1974 was the only year that CBS broadcast the Saturday night lineup often considered “the greatest night in television history,” which included such breakthrough series as All in the Family, MASH, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, and The Bob Newhart Show. And in music, 1974 saw the release of career-defining albums from principal creators of the Southern California sound including Joni Mitchell, The Eagles, Jackson Browne, Linda Ronstadt, and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. The art across all these industries, according to Brownstein, “was socially engaged, grappling with all the changes and critiques of American life that had rumbled through society during the 1960s: greater suspicion of authority in business and government, more assertive roles for women, more tolerance of premarital sex, greater acceptance of racial and sexual minorities.” LA's culture industries in 1974 were at the forefront of the clash between an ascending Baby Boom generation bent on change and older generations opposing that change. In the short term, conservative politics triumphed. But Brownstein argues that the clear lesson for today's political-cultural clash of generations is that “while voices resistant to change may win delaying battles in politics, they cannot indefinitely hold back the future.”
Peace & love in Laurel Canyon didn't always apply to CS&N. If only they could've been as harmonious in person as they were on record! For their second album they decided to add Neil Young into an already volatile mix. Get yourself back to the garden while listening to our musings on the album they made together, as well as Neil's solo record that followed in its wake.
"CSN&Y je jedan od najboljih bendova sveta. Ako neko i sumnja da je to genijalno, taj neko mora da zna da nista nije čuo dok ne sasluša njihov prvi i drugi album i da shvati koliko je ta muzika moćna." Zontag
Music legend David Crosby passed away last month after a long illness. He was 81. Crosby's work paved the way for the folk rock movement. He was a founding member of The Byrds, and performed at Woodstock as a member of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. Crosby was also an award winning solo musician in his own right, and he's been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame twice. We're remembering David Crosby by revisiting our 2016 interview with the late music icon.
Welcome to the Martins and More PODCAST! Today, we'll be discussing the music & legacy of the legendary David Crosby. Maury & Spoon have been huge fans of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young and the recent passing of David Crosby has left a seriously sad void. During this program, Spoon & Maury recollect some great memories & music that would not have been possible if not for the one & only David Crosby. RIP. This podcast features the conversation and opinions of musician T Spoon Phillips. A writer by trade, Spoon's longtime association with professional musicians, luthiers, and music historians affords him a richly unique perspective on all things acoustic guitar. This includes decades of close friendship with executives and employee at C. F. Martin & Company, past and present, and the host of this podcast, Maury Rutch of Maury's Music. Visit Spoon at http://TSPguitar.com AND at http://onemanz.com/ Check out Maury's Music at https://www.maurysmusic.com
David Crosby, of the famous musical group “Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young,” recently died at the age of 81. Just before his passing, he wrote on Twitter that he heard heaven was overrated, and kind of cloudy. This brings up an interesting question that many ask: am I going to heaven when I die, and is it really “overrated”? One of the famous songs of Cosby and his band The Byrds is “Turn, Turn, Turn” from 1965. The lyrics come directly from the Bible—Ecclesiastes 3: 1-8. This song talks about seasons of life and a time to every purpose under the heavens. While Pete Seeger was the songwriter on this one, it has an ethereal connection to vocalist and bandmate David Crosby, whose “turn” it has been to die. But the elephant in the room is that the timing has to do with a purpose under heaven, meaning God's will. In this respect, heaven isn't overrated. ⭕️ Watch in-depth videos based on Truth & Tradition at Epoch TV
Producción y conducción: Begoña Lomelí Sistema Jalisciense de Radio y Televisión Visita: www.jaliscoradio.com
Frankie D talks about how the singer David Crosby from the band, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, died. I also talk about how astronaut and the 2nd man to walk on the moon, Buzz Aldrin, got married on his 93rd birthday. I then talk about how the “Karate Kid” spin off “Cobra Kai” is getting cancelled from Netflix after its next season, which is season 6.
Producción y conducción: Cornelio García Ramírez y Perla Padilla. Sistema Jalisciense de Radio y Televisión Visita: www.jaliscoradio.com
Csősz Bogi elárulta, miért vált el török férjétől Habostorta 2023-01-20 07:33:00 Bulvár Törökország Bulgária Csősz Boglárka Nyolc hónappal ezelőtt újrakezdte az életét Csősz Bolgárka. Kilépett több mint tizenegy évig tartó házasságából, sőt, törökországi cégét is Ekkora bukáshoz már tehetség kell – Helyettetek is megnéztük a Babylon című filmet WMN 2023-01-19 18:06:00 Film Energia Brad Pitt Margot Robbie „Felfoghatatlan mennyiségű energiát és pénzt öltek ebbe a filmbe, és mindezért lehetett volna gyümölcsöző vállalkozás is. Annak kellett volna lennie” – de Gyárfás Dorka szerint csak egy újabb háromórás eposz lett belőle, aminek csupán a végét várod, hiába teszi bele magát a világ legjobb nője (Margot Robbie) és legjobb pasija (Brad Pitt) is. Szia Életem!: A vérfarkas fagyit ebédel Mafab 2023-01-20 04:00:03 Film Mozi Ritkán dobok 5 csillagot egy filmre. Két módon jöhet nálam ez szóba. Az egyik, amikor olyan különleges nézőpontból mutatnak be egy jó sztorit, annyira szokatlan stílusban kapok fantasztikus élmény, ami szinte arcul csap; a másik, amikor egy abszolút bekategorizálható mozi után felteszem a kérdést: OK, sablonos, de lehetett volna ezt jobban? Szokták "A golyónyom Jimmyéknél máig ott van a falon" NLC 2023-01-20 06:57:15 Film Zámbó Jimmy Zámbó Krisztián 10 epizód után véget ért minden idők legjobb magyar tévésorozata, a Zámbó Jimmy életéről szóló A Király, amit szívesen néztünk volna tovább. Miért nem gondolkodtak két évadban? Mi maradt ki a sztoriból? Miért állt a produkció mellé Krisztián és Edit asszony? Kérdéseinkre Zomborácz Virág, a sorozat vezető írója válaszolt. „Stílusa: elemző. Hangulata: honfibú” - Tgm a könyvek és a kánon tükrében Könyves Magazin 2023-01-19 17:21:25 Könyv egyetem Tamás Gáspár Miklós Bár Tamás Gáspár Miklós stílusa és nagysága sokak szerint a klasszikus nagy plampfletírókéval vetekedett, elsősorban mint filozófust és publicistát, egyetemi tanárt és közszereplőt tartják számon. Életéről és világlátásáról hosszabban írtunk ebben a cikkben, de milyen volt a viszonya az irodalomhoz, karcos-egyedi stílusának az irodalmi - vagy bármi „Nem a szerelemtől félek, hanem attól, hogy elmúlik" – 30 éve hunyt el Audrey Hepburn Hamu és Gyémánt 2023-01-20 04:48:00 Film Párkapcsolat Audrey Hepburn A múlt század egyik legbájosabb film- és divatikonja, Audrey Hepburn harminc éve, 1993. január 20-án hunyt el. Az őzikeszemű, mindig természetes módon viselkedő színésznő az egész világot elbűvölte, nem véletlen, hogy a mai napig érezhető hatása. Cikkünkben 5 legendás filmjével emlékezünk meg róla. Elhunyt a zenészóriás – hatalmas űrt hagyott maga után Tudás.hu 2023-01-20 08:55:59 Zene USA Elhunyt David Crosby amerikai folk-rock zenész. A Byrds, valamint a Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young egykori tagja 81 évesen, hosszú betegség után halt meg szerdán. A gitáros, énekes, dalszerző halálhírét ügynöke erősítette meg. A halál pontos okát egyelőre nem közölték. Korábbi zenésztársai kiemelték tehetségét és kreativitását, ugyanakkor emlékeztett Steve Vai kezében felbőg a gitár tavasszal Librarius 2023-01-19 17:59:36 Zene Kultúra Koncert Steve Vai legutóbb 2016-ban játszott Magyarországon, akkor a Budapest Parkban lépett fel rendkívüli koncertélményt hozva. A Sikoly 6. teljes előzetesében Wednesday is futni kényszerül Player 2023-01-20 07:48:04 Film New York Wednesday Megérkezett a Sikoly hatodik részének első teljes kedvcsinálója, melyben már nem egy kisvárosban, hanem New Yorkban tombol az ikonikus maszkos gyilkos. Lemond vezérigazgatói posztjáról a Netflix alapítója Igényesférfi.hu 2023-01-20 07:34:55 Film Netflix A Netflix alapítója, Reed Hastings lemond vezérigazgatói posztjáról, de továbbra is a társaság elnöke marad – jelentette be a vállalat csütörtökön. Premier előtt: bemutatták A helység kalapácsát Magyar Hírlap 2023-01-19 22:10:00 Film Duna Petőfi Sándor A filmes adaptáció Petőfi Sándor azonos című eposzparódiája alapján készült és január 22-én lesz látható a Duna csatornán.
Csősz Bogi elárulta, miért vált el török férjétől Habostorta 2023-01-20 07:33:00 Bulvár Törökország Bulgária Csősz Boglárka Nyolc hónappal ezelőtt újrakezdte az életét Csősz Bolgárka. Kilépett több mint tizenegy évig tartó házasságából, sőt, törökországi cégét is Ekkora bukáshoz már tehetség kell – Helyettetek is megnéztük a Babylon című filmet WMN 2023-01-19 18:06:00 Film Energia Brad Pitt Margot Robbie „Felfoghatatlan mennyiségű energiát és pénzt öltek ebbe a filmbe, és mindezért lehetett volna gyümölcsöző vállalkozás is. Annak kellett volna lennie” – de Gyárfás Dorka szerint csak egy újabb háromórás eposz lett belőle, aminek csupán a végét várod, hiába teszi bele magát a világ legjobb nője (Margot Robbie) és legjobb pasija (Brad Pitt) is. Szia Életem!: A vérfarkas fagyit ebédel Mafab 2023-01-20 04:00:03 Film Mozi Ritkán dobok 5 csillagot egy filmre. Két módon jöhet nálam ez szóba. Az egyik, amikor olyan különleges nézőpontból mutatnak be egy jó sztorit, annyira szokatlan stílusban kapok fantasztikus élmény, ami szinte arcul csap; a másik, amikor egy abszolút bekategorizálható mozi után felteszem a kérdést: OK, sablonos, de lehetett volna ezt jobban? Szokták "A golyónyom Jimmyéknél máig ott van a falon" NLC 2023-01-20 06:57:15 Film Zámbó Jimmy Zámbó Krisztián 10 epizód után véget ért minden idők legjobb magyar tévésorozata, a Zámbó Jimmy életéről szóló A Király, amit szívesen néztünk volna tovább. Miért nem gondolkodtak két évadban? Mi maradt ki a sztoriból? Miért állt a produkció mellé Krisztián és Edit asszony? Kérdéseinkre Zomborácz Virág, a sorozat vezető írója válaszolt. „Stílusa: elemző. Hangulata: honfibú” - Tgm a könyvek és a kánon tükrében Könyves Magazin 2023-01-19 17:21:25 Könyv egyetem Tamás Gáspár Miklós Bár Tamás Gáspár Miklós stílusa és nagysága sokak szerint a klasszikus nagy plampfletírókéval vetekedett, elsősorban mint filozófust és publicistát, egyetemi tanárt és közszereplőt tartják számon. Életéről és világlátásáról hosszabban írtunk ebben a cikkben, de milyen volt a viszonya az irodalomhoz, karcos-egyedi stílusának az irodalmi - vagy bármi „Nem a szerelemtől félek, hanem attól, hogy elmúlik" – 30 éve hunyt el Audrey Hepburn Hamu és Gyémánt 2023-01-20 04:48:00 Film Párkapcsolat Audrey Hepburn A múlt század egyik legbájosabb film- és divatikonja, Audrey Hepburn harminc éve, 1993. január 20-án hunyt el. Az őzikeszemű, mindig természetes módon viselkedő színésznő az egész világot elbűvölte, nem véletlen, hogy a mai napig érezhető hatása. Cikkünkben 5 legendás filmjével emlékezünk meg róla. Elhunyt a zenészóriás – hatalmas űrt hagyott maga után Tudás.hu 2023-01-20 08:55:59 Zene USA Elhunyt David Crosby amerikai folk-rock zenész. A Byrds, valamint a Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young egykori tagja 81 évesen, hosszú betegség után halt meg szerdán. A gitáros, énekes, dalszerző halálhírét ügynöke erősítette meg. A halál pontos okát egyelőre nem közölték. Korábbi zenésztársai kiemelték tehetségét és kreativitását, ugyanakkor emlékeztett Steve Vai kezében felbőg a gitár tavasszal Librarius 2023-01-19 17:59:36 Zene Kultúra Koncert Steve Vai legutóbb 2016-ban játszott Magyarországon, akkor a Budapest Parkban lépett fel rendkívüli koncertélményt hozva. A Sikoly 6. teljes előzetesében Wednesday is futni kényszerül Player 2023-01-20 07:48:04 Film New York Wednesday Megérkezett a Sikoly hatodik részének első teljes kedvcsinálója, melyben már nem egy kisvárosban, hanem New Yorkban tombol az ikonikus maszkos gyilkos. Lemond vezérigazgatói posztjáról a Netflix alapítója Igényesférfi.hu 2023-01-20 07:34:55 Film Netflix A Netflix alapítója, Reed Hastings lemond vezérigazgatói posztjáról, de továbbra is a társaság elnöke marad – jelentette be a vállalat csütörtökön. Premier előtt: bemutatták A helység kalapácsát Magyar Hírlap 2023-01-19 22:10:00 Film Duna Petőfi Sándor A filmes adaptáció Petőfi Sándor azonos című eposzparódiája alapján készült és január 22-én lesz látható a Duna csatornán.
1, 2부 (09:05 ~ 10:00) * 편지 1 : 약국 직원이 하는 일 (이소리 / 서울 강북구) * 편지 2 : 여우 고개에서 만난 은인 (안미희 / 경기도 수원시) #M1 : Our House / Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young 아침 창가에서 #M2 : 시계바늘 / 신유 * 편지 3 : 삶의 길 위에서 (최남선 / 경북 청도군) * 편지 4: 동서, 서방님은 안 계셔도 아직 제 동서죠? (최영미 / 대구광역시 수성구)
De A2 wordt geparkeerd naast een polderweg bij Zoetermeer, op de Laan van Mathenesse. We willen duidelijkheid en wat is er duidelijker dan een polderweg? -GPS 52.034163, 4.527276 -Michel de Montaigne, Essays, Boom 1993 -Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, Almost Cut My Hair, Déjà Vu (1970)
The Greatest Room | Active Buzzer | Open Phones | Bit Of A Tramp | Songs I Wish I Wrote | The New Way | Silver D | There It Is | Live Show Tickets!: https://dice.fm/partner/brain-dead-llc/event/v7d57-axe-to-grind-live-presented-by-sound-and-fury-fest-28th-jul-brain-dead-studios-los-angeles-tickets?dice_source=web&dice_medium=organic&dice_campaign=Brain+Dead%2C+LLC&_branch_referrer=H4sIAAAAAAAAA8soKSkottLXz8nMy9ZLyUxO1UvL1Q8wM0k0TDJKTjVNNgYAsY%2FEgCEAAAA%3D&_branch_match_id=1043714090994519548 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
* Graham Nash Talks Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, Music, Memories, War - and a multitude of magical moments through the years * Concert In The Barn: A conversation with musician, composer, 'earth music' pioneer and 7-time Grammy Award winner Paul Winter
Arran Day from UK rockers These Wicked Rivers drops by 'My Classic Album' to chat with Mike about 'Deja Vu' from Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young! Already a force to be reckoned with as a trio, the addition of Stephen Stills's former Buffalo Springfield bandmate foreshadowed an album that would inspire many including Arran for decades to come. How much creative involvement did Neil Young have on the album? Which historic musical event hosted only the second performance of CSNY? What personal memories does 'Our House' evoke for Arran? PLUS: Enjoy These Wicked Rivers and their track 'Evergreen', a standout from their 2020 album 'Eden'. Sit back and enjoy another episode of 'My Classic Album'. For more information on the show: Head over to www.myclassicalbum.co.uk Like us on Facebook at 'My Classic Album with Mike Norris' Follow us on Instagram @myclassicalbumpodcast Or on Twitter @mca_podcast Music Credits: 'This Is Rock' by Silvia Marchese 'Evergreen' by These Wicked Rivers. Released on Rock People Records from the 2020 album 'Eden'. All music rights reserved to their respective owners.
In this episode of Ear and Loathing, your hosts Aaron, Damon and George (The Gitmo Bros) talk about Aaron drunkenly accosting celebrities, Damon's super unprofessionalism, George's girlie mag expertise, and Peter Tork's eternal party sadness. In the Torture Chamber segment, George and Damon compete for meaningless points by making Aaron listen to his most hated songs. Will Aaron survive the Torture Chamber long enough to share one of his favorite songs? Tune in and find out! Songs featured in this episode: "Almost Cut My Hair" (Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young), "Naughty Girls (Need Love Too)" (Samantha Fox), "Ain't That Lonely Yet" (Dwight Yoakam)
Singer-songwriter Graham Nash of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young fame goes back half a century. His new album revisits his old solo albums from the 1970s. And, the Department of Health and Human Services is ringing the alarm bell over a projected massive worker shortage in medicine. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy discusses the implications.
‘Madres célebres de la literatura'. Especial de Patricia del Río sobre madres emblemáticas en el fascinante y complejo universo literario. Personajes como Úrsula Iguarán, en ‘Cien años de soledad', de Gabriel García Márquez; Pelagia, en ‘La madre', de Máximo Gorki; Margarett March, en ‘Mujercitas', de Louise May Alcott; Fantine, en ‘Los Miserables, de Víctor Hugo; Susan Linda, en ‘Un mundo para Julius', de Alfredo Bryce Echenique, son algunas de las madres famosas en la ficción, mencionadas en cada capítulo de esta nueva entrega. También, escritoras como Blanca Varela, Isabel Allende, Piedad Bonnett, que plasmaron su historia personal, en novelas y poesía, para inmortalizar al hijo ausente. Hoy, en "El libro de la semana", nos acompaña Lis Geraldine Rojas Loyola, autora de ‘Va a anochecer', una historia de superación y búsqueda de justicia vinculada con la muerte de su hijo Brunito. Por su parte, Rossana Díaz Costa, cineasta y directora de cine, nos cuenta cómo adaptó al guion cinematográfico el personaje de Susan Linda, la madre de Julius, de la novela ‘Un mundo para Julius', para la película del mismo nombre. El periodista Diego Pajares recomienda tres películas sobre esta temática: "Boyhood: momentos de una vida", con Patricia Arquette; " Erin Brockovich, una mujer audaz", con Julia Roberts; y "Terminator 2. Sarah Connor, Génesis", con Linda Hamilton. Mientras que el crítico literario y librero de Escena libre, Julio Zavala, nos da tres títulos de lecturas imprescindibles: "El verano en que mi madre tuvo los ojos verdes", de Tatiana Tabulsac; "Una madre", de Alejandro Palomas; "Una canción de Bob Dylan en la agenda de mi madre", de Sergio Galarza. Las canciones que complementan el tema de la madre, son: ‘Teach your children', de Crosby, Still y Nash & Young; ‘Los caminos de la vida', de Vicentico; ‘Over the rainbow', de Israel Kamakawiwo'ole; ‘Siempre me quedará' de Bebe; ‘Dust in the wind', por Melanie; ‘Mamma mia', de Abba; ‘Cunita de hielo', de Pamela Rodríguez. Conducción: Patricia del Río ||| Producción: Amelia Villanueva ||| Edición de audio: Andrés Rodríguez ||| Episodio 19 – Tercera temporada
‘Madres célebres de la literatura'. Especial de Patricia del Río sobre madres emblemáticas en el fascinante y complejo universo literario. Personajes como Úrsula Iguarán, en ‘Cien años de soledad', de Gabriel García Márquez; Pelagia, en ‘La madre', de Máximo Gorki; Margarett March, en ‘Mujercitas', de Louise May Alcott; Fantine, en ‘Los Miserables, de Víctor Hugo; Susan Linda, en ‘Un mundo para Julius', de Alfredo Bryce Echenique, son algunas de las madres famosas en la ficción, mencionadas en cada capítulo de esta nueva entrega. También, escritoras como Blanca Varela, Isabel Allende, Piedad Bonnett, que plasmaron su historia personal, en novelas y poesía, para inmortalizar al hijo ausente. Hoy, en "El libro de la semana", nos acompaña Lis Geraldine Rojas Loyola, autora de ‘Va a anochecer', una historia de superación y búsqueda de justicia vinculada con la muerte de su hijo Brunito. Por su parte, Rossana Díaz Costa, cineasta y directora de cine, nos cuenta cómo adaptó al guion cinematográfico el personaje de Susan Linda, la madre de Julius, de la novela ‘Un mundo para Julius', para la película del mismo nombre. El periodista Diego Pajares recomienda tres películas sobre esta temática: "Boyhood: momentos de una vida", con Patricia Arquette; " Erin Brockovich, una mujer audaz", con Julia Roberts; y "Terminator 2. Sarah Connor, Génesis", con Linda Hamilton. Mientras que el crítico literario y librero de Escena libre, Julio Zavala, nos da tres títulos de lecturas imprescindibles: "El verano en que mi madre tuvo los ojos verdes", de Tatiana Tabulsac; "Una madre", de Alejandro Palomas; "Una canción de Bob Dylan en la agenda de mi madre", de Sergio Galarza. Las canciones que complementan el tema de la madre, son: ‘Teach your children', de Crosby, Still y Nash & Young; ‘Los caminos de la vida', de Vicentico; ‘Over the rainbow', de Israel Kamakawiwo'ole; ‘Siempre me quedará' de Bebe; ‘Dust in the wind', por Melanie; ‘Mamma mia', de Abba; ‘Cunita de hielo', de Pamela Rodríguez. Conducción: Patricia del Río ||| Producción: Amelia Villanueva ||| Edición de audio: Andrés Rodríguez ||| Episodio 19 – Tercera temporada
Scott prepares a brief summary and sings along to Ohio by Crosby Stills Nash & Young and talks about what happened all those years ago on may 4th 1970.
Graham Nash, Allan Clarke and Tony Hicks, The Hollies
Der englische Musiker und Songwriter Graham Nash ist Mitbegründer der britischen Popband «The Hollies» und später auch der amerikanischen Folkrock-Supergroup «Crosby, Stills, Nash (& Young)». Seine grossartigen Songs wurden hundertfach gecovert und gesampelt - von New York bis Teheran.
We had the pleasure of interviewing Jamestown Revival over Zoom video! Jamestown Revival have made the quietest record of their career with Young Man, yet it may resonate the most. Recorded in their home state of Texas, it is their first project without electric guitars, with the emphasis instead on skillful songwriting, flawless harmony, and intricate fingerpicking. In addition, it's the first time that bandmates Jonathan Clay and Zach Chance have created an album with a producer -- in this case, Robert Ellis, a fellow Texan and a recording artist in his own right.Sonically the album draws on inspirations such as Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young and The Doobie Brothers (particularly “Black Water”), yet there's also a dusty Western feel to Young Man, similar to a Guy Clark or Townes Van Zandt album where the detailed backdrop and acoustic arrangements convey the story as eloquently as the lyrics do..Young Man opens with “Coyote,” a plaintive ballad the duo wrote on their ranch near Huntsville, Texas, about an hour north of their hometown of Magnolia. With its lonesome tones and sly title character, it sets the tone for the album, pulling in listeners with blended voices and a narrative that befits a campfire setting. From there, songs like “Young Man,” “Moving Man,” “Northbound,” and especially “These Days” further explore their restless frame of mind, due in no small part to the pandemic.Chance and Clay envision Young Man as a collection of songs that should be played all the way through, like reading a book. “We had the most amazing time recording this album. We laughed nonstop,” Clay says. “When I listen to this album top to bottom, I'm really proud of what we did. I hope that this album transports people because it's like a time capsule. It takes us right back to that studio and to that couple of weeks. It felt like we were doing what we were meant to do.”ABOUT JAMESTOWN REVIVAL:Jamestown Revival deliver skillful songwriting, flawless harmony, and intricate fingerpicking on their newest album, Young Man. The project is their first without electric guitars and their first to be recorded in a studio. Jonathan Clay and Zach Chance forged a musical bond as teenagers growing up in Magnolia, Texas. They draw musical inspiration from groups like Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young and The Doobie Brothers, as well as songwriters such as Guy Clark and Townes Van Zandt. With themes like coming of age and settling into an identity, Young Man is envisioned as a collection of songs that should be played all the way through. Sonically, the album evokes the experience of musicians huddled together, singing and playing without headphones or click tracks. Chance and Clay are joined on the Young Man sessions by producer Robert Ellis and the band's longtime rhythm section of bassist Nick Bearden and drummer Ed Benrock. We want to hear from you! Please email Tera@BringinitBackwards.com. www.BringinitBackwards.com #podcast #interview #bringinbackpod #JamestownRevival #zoom Listen & Subscribe to BiB Follow our podcast on Instagram and Twitter!
Episode 54: Who is the greatest #Supergroup of all-time? Join us this week for another fun-filled discussion about rock music! Ethan and John are back with me to discuss an extensive list of bands who's members were individually famous before forming a "Supergroup." Find out who we thought were the studs, and who were the duds. Be sure to play along and make your own selections! #Countdown #List0:00 - Intro (Lee Michaels)1:17 - Welcome John & Ethan2:24 - Supergroups / Definition 3:53 - Alias 7:37 - Alter Bridge11:27 - Asia14:51 - Audioslave21:57 - Bad Company26:08 - Bad English29:47 - Blind Faith34:02 - Chickenfoot40:14 - Cream46:19 - Them Crooked Vultures51:12 - Prophets of Rage55:09 - Crosby, Stills & Nash (Young)1:01:35 - Damn Yankees1:04:43 - Derek & The Dominos1:10:18 - Emerson, Lake & Palmer1:17:02 - The Firm1:20:09 - Foo Fighters1:25:12 - Hellyeah1:28:37 - The Highwaymen1:32:14 - The Honeydrippers1:35:38 - Humble Pie1:38:39 - Journey1:42:38 - Mad Season1:47:21 - Mike + The Mechanics 1:51:49 - Mr. Big1:54:07 - A Perfect Circle1:59:10 - Traveling Wilburys2:04:39 - Temple Of The Dog2:09:25 - The Power Station2:12:51 - The Raconteurs 2:17:55 - Velvet Revolver / Slash's Snakepit2:24:11 - Zwan2:26:53 - Runner-Up Selections2:31:52 - Number 3 Selections2:34:52 - Number 2 Selections2:38:34 - Number 1 Selections2:45:36 - Outro / Close
Hailing from Philadelphia, America's City of Brotherly Love, Ryan Tennis' music is all about dismantling boundaries and bringing people together. Genre-defiant by nature and with diversity at its core, his rousing songs are infused with the rhythms from the many countries he's visited during his extensive tours. While his performances are dynamic and danceable, Tennis' voice and songs have a disarming sweetness that lowers your defenses and lets you breathe easy. A singer-songwriter and guitarist, Ryan Tennis' style bares a strong influence from the Folk and Rock he grew up with (Simon & Garfunkel, The Beatles, Crosby Stills, Nash & Young), a connection with roots soul music that grew in his youth (Bill Withers, Otis Redding, and Sam Cooke), and the energy and rhythms of Colombia, where he has toured and collaborated with some of the country's finest artists. Despite a life that now circulates around music almost entirely, Tennis admits he was a late bloomer when it came to songwriting. Sports occupied much of his time during his teens and into college, playing as a 1AA All-American defensive lineman at Davidson College in North Carolina until the age of 22. That intensity and power that he channelled for football still comes through in Tennis' live performances. Over the last 12 years, Tennis has played 100-200 shows a year and pulled off countless independent tours with shows in the US, Argentina, Colombia, Peru, Costa Rica, Mexico, Ireland, Switzerland, Germany, France, Austria, the Netherlands, Denmark, Italy, Spain, Thailand, and Australia. Since then, Tennis has also released four full-length LPs and two EPs, has fronted a 10-piece "Graceland'' band with the Grammy award-winning South African bass player Bakithi Kumalo, collaborated with Latin Grammy winning artists Nidia Gongora and Hugo Candaleria, and regularly toured South America with Latin Grammy-nominated group "El Caribefunk”. Additionally, he won the Philadelphia Songwriters Project, was selected as a finalist in the International Songwriting Competition, and helped found “Sancochofest” in the City of Tuluá, Colombia. In his hometown of Philadelphia, he curates and hosts “Tracks at the Vale,” a vibrant concert series on the stage he built in his backyard, where the music and the crowd echo the warmth and diversity he has fostered in his music. “Everyone's struggling these days in their own way, including me” Tennis says. “The best way I've found to feel that joy, that flow, that freedom from worry, is when I'm performing, when I feel like I'm channeling something big. When I'm in that place I can open up my own groove, and open it up for other people too.” Ryan Tennis has achieved so much during his time in music and shows little sign of slowing down. His forthcoming single, 'Alligator' is scheduled for release in early September 2021; a taste of what's to come from his forthcoming album later in the year. https://www.ryantennismusic.com/
In our latest episode, we have a new addition to our "Featured Artist" segment: "Southern Rock/Folk/etc."...and we begin with Crosby, Stills, Nash (& Young). Plus, Frankie gives you his 2 best album covers from 1975 (I think you 'll know these!); a couple of terrific 1-Hit Wonders; Tim makes a case for Boston for induction into the Rock Hall, and Frank has George Michael. Just 2 more episodes to go after this one before we wrap up Season 3. Enjoy!
in this weeks happy episode we talk about the debut album by CSN&Y called Deja Vu, a very cool album by a Dutch band called Focus, Dutch Masters and finally, John Prine's debut album called John Prine. Enjoy, I know that we did. :) --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/reviewsfromthecrawlspace/message
“Americana and roots music has become too complacent. What we need now is to shake ourselves from feeling comfortable and start looking at the world around us.” We're back for a mid-season special series recorded live at Newport Folk Festival, and in this episode, Adia sits down with Newport's Director, Jay Sweet to dig into the Black roots of folk music. The two explore how Newport can serve as a platform for uncomfortable conversations so that it can grow and evolve with the expanding landscape of folk music, and what the festival's return means for the artists and audiences it calls family./ Show Notes / Jay Sweet is the Director of the Newport Folk Festival. Adia references the 1963 performance at Newport by the Freedom Singers, a group formed by the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). Jay brings up the song “Ohio,” originally performed by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, inspired by the 1968 killings that took place at Kent State University in Ohio./ Credits / Call & Response is a Sonos show produced by work x work: Scott Newman, Jemma Rose Brown, Adia Victoria, Babette Thomas and Emily Shaw. Our engineers are Sam Bair and Tom Tierney.
In our first episode of a 5 part look at one year in the life of CSNY from early 1970 to early 1971 we start, of course, with the legendary foursome's 1970 best seller "Deja Vu". The year starts off great commercially for them but not so good personally.
Crosby, Stills, Nash _ Young - "Almost Cut My Hair" Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
"We had no cameras to shoot the landscapeWe passed the hash pipe and played our Doors tapesAnd it was dark, so dark at nightAnd we held on to each other like brother to brotherWe promised our mothers we'd writeAnd we would all go down together" Please join me and pay tribute to those who've served, sacrificed and continue to serve on this weekend of remembrance. I'll be paying tribute with some Vietnam Era tunes and serving up more great tuneage from The Doors, Who, John Mayall's Bluesbreakers, Phil Woods, Phil Ochs, Crosby Stills, Nash & Young, Grateful Dead, Moody Blues, Spirit, Earth Opera, Quincy Jones, Chicago, Trace Adkins, Poco, Tim Buckley, Blood Sweat & Tears, Neil Young & Crazy Horse and Billy Joel...
tracklist comizio 320:..Pier Paolo Pasolini - Comizi D'Amore..Aleksandr Sokurov - Arca Russa..Peter Greenaway - Il Cuoco, Il Ladro, Sua Moglie E L'Amante..Iosonouncane - Hiver..Peter Greenaway - Il Cuoco, Il Ladro, Sua Moglie E L'Amante..Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young - 4 + 20 (2021 Remaster)..Peter Greenaway - Il Ventre dell'Architetto..Four Tet - Parallel 3..Peter Greenaway - Lo Zoo di Venere ..Lucinda Chua - An Avalanche..Peter Greenaway - Il Cuoco, Il Ladro, Sua Moglie E L'Amante..Sally Potter - Orlando..Aleksandr Sokurov - Arca Russa..Jean Luc Godard - 2 o 3 cose che so di lei..Miquela - Tu E Leu
tracklist comizio 320:..Pier Paolo Pasolini - Comizi D'Amore..Aleksandr Sokurov - Arca Russa..Peter Greenaway - Il Cuoco, Il Ladro, Sua Moglie E L'Amante..Iosonouncane - Hiver..Peter Greenaway - Il Cuoco, Il Ladro, Sua Moglie E L'Amante..Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young - 4 + 20 (2021 Remaster)..Peter Greenaway - Il Ventre dell'Architetto..Four Tet - Parallel 3..Peter Greenaway - Lo Zoo di Venere ..Lucinda Chua - An Avalanche..Peter Greenaway - Il Cuoco, Il Ladro, Sua Moglie E L'Amante..Sally Potter - Orlando..Aleksandr Sokurov - Arca Russa..Jean Luc Godard - 2 o 3 cose che so di lei..Miquela - Tu E Leu
We kick things off by taking you back to the very first time each of us performed for a live audience and what the experience was like. We're going back to performances around Newport, Rhode Island where we grew up, from King's Park to school performances at St. Johns, to performing down on Bannister's Wharf. We welcome the legendary Richie Furay onto the show, one of the original members of The Buffalo Springfield! Richie is one of the lead vocalists on songs such as "For What It's Worth", "Kind Woman", "Bluebird", and "Mr. Soul", and he's answering all our lingering questions about the band over the years. We dig into how they recorded some of their bigger hits, rumored band disputes, and finally, we demand to know why they broke our hearts and split up in 1968! The music didn't stop there! The Buffalo Springfield band members continued to make some of the most influential music of our generation. Stills went on to form Crosby, Stills & Nash, Furay and Messina formed Poco, and Young launched his solo career. In 1969, Young reunited with Stills in Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. The Buffalo Springfield was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1997 and their legacy remains alive and well! Song of the week: "Kind Woman"
There's not many people in this world who can say they are one of the world's foremost connoisseurs of cannabis, except David Crosby. We had the honor of sitting down with Crosby (singer/song-writer/musician), 2-time Rock & Roll Hall of Famer and founding member of Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young and The Byrds. David tells us about how he's utilized cannabis consumption to help with his writing process and to help inspire the hundreds of songs he's created. We talk about how he's been a successful musician for over five decades with cannabis always being a constant in his life. David provides insight into what it felt to play at Woodstock in 69' and one of the memorable stories he remembered from that day. As a leader of the counterculture in the 60's David is still very passionate about global warming, anti-war rhetoric amongst many other passions that still play out in his daily life. We wrap up the episode talking about Mighty Croz Cannabis Brand created by Crosby and Stephen Sponder focusing on high quality cannabis teaming up with cultivators and companies that share their vision. We'll have to be patient for the debut of Mighty Croz as Crosby and his team are waiting for federal legalization to release the brand to the masses. Until then you can catch up on one of the 5 new albums David has released in the last 6 years! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lit-and-lucid/support
Il 7 di aprile 1971 la casa discografica americana Atlantic pubblica l'album "4 Way Street" di Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young - con Helmut Failoni
"Well, you've got your diamonds and you've got your pretty clothesAnd the chauffeur drives your cars, you let everybody knowBut don't play with me, cause you're playing with fire"No need to put on your diamonds or your pretty clothes, we're casual here on the Saturday Edition of Whole 'Nuther Thing. The menu is complete, I'll be serving up tasty morsels from Emerson Lake & Palmer, John Prine, Led Zeppelin, The London Symphony Orchestra, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, The Beatles, Pink Floyd, Tom Petty, Poco, David Crosby, Dire Straits, The Nice, Buffalo Springfield, Colosseum, Chuck Berry, Neil Young, Bruce Springsteen, ELO and John Batdorf w James Lee Stanley.
¿Existe un modelo ideal de madre? Es el especial de Patricia del Río con la escritora española Laura Freixas, quien nos muestra el otro lado de la maternidad. Ese tema evadido por tantos años en la Literatura. Los escritores Jennifer Thorndike y Dany Salvatierra, nos comentan de sus libros ‘Ella', y ‘La mujer soviética', respectivamente, historias de amor y odio entre madre e hija. El investigador Luis Rodríguez Pastor hace alusión a mujeres famosas que decidieron no tener hijos. Por su parte, el librero Julio Zavala recomienda algunas lecturas sobre esta temática, así como la periodista Laura Amasifuén de películas inspiradas en las malas madres. Los temas que visten el programa son 'Blues for mamma', de Nina Simone; 'Siempre me quedará, de Bebé; y 'Teach your children', de Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young.
¿Existe un modelo ideal de madre? Es el especial de Patricia del Río con la escritora española Laura Freixas, quien nos muestra el otro lado de la maternidad. Ese tema evadido por tantos años en la Literatura. Los escritores Jennifer Thorndike y Dany Salvatierra, nos comentan de sus libros ‘Ella', y ‘La mujer soviética', respectivamente, historias de amor y odio entre madre e hija. El investigador Luis Rodríguez Pastor hace alusión a mujeres famosas que decidieron no tener hijos. Por su parte, el librero Julio Zavala recomienda algunas lecturas sobre esta temática, así como la periodista Laura Amasifuén de películas inspiradas en las malas madres. Los temas que visten el programa son 'Blues for mamma', de Nina Simone; 'Siempre me quedará, de Bebé; y 'Teach your children', de Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young.
Einer der vielen Neil Young Songs, die politische Position beziehen: sein traurig wütendes Statement aus dem Jahre 1970, als die Nationalgarde im Bundesstaat Ohio 4 Demonstrant*innen erschoss. Kaum jemand hat mit derartiger Kontinuität in seinen Songs Misstände angeprangert und Stellung bezogen: gegen die Vereinnahmung von Popmusik durch Werbung, gegen den Irakkrieg, gegen Trump und immer wieder gegen Rassismus. Mit seinen Bandmates Crosby, Stills und Nash nahm er im Mai 1970 den Song "Ohio" auf, nachdem er gehört hatte, dass 4 Menschen auf einer Demonstration gegen den Vietnamkrieg im Campus der Kent State University erschossen worden waren. Seine Empörung brach sich Bahn mit einem monumentalen Riff gespielt von insgesamt drei verzerrten E-Gitarren und einem schweren hypnotischen Groove. Die typischen 4-stimmigen Harmoniegesänge glätten die Wut keineswegs, der Kontrast zu den lauten Gitarren machen den Song umso eindringlicher.
Al Recapte d'avui el músic i escriptor de Deltebre, Miquel Àngel Marín, ens ha portat una llauna importada directament del Canadà i contenia cançons de Joni Mitchell; Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young i The Band. Un viatge musical a través dels anys fins als anys 60 i 70!
"Nobody on the road, nobody on the beach, I feel it in the air, the summer's out of reach."Please join me for the last Saturday of Summer featuring tasty morsels from (not in order of appearance) Neil Young, John Mellencamp, Motels, Billy Joel, Foreigner, Dexy's Midnight Runners, Christopher Cross, John Klemmer, Buffalo Springfield, Exile, Walter Egan, Aerosmith, Crosby Stills, Nash & Young, Loggins & Messina, Gino Vanelli, Genesis, Kid Rock, Genesis, Daryl Braithwaite, Mark Almond Band and Don Henley....
Christian and Russ Kunkel sit down to go over a long illustrious career as first call session drummer, road dog and being the heartbeat of the Immediate Family Band!Famous drummer Russell Kunkel, better known as Russ, has been a part of the music world for more than two memorable decades. Serving as drummer, and sometimes even as producer, Kunkel has appeared and performed with top musical artists in almost every genre and style known to fans, including Sydney Forest, Stevie Nicks, Wynonna Judd, Aaron Neville, Dan Fogelberg, James Taylor, the Bee Gees, Dolly Parton, Jimmy Buffet, B. B. King, Bob Segar, Carly Simon, and many, many others. Kunkel has also been featured in, and been on the cover of, magazines such as Modern Drummer.Kunkel was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania but by the age of nine he moved to Southern California. There, he was part of an orchestra at the local elementary school. Prior to moving, he was influenced by his brother and the song "Wipe Out" to play drums. During his high school years he lived in Long Beach, California. He played for approximately six different bands, including the Barons, and appeared at many sock hops and high school dances, playing surf music and Beatles songs. In his last two years of high school he was a jazz drummer and later worked for John Stewart and his band the Kingston Trio.In early 1970s, while rehearsing for the upcoming tour, he met Chris Darrow, a former player of John Stewart's, who was a friend of Peter Asher, and together along with James Taylor and bassist Leland Sklar they had put out an album. Later on, guitarist Danny Kortchmar came to them from The Flying Machine along with keyboardist Craig Doerge and together, the four of them, had formed a band called The Section. The group existed between 1972 and 1977, during which time they had recorded three albums. Three years later, Kunkel participated in the Carly Simon's song "Waterfall" and played a part in the James Taylor's album Gorilla in a song "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You)". In 1977 during the recording of Jackson Browne's Running on Empty album, Kunkel played on Pearl and North Drum sets, and went on a tour to promote the album. During the same year, Kunkel played hi-hat on the Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young album CSN. A year later, he worked with Warren Zevon on Excitable Boy as part of the Section.In 1980 during his tour with Jackson Browne to promote his album Hold Out, he played a tom, a floor tom, a bass drum, a snare drum, and two cymbals. During those years, he also was a drummer for the Lawyers In Love album where he played in a song "Say It Isn't True". In 1980s album Mad Love by Linda Ronstadt, Kunkel along with Waddy Wachtel and Danny Kortchmar performed in the songs "How Do I Make You" and "Mad Love".In 1980, Kunkel played in Linda Ronstadt's band for a concert that was shown on HBO, along with the guitarists Kenny Edwards and Danny Kortchmar, bassist Bob Glaub, keyboardist Billy Payne, pedal steel guitarist Dan Dugmore, and backing vocalist Wendy Waldman. https://www.facebook.com/TheImmedFamily
Christian and Russ Kunkel sit down to go over a long illustrious career as first call session drummer, road dog and being the heartbeat of the Immediate Family Band!Famous drummer Russell Kunkel, better known as Russ, has been a part of the music world for more than two memorable decades. Serving as drummer, and sometimes even as producer, Kunkel has appeared and performed with top musical artists in almost every genre and style known to fans, including Sydney Forest, Stevie Nicks, Wynonna Judd, Aaron Neville, Dan Fogelberg, James Taylor, the Bee Gees, Dolly Parton, Jimmy Buffet, B. B. King, Bob Segar, Carly Simon, and many, many others. Kunkel has also been featured in, and been on the cover of, magazines such as Modern Drummer.Kunkel was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania but by the age of nine he moved to Southern California. There, he was part of an orchestra at the local elementary school. Prior to moving, he was influenced by his brother and the song "Wipe Out" to play drums. During his high school years he lived in Long Beach, California. He played for approximately six different bands, including the Barons, and appeared at many sock hops and high school dances, playing surf music and Beatles songs. In his last two years of high school he was a jazz drummer and later worked for John Stewart and his band the Kingston Trio.In early 1970s, while rehearsing for the upcoming tour, he met Chris Darrow, a former player of John Stewart's, who was a friend of Peter Asher, and together along with James Taylor and bassist Leland Sklar they had put out an album. Later on, guitarist Danny Kortchmar came to them from The Flying Machine along with keyboardist Craig Doerge and together, the four of them, had formed a band called The Section. The group existed between 1972 and 1977, during which time they had recorded three albums. Three years later, Kunkel participated in the Carly Simon's song "Waterfall" and played a part in the James Taylor's album Gorilla in a song "How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You)". In 1977 during the recording of Jackson Browne's Running on Empty album, Kunkel played on Pearl and North Drum sets, and went on a tour to promote the album. During the same year, Kunkel played hi-hat on the Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young album CSN. A year later, he worked with Warren Zevon on Excitable Boy as part of the Section.In 1980 during his tour with Jackson Browne to promote his album Hold Out, he played a tom, a floor tom, a bass drum, a snare drum, and two cymbals. During those years, he also was a drummer for the Lawyers In Love album where he played in a song "Say It Isn't True". In 1980s album Mad Love by Linda Ronstadt, Kunkel along with Waddy Wachtel and Danny Kortchmar performed in the songs "How Do I Make You" and "Mad Love".In 1980, Kunkel played in Linda Ronstadt's band for a concert that was shown on HBO, along with the guitarists Kenny Edwards and Danny Kortchmar, bassist Bob Glaub, keyboardist Billy Payne, pedal steel guitarist Dan Dugmore, and backing vocalist Wendy Waldman. https://www.facebook.com/TheImmedFamily
Musik er ikke bare musik - og slet ikke, når det kommer fra en sand mester. En sådan er Neil Young, som gennem en menneskealder har skabt sig et omdømme - både som solist og som medlem af legendariske bands som Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young og Buffalo Springfield. To gange er han indlemmet i Rock 'N' Roll Hall Of Fame - både som solist og som medlem af Buffalo Springfield... Noget af en bedrift! Og derfor er det også fuldt berettiget, at Mike Tramp i denne omgang af myROCK myWAY giver dig 2 timer med Neil Young - og du behøver ikke, at være kender for at være med. Tramp skal nok guide dig hele vejen. Vært: Mike Tramp
... en su disco del mismo nombre que escuchamos hoy junto con sus más claras influencias. Como Crosby, Stills, Nash y Young y su maravilla sobre los ojos azules de Judy o las carreteras californianas bajo el sol, camino de Ventura, que cantaban America. Escucha la impresionante versión de los Lovin' Spoonful a cargo de los Cherry Drops, acompañados por Steve Boone, bajista original de los Lovin. O los maestros Beach Boys y los Beatles, que escucharon antes a los hermanos Everly y a Gram Parsons que, junto a su musa Emmylou Harris, nos trasladan al comienzo del country rock. Los chicos del Club de Exploradores y los Eagles nos mandan recuerdos de California, donde iremos algún día junto con John Mayer buscando a nuestra reina. Clave de Rock, 14 de junio de 2020 Listado de artistas y canciones:- High South, Peace, Love & Harmony- High South, Make It Better- Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, Suite, Judy Blue Eyes- High South, All We Need- America, Ventura Highway- America, Woodstock- The Cherry Drops, You Didn't Have To Be So Nice- The Beach Boys, Wouldn't Be So Nice- The Beatles, Because- Gram Parsons (w Emmylou Harris), The Return Of The Grievous Angel- Dolly Parton, Kinda Ronstadt, Emmylou Harris, To Know Him Is To Love Him- The Everly Brothers, When Will I Be Loved- High South, Moonlight On Sunset- The Explorers Club, Forever- The Eagles, Lyin' Eyes- John Mayer, Queen of California
Todays program features tuneage from (not in order of appearance) Jack Bruce, Chicago Transit Authority, Derek & The Dominos, Led Zeppelin, Beatles, Doors, Traffic, Joni Mitchell, Blind Faith, Buddy Miles, Savoy Brown, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, Fleetwood Mac, Cream, Rolling Stones, Electric Flag, Steve Miller Band and Badfinger.
Episode 299/2019We arrived in the US via the rainbow bridge. It was a Sunday August 18th 2019. We got there early to beat the traffic going through customs. We arrived at customs at 9:00 a.m. and waited a half hour. We went right through without an issue. Which made me think about border crossings it seems like the slower quieter ones have more time perhaps to look through RVs and such. Or perhaps they're thinking is if you're sneaking something through go through the quiet areas. But whatever the reason it always seems that going through customs at a high tourist area like Niagara falls even though we wait longer in line we don't have our rig searched. In the past I had enjoyed seeing Niagara falls from the New York side where it's quiet and more like a state park. Whilw we were in Canada we planned on walking across the bridge to the NY park from Canada but we saw the line of people standing and waiting to go through customs and decided it wasn't worth it.We arrived in Erie pa and stayed at another boondockers welcome location. We had never been to Erie before. We learned that the city has a lot of concerts and live music in the summer. Our hosts invited us to join them at a huge street fair. This was a part of their 3 day celebration which happens every year in August. They had three stages food art and a beer garden. But no wine. This year Sister Sledge and Scotty McCreery performed. The next day we paddled kayaks with them and their friendly neighbors at Presque Isle State Park for almost 3 hours. Halfway through the panel we stopped at a small Beach and had snacks and a glass of wine. The name got me wondering so I googled what a Presque is and it is a peninsula that is almost an island. Now you know lol.The two of us then visited some covered bridges and wineries in Rome Ohio. We drove past Kent State University so of course we had to listen to The Crosby stills Nash & Young song. From there we went to Ashtabula which had a small main Street with a drawbridge and a great chocolate shop. From there we went over to Geneva on the lake well how do I explain this town? Think of the New Jersey shore without the crowds. A lot of shops food and arcades. It was August 20th it was a Tuesday. And it was empty! Many people say it's packed earlier in the season and on the weekends. We had visited two wineries in the area one was South River winery which was a beautiful old church. Here's a link to it http://southrivervineyard.com/ We really enjoyed that winery. And the other one was a ferrante winery. This one was an experience. They had two menus a dinner menu and a light self-serve menu. We got the muscles they were $14 and they were delicious but we got no forks or napkins. So he asked to waiter for some and he handed his silverware and cloth napkins and then he saw that we were not dinner guests but only self-serve guests so he took them away from us and gave us plastic wear and paper napkins. Unreal. The next day we left that host and went to another boondockers welcome host location. As we're backing into the site the host was guided me back on his hard pack driveway. I explained to him I don't want to leave the hard pack because of all the rain lately we had gotten stuck in the mud in the past and I don't want to get stuck again. Unfortunately I trusted him and not myself and he backed us off of the driveway and sank up to the rear axle in mud in the rig. He said that his neighbor will be home the next day with the tractor and composed out. I shook my head the back of the rig was 2 to 3 ft lower than the front of the rig. And we were not going to be sleeping like that tonight. So I took out the tow strap hooked it to the front axle of the rig in the back of the Jeep Wrangler toad. I got in the rig Trish got in the Jeep we put it in 4 low. I told Trish hit the gas and keep going until I beep the horn on the rig. She did the rig pull immediately out of the mud and I beeped the horn. Yay trish. The next day August 23rd 2019 we were off to Nelson Kennedy ledges State Park in garrettsville Ohio. We figured to be there about an hour to hike the 3 miles of trails. We were there for four and a half hours. What fun. There's waterfalls crevasses trails cliffs etc. It is probably the most unique State Park we have ever been to. It's not long hikes but it is beautiful. The next day we visited Cleveland which we found to be a segmented City the New York City you can easily walk from one neighborhood to another like Little Italy to Chinatown. In Cleveland he really need to drive from one area to another. So that was a drag however there was no traffic at all. We visited the West side market. And then we saw that the house where the movie The Christmas story was filmed, was open as a museum. https://www.achristmasstoryhouse.com/ Now we both knew the movie and loved it. We figured we would stay about a half hour and look at the museum stuff. Well it turned out that they do a tour of the house and we were there for just over 2 hours. It was amazing of all the movie props that they had on display. And you can actually walk through the rooms freely to see them. From there we went over to the flats the flats are wrenched right on the Cayahoga River on both sides the east side and the west side. To get from one side of the river to the other side was not easy unless you had a boat. So we pulled out Google maps and we decided which side to walk down. From there we went over to the Mill stream run reservation which is a single track bike trail. Certain days of the weeks it's only for walkers and we were there one of those days which was really nice. We stopped at Gibbs butcher block and got some free samples and bought some of their excellent sausages http://www.gibbsbutcherblock.com/The next day we headed out of Ohio and into Michigan. Last year we saw very little of "Troll, below the bridge" part of Michigan. The main part of Michigan is referred to that way because it is south of Mackinac bridge which takes you to the U.P. So this time we wanted to see more of Michigan. In the lower East side of Michigan we stayed in another boondock was welcome location. Our hosts were a couple from switzerland. Very nice people. The next day we took our toad into Kerrrytown in Ann arbor Michigan. Really nice town. We saw a farmer's market that has been going on every Saturday for over 100 years. We really liked Kerrytown. From there we went off to Manchester. Another cute town. They had a farmer's market there and met the organizer. They take a portion of the profits and they print $1 coupons. You take those coupons and you can buy things from vendors that are run by kids selling their crafts and such. The organizer gave us $5 certificates to help encourage the kids. We spent those $5 and a bunch more by the end of the day. At the end of the day the kids can take their coupons and cash them in for money. When we were in Provincetown I bought a sweater from the Marine store and it had a hole in it so one of the things we bought it this market was yawn and Trish mended it for me. The next day we left this area and we're heading over towards Grayling Michigan to yet another boondockers welcome host location. We had stayed at this location last year and really enjoyed their company. They offered 15 amp which was enough for us.We figured they would be busy with Labor Day coming but they said absolutely come by you know where to park and our son will help you with the electric. Grayling is an interesting town this is where the annual au sable canoe marathon is held. Which is touted as the world's toughest spectator race. It's 120 mi of paneling it runs from one day at 9:00 p.m. to the next afternoon. Very interesting but not for us. We did a more relaxed paddle on the ausable River. We hired a livery and grayling. We dropped our car at Stephen bridge they met us there. Drove us back to grayling. We then peddled our kayak 4 hours over 13 miles back to our car and they charged us 20 bucks not bad. The previous year we did almost The identical paddle but on a different River and our host shuttled us one way to the put in.You would have to go back and listen to that episode to hear about that. The next day was a laundry day. And then we went over to North Higgins lake State Park. It's clear that Michigan is a water-based state in the summer and in the winter. The park had a boat launch a beach and a campground we rode our tandem bike for about 10 miles to Roscommon. Not much there today but apparently a hundred years ago it was the destination spot. In fact Groucho Marx has been time there at a hotel. That night we had dinner with our hosts and their grandson. And when we were leaving they gave us some homemade apple pie moonshine which was delicious. The next day we headed overSo what do you do to help MANAGE your STRESS? Perhaps you or someone you know would benefit from listening to Stress Management Exercises? I have 3 FREE Stress Management recordings at https://relaxrv.org/help/If that ain't your thing, I have DISCOUNTS on my website to various RV related stuff.https://relaxrv.org/discounts/ I've made some videos about improvements and fixes I've done to the RV. Here's a link to them on YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzwH6GhSMBDJ7qKxsLng-TA Or you can watch them on my website at https://relaxrv.org/videos/Here's a link to my RelaxRVPodcast Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/Relax-RV-277623782811787/ I'm on Instagram as @relaxrvpodcast https://www.instagram.com/invites/contact/?i=hsxp0gjpugbz&utm_content=5h4872a My podcast can be found at https://www.spreaker.com/show/relax-rv-podcast If you would like to support my efforts to help others, please feel free to do so at:https://relaxrv.org/support/ Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links. If you buy something from one of our affiliates, we receive a small commission at no extra charge to you. Thanks for helping to keep our podcast running!
Episode 299/2019We arrived in the US via the rainbow bridge. It was a Sunday August 18th 2019. We got there early to beat the traffic going through customs. We arrived at customs at 9:00 a.m. and waited a half hour. We went right through without an issue. Which made me think about border crossings it seems like the slower quieter ones have more time perhaps to look through RVs and such. Or perhaps they're thinking is if you're sneaking something through go through the quiet areas. But whatever the reason it always seems that going through customs at a high tourist area like Niagara falls even though we wait longer in line we don't have our rig searched. In the past I had enjoyed seeing Niagara falls from the New York side where it's quiet and more like a state park. Whilw we were in Canada we planned on walking across the bridge to the NY park from Canada but we saw the line of people standing and waiting to go through customs and decided it wasn't worth it.We arrived in Erie pa and stayed at another boondockers welcome location. We had never been to Erie before. We learned that the city has a lot of concerts and live music in the summer. Our hosts invited us to join them at a huge street fair. This was a part of their 3 day celebration which happens every year in August. They had three stages food art and a beer garden. But no wine. This year Sister Sledge and Scotty McCreery performed. The next day we paddled kayaks with them and their friendly neighbors at Presque Isle State Park for almost 3 hours. Halfway through the panel we stopped at a small Beach and had snacks and a glass of wine. The name got me wondering so I googled what a Presque is and it is a peninsula that is almost an island. Now you know lol.The two of us then visited some covered bridges and wineries in Rome Ohio. We drove past Kent State University so of course we had to listen to The Crosby stills Nash & Young song. From there we went to Ashtabula which had a small main Street with a drawbridge and a great chocolate shop. From there we went over to Geneva on the lake well how do I explain this town? Think of the New Jersey shore without the crowds. A lot of shops food and arcades. It was August 20th it was a Tuesday. And it was empty! Many people say it's packed earlier in the season and on the weekends. We had visited two wineries in the area one was South River winery which was a beautiful old church. Here's a link to it http://southrivervineyard.com/ We really enjoyed that winery. And the other one was a ferrante winery. This one was an experience. They had two menus a dinner menu and a light self-serve menu. We got the muscles they were $14 and they were delicious but we got no forks or napkins. So he asked to waiter for some and he handed his silverware and cloth napkins and then he saw that we were not dinner guests but only self-serve guests so he took them away from us and gave us plastic wear and paper napkins. Unreal. The next day we left that host and went to another boondockers welcome host location. As we're backing into the site the host was guided me back on his hard pack driveway. I explained to him I don't want to leave the hard pack because of all the rain lately we had gotten stuck in the mud in the past and I don't want to get stuck again. Unfortunately I trusted him and not myself and he backed us off of the driveway and sank up to the rear axle in mud in the rig. He said that his neighbor will be home the next day with the tractor and composed out. I shook my head the back of the rig was 2 to 3 ft lower than the front of the rig. And we were not going to be sleeping like that tonight. So I took out the tow strap hooked it to the front axle of the rig in the back of the Jeep Wrangler toad. I got in the rig Trish got in the Jeep we put it in 4 low. I told Trish hit the gas and keep going until I beep the horn on the rig. She did the rig pull immediately out of the mud and I beeped the horn. Yay trish. The next day August 23rd 2019 we were off to Nelson Kennedy ledges State Park in garrettsville Ohio. We figured to be there about an hour to hike the 3 miles of trails. We were there for four and a half hours. What fun. There's waterfalls crevasses trails cliffs etc. It is probably the most unique State Park we have ever been to. It's not long hikes but it is beautiful. The next day we visited Cleveland which we found to be a segmented City the New York City you can easily walk from one neighborhood to another like Little Italy to Chinatown. In Cleveland he really need to drive from one area to another. So that was a drag however there was no traffic at all. We visited the West side market. And then we saw that the house where the movie The Christmas story was filmed, was open as a museum. https://www.achristmasstoryhouse.com/ Now we both knew the movie and loved it. We figured we would stay about a half hour and look at the museum stuff. Well it turned out that they do a tour of the house and we were there for just over 2 hours. It was amazing of all the movie props that they had on display. And you can actually walk through the rooms freely to see them. From there we went over to the flats the flats are wrenched right on the Cayahoga River on both sides the east side and the west side. To get from one side of the river to the other side was not easy unless you had a boat. So we pulled out Google maps and we decided which side to walk down. From there we went over to the Mill stream run reservation which is a single track bike trail. Certain days of the weeks it's only for walkers and we were there one of those days which was really nice. We stopped at Gibbs butcher block and got some free samples and bought some of their excellent sausages http://www.gibbsbutcherblock.com/The next day we headed out of Ohio and into Michigan. Last year we saw very little of "Troll, below the bridge" part of Michigan. The main part of Michigan is referred to that way because it is south of Mackinac bridge which takes you to the U.P. So this time we wanted to see more of Michigan. In the lower East side of Michigan we stayed in another boondock was welcome location. Our hosts were a couple from switzerland. Very nice people. The next day we took our toad into Kerrrytown in Ann arbor Michigan. Really nice town. We saw a farmer's market that has been going on every Saturday for over 100 years. We really liked Kerrytown. From there we went off to Manchester. Another cute town. They had a farmer's market there and met the organizer. They take a portion of the profits and they print $1 coupons. You take those coupons and you can buy things from vendors that are run by kids selling their crafts and such. The organizer gave us $5 certificates to help encourage the kids. We spent those $5 and a bunch more by the end of the day. At the end of the day the kids can take their coupons and cash them in for money. When we were in Provincetown I bought a sweater from the Marine store and it had a hole in it so one of the things we bought it this market was yawn and Trish mended it for me. The next day we left this area and we're heading over towards Grayling Michigan to yet another boondockers welcome host location. We had stayed at this location last year and really enjoyed their company. They offered 15 amp which was enough for us.We figured they would be busy with Labor Day coming but they said absolutely come by you know where to park and our son will help you with the electric. Grayling is an interesting town this is where the annual au sable canoe marathon is held. Which is touted as the world's toughest spectator race. It's 120 mi of paneling it runs from one day at 9:00 p.m. to the next afternoon. Very interesting but not for us. We did a more relaxed paddle on the ausable River. We hired a livery and grayling. We dropped our car at Stephen bridge they met us there. Drove us back to grayling. We then peddled our kayak 4 hours over 13 miles back to our car and they charged us 20 bucks not bad. The previous year we did almost The identical paddle but on a different River and our host shuttled us one way to the put in.You would have to go back and listen to that episode to hear about that. The next day was a laundry day. And then we went over to North Higgins lake State Park. It's clear that Michigan is a water-based state in the summer and in the winter. The park had a boat launch a beach and a campground we rode our tandem bike for about 10 miles to Roscommon. Not much there today but apparently a hundred years ago it was the destination spot. In fact Groucho Marx has been time there at a hotel. That night we had dinner with our hosts and their grandson. And when we were leaving they gave us some homemade apple pie moonshine which was delicious. The next day we headed overSo what do you do to help MANAGE your STRESS? Perhaps you or someone you know would benefit from listening to Stress Management Exercises? I have 3 FREE Stress Management recordings at https://relaxrv.org/help/If that ain't your thing, I have DISCOUNTS on my website to various RV related stuff.https://relaxrv.org/discounts/ I've made some videos about improvements and fixes I've done to the RV. Here's a link to them on YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzwH6GhSMBDJ7qKxsLng-TA Or you can watch them on my website at https://relaxrv.org/videos/Here's a link to my RelaxRVPodcast Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/Relax-RV-277623782811787/ I'm on Instagram as @relaxrvpodcast https://www.instagram.com/invites/contact/?i=hsxp0gjpugbz&utm_content=5h4872a My podcast can be found at https://www.spreaker.com/show/relax-rv-podcast If you would like to support my efforts to help others, please feel free to do so at:https://relaxrv.org/support/ Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links. If you buy something from one of our affiliates, we receive a small commission at no extra charge to you. Thanks for helping to keep our podcast running!
While growing up in poverty, Don “the Fingers” Felder taught himself to play guitar. After getting his start with bandmembers from Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, he joined the Eagles. He not only co-wrote the iconic song “Hotel California,” he has the highest selling album of all time: Their Greatest Hits 1971-1975, which sold 38 million copies. He has performed with some of the biggest names in the industry, including the Bee Gees, Peter Frampton, Michael Jackson, Diana Ross, Barbra Streisand, and Sir Elton John. He is also a best-selling author of Heaven and Hell: My Life in the Eagles. In 2001 he left the band after 27 years and 150 million records (and counting). This week, I am thrilled to have him on our show to share how his morning meditations keep him grounded, how he rose from the backwoods of Florida to become a member of the rock and roll hall of fame, and what his song-writing process looks like. He was a real pleasure to talk with, and I hope you enjoy this week's episode as much as I did.