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A History Of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs
Song 178: “Who Knows Where the Time Goes?” by Fairport Convention, Part Two: “I Have no Thought of Time”

A History Of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2025


For those who haven't heard the announcement I posted, songs from this point on will sometimes be split among multiple episodes, so this is the second part of a two-episode look at the song “Who Knows Where The Time Goes?” by Fairport Convention, and the intertwining careers of Joe Boyd, Sandy Denny, and Richard Thompson. Click the full post to read liner notes, links to more information, and a transcript of the episode. Patreon backers also have a forty-one-minute bonus episode available, on Judy Collins’ version of this song. Tilt Araiza has assisted invaluably by editing, and will hopefully be doing so from now on. Check out Tilt's irregular podcasts at http://www.podnose.com/jaffa-cakes-for-proust and http://sitcomclub.com/ Erratum For about an hour this was uploaded with the wrong Elton John clip in place of “Saturday Sun”. This has now been fixed. Resources Because of the increasing problems with Mixcloud’s restrictions, I have decided to start sharing streaming playlists of the songs used in episodes instead of Mixcloud ones. This Tunemymusic link will let you listen to the playlist I created on your streaming platform of choice — however please note that not all the songs excerpted are currently available on streaming. The songs missing from the Tidal version are “Shanten Bells” by the Ian Campbell Folk Group, “Tom’s Gone to Hilo” by A.L. Lloyd, two by Paul McNeill and Linda Peters, three by Elton John & Linda Peters, “What Will I Do With Tomorrow” by Sandy Denny and “You Never Know” by Charlie Drake, but the other fifty-nine are there. Other songs may be missing from other services. The main books I used on Fairport Convention as a whole were Patrick Humphries' Meet On The Ledge, Clinton Heylin's What We Did Instead of Holidays, and Kevan Furbank's Fairport Convention on Track. Rob Young's Electric Eden is the most important book on the British folk-rock movement. Information on Richard Thompson comes from Patrick Humphries' Richard Thompson: Strange Affair and Thompson's own autobiography Beeswing.  Information on Sandy Denny comes from Clinton Heylin's No More Sad Refrains and Mick Houghton's I've Always Kept a Unicorn. I also used Joe Boyd's autobiography White Bicycles and Chris Blackwell's The Islander.  And this three-CD set is the best introduction to Fairport's music currently in print. Transcript Before we begin, this episode contains reference to alcohol and cocaine abuse and medical neglect leading to death. It also starts with some discussion of the fatal car accident that ended last episode. There’s also some mention of child neglect and spousal violence. If that’s likely to upset you, you might want to skip this episode or read the transcript. One of the inspirations for this podcast when I started it back in 2018 was a project by Richard Thompson, which appears (like many things in Thompson’s life) to have started out of sheer bloody-mindedness. In 1999 Playboy magazine asked various people to list their “songs of the Millennium”, and most of them, understanding the brief, chose a handful of songs from the latter half of the twentieth century. But Thompson determined that he was going to list his favourite songs *of the millennium*. He didn’t quite manage that, but he did cover seven hundred and forty years, and when Playboy chose not to publish it, he decided to turn it into a touring show, in which he covered all his favourite songs from “Sumer Is Icumen In” from 1260: [Excerpt: Richard Thompson, “Sumer is Icumen In”] Through numerous traditional folk songs, union songs like “Blackleg Miner”, pieces by early-modern composers, Victorian and Edwardian music hall songs, and songs by the Beatles, the Ink Spots, the Kinks, and the Who, all the way to “Oops! I Did It Again”: [Excerpt: Richard Thompson, “Oops! I Did it Again”] And to finish the show, and to show how all this music actually ties together, he would play what he described as a “medieval tune from Brittany”, “Marry, Ageyn Hic Hev Donne Yt”: [Excerpt: Richard Thompson, “Marry, Ageyn Hic Hev Donne Yt”] We have said many times in this podcast that there is no first anything, but there’s a reason that Liege and Lief, Fairport Convention’s third album of 1969, and the album other than Unhalfbricking on which their reputation largely rests, was advertised with the slogan “The first (literally) British folk rock album ever”. Folk-rock, as the term had come to be known, and as it is still usually used today, had very little to do with traditional folk music. Rather, the records of bands like The Byrds or Simon and Garfunkel were essentially taking the sounds of British beat groups of the early sixties, particularly the Searchers, and applying those sounds to material by contemporary singer-songwriters. People like Paul Simon and Bob Dylan had come up through folk clubs, and their songs were called folk music because of that, but they weren’t what folk music had meant up to that point — songs that had been collected after being handed down through the folk process, changed by each individual singer, with no single identifiable author. They were authored songs by very idiosyncratic writers. But over their last few albums, Fairport Convention had done one or two tracks per album that weren’t like that, that were instead recordings of traditional folk songs, but arranged with rock instrumentation. They were not necessarily the first band to try traditional folk music with electric instruments — around the same time that Fairport started experimenting with the idea, so did an Irish band named Sweeney’s Men, who brought in a young electric guitarist named Henry McCullough briefly. But they do seem to have been the first to have fully embraced the idea. They had done so to an extent with “A Sailor’s Life” on Unhalfbricking, but now they were going to go much further: [Excerpt: Fairport Convention, “Matty Groves” (from about 4:30)] There had been some doubt as to whether Fairport Convention would even continue to exist — by the time Unhalfbricking, their second album of the year, was released, they had been through the terrible car accident that had killed Martin Lamble, the band’s drummer, and Jeannie Franklyn, Richard Thompson’s girlfriend. Most of the rest of the band had been seriously injured, and they had made a conscious decision not to discuss the future of the band until they were all out of hospital. Ashley Hutchings was hospitalised the longest, and Simon Nicol, Richard Thompson, and Sandy Denny, the other three surviving members of the band, flew over to LA with their producer and manager, Joe Boyd, to recuperate there and get to know the American music scene. When they came back, the group all met up in the flat belonging to Denny’s boyfriend Trevor Lucas, and decided that they were going to continue the band. They made a few decisions then — they needed a new drummer, and as well as a drummer they wanted to get in Dave Swarbrick. Swarbrick had played violin on several tracks on Unhalfbricking as a session player, and they had all been thrilled to work with him. Swarbrick was one of the most experienced musicians on the British folk circuit. He had started out in the fifties playing guitar with Beryl Marriott’s Ceilidh Band before switching to fiddle, and in 1963, long before Fairport had formed, he had already appeared on TV with the Ian Campbell Folk Group, led by Ian Campbell, the father of Ali and Robin Campbell, later of UB40: [Excerpt: The Ian Campbell Folk Group, “Shanten Bells (medley on Hullaballoo!)”] He’d sung with Ewan MacColl and A.L. Lloyd: [Excerpt: A.L. Lloyd, “Tom’s Gone to Hilo” ] And he’d formed his hugely successful duo with Martin Carthy, releasing records like “Byker Hill” which are often considered among the best British folk music of all time: [Excerpt: Martin Carthy and Dave Swarbrick, “Byker Hill”] By the time Fairport had invited him to play on Unhalfbricking, Swarbrick had already performed on twenty albums as a core band member, plus dozens more EPs, singles, and odd tracks on compilations. They had no reason to think they could actually get him to join their band. But they had three advantages. The first was that Swarbrick was sick of the traditional folk scene at the time, saying later “I didn’t like seven-eighths of the people involved in it, and it was extremely opportune to leave. I was suddenly presented with the possibilities of exploring the dramatic content of the songs to the full.” The second was that he was hugely excited to be playing with Richard Thompson, who was one of the most innovative guitarists of his generation, and Martin Carthy remembers him raving about Thompson after their initial sessions. (Carthy himself was and is no slouch on the guitar of course, and there was even talk of getting him to join the band at this point, though they decided against it — much to the relief of rhythm guitarist Simon Nicol, who is a perfectly fine player himself but didn’t want to be outclassed by *two* of the best guitarists in Britain at the same time). And the third was that Joe Boyd told him that Fairport were doing so well — they had a single just about to hit the charts with “Si Tu Dois Partir” — that he would only have to play a dozen gigs with Fairport in order to retire. As it turned out, Swarbrick would play with the group for a decade, and would never retire — I saw him on his last tour in 2015, only eight months before he died. The drummer the group picked was also a far more experienced musician than any of the rest, though in a very different genre. Dave Mattacks had no knowledge at all of the kind of music they played, having previously been a player in dance bands. When asked by Hutchings if he wanted to join the band, Mattacks’ response was “I don’t know anything about the music. I don’t understand it… I can’t tell one tune from another, they all sound the same… but if you want me to join the group, fine, because I really like it. I’m enjoying myself musically.” Mattacks brought a new level of professionalism to the band, thanks to his different background. Nicol said of him later “He was dilligent, clean, used to taking three white shirts to a gig… The application he could bring to his playing was amazing. With us, you only played well when you were feeling well.” This distinction applied to his playing as well. Nicol would later describe the difference between Mattacks’ drumming and Lamble’s by saying “Martin’s strength was as an imaginative drummer. DM came in with a strongly developed sense of rhythm, through keeping a big band of drunken saxophone players in order. A great time-keeper.” With this new line-up and a new sense of purpose, the group did as many of their contemporaries were doing and “got their heads together in the country”. Joe Boyd rented the group a mansion, Farley House, in Farley Chamberlayne, Hampshire, and they stayed there together for three months. At the start, the group seem to have thought that they were going to make another record like Unhalfbricking, with some originals, some songs by American songwriters, and a few traditional songs. Even after their stay in Farley Chamberlayne, in fact, they recorded a few of the American songs they’d rehearsed at the start of the process, Richard Farina’s “Quiet Joys of Brotherhood” and Bob Dylan and Roger McGuinn’s “Ballad of Easy Rider”: [Excerpt: Fairport Convention, “Ballad of Easy Rider”] Indeed, the whole idea of “getting our heads together in the country” (as the cliche quickly became in the late sixties as half of the bands in Britain went through much the same kind of process as Fairport were doing — but usually for reasons more to do with drug burnout or trend following than recovering from serious life-changing trauma) seems to have been inspired by Bob Dylan and the Band getting together in Big Pink. But very quickly they decided to follow the lead of Ashley Hutchings, who had had something of a Damascene conversion to the cause of traditional English folk music. They were listening mostly to Music From Big Pink by the Band, and to the first album by Sweeney’s Men: [Excerpt: Sweeney’s Men, “The Handsome Cabin Boy”] And they decided that they were going to make something that was as English as those records were North American and Irish (though in the event there were also a few Scottish songs included on the record). Hutchings in particular was becoming something of a scholar of traditional music, regularly visiting Cecil Sharp House and having long conversations with A.L. Lloyd, discovering versions of different traditional songs he’d never encountered before. This was both amusing and bemusing Sandy Denny, who had joined a rock group in part to get away from traditional music; but she was comfortable singing the material, and knew a lot of it and could make a lot of suggestions herself. Swarbrick obviously knew the repertoire intimately, and Nicol was amenable, while Mattacks was utterly clueless about the folk tradition at this point but knew this was the music he wanted to make. Thompson knew very little about traditional music, and of all the band members except Denny he was the one who has shown the least interest in the genre in his subsequent career — but as we heard at the beginning, showing the least interest in the genre is a relative thing, and while Thompson was not hugely familiar with the genre, he *was* able to work with it, and was also more than capable of writing songs that fit in with the genre. Of the eleven songs on the album, which was titled Liege and Lief (which means, roughly, Lord and Loyalty), there were no cover versions of singer-songwriters. Eight were traditional songs, and three were originals, all written in the style of traditional songs. The album opened with “Come All Ye”, an introduction written by Denny and Hutchings (the only time the two would ever write together): [Excerpt: Fairport Convention, “Come All Ye”] The other two originals were songs where Thompson had written new lyrics to traditional melodies. On “Crazy Man Michael”, Swarbrick had said to Thompson that the tune to which he had set his new words was weaker than the lyrics, to which Thompson had replied that if Swarbrick felt that way he should feel free to write a new melody. He did, and it became the first of the small number of Thompson/Swarbrick collaborations: [Excerpt: Fairport Convention, “Crazy Man Michael”] Thompson and Swarbrick would become a brief songwriting team, but as much as anything else it was down to proximity — the two respected each other as musicians, but never got on very well. In 1981 Swarbrick would say “Richard and I never got on in the early days of FC… we thought we did, but we never did. We composed some bloody good songs together, but it was purely on a basis of “you write that and I’ll write this, and we’ll put it together.” But we never sat down and had real good chats.” The third original on the album, and by far the most affecting, is another song where Thompson put lyrics to a traditional tune. In this case he thought he was putting the lyrics to the tune of “Willie O'Winsbury”, but he was basing it on a recording by Sweeney’s Men. The problem was that Sweeney’s Men had accidentally sung the lyrics of “Willie O'Winsbury'” to the tune of a totally different song, “Fause Foodrage”: [Excerpt: Sweeney’s Men, “Willie O’Winsbury”] Thompson took that melody, and set to it lyrics about loss and separation. Thompson has never been one to discuss the meanings of his lyrics in any great detail, and in the case of this one has said “I really don't know what it means. This song came out of a dream, and I pretty much wrote it as I dreamt it (it was the sixties), and didn't spend very long analyzing it. So interpret as you wish – or replace with your own lines.” But in the context of the traffic accident that had killed his tailor girlfriend and a bandmate, and injured most of his other bandmates, the lyrics about lonely travellers, the winding road, bruised and beaten sons, saying goodbye, and never cutting cloth, seem fairly self-explanatory: [Excerpt: Fairport Convention, “Farewell, Farewell”] The rest of the album, though, was taken up by traditional tunes. There was a long medley of four different fiddle reels; a version of “Reynardine” (a song about a seductive man — or is he a fox? Or perhaps both — which had been recorded by Swarbrick and Carthy on their most recent album); a 19th century song about a deserter saved from the firing squad by Prince Albert; and a long take on “Tam Lin”, one of the most famous pieces in the Scottish folk music canon, a song that has been adapted in different ways by everyone from the experimental noise band Current 93 to the dub poet Benjamin Zephaniah to the comics writer Grant Morrison: [Excerpt: Fairport Convention, “Tam Lin”] And “Matty Groves”, a song about a man killing his cheating wife and her lover, which actually has a surprisingly similar story to that of “1921” from another great concept album from that year, the Who’s Tommy. “Matty Groves” became an excuse for long solos and shows of instrumental virtuosity: [Excerpt: Fairport Convention, “Matty Groves”] The album was recorded in September 1969, after their return from their break in the country and a triumphal performance at the Royal Festival Hall, headlining over fellow Witchseason artists John and Beverly Martyn and Nick Drake. It became a classic of the traditional folk genre — arguably *the* classic of the traditional folk genre. In 2007 BBC Radio 2’s Folk Music Awards gave it an award for most influential folk album of all time, and while such things are hard to measure, I doubt there’s anyone with even the most cursory knowledge of British folk and folk-rock music who would not at least consider that a reasonable claim. But once again, by the time the album came out in November, the band had changed lineups yet again. There was a fundamental split in the band – on one side were Sandy Denny and Richard Thompson, whose stance was, roughly, that Liege and Lief was a great experiment and a fun thing to do once, but really the band had two first-rate songwriters in themselves, and that they should be concentrating on their own new material, not doing these old songs, good as they were. They wanted to take the form of the traditional songs and use that form for new material — they wanted to make British folk-rock, but with the emphasis on the rock side of things. Hutchings, on the other hand, was equally sure that he wanted to make traditional music and go further down the rabbit hole of antiquity. With the zeal of the convert he had gone in a couple of years from being the leader of a band who were labelled “the British Jefferson Airplane” to becoming a serious scholar of traditional folk music. Denny was tired of touring, as well — she wanted to spend more time at home with Trevor Lucas, who was sleeping with other women when she was away and making her insecure. When the time came for the group to go on a tour of Denmark, Denny decided she couldn’t make it, and Hutchings was jubilant — he decided he was going to get A.L. Lloyd into the band in her place and become a *real* folk group. Then Denny reconsidered, and Hutchings was crushed. He realised that while he had always been the leader, he wasn’t going to be able to lead the band any further in the traditionalist direction, and quit the group — but not before he was delegated by the other band members to fire Denny. Until the publication of Richard Thompson’s autobiography in 2022, every book on the group or its members said that Denny quit the band again, which was presumably a polite fiction that the band agreed, but according to Thompson “Before we flew home, we decided to fire Sandy. I don't remember who asked her to leave – it was probably Ashley, who usually did the dirty work. She was reportedly shocked that we would take that step. She may have been fragile beneath the confident facade, but she still knew her worth.” Thompson goes on to explain that the reasons for kicking her out were that “I suppose we felt that in her mind she had already left” and that “We were probably suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, though there wasn't a name for it back then.” They had considered inviting Trevor Lucas to join the band to make Denny more comfortable, but came to the (probably correct) conclusion that while he was someone they got on well with personally, he would be another big ego in a band that already had several, and that being around Denny and Lucas’ volatile relationship would, in Thompson’s phrasing, “have not always given one a feeling of peace and stability.” Hutchings originally decided he was going to join Sweeney’s Men, but that group were falling apart, and their first rehearsal with Hutchings would also be their last as a group, with only Hutchings and guitarist and mandolin player Terry Woods left in the band. They added Woods’ wife Gay, and another couple, Tim Hart and Maddy Prior, and formed a group called Steeleye Span, a name given them by Martin Carthy. That group, like Fairport, went to “get their heads together in the country” for three months and recorded an album of electric versions of traditional songs, Hark the Village Wait, on which Mattacks and another drummer, Gerry Conway, guested as Steeleye Span didn’t at the time have their own drummer: [Excerpt: Steeleye Span, “Blackleg Miner”] Steeleye Span would go on to have a moderately successful chart career in the seventies, but by that time most of the original lineup, including Hutchings, had left — Hutchings stayed with them for a few albums, then went on to form the first of a series of bands, all called the Albion Band or variations on that name, which continue to this day. And this is something that needs to be pointed out at this point — it is impossible to follow every single individual in this narrative as they move between bands. There is enough material in the history of the British folk-rock scene that someone could do a 500 Songs-style podcast just on that, and every time someone left Fairport, or Steeleye Span, or the Albion Band, or Matthews’ Southern Comfort, or any of the other bands we have mentioned or will mention, they would go off and form another band which would then fission, and some of its members would often join one of those other bands. There was a point in the mid-1970s where the Albion Band had two original members of Fairport Convention while Fairport Convention had none. So just in order to keep the narrative anything like wieldy, I’m going to keep the narrative concentrated on the two figures from Fairport — Sandy Denny and Richard Thompson — whose work outside the group has had the most influence on the wider world of rock music more broadly, and only deal with the other members when, as they often did, their careers intersected with those two. That doesn’t mean the other members are not themselves hugely important musicians, just that their importance has been primarily to the folk side of the folk-rock genre, and so somewhat outside the scope of this podcast. While Hutchings decided to form a band that would allow him to go deeper and deeper into traditional folk music, Sandy Denny’s next venture was rather different. For a long time she had been writing far more songs than she had ever played for her bandmates, like “Nothing More”, a song that many have suggested is about Thompson: [Excerpt: Fotheringay, “Nothing More”] When Joe Boyd heard that Denny was leaving Fairport Convention, he was at first elated. Fairport’s records were being distributed by A&M in the US at that point, but Island Records was in the process of opening up a new US subsidiary which would then release all future Fairport product — *but*, as far as A&M were concerned, Sandy Denny *was* Fairport Convention. They were only interested in her. Boyd, on the other hand, loved Denny’s work intensely, but from his point of view *Richard Thompson* was Fairport Convention. If he could get Denny signed directly to A&M as a solo artist before Island started its US operations, Witchseason could get a huge advance on her first solo record, while Fairport could continue making records for Island — he’d have two lucrative acts, on different labels. Boyd went over and spoke to A&M and got an agreement in principle that they would give Denny a forty-thousand-dollar advance on her first solo album — twice what they were paying for Fairport albums. The problem was that Denny didn’t want to be a solo act. She wanted to be the lead singer of a band. She gave many reasons for this — the one she gave to many journalists was that she had seen a Judy Collins show and been impressed, but noticed that Collins’ band were definitely a “backing group”, and as she put it “But that's all they were – a backing group. I suddenly thought, If you're playing together on a stage you might as well be TOGETHER.” Most other people in her life, though, say that the main reason for her wanting to be in a band was her desire to be with her boyfriend, Trevor Lucas. Partly this was due to a genuine desire to spend more time with someone with whom she was very much in love, partly it was a fear that he would cheat on her if she was away from him for long periods of time, and part of it seems to have been Lucas’ dislike of being *too* overshadowed by his talented girlfriend — he didn’t mind acknowledging that she was a major talent, but he wanted to be thought of as at least a minor one. So instead of going solo, Denny formed Fotheringay, named after the song she had written for Fairport. This new band consisted at first of Denny on vocals and occasional piano, Lucas on vocals and rhythm guitar, and Lucas’ old Eclection bandmate Gerry Conway on drums. For a lead guitarist, they asked Richard Thompson who the best guitarist in Britain was, and he told them Albert Lee. Lee in turn brought in bass player Pat Donaldson, but this lineup of the band barely survived a fortnight. Lee *was* arguably the best guitarist in Britain, certainly a reasonable candidate if you could ever have a singular best (as indeed was Thompson himself), but he was the best *country* guitarist in Britain, and his style simply didn’t fit with Fotheringay’s folk-influenced songs. He was replaced by American guitarist Jerry Donahue, who was not anything like as proficient as Lee, but who was still very good, and fit the band’s style much better. The new group rehearsed together for a few weeks, did a quick tour, and then went into the recording studio to record their debut, self-titled, album. Joe Boyd produced the album, but admitted himself that he only paid attention to those songs he considered worthwhile — the album contained one song by Lucas, “The Ballad of Ned Kelly”, and two cover versions of American singer-songwriter material with Lucas singing lead. But everyone knew that the songs that actually *mattered* were Sandy Denny’s, and Boyd was far more interested in them, particularly the songs “The Sea” and “The Pond and the Stream”: [Excerpt: Fotheringay, “The Pond and the Stream”] Fotheringay almost immediately hit financial problems, though. While other Witchseason acts were used to touring on the cheap, all packed together in the back of a Transit van with inexpensive equipment, Trevor Lucas had ambitions of being a rock star and wanted to put together a touring production to match, with expensive transport and equipment, including a speaker system that got nicknamed “Stonehenge” — but at the same time, Denny was unhappy being on the road, and didn’t play many gigs. As well as the band itself, the Fotheringay album also featured backing vocals from a couple of other people, including Denny’s friend Linda Peters. Peters was another singer from the folk clubs, and a good one, though less well-known than Denny — at this point she had only released a couple of singles, and those singles seemed to have been as much as anything else released as a novelty. The first of those, a version of Dylan’s “You Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere” had been released as by “Paul McNeill and Linda Peters”: [Excerpt: Paul McNeill and Linda Peters, “You Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere”] But their second single, a version of John D. Loudermilk’s “You’re Taking My Bag”, was released on the tiny Page One label, owned by Larry Page, and was released under the name “Paul and Linda”, clearly with the intent of confusing particularly gullible members of the record-buying public into thinking this was the McCartneys: [Excerpt: Paul and Linda, “You’re Taking My Bag”] Peters was though more financially successful than almost anyone else in this story, as she was making a great deal of money as a session singer. She actually did another session involving most of Fotheringay around this time. Witchseason had a number of excellent songwriters on its roster, and had had some success getting covers by people like Judy Collins, but Joe Boyd thought that they might possibly do better at getting cover versions if they were performed in less idiosyncratic arrangements. Donahue, Donaldson, and Conway went into the studio to record backing tracks, and vocals were added by Peters and another session singer, who according to some sources also provided piano. They cut songs by Mike Heron of the Incredible String Band: [Excerpt: Linda Peters, “You Get Brighter”] Ed Carter, formerly of The New Nadir but by this time firmly ensconced in the Beach Boys’ touring band where he would remain for the next quarter-century: [Excerpt: Linda Peters, “I Don’t Mind”] John and Beverly Martyn, and Nick Drake: [Excerpt: Elton John, “Saturday Sun”] There are different lineups of musicians credited for those sessions in different sources, but I tend to believe that it’s mostly Fotheringay for the simple reason that Donahue says it was him, Donaldson and Conway who talked Lucas and Denny into the mistake that destroyed Fotheringay because of these sessions. Fotheringay were in financial trouble already, spending far more money than they were bringing in, but their album made the top twenty and they were getting respect both from critics and from the public — in September, Sandy Denny was voted best British female singer by the readers of Melody Maker in their annual poll, which led to shocked headlines in the tabloids about how this “unknown” could have beaten such big names as Dusty Springfield and Cilla Black. Only a couple of weeks after that, they were due to headline at the Albert Hall. It should have been a triumph. But Donahue, Donaldson, and Conway had asked that singing pianist to be their support act. As Donahue said later “That was a terrible miscast. It was our fault. He asked if [he] could do it. Actually Pat, Gerry and I had to talk Sandy and Trevor into [it]… We'd done these demos and the way he was playing – he was a wonderful piano player – he was sensitive enough. We knew very little about his stage-show. We thought he'd be a really good opener for us.” Unfortunately, Elton John was rather *too* good. As Donahue continued “we had no idea what he had in mind, that he was going to do the most incredible rock & roll show ever. He pretty much blew us off the stage before we even got on the stage.” To make matters worse, Fotheringay’s set, which was mostly comprised of new material, was underrehearsed and sloppy, and from that point on no matter what they did people were counting the hours until the band split up. They struggled along for a while though, and started working on a second record, with Boyd again producing, though as Boyd later said “I probably shouldn't have been producing the record. My lack of respect for the group was clear, and couldn't have helped the atmosphere. We'd put out a record that had sold disappointingly, A&M was unhappy. Sandy's tracks on the first record are among the best things she ever did – the rest of it, who cares? And the artwork, Trevor's sister, was terrible. It would have been one thing if I'd been unhappy with it and it sold, and the group was working all the time, making money, but that wasn't the case … I knew what Sandy was capable of, and it was very upsetting to me.” The record would not be released for thirty-eight years: [Excerpt: Fotheringay, “Wild Mountain Thyme”] Witchseason was going badly into debt. Given all the fissioning of bands that we’ve already been talking about, Boyd had been stretched thin — he produced sixteen albums in 1970, and almost all of them lost money for the company. And he was getting more and more disillusioned with the people he was producing. He loved Beverly Martyn’s work, but had little time for her abusive husband John, who was dominating her recording and life more and more and would soon become a solo artist while making her stay at home (and stealing her ideas without giving her songwriting credit). The Incredible String Band were great, but they had recently converted to Scientology, which Boyd found annoying, and while he was working with all sorts of exciting artists like Vashti Bunyan and Nico, he was finding himself less and less important to the artists he mentored. Fairport Convention were a good example of this. After Denny and Hutchings had left the group, they’d decided to carry on as an electric folk group, performing an equal mix of originals by the Swarbrick and Thompson songwriting team and arrangements of traditional songs. The group were now far enough away from the “British Jefferson Airplane” label that they decided they didn’t need a female vocalist — and more realistically, while they’d been able to replace Judy Dyble, nobody was going to replace Sandy Denny. Though it’s rather surprising when one considers Thompson’s subsequent career that nobody seems to have thought of bringing in Denny’s friend Linda Peters, who was dating Joe Boyd at the time (as Denny had been before she met Lucas) as Denny’s replacement. Instead, they decided that Swarbrick and Thompson were going to share the vocals between them. They did, though, need a bass player to replace Hutchings. Swarbrick wanted to bring in Dave Pegg, with whom he had played in the Ian Campbell Folk Group, but the other band members initially thought the idea was a bad one. At the time, while they respected Swarbrick as a musician, they didn’t think he fully understood rock and roll yet, and they thought the idea of getting in a folkie who had played double bass rather than an electric rock bassist ridiculous. But they auditioned him to mollify Swarbrick, and found that he was exactly what they needed. As Joe Boyd later said “All those bass lines were great, Ashley invented them all, but he never could play them that well. He thought of them, but he was technically not a terrific bass player. He was a very inventive, melodic, bass player, but not a very powerful one technically. But having had the part explained to him once, Pegg was playing it better than Ashley had ever played it… In some rock bands, I think, ultimately, the bands that sound great, you can generally trace it to the bass player… it was at that point they became a great band, when they had Pegg.” The new lineup of Fairport decided to move in together, and found a former pub called the Angel, into which all the band members moved, along with their partners and children (Thompson was the only one who was single at this point) and their roadies. The group lived together quite happily, and one gets the impression that this was the period when they were most comfortable with each other, even though by this point they were a disparate group with disparate tastes, in music as in everything else. Several people have said that the only music all the band members could agree they liked at this point was the first two albums by The Band. With the departure of Hutchings from the band, Swarbrick and Thompson, as the strongest personalities and soloists, became in effect the joint leaders of the group, and they became collaborators as songwriters, trying to write new songs that were inspired by traditional music. Thompson described the process as “let’s take one line of this reel and slow it down and move it up a minor third and see what that does to it; let’s take one line of this ballad and make a whole song out of it. Chopping up the tradition to find new things to do… like a collage.” Generally speaking, Swarbrick and Thompson would sit by the fire and Swarbrick would play a melody he’d been working on, the two would work on it for a while, and Thompson would then go away and write the lyrics. This is how the two came up with songs like the nine-minute “Sloth”, a highlight of the next album, Full House, and one that would remain in Fairport’s live set for much of their career: [Excerpt: Fairport Convention, “Sloth”] “Sloth” was titled that way because Thompson and Swarbrick were working on two tunes, a slow one and a fast one, and they jokingly named them “Sloth” and “Fasth”, but the latter got renamed to “Walk Awhile”, while “Sloth” kept its working title. But by this point, Boyd and Thompson were having a lot of conflict in the studio. Boyd was never the most technical of producers — he was one of those producers whose job is to gently guide the artists in the studio and create a space for the music to flourish, rather than the Joe Meek type with an intimate technical knowledge of the studio — and as the artists he was working with gained confidence in their own work they felt they had less and less need of him. During the making of the Full House album, Thompson and Boyd, according to Boyd, clashed on everything — every time Boyd thought Thompson had done a good solo, Thompson would say to erase it and let him have another go, while every time Boyd thought Thompson could do better, Thompson would say that was the take to keep. One of their biggest clashes was over Thompson’s song “Poor Will and the Jolly Hangman”, which was originally intended for release on the album, and is included in current reissues of it: [Excerpt: Fairport Convention, “Poor Will and the Jolly Hangman”] Thompson had written that song inspired by what he thought was the unjust treatment of Alex Bramham, the driver in Fairport’s fatal car crash, by the courts — Bramham had been given a prison sentence of a few months for dangerous driving, while the group members thought he had not been at fault. Boyd thought it was one of the best things recorded for the album, but Thompson wasn’t happy with his vocal — there was one note at the top of the melody that he couldn’t quite hit — and insisted it be kept off the record, even though that meant it would be a shorter album than normal. He did this at such a late stage that early copies of the album actually had the title printed on the sleeve, but then blacked out. He now says in his autobiography “I could have persevered, double-tracked the voice, warmed up for longer – anything. It was a good track, and the record was lacking without it. When the album was re-released, the track was restored with a more confident vocal, and it has stayed there ever since.” During the sessions for Full House the group also recorded one non-album single, Thompson and Swarbrick’s “Now Be Thankful”: [Excerpt, Fairport Convention, “Now Be Thankful”] The B-side to that was a medley of two traditional tunes plus a Swarbrick original, but was given the deliberately ridiculous title “Sir B. McKenzie’s Daughter’s Lament For The 77th Mounted Lancers Retreat From The Straits Of Loch Knombe, In The Year Of Our Lord 1727, On The Occasion Of The Announcement Of Her Marriage To The Laird Of Kinleakie”: [Excerpt: Fairport Convention, “Sir B. McKenzie’s Daughter’s Lament For The 77th Mounted Lancers Retreat From The Straits Of Loch Knombe, In The Year Of Our Lord 1727, On The Occasion Of The Announcement Of Her Marriage To The Laird Of Kinleakie”] The B. McKenzie in the title was a reference to the comic-strip character Barry McKenzie, a stereotype drunk Australian created for Private Eye magazine by the comedian Barry Humphries (later to become better known for his Dame Edna Everage character) but the title was chosen for one reason only — to get into the Guinness Book of Records for the song with the longest title. Which they did, though they were later displaced by the industrial band Test Dept, and their song “Long Live British Democracy Which Flourishes and Is Constantly Perfected Under the Immaculate Guidance of the Great, Honourable, Generous and Correct Margaret Hilda Thatcher. She Is the Blue Sky in the Hearts of All Nations. Our People Pay Homage and Bow in Deep Respect and Gratitude to Her. The Milk of Human Kindness”. Full House got excellent reviews in the music press, with Rolling Stone saying “The music shows that England has finally gotten her own equivalent to The Band… By calling Fairport an English equivalent of the Band, I meant that they have soaked up enough of the tradition of their countryfolk that it begins to show all over, while they maintain their roots in rock.” Off the back of this, the group went on their first US tour, culminating in a series of shows at the Troubadour in LA, on the same bill as Rick Nelson, which were recorded and later released as a live album: [Excerpt: Fairport Convention, “Sloth (live)”] The Troubadour was one of the hippest venues at the time, and over their residency there the group got seen by many celebrities, some of whom joined them on stage. The first was Linda Ronstadt, who initially demurred, saying she didn’t know any of their songs. On being told they knew all of hers, she joined in with a rendition of “Silver Threads and Golden Needles”. Thompson was later asked to join Ronstadt’s backing band, who would go on to become the Eagles, but he said later of this offer “I would have hated it. I’d have hated being on the road with four or five miserable Americans — they always seem miserable. And if you see them now, they still look miserable on stage — like they don’t want to be there and they don’t like each other.” The group were also joined on stage at the Troubadour on one memorable night by some former bandmates of Pegg’s. Before joining the Ian Campbell Folk Group, Pegg had played around the Birmingham beat scene, and had been in bands with John Bonham and Robert Plant, who turned up to the Troubadour with their Led Zeppelin bandmate Jimmy Page (reports differ on whether the fourth member of Zeppelin, John Paul Jones, also came along). They all got up on stage together and jammed on songs like “Hey Joe”, “Louie Louie”, and various old Elvis tunes. The show was recorded, and the tapes are apparently still in the possession of Joe Boyd, who has said he refuses to release them in case he is murdered by the ghost of Peter Grant. According to Thompson, that night ended in a three-way drinking contest between Pegg, Bonham, and Janis Joplin, and it’s testament to how strong the drinking culture is around Fairport and the British folk scene in general that Pegg outdrank both of them. According to Thompson, Bonham was found naked by a swimming pool two days later, having missed two gigs. For all their hard rock image, Led Zeppelin were admirers of a lot of the British folk and folk-rock scene, and a few months later Sandy Denny would become the only outside vocalist ever to appear on a Led Zeppelin record when she duetted with Plant on “The Battle of Evermore” on the group’s fourth album: [Excerpt: Led Zeppelin, “The Battle of Evermore”] Denny would never actually get paid for her appearance on one of the best-selling albums of all time. That was, incidentally, not the only session that Denny was involved in around this time — she also sang on the soundtrack to a soft porn film titled Swedish Fly Girls, whose soundtrack was produced by Manfred Mann: [Excerpt: Sandy Denny, “What Will I Do With Tomorrow?”] Shortly after Fairport’s trip to America, Joe Boyd decided he was giving up on Witchseason. The company was now losing money, and he was finding himself having to produce work for more and more acts as the various bands fissioned. The only ones he really cared about were Richard Thompson, who he was finding it more and more difficult to work with, Nick Drake, who wanted to do his next album with just an acoustic guitar anyway, Sandy Denny, who he felt was wasting her talents in Fotheringay, and Mike Heron of the Incredible String Band, who was more distant since his conversion to Scientology. Boyd did make some attempts to keep the company going. On a trip to Sweden, he negotiated an agreement with the manager and publisher of a Swedish band whose songs he’d found intriguing, the Hep Stars. Boyd was going to publish their songs in the UK, and in return that publisher, Stig Anderson, would get the rights to Witchseason’s catalogue in Scandinavia — a straight swap, with no money changing hands. But before Boyd could get round to signing the paperwork, he got a better offer from Mo Ostin of Warners — Ostin wanted Boyd to come over to LA and head up Warners’ new film music department. Boyd sold Witchseason to Island Records and moved to LA with his fiancee Linda Peters, spending the next few years working on music for films like Deliverance and A Clockwork Orange, as well as making his own documentary about Jimi Hendrix, and thus missed out on getting the UK publishing rights for ABBA, and all the income that would have brought him, for no money. And it was that decision that led to the breakup of Fotheringay. Just before Christmas 1970, Fotheringay were having a difficult session, recording the track “John the Gun”: [Excerpt: Fotheringay, “John the Gun”] Boyd got frustrated and kicked everyone out of the session, and went for a meal and several drinks with Denny. He kept insisting that she should dump the band and just go solo, and then something happened that the two of them would always describe differently. She asked him if he would continue to produce her records if she went solo, and he said he would. According to Boyd’s recollection of the events, he meant that he would fly back from California at some point to produce her records. According to Denny, he told her that if she went solo he would stay in Britain and not take the job in LA. This miscommunication was only discovered after Denny told the rest of Fotheringay after the Christmas break that she was splitting the band. Jerry Donahue has described that as the worst moment of his life, and Denny felt very guilty about breaking up a band with some of her closest friends in — and then when Boyd went over to the US anyway she felt a profound betrayal. Two days before Fotheringay’s final concert, in January 1971, Sandy Denny signed a solo deal with Island records, but her first solo album would not end up produced by Joe Boyd. Instead, The North Star Grassman and the Ravens was co-produced by Denny, John Wood — the engineer who had worked with Boyd on pretty much everything he’d produced, and Richard Thompson, who had just quit Fairport Convention, though he continued living with them at the Angel, at least until a truck crashed into the building in February 1971, destroying its entire front wall and forcing them to relocate. The songs chosen for The North Star Grassman and the Ravens reflected the kind of choices Denny would make on her future albums, and her eclectic taste in music. There was, of course, the obligatory Dylan cover, and the traditional folk ballad “Blackwaterside”, but there was also a cover version of Brenda Lee’s “Let’s Jump the Broomstick”: [Excerpt: Sandy Denny, “Let’s Jump the Broomstick”] Most of the album, though, was made up of originals about various people in Denny’s life, like “Next Time Around”, about her ex-boyfriend Jackson C Frank: [Excerpt: Sandy Denny, “Next Time Around”] The album made the top forty in the UK — Denny’s only solo album to do so — and led to her once again winning the “best female singer” award in Melody Maker’s readers’ poll that year — the male singer award was won by Rod Stewart. Both Stewart and Denny appeared the next year on the London Symphony Orchestra’s all-star version of The Who’s Tommy, which had originally been intended as a vehicle for Stewart before Roger Daltrey got involved. Stewart’s role was reduced to a single song, “Pinball Wizard”, while Denny sang on “It’s a Boy”: [Excerpt: Sandy Denny, “It’s a Boy”] While Fotheringay had split up, all the band members play on The North Star Grassman and the Ravens. Guitarists Donahue and Lucas only play on a couple of the tracks, with Richard Thompson playing most of the guitar on the record. But Fotheringay’s rhythm section of Pat Donaldson and Gerry Conway play on almost every track. Another musician on the album, Ian Whiteman, would possibly have a profound effect on the future direction of Richard Thompson’s career and life. Whiteman was the former keyboard player for the mod band The Action, having joined them just before they became the blues-rock band Mighty Baby. But Mighty Baby had split up when all of the band except the lead singer had converted to Islam. Richard Thompson was on his own spiritual journey at this point, and became a Sufi – the same branch of Islam as Whiteman – soon after the session, though Thompson has said that his conversion was independent of Whiteman’s. The two did become very close and work together a lot in the mid-seventies though. Thompson had supposedly left Fairport because he was writing material that wasn’t suited to the band, but he spent more than a year after quitting the group working on sessions rather than doing anything with his own material, and these sessions tended to involve the same core group of musicians. One of the more unusual was a folk-rock supergroup called The Bunch, put together by Trevor Lucas. Richard Branson had recently bought a recording studio, and wanted a band to test it out before opening it up for commercial customers, so with this free studio time Lucas decided to record a set of fifties rock and roll covers. He gathered together Thompson, Denny, Whiteman, Ashley Hutchings, Dave Mattacks, Pat Donaldson, Gerry Conway, pianist Tony Cox, the horn section that would later form the core of the Average White Band, and Linda Peters, who had now split up with Joe Boyd and returned to the UK, and who had started dating Thompson. They recorded an album of covers of songs by Jerry Lee Lewis, the Everly Brothers, Johnny Otis and others: [Excerpt: The Bunch, “Willie and the Hand Jive”] The early seventies was a hugely productive time for this group of musicians, as they all continued playing on each other’s projects. One notable album was No Roses by Shirley Collins, which featured Thompson, Mattacks, Whiteman, Simon Nicol, Lal and Mike Waterson, and Ashley Hutchings, who was at that point married to Collins, as well as some more unusual musicians like the free jazz saxophonist Lol Coxhill: [Excerpt: Shirley Collins and the Albion Country Band, “Claudy Banks”] Collins was at the time the most respected female singer in British traditional music, and already had a substantial career including a series of important records made with her sister Dolly, work with guitarists like Davey Graham, and time spent in the 1950s collecting folk songs in the Southern US with her then partner Alan Lomax – according to Collins she did much of the actual work, but Lomax only mentioned her in a single sentence in his book on this work. Some of the same group of musicians went on to work on an album of traditional Morris dancing tunes, titled Morris On, credited to “Ashley Hutchings, Richard Thompson, Dave Mattacks, John Kirkpatrick and Barry Dransfield”, with Collins singing lead on two tracks: [Excerpt: Ashley Hutchings, Richard Thompson, Dave Mattacks, John Kirkpatrick and Barry Dransfield with Shirley Collins, “The Willow Tree”] Thompson thought that that album was the best of the various side projects he was involved in at the time, comparing it favourably to Rock On, which he thought was rather slight, saying later “Conceptually, Fairport, Ashley and myself and Sandy were developing a more fragile style of music that nobody else was particularly interested in, a British Folk Rock idea that had a logical development to it, although we all presented it our own way. Morris On was rather more true to what we were doing. Rock On was rather a retro step. I'm not sure it was lasting enough as a record but Sandy did sing really well on the Buddy Holly songs.” Hutchings used the musicians on No Roses and Morris On as the basis for his band the Albion Band, which continues to this day. Simon Nicol and Dave Mattacks both quit Fairport to join the Albion Band, though Mattacks soon returned. Nicol would not return to Fairport for several years, though, and for a long period in the mid-seventies Fairport Convention had no original members. Unfortunately, while Collins was involved in the Albion Band early on, she and Hutchings ended up divorcing, and the stress from the divorce led to Collins developing spasmodic dysphonia, a stress-related illness which makes it impossible for the sufferer to sing. She did eventually regain her vocal ability, but between 1978 and 2016 she was unable to perform at all, and lost decades of her career. Richard Thompson occasionally performed with the Albion Band early on, but he was getting stretched a little thin with all these sessions. Linda Peters said later of him “When I came back from America, he was working in Sandy’s band, and doing sessions by the score. Always with Pat Donaldson and Dave Mattacks. Richard would turn up with his guitar, one day he went along to do a session with one of those folkie lady singers — and there were Pat and DM. They all cracked. Richard smashed his amp and said “Right! No more sessions!” In 1972 he got round to releasing his first solo album, Henry the Human Fly, which featured guest appearances by Linda Peters and Sandy Denny among others: [Excerpt: Richard Thompson, “The Angels Took My Racehorse Away”] Unfortunately, while that album has later become regarded as one of the classics of its genre, at the time it was absolutely slated by the music press. The review in Melody Maker, for example, read in part “Some of Richard Thompson’s ideas sound great – which is really the saving grace of this album, because most of the music doesn’t. The tragedy is that Thompson’s “British rock music” is such an unconvincing concoction… Even the songs that do integrate rock and traditional styles of electric guitar rhythms and accordion and fiddle decoration – and also include explicit, meaningful lyrics are marred by bottle-up vocals, uninspiring guitar phrases and a general lack of conviction in performance.” Henry the Human Fly was released in the US by Warners, who had a reciprocal licensing deal with Island (and for whom Joe Boyd was working at the time, which may have had something to do with that) but according to Thompson it became the lowest-selling record that Warners ever put out (though I’ve also seen that claim made about Van Dyke Parks’ Song Cycle, another album that has later been rediscovered). Thompson was hugely depressed by this reaction, and blamed his own singing. Happily, though, by this point he and Linda had become a couple — they would marry in 1972 — and they started playing folk clubs as a duo, or sometimes in a trio with Simon Nicol. Thompson was also playing with Sandy Denny’s backing band at this point, and played on every track on her second solo album, Sandy. This album was meant to be her big commercial breakthrough, with a glamorous cover photo by David Bailey, and with a more American sound, including steel guitar by Sneaky Pete Kleinow of the Flying Burrito Brothers (whose overdubs were supervised in LA by Joe Boyd): [Excerpt: Sandy Denny, “Tomorrow is a Long Time”] The album was given a big marketing push by Island, and “Listen, Listen” was made single of the week on the Radio 1 Breakfast show: [Excerpt: Sandy Denny, “Listen, Listen”] But it did even worse than the previous album, sending her into something of a depression. Linda Thompson (as the former Linda Peters now was) said of this period “After the Sandy album, it got her down that her popularity didn't suddenly increase in leaps and bounds, and that was the start of her really fretting about the way her career was going. Things only escalated after that. People like me or Martin Carthy or Norma Waterson would think, ‘What are you on about? This is folk music.'” After Sandy’s release, Denny realised she could no longer afford to tour with a band, and so went back to performing just acoustically or on piano. The only new music to be released by either of these ex-members of Fairport Convention in 1973 was, oddly, on an album by the band they were no longer members of. After Thompson had left Fairport, the group had managed to release two whole albums with the same lineup — Swarbrick, Nicol, Pegg, and Mattacks. But then Nicol and Mattacks had both quit the band to join the Albion Band with their former bandmate Ashley Hutchings, leading to a situation where the Albion Band had two original members of Fairport plus their longtime drummer while Fairport Convention itself had no original members and was down to just Swarbrick and Pegg. Needing to fulfil their contracts, they then recruited three former members of Fotheringay — Lucas on vocals and rhythm guitar, Donahue on lead guitar, and Conway on drums. Conway was only a session player at the time, and Mattacks soon returned to the band, but Lucas and Donahue became full-time members. This new lineup of Fairport Convention released two albums in 1973, widely regarded as the group’s most inconsistent records, and on the title track of the first, “Rosie”, Richard Thompson guested on guitar, with Sandy Denny and Linda Thompson on backing vocals: [Excerpt: Fairport Convention, “Rosie”] Neither Sandy Denny nor Richard Thompson released a record themselves in 1973, but in neither case was this through the artists’ choice. The record industry was changing in the early 1970s, as we’ll see in later episodes, and was less inclined to throw good money after bad in the pursuit of art. Island Records prided itself on being a home for great artists, but it was still a business, and needed to make money. We’ll talk about the OPEC oil crisis and its effect on the music industry much more when the podcast gets to 1973, but in brief, the production of oil by the US peaked in 1970 and started to decrease, leading to them importing more and more oil from the Middle East. As a result of this, oil prices rose slowly between 1971 and 1973, then very quickly towards the end of 1973 as a result of the Arab-Israeli conflict that year. As vinyl is made of oil, suddenly producing records became much more expensive, and in this period a lot of labels decided not to release already-completed albums, until what they hoped would be a brief period of shortages passed. Both Denny and Thompson recorded albums at this point that got put to one side by Island. In the case of Thompson, it was the first album by Richard and Linda as a duo, I Want to See the Bright Lights Tonight: [Excerpt: Richard and Linda Thompson, “I Want to See the Bright Lights Tonight”] Today, I Want to See the Bright Lights Tonight is widely regarded as one of the greatest albums of all time, and as one of the two masterpieces that bookended Richard and Linda’s career as a duo and their marriage. But when they recorded the album, full of Richard’s dark songs, it was the opposite of commercial. Even a song that’s more or less a boy-girl song, like “Has He Got a Friend for Me?” has lyrics like “He wouldn’t notice me passing by/I could be in the gutter, or dangling down from a tree” [Excerpt: Richard and Linda Thompson, “Has He got a Friend For Me?”] While something like “The Calvary Cross” is oblique and haunted, and seems to cast a pall over the entire album: [Excerpt: Richard and Linda Thompson, “The Calvary Cross”] The album itself had been cheap to make — it had been recorded in only a week, with Thompson bringing in musicians he knew well and had worked with a lot previously to cut the tracks as-live in only a handful of takes — but Island didn’t think it was worth releasing. The record stayed on the shelf for nearly a year after recording, until Island got a new head of A&R, Richard Williams. Williams said of the album’s release “Muff Winwood had been doing A&R, but he was more interested in production… I had a conversation with Muff as soon as I got there, and he said there are a few hangovers, some outstanding problems. And one of them was Richard Thompson. He said there’s this album we gave him the money to make — which was I Want to See the Bright Lights Tonight — and nobody’s very interested in it. Henry the Human Fly had been a bit of a commercial disappointment, and although Island was altruistic and independent and known for only recording good stuff, success was important… Either a record had to do well or somebody had to believe in it a lot. And it seemed as if neither of those things were true at that point of Richard.” Williams, though, was hugely impressed when he listened to the album. He compared Richard Thompson’s guitar playing to John Coltrane’s sax, and called Thompson “the folk poet of the rainy streets”, but also said “Linda brightened it, made it more commercial. and I thought that “Bright Lights” itself seemed a really commercial song.” The rest of the management at Island got caught up in Williams’ enthusiasm, and even decided to release the title track as a single: [Excerpt: Richard and Linda Thompson, “I Want to See the Bright Lights Tonight”] Neither single nor album charted — indeed it would not be until 1991 that Richard Thompson would make a record that made the top forty in the UK — but the album got enough critical respect that Richard and Linda released two albums the year after. The first of these, Hokey Pokey, is a much more upbeat record than their previous one — Richard Thompson has called it “quite a music-hall influenced record” and cited the influence of George Formby and Harry Lauder. For once, the claim of music hall influence is audible in the music. Usually when a British musician is claimed to have a music ha

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Big Fat Five: A Podcast Financially Supported by Big Fat Snare Drum
The Drum Panel: Taste Is Fake, but My Feelings Are Real

Big Fat Five: A Podcast Financially Supported by Big Fat Snare Drum

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2025 45:17


In this episode, The Drum Panel returns with ME (Ben Hilzinger), alongside my co-host Eric Urrea (Marina City), Max Flanders (Lukas Nelson), and Dean Sinclair (Capital Soirée, Worry Club, Ostin) for a roundtable on the ever-fragile topic of taste. Today we discuss: How to handle unsolicited feedback without spiraling into existential dread The delicate balance between self-expression and being hireable Whether “good taste” is something you're born with—or can develop That awkward moment when a producer tells you to “play something you're already playing” Learning to interpret non-drummer feedback without losing your mind The anxiety of showing people your work… and how to move past it Whether your teenage influences are a crutch… or your secret weapon Developing your own voice in a world full of technically perfect drummers—and incoming AI Overcoming “red light syndrome” in the studio and learning to groove under pressure This one is for anyone who's ever questioned their taste, their technique, or their place in the industry. It's funny, raw, and packed with perspective. --- Get Your Copy of the Drummers on Drumming Book Today!

SWF Podcast
ESG in Space | Episode 8 | Jonathan Hung

SWF Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2025 34:05 Transcription Available


"A Singaporean Vision for Space Sustainability" featuring Jonathan Hung, Head of Singapore's National Space Office The Secure World Foundation (SWF) and Exponential Academy are proud to present Episode 8 of the “ESG in Space” podcast series, spotlighting an insightful conversation with Jonathan Hung, Head of the Office for Space Technology and Industry (OSTIn)—Singapore's National Space Office. In this episode, Jonathan shares Singapore's evolving journey in the space domain—from the establishment of its first satellite ground station in 1971 to launching its national space office in 2013. Singapore's approach to space development is defined by a keen focus on sustainable economic growth, global connectivity, and technological innovation across key adjacent industries such as aerospace, finance, and maritime sectors. As a small but highly strategic nation, Singapore has committed to enabling a pro-business, collaborative space environment, serving as both a regional hub and a global bridge for space activity. Jonathan explains how the city-state leverages public-private partnerships to attract foreign and domestic companies alike, positioning Singapore as a launchpad for startups and established players targeting the Asia-Pacific market and beyond. The conversation also explores Singapore's core values in space governance: commitment to international norms, peaceful use of space, and support for inclusive and rules-based cooperation. Singapore is actively engaged in multilateral platforms, such as COPUOS and the Artemis Accords, and recently co-hosted workshops with SWF to promote long-term sustainability and space traffic management across the ASEAN region. Jonathan also discusses OSTIn's Earth Observation initiative and investments in quantum communications, highlighting Singapore's focus on real-world space applications in climate monitoring, financial security, and secure data exchange. Finally, the episode underscores Singapore's drive to cultivate space talent from the ground up—engaging students, researchers, and innovators in a holistic vision for a sustainable and diverse global space economy. Tune in to discover how Singapore is crafting a purpose-driven space agenda that blends technology, policy, and entrepreneurship to ensure a resilient and inclusive future among the stars. Recorded May 2, 2025

Mimmit sijoittaa
K2 J6: Julia Thurén paljastaa – Miksi ostin kaksi asuntoa samasta talosta?

Mimmit sijoittaa

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2024 39:19


KAIKKIEN (tai siis ainakin Mimmien yleisöstä 'kaikkien') tuntema tietokirjailija, rahavaikuttaja ja rakastettu somehahmo, eli Julia Thurén, vierailee uusimmassa Mimmit sijoittaa asuntoihin -podcast-jaksossamme! Jaksosta tuli poikkeuksellisen kiinnostava, sillä studiossa Julia paljastaa Suville, miksi hän päätyi monen mielestä yllättävään asumisratkaisuun: kaksi eri asuntoa samasta taloyhtiöstä, jotka eivät ole päällekkäin tai vierekkäin. Entä millaista remonttia Julia aikoo tehdä uuteen asuntoonsa?Jakson kuunneltuasi tiedät myös, mitkä ovat suomalaisten suosituimmat asumisen muodot ja mitä asuntojen kysynnälle ja tarjonnalle kuuluu at the moment. Opi uutta kanssamme, mutta hauskasti! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Radio Voiman podcastit
"Keliakia on allergia" ja neljä muuta väitettä - tiedätkö sinä oikeat vastaukset?

Radio Voiman podcastit

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2024 17:19


Valtakunnallinen Keliakiaviikko on käynnissä huipentuen Suomen suurimpiin gluteenittomiin kahveihin lauantaina 7. syyskuuta. Teija Yli-Savola ja Maritta Palmroth Päijät-Hämeen keliakiayhdistyksestä muistuttivat Radio Voimalla maanantaina, että keliakia on autoimmuunisairaus. - Vaikkei ole hengenvaarallisesta taudista kyse, niin se on aluksi järkytys. Muistan itse, kun minulle tähystyksen jälkeen sanottiin, että tämä on selvä juttu ja menin kauppaan. Ostin pakkasesta leipäpaketin ja minulle tuli melkein itku siitä, että tätäkö syön nyt sitten loppuelämäni. Enkä saa ruisleipää, josta hirmuisesti tykkäsin, muisteli Yli-Savola tilannetta 20 vuoden takaa, kun gluteeniton valikoima oli vielä paljon suppeampi. Tiedätkö sinä oikeat vastaukset näihin väitteisiin? 1. Keliakia on allergia. 2. Keliakia todetaan yleensä vauvaiässä. 3. Keliaakikko voi syödä ilman oireita pieniä määriä gluteenia. 4. Gluteeniton ruoka on yleensä tavallista ruokaa kalliimpaa. 5. Ainoa lääke keliakiaan on ruokavalio, joka sisältää suomalaista ruista, vehnää ja ohraa. Kuuntele haastattelusta oikeat vastaukset.

Avto FM 107.7
Bu ölkədə yol qaydalarına diqqət etmirlər I Yol Əhvalatı #311

Avto FM 107.7

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2023 7:16


"Yol Əhvalatı"nda qonaq olan Elvin Novruzov Pakistanda olan konsert proqramındakı çıxışından, insanların mehriban olmasından, Ostin şəhərinin təhlükəsizliyindən, 3 günə Ostin şəhərinə çatmasından bəhs edib.

Sisuradion sarjat
Vain hetkeksi piti jäädä: 1950-luvulla isälle tuotiin lauantaisin palkka kotiin

Sisuradion sarjat

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2023 24:42


Neuvostoliiton pelko, seikkailumieli ja isän konkurssi toivat Ruotsiin 1950-luvun nuoret Arvo Lattusen, Aira Lepistön ja Virpi Korhosen. Vain hetkeksi piti jäädä on sarja suomalaisista, jotka ovat muuttaneet Ruotsiin eri vuosikymmenillä. Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. 1950-luvun Suomi oli sodan runtelema ja maata jälleenrakennettiin. – Suomi oli ikävä maa, toteaa Arvo Lattunen ja kertoo olleensa yhä peloissaan, että Suomen sotavihollinen, Neuvostoliitto, vaikeuttaisi elämää Suomessa.Hän päätti muuttaa Ruotsiin 50-luvun alussa, ja olihan hänellä toinenkin syy muuttoon. Silloinen tyttöystävä oli jo aikaisemmin tullut Tukholmaan.Tyttöystävä auttoikin alkutaipaleella. Hänen ansioistaan kellosepäksi valmistunut Arvo sai heti työpaikan, vaikka ei osannut sanaakaan ruotsia.Elämä uudessa maassa lähti hyvin käyntiin. Arvo urheili, kävi tansseissa Alenin tanssiravintolassa ja tienasi niin paljon rahaa, että pystyi ostamaan unelmiensa Vespan. – Se oli niin ihmeellistä, että täältä sai hedelmiä ja kaikkea hyvää, mitä Suomesta ei saanut.Asunnon hankkiminen Tukholmassa oli kuitenkin hankalaa huutavan asuntopulan takia.– Onnistuin vuokraamaan Östermalmilta huoneen. Se oli kamalan pieni, ja siinä oli hirveän huono sänky, muistelee Arvo.Äiti haukkui ja ihmetteli, miksi pitää lähteä maailman ääriinTurkulaisen Barkerin kutomon tyttö Aira Lepistö kuuli kesälomaltaan palatessaan, että Vetlandaan haettiin kutojia. – Töitähän minulla oli Suomessa, mutta ei asuntoa, kuittaa Airi.21-vuotias Airi päätti lähteä seikkailumielessä Ruotsiin, vaikka tuskin edes tiesi, missä Vetlanda on. Seuraksi lähti muutama muu tyttö Turusta.– Juna pysähtyi Nässjössä ja menin Epan tavarataloon. Ostin sieltä kattilan, ja se on minulla vieläkin tallella.Airin muuttopäätös ei ollut kaikkien mieleen, ja hänen äitinsä uskoikin, ettei ikinä enää näkisi tytärtään. Vetlandassa Airia odotti kalustettu huone ja työpaikka kutomossa.– Skånelainen työnjohtaja opasti ensimmäisenä työpäivänä, mutta en kyllä ymmärtänyt sanaakaan. Minulla oli kaksi pientä sanakirjaa ja niistä opettelin sanoja.Sain ottaa mukaani vain yhden nukenVirpi Korhonen oli alle kouluikäinen, kun hän perheineen muutti Tukholmaan. Hänen isänsä oli muuttanut Ruotsiin jo aikaisemmin. Isän firma oli mennyt konkurssiin Suomessa, ja uudet haasteet vetivät hänet Ruotsin puolelle.– Isän piti tulla meitä vastaan Tukholman Skeppsbrolle, mutta hän olikin nukahtanut ja unohtanut, että olimme tulossa. Onneksi äiti tiesi, missä hän asuu ja löysimme perille.Uusi asuinmaa ei saanut Virpiä hullaantumaan. Lähinnä häntä harmitti, että piti luopua miltei kaikista leikkikaluista. Äiti antoi ottaa mukaan vain yhden nuken.Korhoset asuivat ahtaasti ensin Tukholmassa ja sitten Nynäshamnissa.– Meillä oli huone ja keittiö ja siinä asui viisi henkeä. Sitten saimme vähän suuremman asunnon, kaksi huonetta ja keittiön.Virpi Korhosen huippuhetkiä 50-luvulla olivat lauantait, jolloin työnjohtaja toi isälle palkan kotiin. – Se oli mahtavan paksu nippu tuhannen kruunun seteleitä. Sarjan teossa on käytetty lähteenä Turun Siirtolaisinstituutin Jouni Korkiasaaren artikkelia "Suomalaisten Ruotsiin suuntautuneen siirtolaisuuden yhteiskunnalliset syyt 1900-luvulla".7-osainen ohjelmasarja on lähetetty ensimmäisen kerran vuonna 2016. Sarjan kaikki osat löytyvät myös Sveriges Radio Play-sovelluksesta. Kirjoita hakusanakenttään Vain hetkeksi piti jäädä.Virpi Inkerivirpi.inkeri@sverigesradio.se

The Wisconsin Wrestler
Conversation with Ostin Blanchard

The Wisconsin Wrestler

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2023 66:12


Longtime friend of the show Ostin Blanchard joins Teague and Steve and shares a life and wrestling story that's nothing short of exciting! Ostin starts the show by talking about his very fateful adoption and his transition to the US (and Wisconsin weather) when he was eight. We then get into wrestling talk, where Ostin talks about his greatest moments of motivation and we highlight his best matches in a journey that saw him go from a .500 wrestler his freshman year to becoming this year's D2 126 pound State Champ! Ostin is a prime example of what happens when you mix work ethic with a great attitude and exemplifies why he is a fan favorite in the state of Wisconsin, you won't want to miss this one!Support the show

Artelligence Podcast
Mo Ostin Collection; Press family collection, Basquiat, Rousseau & NY HIghlights, May 2023

Artelligence Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2023 38:16


The New York auctions begin this week with just over 2000 lots on offer. The combined low estimate is nearly $1.37 billion dollars. If we remove the Allen collection from last November's sales, we're still at about the same level in terms of the value of the low estimate. If that doesn't surprise you, you're lucky. That means you didn't spend three months after November's auctions waiting for a global recession to begin. During that period, little art traded hands. Now that the economic slowdown hasn't happened—yet—it would seem as though the art market is trying to make up for lost time and take advantage of this goldilocks moment. Pre-sale guarantees seem to be down but the freight train of collections and estates hasn't stopped either. In this podcast, we're going to hear from the specialists at Christie's, Phillips and Sotheby's about some of the lots selling this month. There's so much high quality art on offer, we're not going to get to it all. But here are some of the interesting stories.

Söhbətgah
Ostin Kleon | Rəssam kimi oğurla | Söhbətgah

Söhbətgah

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2023 9:01


Rəqəmsal əsrdə yaradıcılığı inkişaf etdirməyə kömək edən bələdçi, "Rəssam kimi oğurla" oxuculara bədii tərəflərini kəşf etməyə və daha yaradıcı həyat qurmağa kömək edəcək 10 əsas transformasiya prinsipindən danışır.

Kultūras Rondo
Monta Kroma: dzeja un refleksija

Kultūras Rondo

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2022 44:09


Monta Kroma: dzeja un refleksija. Gan Kultūras rondo sarunā ar dzejniekiem Kārli Vērdiņu un Arti Ostupu un mūziķi Jāni Ozoliņu, viņi ir arī tikko izdotās kolektīvās monogrāfijas sastādītāji un redaktori; gan mākslinieces Helēnas Heinrihsones atmiņās, kuras piefiksējis rakstnieks Svens Kuzmins ierakstu sērijā “Pilsētā ar Montu Kromu”. 13. decembra vakarā ar Montai Kromai veltītiem Kārļa Vērdiņa un Arta Ostupa dzejas lasījumiem, kā arī grupas Sigma koncertu tiks svinīgi atklāta kolektīvā monogrāfija "Monta Kroma: dzeja un refleksija" un Sigmas albuma "Ostinācijas" vinils, kurā iekļautas dziesmas ar dzejnieces tekstiem. 

The Vision Quest Podcast
#5 - Ostin Blanchard Makes His Announcement!

The Vision Quest Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2022 7:27


Who will it be?? If you don't have Instagram, you can hear it right here! Support the showAppleton Tattoo Linkshttps://www.facebook.com/appletontattoohttps://www.instagram.com/mark_appletontattoo/920 Hat Co. Linkshttps://920hatco.com/https://www.instagram.com/920hatco/https://www.facebook.com/920HatCo

Ostan Asuntoja Podcast
228. Maailmanmatkaajan koti ja sijoitukset Lapissa Anette Vaherto Osa 1

Ostan Asuntoja Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2022 64:13


UUTTA! Asuntosijoittajan ABC -verkkokurssi. Kokeneiden asuntosijoittajien Harri Hurun ja Niina Huhtalan verkkokurssi 10 %:n alennuksella koodilla ABC 13.11.2022 saakka kurssin nettisivuilta. Tutustu tämän jakson sponsoreiden tarjoamaan sopivan tilaisuuden tullen. Kiitos OVV, Peab, Vuokraovi, Flatco, If ja Huutokaupat.com. Anette Vaherto on kulkenut muun muassa Arizonan, Kreikan ja Uuden Seelannin kautta Suomen Lappiin ja Yllästunturin kotikaupunkiin Kolariin, josta lopulta löytyi paikka, johon Anette ja Matteo halusivat pysähtyä. Tässä jaksossa puidaan muun muassa: Tarinaa, miten Anette ja Matteo päätyivät ostamaan talon Kolarista? Miten "vesi kannetaan ämpärillä" -tyylinen pihavaja ja Airbnb toimivat keskenään? Miten pihavajan jälkeen ajatus ensimmäisestä sijoitusmökistä toteutui? Kaupungistumisen negatrendistä kiinnostuneet ja mistä päin tahansa Suomea pihavajan tai mökin vuokranantajan hommista kiinnostuneet voivat saada Anetten ja Matteon tarinasta inspiraatiota. Ostin sitten 10 omakotitaloa vuodessa Osa 1 Jesse Huhtala – Ostan Asuntoja Podcast #199 Outi Lahden milkit ja massit Osa 1 – Ostan Asuntoja Podcast #224 Kiitos Ostan Asuntoja -sisällön mahdollistavalle sponsorille:     Vuokraustoiminta on tärkeä osa asuntosijoittamista. Ajan tai taitojen puuttuessa sen voi ulkoistaa OVV:n ammattilaiselle oli kyseessä sitten yksittäinen vuokra-asunto tai suursijoittajan asuntosalkku. Mikäli haluat vain keskittyä nauttimaan sijoitusasuntosi tuotosta, OVV Kokonaispalvelu on sopiva vaihtoehto. Se on kaiken kattava ”avaimet käteen” -konsepti, jossa OVV hoitaa kaiken vuokrasuhteen alusta loppuun myöntäen vuokratakuun koko vuokrasuhteen ajalle. Jos vuokralainen ei maksaisi vuokraansa, paikallinen OVV:n toimisto maksaa sen. Mikäli haluat apua hyvän vuokralaisen löytämisessä mutta hoidat vuokrasuhteen hallinnan itse, OVV Vuokravälityspalvelu on oikea vaihtoehto. OVV palvelee ja neuvoo koko vuokrasuhteen ajan. OVV.com OVV Asuntopalvelut Instagram, Facebook Kiitos Ostan Asuntoja Podcast -sponsorille: Kiinnostaako sinua uudisasunnot Suomen kasvukeskuksissa? Peabin asunnot sijaitsevat hyvillä paikoilla ja ne suunnitellaan toimiviksi kestämään aikaa. Vakavaraiselta ja luotettavalta yhtiöltä hankittu uusi asunto on huoleton ja helposti vuokrattavissa.  Saat tiedot uusista kohteista sähköpostiisi ennen julkista ennakkomarkkinointia liittymällä avainasiakkaaksi osoitteessa peabkoti.fi/avainasiakas. Tutustu asuntoihin ja lue lisää peabkoti.fi - Seuraa meitä myös Instagramissa @peabkoti Vuokraovi on suosituin vuokra-asuntojen markkinapaikka, jossa hyvää vuokrakotia etsivät vuokralaiset ja niitä tarjoavat vuokranantajat onnistuvat löytämään toisensa helposti. Vuokraovi.com. Flatco on johtava vuokranantajan elämää helpottava palvelu. Flatco sähköistää vuokraustoiminnan paikkariippumattomaksi asuntohakemuksesta vuokravalvontaan asti. Etsitkö löytöjä asuntoflippaukseen? Haetko tuottavia kohteita osta ja pidä salkkuusi? Meitä asuntosijoittajia kiinnostava kauppapaikka on Huutokaupat.com. Ifin vuokaranantajan vakuutuksen saat helposti verkosta. Laske hinta if.fi/vuokranantaja Asuntosijoittamisen lumipalloefekti -kirjan alennuskoodilla "KOTIMATKA” saat 30 %:n alennuksen kirjan kovakantisesta versiosta kirjan nettisivuilta.

REstarts
F1LVPodkāsts #163: Red Bull epicentrā arī ASV GP

REstarts

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2022 62:51


Verstapens uzvar arī Ostinā un nodrošina Konstruktoru Kausu Red Bull komandai, kura sēro par Dītriha Matešitca aiziešanu.

The Record Player
Remembering Mo Ostin

The Record Player

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2022 82:17


Legendary record executive Mo Ostin passed away at the age of 95, leaving behind an incredible legacy of work. For more than 30 years, Ostin was one of the key industry figures associated with Warner Brothers and Reprise, first joining the latter in 1960 when he was recruited by Frank Sinatra. He became chairman and CEO of Warner/Reprise in 1972  and held that title until his departure in 1994.That year, his peers at the label assembled Mo's Songs, a six disc promotional box set that was presented to Ostin and the label staff as a musical send-off. The compilation opens with "Mo," an original song from George Harrison and offers an astounding overview of Ostin's career in the 100+ tracks that follow.Jeff and Matt welcome David Wild, who shares memories of his unique encounters with Mo over the years. David also reveals a Mo project that he was working on.We also discuss Naked Lunch, the fantastic new podcast that David is hosting with his longtime friend, Phil Rosenthal. As always, the stories are great and we appreciate David taking the time to join us.If you enjoy our podcast, we invite you to become a member of our Record Club on Patreon to unlock even more Record Player fun. You'll get access to advance audio of these episodes, bonus interviews and a wealth of additional content. We appreciate your support!Visit us on Twitter @RecordPlayerPod and share these episodes with ten friends.

Innersleeve
Episode 85: RIP Mo Ostin | SoundMojo Community | Xênia França Interview

Innersleeve

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2022 62:49


Hey everyone! This week on Innersleeve, we are joined by special guest, Xenia França! We discuss her roots in Brazil/music influences from her upbringing, her first time visiting Canada for her music, adjusting to life post-pandemic, her performance on the popular YouTube channel ‘COLORS' and much more! Joe and Cassius open the show by discussing the hottest trending news in music and reacting to your posts/music on the SoundMojo community tab! Connect with Xênia França:https://www.instagram.com/xeniafranca/?hl=enConnect with SoundMojo:Subscribe to SoundMojo: https://wmojo.com/soundmojo-subscribe

The Johnny Beane Podcast
Exclusively Van Halen Vinyl Giveaway! RIP WB Record Executive Mo Ostin; LIVE! 8/2/22

The Johnny Beane Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2022 77:37


Kultūras Rondo
Grupai "Sigma" trešais studijas albums "Ostinācijas"

Kultūras Rondo

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2022 8:19


Grupa "Sigma", ierakstot savu trešo studijas albumu "Ostinācijas", turpina meklēt dzejā, mūzikā un vizualizācijās. Kultūras Rondo studijā viesojās mūziķi Sniedze Prauliņa, Igors Šelegovskis un Jānis Ozoliņš. Sarunu sākam ar albuma nosaukuma nozīmes meklējumiem.     

Kultūras Rondo
Avangardiskāk. Ar jauno albumu "Ostinācijas" iepazīstina grupas "Sigma" pārstāvji

Kultūras Rondo

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2022 18:40


Avangardiskāk – par skaņu un dziesmu formu meklējumiem, ierakstot savu trešo studijas albumu "Ostinācijas", Kulturas rondo studijā dalās latviešu indīroka grupas "Sigma" pārstāvji. Studijā mūziķis un literatūrzinātnieks Jānis Ozoliņš, dziedātāja Sniedze Prauliņa un aktieris Igors Šelegovskis. Tezaurs vēsta, ka ostinato ir melodijas, ritma vai harmoniskās secības vairākkārtējs atkārtojums. Tas ir nelokāms lietvārds vīriešu dzimtā, bet grupa "Sigma" savam albumam ir izvēlējusies nosaukumu "Ostinācijas" - tas ir daudzskaitlis sieviešu dzimtē. "Ostinācijas ir saistīts arī ostinato. Kaut kā rakstot šīs dziesmas, secinājām, ka princips veidojas kā žanrs. Pats princips nav jauns, vecs kā pasaule. Ir virkne skaņdarbu, kur šis princips ir izmantots - Mēnesnīcas sonāte vai Ravēla "Bolero"," skaidro Jānis Ozoliņš. "Ko var darīt dziesmas žanrā ar atkārtojuma principu? Kā tas strādā, mēs zinām par piedziedājumu, kas vienmēr ir ar atkārtojuma principu. Noteikti ir arī citas iespējas, tās mēs arī meklējām," turpina Jānis Ozoliņš "Ostinācijas - tas mums nāca prātā pēc analoģijas ar dzeju. Ja ir soneti, trioletas, tad mums ir ostinācijas." Latviešu indīroka grupa "Sigma" šogad laiž klajā savu trešo studijas albumu "Ostinācijas" ar atvēršanas koncertiem maijā Latvijas Mākslas akadēmijas K2 jeb jaunajā zālē. Katra koncerta apmeklētājiem būs iespēja baudīt īpašu, tieši šim vakaram paredzētu ievadkoncertu. 27. maijā pirms grupas "Sigma" uzstāsies aktieris Igors Šelegovskis, kuram šogad gaidāms debijas albums hiphopā. Koncertā 25. maijā viešņa būs Sniedze Prauliņa, bet 26. maijā ar tehno diskotēku trakos komponists Platons Buravickis. "Sigma" iecerējusi ierakstu "Ostinācijas" vasarā izdod arī vinila platē.

Ostan Asuntoja Podcast
Myyjän rahoitus riippuu myyjästä, ei asuntosijoittajasta tai kohteesta - Tiistaiaudio #216

Ostan Asuntoja Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2022 11:25


Myyjän rahoitus on monelle epäileväiselle helposti tyrmättävä konsepti. En minäkään tuosta vaan rahoittaisi sijoitusasuntoni tuntematonta ostajaa, jos pöydällä on 5 muuta tarjousta, jotka kaikki olisivat käteistarjouksia. Mikäli löytäisi myyjän, joka suostuisi ainakin osarahoittamaan kauppaa, se tarkoittaisi sitä, että tämän rahoituksen osalta ei tarvitse käydä pankissa ja rahoituksen ehdot voisi sopia myyjän kanssa suoraan osana kaupantekoa. Onko tällaisia myyjiä olemassa? Jos on, milloin sellaisen löytää paremmin ja miten lähestyä asiaa? Näitä käyn läpi parin esimerkinkin avulla. Asuntosijoittajan veroilmoitus ja verojen laskeminen 2022 – Blogi #300  Asuntosijoittajan ja vuokranantajan 2021 veroilmoitus OmaVerossa – Blogi #301  Ostin sitten 10 omakotitaloa vuodessa Osa 1 Jesse Huhtala – Ostan Asuntoja Podcast #199 Kiitos Ostan Asuntoja -sisällön mahdollistavalle sponsorille: Sijoitusasunnot.com tarjoaa hyvätuottoisia sijoitusasuntoja alle markkinahintojen ja arvokasta tietoa sekä ajankohtaisia näkemyksiä asuntosijoittamisesta. Käy katsomassa vuodelle 2021 päivittyneet nettisivut, uusimmat kohteet, liittymässä sähköpostilistalle, lataamassa ilmaiset asuntosijoittajan työkalut ja katsastamassa uusimmat artikkelit osoitteesta sijoitusasunnot.com. Näin ostat sijoitusasunnon Sijoitusasunnot.com:lta Tosi laadukas opas: Sijoitusasunnon valokuvaus ja kuvien editointi nykyaikaisella kännykällä Pistä muuten Sijoitusasunnot.com YouTube -kanava tilaukseen Blogista: ”Kohde sopii hyvin sijoittajalle, ensiasunnon ostajalle, pariskunnalle, opiskelijalle kuin eläkeläisellekin!”

Ostan Asuntoja Podcast
200. Ostin sitten 10 omakotitaloa vuodessa Osa 2 Jesse Huhtala

Ostan Asuntoja Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2022 59:06


Asuntosijoittamisen lumipalloefekti -kirjaan alennuskoodi "KOTIMATKA”, jolla saa 30 %:n alennuksen kirjan kovakantisesta versiosta kirjan nettisivuilta. E-kirja löytyy nyt ainakin Suomalaisen verkkokaupasta, Adlibriksestä ja booky.fi:stä. Omakotitaloihin "osta ja pidä" -asuntosijoittavista vieraista ei ole ollut ylitarjontaa. Vihdoinkin saadaan tätä segmenttiä edustava asuntosijoittaja, tai siis omakotitaloihin sijoittava kiinteistösijoittaja, tai kiinteistöihin sijoittava omakotien vuokranantaja, tai vieraskotikiinteistöihin... Ostan Asuntoja Podcastin vieraaksi.  Jesse Huhtalan & Co toiminta-aluetta on Helsinki-Pori -tien varrella viimeisellä 50 kilometrillä sijaitsevia pikkukaupunkeja ja tien päätepiste Pori. Ja parin asunto-osakkeen harha-askeleen lisänä pitosalkussa on omakotitaloja, joihin Jesse on vaimonsa Tian kanssa nyt keskittynyt. Osassa 1 juteltiin siitä, miten asuntosijoittaminen lähti alkuun ja kerrotalo-osakkeen jälkeen tuli paritalon puolikas. Nyt käydään läpi loput asiat ja se, miten 10 omakotitaloa tuli ostettua vuodessa. Perheen tuoreella @huhtalarent -instatilillä pääsee seuraamaan, miten omakotitaloprojektit etenee. Hieman on roska silmässä, kun 200 perjantaita putkeen on enteriä Ostan Asuntoja Podcastin osalta tullut painettua. Kiitollinen olen erityisesti siitä, etten ole päivääkään ollut sairaana ja voimia on riittänyt. Kiitos paljon, kun olet mukana matkassa ja olet jakanut sisältöäni eteenpäin. Kiitos Ostan Asuntoja -sisällön mahdollistavalle sponsorille: Sijoitusasunnot.com tarjoaa hyvätuottoisia sijoitusasuntoja alle markkinahintojen ja arvokasta tietoa sekä ajankohtaisia näkemyksiä asuntosijoittamisesta. Käy katsomassa  päivittyneet nettisivut, uusimmat kohteet, liittymässä sähköpostilistalle, lataamassa ilmaiset asuntosijoittajan työkalut ja katsastamassa uusimmat artikkelit osoitteesta sijoitusasunnot.com. Näin ostat sijoitusasunnon Sijoitusasunnot.com:lta Tosi laadukas opas: Sijoitusasunnon valokuvaus ja kuvien editointi nykyaikaisella kännykällä Pistä muuten Sijoitusasunnot.com YouTube -kanava tilaukseen Blogista: ”Kohde sopii hyvin sijoittajalle, ensiasunnon ostajalle, pariskunnalle, opiskelijalle kuin eläkeläisellekin!” Kiitos Ostan Asuntoja Podcast -sponsorille: Kiinnostaako sinua uudisasunnot Suomen kasvukeskuksissa? Peabin asunnot sijaitsevat hyvillä paikoilla ja ne suunnitellaan toimiviksi kestämään aikaa. Vakavaraiselta ja luotettavalta yhtiöltä hankittu uusi asunto on huoleton ja helposti vuokrattavissa.  Saat tiedot uusista kohteista sähköpostiisi ennen julkista ennakkomarkkinointia liittymällä avainasiakkaaksi osoitteessa peabkoti.fi/avainasiakas. Tutustu asuntoihin ja lue lisää peabkoti.fi - Seuraa meitä myös Instagramissa @peabkoti Vuokraovi on suosituin vuokra-asuntojen markkinapaikka, jossa hyvää vuokrakotia etsivät vuokralaiset ja niitä tarjoavat vuokranantajat onnistuvat löytämään toisensa helposti. Vuokraovi.com. Flatco on johtava vuokranantajan elämää helpottava palvelu. Flatco sähköistää vuokraustoiminnan paikkariippumattomaksi asuntohakemuksesta vuokravalvontaan asti. Etsitkö löytöjä asuntoflippaukseen? Haetko tuottavia kohteita osta ja pidä salkkuusi? Meitä asuntosijoittajia kiinnostava kauppapaikka on Huutokaupat.com. Ifin vuokaranantajan vakuutuksen saat helposti verkosta. Laske hinta if.fi/vuokranantaja Pitäisikö asuntosijoittajan jo pelästyä inflaatiota? – Tiistaiaudio #215 Asuntosijoittajan veroilmoitus ja verojen laskeminen 2022 – Blogi #300 Asuntosijoittajan ja vuokranantajan 2021 veroilmoitus OmaVerossa – Blogi #301

Ostan Asuntoja Podcast
Pitäisikö asuntosijoittajan jo pelästyä inflaatiota? - Tiistaiaudio #215

Ostan Asuntoja Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2022 24:36


Nyt on käsissä vuosikymmeniin suurempi todennäköisyys siitä, että tilaustoimitusketjut pitää järjestää uudestaan tai jopa tuplata siten, että nato-maiden puolustuskalusto ei ole riippuvainen idän raaka-aineista ja osista. Energia ja raaka-aineet joutuvat uuden tarkastelun kohteeksi ja minivarastoajattelu muuttuu varmuusvarastoajatteluksi. Omavaraisuus nousee suhteellisesti tärkeämmäksi tehokkuuden kustannuksella. Pohjustan aihetta ensin selittämällä, mitä on viimeisten vuosikymmenten aikana tapahtunut, ja miksi todennäköisyydet sille ovat kasvaneet, että näin ei jatketa tästä eteenpäin. Sitten pohdin, mitä tämä voisi tarkoittaa suomalaiselle asuntosijoittajalle ja vuokranantajalle? Mitä asialle voisi tehdä? Jatkuuko epävarmuus ikuisesti? Asuntosijoittajan veroilmoitus ja verojen laskeminen 2022 – Blogi #300  Asuntosijoittajan ja vuokranantajan 2021 veroilmoitus OmaVerossa – Blogi #301 Vuokrasi 300 asuntoa vuodessa Sofia Savimäki Osa 1 – Ostan Asuntoja Podcast #197 Ostin sitten 10 omakotitaloa vuodessa Osa 1 Jesse Huhtala – Ostan Asuntoja Podcast #199 Kiitos Ostan Asuntoja -sisällön mahdollistavalle sponsorille: Sijoitusasunnot.com tarjoaa hyvätuottoisia sijoitusasuntoja alle markkinahintojen ja arvokasta tietoa sekä ajankohtaisia näkemyksiä asuntosijoittamisesta. Käy katsomassa vuodelle 2021 päivittyneet nettisivut, uusimmat kohteet, liittymässä sähköpostilistalle, lataamassa ilmaiset asuntosijoittajan työkalut ja katsastamassa uusimmat artikkelit osoitteesta sijoitusasunnot.com. Näin ostat sijoitusasunnon Sijoitusasunnot.com:lta Tosi laadukas opas: Sijoitusasunnon valokuvaus ja kuvien editointi nykyaikaisella kännykällä Pistä muuten Sijoitusasunnot.com YouTube -kanava tilaukseen Blogista: ”Kohde sopii hyvin sijoittajalle, ensiasunnon ostajalle, pariskunnalle, opiskelijalle kuin eläkeläisellekin!”

Ostan Asuntoja Podcast
199. "Ostin sitten 10 omakotitaloa vuodessa" Osa 1 Jesse Huhtala

Ostan Asuntoja Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2022 43:48


Asuntosijoittamisen lumipalloefekti -kirjaan alennuskoodi "KOTIMATKA”, jolla saa 30 %:n alennuksen kirjan kovakantisesta versiosta kirjan nettisivuilta. E-kirja löytyy nyt ainakin Suomalaisen verkkokaupasta, Adlibriksestä ja booky.fi:stä. Omakotitaloihin "osta ja pidä" -asuntosijoittavista vieraista ei ole ollut ylitarjontaa. Vihdoinkin saadaan tätä segmenttiä edustava asuntosijoittaja, tai siis omakotitaloihin sijoittava kiinteistösijoittaja, tai kiinteistöihin sijoittava omakotien vuokranantaja, tai vieraskotikiinteistöihin... Ostan Asuntoja Podcastin vieraaksi.  Jesse Huhtalan & Co toiminta-aluetta on Helsinki-Pori -tien varrella viimeisellä 50 kilometrillä sijaitsevia pikkukaupunkeja ja tien päätepiste Pori. Ja parin asunto-osakkeen harha-askeleen lisänä pitosalkussa on omakotitaloja, joihin Jesse on vaimonsa Tian kanssa nyt keskittynyt. Perheen tuoreella @huhtalarent -instatilillä pääsee seuraamaan, miten omakotitaloprojektit etenee. Kiitos Ostan Asuntoja -sisällön mahdollistavalle sponsorille:   Vuokraustoiminta on tärkeä osa asuntosijoittamista. Ajan tai taitojen puuttuessa sen voi ulkoistaa OVV:n ammattilaiselle oli kyseessä sitten yksittäinen vuokra-asunto tai suursijoittajan asuntosalkku. Mikäli haluat vain keskittyä nauttimaan sijoitusasuntosi tuotosta, OVV Kokonaispalvelu on sopiva vaihtoehto. Se on kaiken kattava ”avaimet käteen” -konsepti, jossa OVV hoitaa kaiken vuokrasuhteen alusta loppuun myöntäen vuokratakuun koko vuokrasuhteen ajalle. Jos vuokralainen ei maksaisi vuokraansa, paikallinen OVV:n toimisto maksaa sen. Mikäli haluat apua hyvän vuokralaisen löytämisessä mutta hoidat vuokrasuhteen hallinnan itse, OVV Vuokravälityspalvelu on oikea vaihtoehto. OVV palvelee ja neuvoo koko vuokrasuhteen ajan. OVV.com OVV Asuntopalvelut Instagram, Facebook Vuokranantajan nelikenttä – yrittäjä Ville Vesterinen Osa 1 – Ostan Asuntoja Podcast #185 Piristystä ja Joensuuta Satu Lukin Osa 1 – Ostan Asuntoja Podcast #193 Kiitos Ostan Asuntoja Podcast -sponsorille: Kiinnostaako sinua uudisasunnot Suomen kasvukeskuksissa? Peabin asunnot sijaitsevat hyvillä paikoilla ja ne suunnitellaan toimiviksi kestämään aikaa. Vakavaraiselta ja luotettavalta yhtiöltä hankittu uusi asunto on huoleton ja helposti vuokrattavissa.  Saat tiedot uusista kohteista sähköpostiisi ennen julkista ennakkomarkkinointia liittymällä avainasiakkaaksi osoitteessa peabkoti.fi/avainasiakas. Tutustu asuntoihin ja lue lisää peabkoti.fi - Seuraa meitä myös Instagramissa @peabkoti Ifin vuokaranantajan vakuutuksen saat helposti verkosta. Laske hinta if.fi/vuokranantaja Flatco on johtava vuokranantajan elämää helpottava palvelu. Flatco sähköistää vuokraustoiminnan paikkariippumattomaksi asuntohakemuksesta vuokravalvontaan asti. Etsitkö löytöjä asuntoflippaukseen? Haetko tuottavia kohteita osta ja pidä salkkuusi? Meitä asuntosijoittajia kiinnostava kauppapaikka on Huutokaupat.com. Voiko asuntosijoittaja ulkoistaa kannattavuusvastuun toivolle? – Tiistaiaudio #214 Asuntosijoittajan veroilmoitus ja verojen laskeminen 2022 – Blogi #300 Asuntosijoittajan ja vuokranantajan 2021 veroilmoitus OmaVerossa – Blogi #301

SBS Bosnian - SBS na bosanskom jeziku
Obilježavajući World Cancer Day - Dr Avdo Zahirović

SBS Bosnian - SBS na bosanskom jeziku

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2022 17:32


Specijalista otorinolaringologije i hirurg u Ostin bolnici na sjeveru Melbournea, doktor Avdo Zahirović daje nesebičan doprinos obilježavanju Svjetskog dana borbe protiv raka, nudeći potpuno realan, pa ipak originalan pristup u objašnjenju pojave malignih oboljenja, kao i njihovih tretmana.

Historie na Faktach
Znam Twój sekret nianiu! I Podcast #52

Historie na Faktach

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2021 33:16


Poszukiwana opiekunka do dzieci u francuskiej rodziny Londynie w ramach programu OłPer... -czyta z przejęciem.Ogłoszenie, naprawdę mocno ją interesuje...W końcu znalazła coś, co spełnia jej oczekiwania.Nigdy nie była w Londynie...Mogłaby podszkolić język, poznać angielską kulturę i odwiedzić wszystkie piękne miejsca, które jak dotąd znała tylko z telewizji i powieści Dżejn Ostin...LUBISZ SŁUCHAĆ AUDIOBOOKÓW? BookBeat 30 darmowych dni na testowanie pakietu Premium! Możecie zarejestrować się korzystając z linku: https://bit.ly/3pr3eMFKOD: HISTORIENAFAKTACHPremiera odcinka▶️

Lala Beamz
#37 - Lala & Ostin Interview David Thibodeau - Waco Survivor

Lala Beamz

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2021 100:32


David Thibodeau was in his 20s when the waco massacre happened and the federal government, law enforcement and military joined forces to unlawfully hold up over 80 people in their compound and killing 90% of them using excessive force, including many children. Furthermore, the media twisted the story and stated it was a mass suicide done by a "cult". ALL COMPLETELY FALSIFIED, surprise right? He has more resources here as well as his book on his personal account: https://www.wacosurvivors.com/

Lala Beamz
#8 - Ostin & I Talk About LSD & Stuff

Lala Beamz

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2021 135:06


You are in for a wild ride & if you are easily offended, you came to the wrong slash right place. We fuck your world up with humor, and I mean degenerate humor, oh and acid trips. @pok3mom @russian.disinformation

ostin
I have a Strange Story
Episode 99 Shorties

I have a Strange Story

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2020 17:53


Another Shorties episode! Thank you to everyone who allowed me to retell your experiences! Music from the http://freemusicarchive.org Rozkol https://freemusicarchive.org/music/ROZKOL So sorry little girl and Ostin https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Ostin spirit 2 Find our show and others like it on the Paranormality Network https://paranormalityradio.com Do you have a paranormal experience you would like for us to retell? Send it to ihaveastrangestorypodcast@ gmail.com. Subscribe, rate and review us! If you give us a review please screen shot it and send it to our emailing address with your physical address and we will mail you some stickers! Follow us on IG, Twitter and Facebook and now on YouTube! --- This episode is sponsored by · Charity Promotion: BallotReady: The goal of this initiative is to increase voter education and encourage your listeners to get the vote out during the 2020 General Election this November. https://www.ballotready.org/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ihaveastrangestory/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ihaveastrangestory/support

Stressivapaa johtaja | Näkökulmia henkilökohtaiseen kasvuun
SJ - Mitä opin kun ostin 30 vuotta vanhan Jeepin?

Stressivapaa johtaja | Näkökulmia henkilökohtaiseen kasvuun

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2020 5:35


Tässä jaksossa kerron, mitä 30 vuotta vanhan Jeepin ostaminen opetti.  http://www.jpjakonen.fi Email: jpjako@gmail.com © JP Jakonen 2020

Literatur Radio Hörbahn
Reportage: “Tegernsee als literarischer Thinktank des Spätmittelalters” – von Prof. Dr. Klaus Wolf im Rahmen der Sonderausstellung im Rahmen des TeLiTo-Projektes

Literatur Radio Hörbahn

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2020 22:42


Vortrag zur Eröffnung der Sonderausstellung im Rahmen des TeLiTo-Projektes am 21. August 2020. Dauer der Ausstellung bis 8. November 2020. Wir berichten von der Eröffnung. Endlich ist es soweit und wir können Sie/Euch zur Sonderausstellung ins Museum Tegernseer Tal einladen! Tegernseer Literatur Touren? heißt das Projekt, das im Museum gemeinsam mit dem Literaturschloss Edelstetten nun bereits seit einiger Zeit bearbeitet wird. Wie berichtet, wurde mit Mitteln des Bundes, welche das Projekt finanzieren, die Beleuchtung des Museums modernisiert, sodass das Heimatmuseum nun einen weiteren Schritt zur Visualisierung seiner kulturhistorischen Sammlung machen konnte. Der Tegernsee als Hotspot der Literaturgeschichte zieht sich über viele Jahrhunderte. Vom bedeutenden Schaffen der Tegernseer Mönche bis zu den Heimatkrimis der Gegenwart verbindet er vielerlei Genres. Im Kloster Tegernsee entstanden neben den mannigfaltigen geistlichen Werken gebildeter Theologen profane Texte, die die deutschsprachige Literatur entscheidend geprägt haben. Mit den Landesbeschreibungen des 19. Jahrhunderts und dem ersten Fremdenführer, Joseph von Hefners Beschreibung Tegernsees und seiner Umgegend von 1838, änderte sich das Augenmerk auf Landschaft und Kultur. Dem allgemeinen Zustrom an hochgestellten Persönlichkeiten folgend, entdeckten zunehmend auch Künstler und Literaten die Schönheit des Tegernseer Tales und seine schaffenskräftige Inspiration. Große Namen der deutschen Literaturgeschichte sind darunter, 2020/21 gedenkt man besonders der Todestage von Ludwig Ganghofer und Ludwig Thoma. In den Reihen finden sich ebenso Franz von Kobell, Karl Stieler, Max Mohr und teils schon weniger bekannte Namen wie Wilhelm Diess, Georg Stöger-Ostin und anderen. Thematisiert wird zudem das Schaffen schreibender Frauen, wie Hedwig Courths-Mahler, ihrer Tochter Friede Birkner, Grete Weil und Carry Brachvogel. Mancher literarische Text ist einfach nur in der Sommerfrische hier entstanden. Andere wiederum greifen die Gegebenheiten der Region als zentrales Element ihrer Handlung auf. Ein weiter Bogen durch die Jahrhunderte spannt sich über die detailreiche Sonderausstellung im Museum Tegernseer Tal, die ab 22. August geöffnet ist. Ausstellungsöffnung: 22. August – 8. November 2020, jeweils Freitag und Samstag von 10-13 Uhr und Sonntag von 13-16 Uhr Begleitend zur Sonderausstellung sind im Herbst Vorträge zu diesen Themen geplant.

Life Cycle w/ Lisa Ostin
#2: Exploring Childhood Trauma Around Race & the Complexities of Ethnicity, Culture & Privilege w/ Norah Ostin

Life Cycle w/ Lisa Ostin

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2020 67:22


Hey Y'all! Thank you for tuning in to Life Cycle where we talk about where we discuss peoples journeys in life and how people change and grow through their personal experiences. In today's episode, i am proud to introduce you to my awesome, incredible and multi-talented cousin, Norah Ostin. She actually has her own podcast, called Norah Rants, which you should totally check out. I actually went on her podcast and we discussed our journey with our body image and how we went from being insecure to confidence. I will leave a link below for her podcast so that you can listen to her other episodes as well as the episode that i feature in. For the second episode of Life Cycle, Norah and I get pretty deep and personal about our struggles with living in predominantly white neighborhoods, wanting to fit in, accepting our race, exploring our culture as Haitian Americans, and our natural hair journey. I am very happy and proud of this episode, and i'm so excited to be sharing it with y'all. If y'all want to follow me and Norah, i will link our Instagram accounts below as well. Norah's Podcast: https://anchor.fm/norah-ostin Norah's Instagram: www.instagram.com/norah_ostin My Instagram: www.instagram.com/musicnpastry I would really appreciate if you engage with me by leaving voice messages and also sharing these episodes with your friends as family. Thank you for the love and support. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/lifecyclewlisa/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lifecyclewlisa/support

Literatur Radio Hörbahn
Interview: “Literatur am Tegernsee” – Sonderausstellung im Rahmen des TeLiTo-Projektes

Literatur Radio Hörbahn

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2020 5:10


Eröffnung der Sonderausstellung im Rahmen des TeLiTo-Projektes am 21. August. Dauer der Ausstellung bis 8. November 2020. Wir berichten von der Eröffnung. Endlich ist es soweit und wir können Sie/Euch zur Sonderausstellung ins Museum Tegernseer Tal einladen!? Tegernseer Literatur Touren? heißt das Projekt, das im Museum gemeinsam mit dem Literaturschloß Edelstetten nun bereits seit einiger Zeit bearbeitet wird. Wie berichtet, wurde mit Mitteln des Bundes, welche das Projekt finanzieren, die Beleuchtung des Museums modernisiert, sodass das Heimatmuseum nun einen weiteren Schritt zur Visualisierung seiner kulturhistorischen Sammlung machen konnte. Der Tegernsee als Hotspot der Literaturgeschichte zieht sich über viele Jahrhunderte. Vom bedeutenden Schaffen der Tegernseer Mönche bis zu den Heimatkrimis der Gegenwart verbindet er vielerlei Genres. Im Kloster Tegernsee entstanden neben den mannigfaltigen geistlichen Werken gebildeter Theologen profane Texte, die die deutschsprachige Literatur entscheidend geprägt haben. Mit den Landesbeschreibungen des 19. Jahrhunderts und dem ersten ?Fremdenführer, Joseph von Hefners Beschreibung Tegernsees und seiner Umgegend von 1838, änderte sich das Augenmerk auf Landschaft und Kultur. Dem allgemeinen Zustrom an hochgestellten Persönlichkeiten folgend, entdeckten zunehmend auch Künstler und Literaten die Schönheit des Tegernseer Tales und seine schaffenskräftige Inspiration. Große Namen der deutschen Literaturgeschichte sind darunter, 2020/21 gedenkt man besonders der Todestage von Ludwig Ganghofer und Ludwig Thoma. In den Reihen finden sich ebenso Franz von Kobell, Karl Stieler, Max Mohr und teils schon weniger bekannte Namen wie Wilhelm Diess, Georg Stöger-Ostin und anderen. Thematisiert wird zudem das Schaffen schreibender Frauen, wie Hedwig Courths-Mahler, ihrer Tochter Friede Birkner, Grete Weil und Carry Brachvogel. Mancher literarische Text ist einfach nur in der Sommerfrische hier entstanden. Andere wiederum greifen die Gegebenheiten der Region als zentrales Element ihrer Handlung auf. Ein weiter Bogen durch die Jahrhunderte spannt sich über die detailreiche Sonderausstellung im Museum Tegernseer Tal, die ab 22. August geöffnet ist. Ausstellungsöffnung: 22. August – 8. November 2020, jeweils Freitag und Samstag von 10-13 Uhr und Sonntag von 13-16 Uhr Begleitend zur Sonderausstellung sind im Herbst Vorträge zu diesen Themen geplant. Am Freitag, 21. August kann die Ausstellung ab 17.30 Uhr besucht werden. Um 19.30 Uhr hält Prof. Dr. Klaus Wolf den Auftaktvortrag “Tegernsee als literarischer Thinktank des Spätmittelalters.” Dieser findet im Alten Schalthaus Tegernsee, in der Hochfeldstraße, statt. Derzeit sind leider aufgrund der geltenden Abstandgebote noch keine Führungen möglich. Museum Tegernseer Tal, Seestraße 17 (Ecke Bahnhofstraße), 83684 Tegernsee Eintritt für Erwachsene: 5,- EUR, mit der TegernseeCard ermäßigten Eintritt! Mitglieder des Altertums-Gauverein haben jederzeit kostenlosen Eintritt ins MuseumFür den Vortrag werden freiwillige Spenden erbeten Altertums-Gauverein Tegernsee e.V.Träger des Museums Tegernseer Tal, Seestraße 17, 83684 Tegernsee. Tel: 08022/4978 od. 4862 – mobil: 0174/991 99 98 Ort: Museum Tegernseer Tal

I have a Strange Story
Episode 81 Shorties

I have a Strange Story

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2020 18:56


Our “infamous” short story episode. These are amazing spooky experiences that would be short for our regular episodes. Update, Lindsey is still at it saving lives which is why we did not do an episode last week. Send her some good vibes y’all! Rebekah is doing the best she can without her. Thank you to everyone who allowed me to retell their stories! Thank you Paul De Gracia for your amazing voice over work as “dad”. Thank you Parayeet27 for your “Nothing, go back to sleep” story. Thank you epicinium_art for your “something strange at work story”. These stories belong to their respected experiencers. Thank you umbrawolfx for your shadow person experience, check out the original story here https://www.reddit.com/r/Paranormal/comments/gljvd8/its_been_15_years_but_i_still_remember_like/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=ios_app&utm_name=iossmf Music from the http://freemusicarchive.org Rozkol https://freemusicarchive.org/music/ROZKOL So sorry little girl and Ostin https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Ostin spirit 2 Find our show and others like it on the Paranormality Network https://paranormalityradio.com Do you have a paranormal experience you would like for us to retell? Send it to ihaveastrangestorypodcast@ gmail.com. Subscribe, rate and review us! If you give us a review please screen shot it and send it to our emailing address with your physical address and we will mail you some stickers! Follow us on IG, Twitter and Facebook and now on YouTube! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ihaveastrangestory/support

I have a Strange Story
Episode 52 Get Shorty Stories

I have a Strange Story

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 13, 2019 20:08


Special episode for short stories. Thanks to everyone for letting us share your stories! Do you want us to retell your paranormal experience? Send it to ihaveastrangestorypodcast@gmail.com or send us a letter to P.O. Box 2292 Georgetown Tx 78627 Music from Free Music Archive. Weird Meetings at Water Castle, Sister Ritual and Sorry Little Girl by ROZKOL https://freemusicarchive.org/music/ROZKOL Spirit by Ostin https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Ostin/Delirium/09_ostin_-_spirit Ghostly hand stories by https://www.reddit.com/user/EvilAsFxck --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ihaveastrangestory/support

Ar žinai, kad?...
Ar žinai, kad 2019-02-20 08:35

Ar žinai, kad?...

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2019 1:35


Įdomybės. Literatūra. Džeinė Ostin.

From There to Here
S2 E1 LoRuchama Ostin, Haiti

From There to Here

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2019


LoRuchama Ostin talks about growing up in Haiti and her move to the US. This interview was conducted by Amina, Bryce, Charlie & Maeve from Winchester Thurston School.   Background Music: "Quasi Motion" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

haiti ostin winchester thurston school
From There to Here
S2 E1 LoRuchama Ostin, Haiti

From There to Here

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2019 6:47


LoRuchama Ostin talks about growing up in Haiti and her move to the US. This interview was conducted by Amina, Bryce, Charlie & Maeve from Winchester Thurston School.   Background Music: "Quasi Motion" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

haiti ostin winchester thurston school
inderesPodi
inderesPodi jakso 24: Yrityskaupat ja potentiaaliset yritysostokohteet

inderesPodi

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2018 32:24


Juha ja Petri A. puhuvat tällä kertaa yrityskaupoista lokeroimalla niitä kuuteen erilaiseen profiiliin. Podissa nousee esille millaiset tekijät voivat tukea yrityskaupan onnistumista ja millaiset kohteet niin ikää voisivat kiinnostaa eri yhtiöitä? :) 00:48 Miksi yrityskauppoja tehdään? 02:17 “Tehdään hommat paremmin” Case: Orava 05:47 “Asiakkaille tarpeellinen tuote, teknologia tai osaaminen” Caset: Konepajat, Revenio, Stonesoft, Comptel, Facebook 10:45 “Yhdessä tehokkaampia” Caset: UPM, autoteollisuus, IT-palveluyhtiöt 16:41 “Tulevaisuuden voittajat” Caset: Facebook, Google, Stonesoft, Admicom 20:36 “Palapelin kokoaminen” Caset: Palveluliiketoiminta, tilitoimistoala, Talenom 24:55 “Ostin kun sain halvalla” 27:38 Yhteenveto www.inderes.fi

Daily Bruin
Hidden Wonders, Episode Six: Mo Ostin Basketball Center

Daily Bruin

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2018 7:07


Hidden Wonders, Episode Six: Mo Ostin Basketball Center by Daily Bruin

Ostin.
Dj Ostin - The Power

Ostin.

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2017 64:18


ostin
Daily Bruin
Hidden Wonders - Episode 2: The Mo Ostin Music Center

Daily Bruin

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2017 11:48


The Evelyn and Mo Ostin Music Center opened about two years ago as an expansion of The UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music. The space includes a high-tech recording studio, cafe and ensemble room where students can practice and perform their pieces. In 2016, the center was honored at the 46th Annual Los Angeles Architectural Awards for its innovative design that caters to every aspect of the recording process. To learn the story behind this award-winning music center, Daily Bruin Radio reporter Savannah Tate spoke with Kevin Daly, the head of the firm that designed the space.

music music center hidden wonders ostin ucla herb alpert school kevin daly
Radio Suomesta poimittuja
Sananen - Uudet lenkkarit (kyllä nyt hävettää)

Radio Suomesta poimittuja

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2016 4:53


Kuntourheilu on muuttunut niin överiksi, että tavallinen tennarinkuluttaja ei uskalla ostaa enää hyvännäköisiä lenkkareita. Vaatimus maratonista seuraa, ehkä jopa hautaan asti. Tein sen virheen, että ostin lenkkarit. Luulin, että ne olivat vain lenkkarit. Keski-ikäisen miehen rumat tummansiniset kajakit. Mitäänsanomattomat umpiot, joihin piilottaa varpaat tuulelta suojaan - ja pohjassakin jotain kuminkaltaista, joka pehmentää elämästä raskautetun askelta. Vaan ei. Minähän ostin kuulemma elämänmuutoksen. Ostin intohimon ja kaiken tarkoituksen. Kuudella kympillä! En ole vielä testannut niitä. Oikeasti olen sitä mieltä, että uudet lenkkarit ovat parhaimmillaan kirjahyllyssä. Juostessa ne muuttuvat jotenkin likaisiksi. Kirjahyllyssä ne ovat kuin Dalin veistos: muistuttavat absurdilla tavalla kaiken katoavaisuudesta. Jonain päivänä juokseminen loppuu. Silloin punnitaan mitä ihminen todella on, ilman laadukkaita juoksukenkiä. En saanut tennareita ulos leivinpaperista, kun jo kuulin korvissani sanat: syksyllä sitten maratonille! Yhdessä treenataan ja työ alkaa Nyt. Ennen lause olisi ollut huumoria. Nyt se on ihailtavaa määrätietoisuutta ja uuden elämän vähimmäistavoite. Muutuin uimahallipyyhkeeksi, menin kasaan. Ei auttanut vaikka sanottiin, että huumoriahan tämä, kun ei se ole. Juoksemisen aloittamisessa tuskaisinta ovat ensimmäiset kolme kuukautta. Siksi en ole koskaan aloittanut. Kokeillut olen munasti, pieniä repäisyjä. Katseet ovat kertoneet, miten ihmiset ovat ilahtuneet nähdessään Fingerporista karanneen hahmon harjoittavan omintakeista kulkuaan. Suussa ei viivy ainoastaan verenmaku, se sekoittuu väljähtänyttä Portteria muistuttavaan vatsahappoon ja jostain on lurautettu ylivuotista sillilientäkin sekaan. Siinä sorbetissa ei haaveile marathonista. Mielessä on vieläkin ylevämpää: ihmisarvoinen elämä. Liikunta on muuttunut. Huippu-urheilijan pitää olla ankara itselleen, jos haluaa olla. Nyt tuo ankaruus ja rajut aikataulut ovat hiipineet tavallisten arkeen. Jos ostat juoksukengät, niin kuin minä idiootti krapulassa tein, se on sitten menoa. Missä on sykemittari? Mobiilikunto-ohjelma? Exeltaulukot. Seuranta. Proteiinijauheet. Kisakausi. Herkistely. Intervallit - ja nirvana. Sosiaalinen media on kuin luotu juoksupäiväkirjaksi. Punoittavia naamareita, kuin kahden tunnin jörnimisen jäljiltä. Alla kilometrit, aika ja keskisyke. Kukaan ei jää siitä tiedosta paitsi kuinka usein meidän perheessä lihan iloja harjoitetaan. Voisin kuvitella, että kävisin jolkuttelemassa kevään kunniaksi kerran viikossa. Löysästi. Kääntyisin katsomaan perseet rytmin rikkoontumatta. Pysähtyisin Lounaispuiston grillin kohdalle vähäksi aikaa nuuhkuttelemaan. Kyseessä on kuitenkin maailman toiseksi parhaat hajut. Mutta kun en uskalla! Maailma ehti jo muuttua. Media teki elämästämme sietämätöntä. Sukeltajakin tietää, että ympäristön painetta ei pysty kiertämään. Olen niin heikko, että saattaisin lähteä mukaan hulluun urheiluun. Kohta jo juoksisin viisi kertaa viikossa ja lihaskuntoharjoitteet päälle. Olisin mennyttä miestä. Häpeäisin itseäni. Luin tänään terveysuutisen. Se oli päivän kahdeksas. KOVA HIKILIIKUNTA VÄHENTÄÄ KUOLEMANRISKIÄ. Minä kun luulin, että kaikki kuolevat. Ei. Ne jotka juoksevat kovaa säilyvät ikuisesti hengissä. Reippaan ilmekin kertoo uskosta. Jos nyt saisin mielenhäiriön ja survoisin jalkani niihin uusiin lenkkareihin, juoksisin pakoon kuolemaa. Näyttäisin hätääntyneeltä. Halveksisin lahjaa, hetken kauneutta. Maailman vanhin ihminenkin kuoli. Mietin eilen, miksi se on uutinen. Tänään tajuan, että kirjoittaja oli joku lahjakas harrastajajuoksija. Hänen maailmankuvansa sai jarrutusjäljen. Maallikkosaarnaaja Maasola

Sisuradion sarjat
Vain hetkeksi piti jäädä: 1950-luvulla isälle tuotiin lauantaisin palkka kotiin

Sisuradion sarjat

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2016 23:52


Neuvostoliiton pelko, seikkailumieli ja isän konkurssi toivat Ruotsiin 50-luvun nuoret Arvo Lattusen, Aira Lepistön ja Virpi Korhosen. 1950-luvun Suomi oli sodan runtelema ja maata jälleenrakennettiin.  Suomi oli ikävä maa, toteaa Arvo Lattunen ja kertoo olleensa yhä peloissaan, että Suomen sotavihollinen, Neuvostoliitto, vaikeuttaisi elämää Suomessa.Hän päätti muuttaa Ruotsiin 50-luvun alussa, ja olihan hänellä toinenkin syy muuttoon. Silloinen tyttöystävä oli jo aikaisemmin tullut Tukholmaan. Tyttöystävä auttoikin alkutaipaleella. Hänen ansioistaan kellosepäksi valmistunut Arvo sai heti työpaikan, vaikka ei osannut sanaakaan ruotsia. Elämä uudessa maassa lähti hyvin käyntiin. Arvo urheili, kävi tansseissa Alenin tanssiravintolassa ja tienasi niin paljon rahaa, että pystyi ostamaan unelmiensa Vespan. Se oli niin ihmeellistä, että täältä sai hedelmiä ja kaikkea hyvää, mitä Suomesta ei saanut.Arvo LattunenAsunnon hankkiminen Tukholmassa oli kuitenkin hankalaa huutavan asuntopulan takia. Onnistuin vuokraamaan Östermalmilta huoneen. Se oli kamalan pieni, ja siinä oli hirveän huono sänky, muistelee Arvo.Äiti haukkui ja ihmetteli, miksi pitää lähteä maailman ääriinTurkulaisen Barkerin kutomon tyttö Aira Lepistö kuuli kesälomaltaan palatessaan, että Vetlandaan haettiin kutojia.  Töitähän minulla oli Suomessa, mutta ei asuntoa, kuittaa Airi.21-vuotias Airi päätti lähteä seikkailumielessä Ruotsiin, vaikka tuskin edes tiesi, missä Vetlanda on. Seuraksi lähti muutama muu tyttö Turusta.Juna pysähtyi Nässjössä ja menin Epan tavarataloon. Ostin sieltä kattilan, ja se on minulla vieläkin tallella.Airi LepistöAirin muuttopäätös ei ollut kaikkien mieleen, ja hänen äitinsä uskoikin, ettei ikinä enää näkisi tytärtään. Vetlandassa Airia odotti kalustettu huone ja työpaikka kutomossa. Skånelainen työnjohtaja opasti ensimmäisenä työpäivänä, mutta en kyllä ymmärtänyt sanaakaan. Minulla oli kaksi pientä sanakirjaa ja niistä opettelin sanoja.Sain ottaa mukaani vain yhden nukenVirpi Korhonen oli alle kouluikäinen, kun hän perheineen muutti Tukholmaan. Hänen isänsä oli muuttanut Ruotsiin jo aikaisemmin. Isän firma oli mennyt konkurssiin Suomessa, ja uudet haasteet vetivät hänet Ruotsin puolelle.Isän piti tulla meitä vastaan Tukholman Skeppsbrolle, mutta hän olikin nukahtanut ja unohtanut, että olimme tulossa. Onneksi äiti tiesi, missä hän asuu ja löysimme perille.Virpi KorhonenUusi asuinmaa ei saanut Virpiä hullaantumaan. Lähinnä häntä harmitti, että piti luopua miltei kaikista leikkikaluista. Äiti antoi ottaa mukaan vain yhden nuken. Korhoset asuivat ahtaasti ensin Tukholmassa ja sitten Nynäshamnissa. Meillä oli huone ja keittiö ja siinä asui viisi henkeä. Sitten saimme vähän suuremman asunnon, kaksi huonetta ja keittiön.Virpi Korhosen huippuhetkiä 50-luvulla olivat lauantait, jolloin työnjohtaja toi isälle palkan kotiin.  Se oli mahtavan paksu nippu tuhannen kruunun seteleitä.  Sarjan teossa on käytetty lähteenä Turun Siirtolaisinstituutin Jouni Korkiasaaren artikkelia "Suomalaisten Ruotsiin suuntautuneen siirtolaisuuden yhteiskunnalliset syyt 1900-luvulla".Virpi Inkeri virpi.inkeri@sverigesradio.se 

Sisuradion sarjat
1950-luvulla isälle tuotiin lauantaisin palkka kotiin

Sisuradion sarjat

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2016 23:52


Neuvostoliiton pelko, seikkailumieli ja isän konkurssi toivat Ruotsiin 50-luvun nuoret Arvo Lattusen, Aira Lepistön ja Virpi Korhosen. 1950-luvun Suomi oli sodan runtelema ja maata jälleenrakennettiin.  Suomi oli ikävä maa, toteaa Arvo Lattunen ja kertoo olleensa yhä peloissaan, että Suomen sotavihollinen, Neuvostoliitto, vaikeuttaisi elämää Suomessa.Hän päätti muuttaa Ruotsiin 50-luvun alussa, ja olihan hänellä toinenkin syy muuttoon. Silloinen tyttöystävä oli jo aikaisemmin tullut Tukholmaan. Tyttöystävä auttoikin alkutaipaleella. Hänen ansioistaan kellosepäksi valmistunut Arvo sai heti työpaikan, vaikka ei osannut sanaakaan ruotsia. Elämä uudessa maassa lähti hyvin käyntiin. Arvo urheili, kävi tansseissa Alenin tanssiravintolassa ja tienasi niin paljon rahaa, että pystyi ostamaan unelmiensa Vespan. Se oli niin ihmeellistä, että täältä sai hedelmiä ja kaikkea hyvää, mitä Suomesta ei saanut.Arvo LattunenAsunnon hankkiminen Tukholmassa oli kuitenkin hankalaa huutavan asuntopulan takia. Onnistuin vuokraamaan Östermalmilta huoneen. Se oli kamalan pieni, ja siinä oli hirveän huono sänky, muistelee Arvo.Äiti haukkui ja ihmetteli, miksi pitää lähteä maailman ääriinTurkulaisen Barkerin kutomon tyttö Aira Lepistö kuuli kesälomaltaan palatessaan, että Vetlandaan haettiin kutojia.  Töitähän minulla oli Suomessa, mutta ei asuntoa, kuittaa Airi.21-vuotias Airi päätti lähteä seikkailumielessä Ruotsiin, vaikka tuskin edes tiesi, missä Vetlanda on. Seuraksi lähti muutama muu tyttö Turusta.Juna pysähtyi Nässjössä ja menin Epan tavarataloon. Ostin sieltä kattilan, ja se on minulla vieläkin tallella.Airi LepistöAirin muuttopäätös ei ollut kaikkien mieleen, ja hänen äitinsä uskoikin, ettei ikinä enää näkisi tytärtään. Vetlandassa Airia odotti kalustettu huone ja työpaikka kutomossa. Skånelainen työnjohtaja opasti ensimmäisenä työpäivänä, mutta en kyllä ymmärtänyt sanaakaan. Minulla oli kaksi pientä sanakirjaa ja niistä opettelin sanoja.Sain ottaa mukaani vain yhden nukenVirpi Korhonen oli alle kouluikäinen, kun hän perheineen muutti Tukholmaan. Hänen isänsä oli muuttanut Ruotsiin jo aikaisemmin. Isän firma oli mennyt konkurssiin Suomessa, ja uudet haasteet vetivät hänet Ruotsin puolelle.Isän piti tulla meitä vastaan Tukholman Skeppsbrolle, mutta hän olikin nukahtanut ja unohtanut, että olimme tulossa. Onneksi äiti tiesi, missä hän asuu ja löysimme perille.Virpi KorhonenUusi asuinmaa ei saanut Virpiä hullaantumaan. Lähinnä häntä harmitti, että piti luopua miltei kaikista leikkikaluista. Äiti antoi ottaa mukaan vain yhden nuken. Korhoset asuivat ahtaasti ensin Tukholmassa ja sitten Nynäshamnissa. Meillä oli huone ja keittiö ja siinä asui viisi henkeä. Sitten saimme vähän suuremman asunnon, kaksi huonetta ja keittiön.Virpi Korhosen huippuhetkiä 50-luvulla olivat lauantait, jolloin työnjohtaja toi isälle palkan kotiin.  Se oli mahtavan paksu nippu tuhannen kruunun seteleitä. Sarjan teossa on käytetty lähteenä Turun Siirtolaisinstituutin Jouni Korkiasaaren artikkelia "Suomalaisten Ruotsiin suuntautuneen siirtolaisuuden yhteiskunnalliset syyt 1900-luvulla".Virpi Inkeri virpi.inkeri@sverigesradio.se 

Antti Syrjä » Asian syrjästä
Asian syrjästä – viikko 13

Antti Syrjä » Asian syrjästä

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2012 14:32


COMEBACK, osa 42 Noniin, edellisestä onkin sitten aikaa. Mutta nyt koitetaan taas aktivoitua, sillä sanottavaa riittäisi. Ostin myös uuden mikin ja tässä ekassa onkin varmaan vähän parantamisesta asetusten jne äänenlaadun suhteen. Mutta annetaan tälle ekalle vaikka beta-leima. Sisällysluettelo Kesäaika Ilmastonmuutos Poliittinen korrektius Iltapäivälehtien absurdit kuvat Viikon oudoin kysymys Tulkaa keikalle! Kesto 14:32 minuuttia