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Early jazz drummers, pt. 2. Featuring: Buddy Gilmore, Chick Webb, Sonny Greer, George Wettling, Dave Tough, Gene Krupa, Papa Jo Jones.Music: Castle House Rag, Vote for Mr. Rhythm, Liza (All The Clouds'll Roll Away), Jumpin' Pumpkins, Drummer's Delight, Three Little Words, Shine, Sing Sing Sing, Drum Boogie, Sent for You Yesterday (And Here You Come Today), Delta Serenade.
Welcome to Walking the Way. My name is Ray, and I really want to say thank you to everyone for listening in as we share in a regular rhythm of worship and devotion together. CreditsOpening Prayerhttp://www.myredeemerlives.com/prayers.htmlBible versePsalm 43:5 Thought for the dayRay BorrettBible PassagePsalm 43New Revised Standard Version, Updated Edition. Copyright © 2021 National Council of Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.Prayer HandbookClick here to download itSupporting Walking the WayIf you want to support Walking the Way, please go to: https://ko-fi.com/S6S4WXLBBor you can subscribe to the channel: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/walkingtheway/subscribeTo contact Ray: Please leave a comment or a review. I want to find out what people think and how we make it better.www.rayborrett.co.ukwalkingthewaypodcast@outlook.com@raybrrtt
Ready to boost your mood, strengthen your lungs, and deepen your faith... all at the same time? Believe it or not, singing is a gift from God with amazing benefits for your body, mind, and soul! This episode of Summer Psalms dives into Psalm 96, where the Bible tells us to SING to the Lord! We'll explore how singing: Releases happy chemicals in your brain (hello, endorphins!) ✨ Lowers stress and blood pressure Brings people together and builds community ❤️ Strengthens your memory and even helps with Parkinson's! And most importantly, is a powerful way to worship God We'll also uncover 12 Reasons Why We Sing to the Lord according to Psalm 96, from His greatness and majesty to His faithfulness and coming judgement. But wait, there's more! Ready to Sing, Sing, Sing your way to a happier, healthier you? Watch now! P.S. Don't worry if you're not a shower singer extraordinaire. God loves your voice, no matter how perfect (or imperfect) it may be! New Worship Song: As For Me And My House Worship Notes on YouVersion Please let us know you're listening: Digital Connection Card #SummerPsalms #SingPraise #MentalHealth #MusicTherapy
When Chris hears "Sing Sing Sing," he's instantly in his bedroom waking up to music and the smell of fresh cut grass. Chris Stone, a former Sony employee, has always harbored a profound love for music, a passion deeply rooted in his childhood. His thoughts on music and memories reflect a deep emotional connection to the songs he grew up listening to, on record, such as those by Benny Goodman and Louis Prima. His upbringing in a musically diverse environment not only shaped his musical tastes but also inspired his creative endeavors, including playing bass guitar and composing music. Full Show Notes
The musical path that freelance session and touring drummer Brian Czach (pronounced "Zack") has been on started in New York City, moved west to Las Vegas, and now has settled in Nashville, TN. After a year and a half of touring with country music star Tracy Lawrence in 2021-2022. Brian is currently a member of Mannheim Steamroller which tours annually, and regularly performs with the Nashville Symphony Pops Orchestra. Czach has been drumming professionally since he was 11 years old. Born in Schenectady NY, he has experience playing in every imaginable musical setting, from a packed out arena to the swankiest jazz clubs, film & TV scores, artist sessions, tours, dance bands, and live theater, Brian's musical experience is vastly extensive. Some Things That Came Up: -1:00 How Rich met Brian through Danny Young -6:00 Studying with Gordon Stout at Ithaca College -11:30 Audition for cruise ship agency in NYC -15:20 Met his wife on the cruise ship and then a move to NYC -16:50 Being known for playing a showcase piece on Krupa's “Sing Sing Sing” -24:00 A move to Vegas -26:00 A shared love of Larry Aberman -28:30 Hanging together on tour with Tracy Lawrence and Jason Aldean -29:30 Traditional Grip and Jim Petercsak of University of NY Potsdam's Crane School of Music -33:30 Don Meoli and Jersey Boys -37:00 Gravitated towards clean, studio players like Steve Gadd, John Robinson, Jeff Porcaro, Dave Weckl, Vinnie Colaiuta, and Phil Collins -41:15 Coming from a musical family. Being introduced to James Brown, Tower of Power, Blood, Sweat and Tears, etc. -43:00 Connecting with eh playing of Bill Stewart -49:30 The power of the Nashville Number System -51:50 Mannheim Steamroller and Chip Davis. Glockenspiel, hammered dulcimer, toy piano, etc. Local string section is contracted. 7-8 shows per week for 7 weeks. -56:40 Playing Pops concerts with The Nashville Symphony. Percussionists Scot Corey and Sam Bacco -1:01:50 Following the conductor and playing extreme dynamics -1:03:30 Soundbeter.com and airgigs.com …Own what you charge! -1:08:40 Have a system for learning new music quickly. Be versatile. Always be authentic. -1:10:20 READ MUSIC! Also, know how o really fake a song you don't know. -1:13:00 The Fave 5 Follow: www.brianczach.com FB: @brianczach IG: @brianczach YouTube: @brianczach The Rich Redmond Show is about all things music, motivation and success. Candid conversations with musicians, actors, comedians, authors and thought leaders about their lives and the stories that shaped them. Rich Redmond is the longtime drummer with Jason Aldean and many other veteran musicians and artists. Rich is also an actor, speaker, author, producer and educator. Rich has been heard on thousands of songs, over 25 of which have been #1 hits! Rich can also be seen in several films and TV shows and has also written an Amazon Best-Selling book, "CRASH! Course for Success: 5 Ways to Supercharge Your Personal and Professional Life" currently available at: https://www.amazon.com/CRASH-Course-Success-Supercharge-Professional/dp/B07YTCG5DS/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=crash+redmond&qid=1576602865&sr=8-1 One Book: Three Ways to consume....Physical (delivered to your front door, Digital (download to your kindle, ipad or e-reader), or Audio (read to you by me on your device...on the go)! Buy Rich's exact gear at www.lessonsquad.com/rich-redmond Follow Rich: @richredmond www.richredmond.com Jim McCarthy is the quintessential Blue Collar Voice Guy. Honing his craft since 1996 with radio stations in Illinois, South Carolina, Connecticut, New York, Las Vegas and Nashville, Jim has voiced well over 10,000 pieces since and garnered an ear for audio production which he now uses for various podcasts, commercials and promos. Jim is also an accomplished video producer, content creator, writer and overall entrepreneur. Follow Jim: @jimmccarthy www.jimmccarthyvoiceovers.com www.itsyourshow.co
Musik hat unglaubliche Kraft! Sie kann uns fröhlich stimmen oder betrübt werden lassen. Sie kann gleichermaßen Jubel und tiefen Schmerz ausdrücken. Und sie kann das Evangelium verkündigen. Warum manche Leute das lieber unterdrücken würden, wie du die Verkündigungskraft der Musik für dich nutzen kannst und welche Lieder mir schon das Evangelium gepredigt haben, hörst du in dieser Predigt zum Sonntag Kantate.
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Join Pastor Matt as he shares heartwarming experiences of fatherhood and the joy of singing over his children with truths about Jesus's love. Discover how these moments reflect God's own delight and songs over us, even during life's most challenging times.
December 22, 2023 Zech. 10:1-12; Ps. 146:1-2; Prov. 30:18-20; Rev. 18:1-10
On a brave busking debut, joining a choir, and the hush that falls when an extraordinary voice starts to sing: the place of music and song in our lives in Dublin, with Kevin Connolly, Denise Blake, Colm Tóibín, Tim Carey and Sheila Maher
Psalms for All Seasons - Sing, Sing, Sing - Week 5 09/10/2023 Sunday Sermon Pastor David L GoldsberryPsalm 96:1-13Ephesians 5:19; Psalm 40:3, 22:3; Job 38:6-7; Matthew 18:20; 1 Peter 2:23; Acts 16:16-34To view the livestream, visit: https://fb.watch/mZUvur8KpG/www.hpcbrandon.org
It's seems to be human nature to sing. We may sing in the shower, the car, at parties and gatherings, and there are definite benefits to that, but we also sing when we gather together as God's people. Pastor Kent is continuing in our series "Psalms For All Seasons," looking at this whole subject, in a sermon based on Psalm 96 titled "Sing, Sing, Sing."To learn more about us, visit www.braemarbaptist.com.
Sermon preached on June 25, 2023, by Eric Yang on Ephesians 5:15-21
Like your Patty Labelle --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/Tammy English /message
**EXPLICIT LANGUAGE WARNING** It's time to put on a big show! Cowboy Bills is having a regular hoot night and the whole gang wants to get in on the act. Carmine and Shirley perform a touching duet, Rhonda and Edna plot a trumpet-laden rocker, but Laverne...well, her plans to become a balladeer go by the wayside after she clears out the place with her less-than-lovely voice. Determined anyway, Laverne turns to Lenny and Carmine for help, but her caterwauling doesn't improve. Will she become a balladeer? Or will Squiggy manage to talk some sense into her and get her to embrace her made-for-novelty-tunes voice? Elsewhere, Lenny tries to charm a comely waitress named Sabrina Bouche, whom we will never see again after this episode. On pod, we go whole-hog into Lavenny shipping, the musical talents of the cast, and the magic provided by Cindy Williams' one and only directorial outing.
EPISODE 185: COUNTDOWN WITH KEITH OLBERMANN A-Block (1:43) SPECIAL COMMENT: Rupert Murdoch PERSONALLY fired Tucker Carlson over ex-Carlson producer Abby Grossberg's lawsuit for harassment, abuse, sexism, and misogyny. Murdoch also felt crossed by Carlson in many of the texts and emails produced by discovery in the Dominion lawsuit, but the firing was NOT a part of the settlement. There were also questions about impending lawsuits against Fox and Carlson by Smartmatic and Ray Epps. But this was about how women were called the c-word in Carlson's office and how producers held a vote on which candidate for Governor of Michigan was more "f-able" and more might have come out if the Dominion case had gone to trial. There is a line, even at Fox (ask Bill O'Reilly or Roger Ailes). And Carlson found it and crossed it. And take it from somebody who was himself fired personally by Murdoch. Tucker was FIRED PERSONALLY BY MURDOCH. Don Lemon was also fired for misogyny, though it appears CNN actually gave him some time in hopes that his crass comments about Nikki Haley and when women were or weren't in their prime might fade in the background they didn't. Still, this is a time to rejoice and wallow neck high in our schadenfreude! Let's SING SING SING! NOTE. THE B AND C BLOCKS ARE REPEATED FROM THIS MORNING'S EDITION OF COUNTDOWN (EPISODE 184) B-Block (23:31) WORST PERSONS IN THE WORLD: A nice racism tie between basketball's Phil Jackson and NC Lt. Governor Mark Robinson (who wants his fellow African-Americans to PAY reparations), Senator Hawley and his tiny manhood, and of course Elon Musk, who over the subject of checkmarks just Blue himself. BREAKING NEWS: NBC fires my lying ex-friend Jeff Shell as CEO - for lying. Deadline.Com reports he had an affair with a CNBC Correspondent, Hadley Gamble - the woman Russian state TV once accused of trying to distract Vladimir Putin with her "sex appeal" - and compared her to Sharon Stone CROSSING HER LEGS IN BASIC INSTINCT. I'm so full of Schadenfreude I actually sing "The Ode To Joy" in the original German. C-Block (38:30) EVERY DOG HAS ITS DAY: Tobias in California. (39:30) THINGS I PROMISED NOT TO TELL: If the Shell news isn't fun enough, CNN and Chris Licht make his biggest mistake yet. There are nine laws of cable TV news and the new Gayle King/Charles Barkley show will violate ALL NINE OF THEM.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The proper response to the greatness and goodness of God is to worship God.
A sermon by PJ Wenzel based on Exodus 15:1:21 preached on January 8th, 2023 for the Tri-City congregation of Veritas Community Church as part of sermon series called "The God Who Redeems: Exodus".
A sermon by PJ Wenzel based on Exodus 15:1:21 preached on January 8th, 2023 for the Tri-City congregation of Veritas Community Church as part of sermon series called "The God Who Redeems: Exodus".
Andy shares about how Christmas means so much more than our traditions we hold dear or customs that we follow. Today's Music:. Joy To the World, Sing Sing Sing, King of Kings, and Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence (Jerry Schnake and Shannon Gallantine special)
Here in Episode 17, Michael encourages us to find out what makes our heart sing. What is it that takes your breath away? Could it be that making someone else's life better is just what you need? Could it make the world better in the process?
With episodes nearing 350 in the STAGES archive, it's time to revisit conversations featured in our previous seasons. STAGES spotlights such episodes, in case you missed them the first time ‘round - or so you can simply savour, a second listen. Either way, you'll be accessing precious oral histories from the people who were there, on and around our stages. In February 2019 we lost a stalwart of the musical theatre fraternity in Australia. Rod Dunbar was a gentleman who relished a life on the boards, navigating a career over five decades. STAGES was honoured that he consented to be featured in our very first series. And a privilege to revisit his extensive career and life in showbiz in this Spotlight episode. Growing up in Rockhampton in Queensland, Rod made the piano his instrument of choice. But he soon discovered he had a decent ‘set of pipes' and promptly pursued a career fronting bands. It was a move hastened by his viewing of Blackboard Jungle, a film celebrated for its innovative use of rock and roll in its soundtrack. His taste for entertaining an audience prompted a venture south to Sydney where he quickly established himself as an in-demand vocalist. An enthusiastic beginning saw him perform with the Petersham Musical Society guided by Helen de Paul and working alongside her daughter, a young Trisha Noble. He became a regular on Channel Seven's Sing Sing Sing hosted by Johnny O'Keefe (it aired from 1962 to 1965), and launched a pop career that saw recordings such as ‘Break Down', ‘Dare I Say It Again', ‘Little Girl It's Time We Parted' and ‘What Do You Want from Me?'. Rod toured the country, doing gigs with other high-profile entertainers including The Bee Gees, Digger Revell and the Denvermen, Lee Sellars and Jimmy Little. They attracted attention everywhere, due to their national exposure through the new medium of television. At a time when he was looking to expand the possibilities of his career, Rod was spotted by J.C. Williamson's Betty Pounder, who encouraged him to pursue a career in musical theatre. His celebrity made him an ideal candidate to join Noel Ferrier's production of Rodgers and Hammerstein's Cinderella. Rod was cast as a featured courtier and worked alongside John Meillon, Gwen Plumb, Tony Bonner and Max Phipps. This was followed by performances in The Boys From Syracuse, Oliver!, and his renowned turn in 1967 as The Fiddler in the original staging of Fiddler on the Roof in Australia, with Hayes Gordon and Brigid Lenihan. He experienced personal triumphs in the original Australian productions of You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown as Snoopy, and in Godspell in 1972 in a magnetic performance as Jesus. The production also toured New Zealand. His extensive career included the celebrated production of Chicago directed by Richard Wherrett for the Sydney Theatre Company. Other work for the STC included Company and Merrily We Roll Along. He completed tours of Dirty Dancing for Kevin Jacobsen and Are You Lonesome Tonight, South Pacific and Big River for GFO. His arrival on stage as Mark Twain at the beginning of Big River is still vivid. Dressed immaculately in a white suit, centre stage in a solo spot, drawing on a cigar and releasing a smoke plume that billowed high above into the flys, he was an actor at one with a character and held the audience poised, ready for a great story. Whether on stage or off, Rod was always a gifted storyteller. He leaves behind a legacy of wonderful performances and professionalism as a colleague, mentor and mate. It is a privilege to revisit this conversation with Rod Dunbar. The Stages podcast is available from Apple podcasts, Spotify, and where you find your favourite podcasts. www.stagespodcast.com.au
Sing sing sing... --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Wasting money? Sing sing sing
Y por quinta vez hacemos nuestro crossover anual con Jugando con los Abuelos. El turno esta vez será para otro de nuestros Chantas del Siglo XIX, tal vez el más famoso de todos: Carlo (o Charles) Ponzi, el inventor de los famosos esquemas de Ponzi. Lo mismo que hizo Madoff y ¡si! nuestro tan mencionado Cositorto. Luego hablaremos del juego de mesa que lleva su nombre, Ponzi. Imagen: Carlo Ponzi, cerca de 1920. Fuentes / Videos - BOYLE, Patrick (2020) Charles Ponzi: the documentary. Youtube. Fuentes / Sitios web - Wikipedia Música: El tema de la Tortulia es una versión de Caravan por Oleg Zobachev. El tema original es de Duke Ellington. El tema de Jugando con los Abuelos es Sing Sing Sing de Benny Goodman. El remix de ambos es cortesía de @amarillo114. Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
Singing is amazing if you think about it. Somehow, we humans are able to push air up our throats over some sort of flexible fleshy membranes that vibrate a different speeds, changing the pitch of the sound we're producing (which we intuitively know how to do) all the while shaping our tongues, lips, and mouths to form words while making this happen. And the songs we sing over and over again (somehow) get lodged in our brains, hearts, and consciousness for the long haul. Maybe it's why parents, teachers, and religious leaders use MUSIC and SONGS to educate children. And maybe it's one reason God asks us to SING.
Историята на песента, официализирала навлизането на джаза в масовата култура. Новият епизод на поредицата „Нотна стойност“ е посветен на „Sing, Sing, Sing“, една композиция с особено голямо значение в историята на джаза. Вашите предложения за бъдещи теми на поредицата може да изпращате на имейл адрес notnastoinost@abv.bg. Не пропускайте да последвате страницата на поредицата във Facebook, където редовно се публикуват материали на музикална тематика.
Singen tut einfach gut! Die Musik spricht unser Herz an und lässt uns über uns selbst hinaus zu blicken. Für Christen ist deshalb Musik im Gottesdienst unverzichtbar. Doch zugleich scheint kaum etwas so umstritten, wie der "richtige" Musikstil? Müssen es immer Choräle sein? Darf auch Gospel erklingen? Oder ist popiger Worship heute das einzig Wahre? Worum es in der Anbetungszeit wirklich geht, worauf wir dabei nicht achten sollten und was an deutscher Kirchenkultur komisch ist, hörst du in dieser Predigt.
Join us as we SING SING SING....just kidding. But you know who did? Paul and Silas when they were in prison! They were full of Joy despite their circumstances! How can we take their example?
Grayson and Zorramir attend the Opera, and the rest of the party find their way to Breckensfjord and talks to the King.
"Sing Sing Sing" Buddy Rich & Max Roach: Rich Versus Roach. A battle of bands and drums between Buddy Rich and Max Roach (1959) Buddy Rich Quintet: Buddy Rich, Willie Dennis, Phil Woods, John Bunch, Pil Leshin. Max Roach Quintet: Max Roach, Tommy Turrentine, Stanley Turrentine, Julian Priester, Bobby Boswell. La composición es obra de Louis Prima. Tomajazz: © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 ¿Sabías que? En JazzX5 en la edición de fin de semana, continuamos escuchando versiones de "Sing Sing Sing", el tema de Louis Prima. La versión seleccionada es la que aparecía en una muy atractiva batalla de baterías entre dos bateristas con unos estilos muy diferentes, acompañados por sus respectivos quintetos: Buddy Rich y Max Roach. En el disco había un único tema, "Figure Eights" en el que los dos bateristas tocaban sin estar acompañados por sus respectivos quintetos. Buddy Rich y Gene Krupa llegaron a tocar en directo, contratados por Norman Granz, en el espectáculo Jazz At The Philharmonic. A partir de estos conciertos se publicó la grabación The Drum Battle. En anteriores episodios de JazzX5/HDO/LODLMA/Maltidos Jazztardos/Tomajazz Remembers… https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=61862 https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=61696 https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=61681 https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=61464 https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=61435 https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=46367 Más información sobre Buddy Rich y Max Roach http://buddyrich.com/ https://www.britannica.com/biography/Max-Roach https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?s=buddy+rich&submit=Search https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?s=max+roach&submit=Search Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
"Sing Sing Sing" Gene Krupa and his Orchestra Sing Sing Sing (1954) Gene Krupa, Eddie Shu, Teddy Napoleon. La composición es obra de Louis Prima. Tomajazz: © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 ¿Sabías que? En JazzX5 en la edición de fin de semana, continuamos escuchando versiones de "Sing Sing Sing", el tema de Louis Prima. El baterista Gene Krupa fue uno de los protagonistas más destacado de la versión de "Sing, Sing, Sing" que grabó Benny Goodman tanto en estudio en 1937, como en el Carnegie Hall en 1938. En 1939 dejó la orquesta de Goodman, aunque posteriormente tocaría en varias ocasiones con el clarinetista. Posteriormente, Krupa grabó el tema. Una de estas ocasiones fue con su "Orchestra" en la versión seleccionada de 1954. Una "orquesta" un tanto peculiar (posiblemente de las menos numerosas de toda la historia), porque únicamente estaba integrada por Krupa, el pianista Teddy Napoleon y Eddie Shu, que se encargaba de tocar trompeta, clarinete, saxos alto y tenor, e incluso la armónica. "Sing, Sing, Sing" en anteriores episodios de JazzX5/HDO/LODLMA/Maltidos Jazztardos/Tomajazz Remembers… https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=61696 https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=61681 https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=61464 https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=61435 https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=46367 Más información sobre Gene Krupa https://www.gkrp.net/ https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?s=krupa&submit=Search Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
Have you ever wondered what is the importance of worship? Why do we gather every week to sing, pray and study? This week Bill will be sharing some lessons and important reminders of why we not only come together to worship God, but also spend time together as a church community. Downey Adventist Church Sermon Sing, Sing, Sing Bill Aumack 12 March 2022 www.downeychurch.org
Bennie Goodman: "Sing, Sing, Sing" (1938) Benny Goodman, Harry James, Chris Griffin, Ziggy Elman, Red Ballard, Vernon Brown, Hymie Schertzer, George Koenig, Art Rollini y Babe Russin, Jess Stacey, Allen Reuss, Harry Goodman, Gene Krupa. Louis Prima es el autor del tema. Tomajazz: © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 Leer más acerca de esta grabación en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=61696 En anteriores episodios de JazzX5/HDO/LODLMA/Maltidos Jazztardos/Tomajazz Remembers… https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=46367 https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=61681 https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=61435 https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=61464 Más información sobre Benny Goodman http://www.bennygoodman.com/ https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?s=benny+goodman+&submit=Search Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
Fletcher Henderson and His Orchestra: "Sing, Sing, Sing" (1936) Dick Vance, Joe Thomas, Roy Eldridge, Fernando Arbello, Ed Cuffee, Buster Bailey, Don Pasquall, Elmer Williams, Chu Berri, Fletcher Henderson, Horace Henderson, Bobb Lessey, Israel Crosby, Walter Johnson, "Georgia Boy" Simpkins. Louis Prima es el autor del tema. Tomajazz: © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 ¿Sabías que? El tema se grabó en Chicago el 4 de agosto de 1936, el mismo año que Louis Prima lo dio a conocer. En la misma sesión se puede escuchar cantar a Roy Eldridge, aunque el cantante en este tema es "Georgia Boy" Simpkins. En esa misma sesión L.J. Russell y Fletcher Henbderson fueron los arreglistas de algunos de los temas, aunque en este tema el arreglista fue Horace Henderson. El tema se puede encontrar en distintas recopilaciones: Fletcher Henderson 1934-1937 de la colección The Classics Chronological Series, o en Classic Chu Berry Columbia and Victor Sessions de Mosaic. Escuchar Fletcher Henderson and His Orchestra: "Sing, Sing, Sing" En anteriores episodios de JazzX5/HDO/LODLMA/Maltidos Jazztardos/Tomajazz Remembers… https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=61435 https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=61464 Más información sobre Fletcher Henderson https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?s=fletcher+henderson&submit=Search https://syncopatedtimes.com/profiles-in-jazz-fletcher-henderson/ Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
"Sing, Sing, Sing" (1937) Benny Goodman Benny Goodman, Gene Krupa, Harry James, Ziggy Elman, Chris Griffin, Red Ballard, Murray McEachern, Hymie Schertzer, George Koenig, Art Rollini, Vido Musso, Jess Stacy, Allan Reuss, Harry Goodman. Jimmy Mundy fue el arreglista del tema, que fue compuesto por Louis Prima. Tomajazz: © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 Más información en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=61464 En anteriores episodios de JazzX5/HDO/LODLMA/Maltidos Jazztardos/Tomajazz Remembers… https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=61435 https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=61282 Más información sobre Benny Goodman http://www.bennygoodman.com/ https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?s=benny+goodman+&submit=Search Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
"Sing, Sing, Sing" (1936) Louis Prima And His New Orleans Gang Louis Prima, Pee Wee Russell, Joe Catalyne, Frank Pinero, Garry McAdams, Jack Ryan, George Pemberty. Louis Prima es autor de esta composición inmortal. Tomajazz: © Pachi Tapiz, 2022 Más información sobre este tema en... https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=61435 En anteriores episodios de JazzX5/HDO/LODLMA/Maltidos Jazztardos/Tomajazz Remembers… https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?p=61282 Más información sobre Louis Prima https://www.louisprima.com/ Más información sobre JazzX5 JazzX5 es un minipodcast de HDO de la Factoría Tomajazz presentado, editado y producido por Pachi Tapiz. JazzX5 comenzó su andadura el 24 de junio de 2019. Todas las entregas de JazzX5 están disponibles en https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=23120 / https://www.ivoox.com/jazzx5_bk_list_642835_1.html. JazzX5 y los podcast de Tomajazz en Telegram En Tomajazz hemos abierto un canal de Telegram para que estés al tanto, al instante, de los nuevos podcast. Puedes suscribirte en https://t.me/TomajazzPodcast. Pachi Tapiz en Tomajazz https://www.tomajazz.com/web/?cat=17847
Meet Gal Bareket, Chief Solutions Officer of accessiBe. Gal, an Israeli-born technology leader tells his story of growing up in Israel including serving in the Israeli military. He talks about his experiences forming and growing his companies before joining accessiBe. Gal will discuss his views about internet access and his experiences helping to shape the vision and products of the assistive technology industry's largest internet remediation company, accessiBe. His stories will fascinate and enthrall you and inspire you to do better in whatever task you undertake. Some directories do not show full show notes. For the complete transcription please visit https://michaelhingson.com/podcast About the Host: Michael Hingson is a New York Times best-selling author, international lecturer, and Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe. Michael, blind since birth, survived the 9/11 attacks with the help of his guide dog Roselle. This story is the subject of his best-selling book, Thunder Dog. Michael gives over 100 presentations around the world each year speaking to influential groups such as Exxon Mobile, AT&T, Federal Express, Scripps College, Rutgers University, Children's Hospital, and the American Red Cross just to name a few. He is Ambassador for the National Braille Literacy Campaign for the National Federation of the Blind and also serves as Ambassador for the American Humane Association's 2012 Hero Dog Awards. https://michaelhingson.com https://www.facebook.com/michael.hingson.author.speaker/ https://twitter.com/mhingson https://www.youtube.com/user/mhingson https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelhingson/ accessiBe Links https://accessibe.com/ https://www.youtube.com/c/accessiBe https://www.linkedin.com/company/accessibe/mycompany/ https://www.facebook.com/accessibe/ Thanks for listening! Thanks so much for listening to our podcast! If you enjoyed this episode and think that others could benefit from listening, please share it using the social media buttons on this page. Do you have some feedback or questions about this episode? Leave a comment in the section below! Subscribe to the podcast If you would like to get automatic updates of new podcast episodes, you can subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts or Stitcher. You can also subscribe in your favorite podcast app. Leave us an Apple Podcasts review Ratings and reviews from our listeners are extremely valuable to us and greatly appreciated. They help our podcast rank higher on Apple Podcasts, which exposes our show to more awesome listeners like you. If you have a minute, please leave an honest review on Apple Podcasts. Transcription Notes Michael Hingson 00:00 Access Cast and accessiBe Initiative presents Unstoppable Mindset. The podcast we're inclusion, diversity and the unexpected meet. Hi, I'm Michael Hingson, Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe and the author of the number one New York Times bestselling book, Thunder dog, the story of a blind man, his guide dog and the triumph of trust. Thanks for joining me on my podcast as we explore our own blinding fears of inclusion unacceptance and our resistance to change. We will discover the idea that no matter the situation, or the people we encounter, our own fears, and prejudices often are our strongest barriers to moving forward. The unstoppable mindset podcast is sponsored by accessiBe, that's a c c e s s i capital B e. Visit www.accessibe.com to learn how you can make your website accessible for persons with disabilities. And to help make the internet fully inclusive by the year 2025. Glad you dropped by we're happy to meet you and to have you here with us. Michael Hingson 01:22 Hi, I'm Michael Hanson, and welcome to another edition of unstoppable mindset podcast where inclusion, diversity and the unexpected meet. And today unexpected in a lot of ways, partly because, up until about a week and a half ago, I didn't expect that I would have our guest on today. But here he is. I would like you all to meet gala bracket gal is in Israel and gal works for accessibility. I've told you all a little bit about accessibility in the past, accessibility is a company that has created a variety of products and systems to make websites more usable, so that we can achieve our ultimate goal of making the internet fully accessible by 2025. And one of the people who's going to help with that is gal who is our guest today. God Welcome to unstoppable mindset. Gal Bareket 02:19 Hi Michael, thank you for having me. This is such a pleasure having the country having to have the continued conversations the ongoing conversation with you. Michael Hingson 02:27 Well, and and we don't get to talk nearly enough. So here's a chance to do some of that. So you are in Israel. So right now it's probably something like about 636 or 637 in the evening. Gal Bareket 02:40 Also, daylight saving brought us one hour back. Right now we actually 5:30pm It's great still have today. Yes. Yes. Michael Hingson 02:48 So the daylight saving just in for you. Gal Bareket 02:50 Just just editor just started with. We just added we are it's getting dark earlier. Michael Hingson 02:56 Yeah. And we do that next Sunday. So we'll we'll catch back up to you. I don't know why we can't have a standard in the world, but it's the way it is. Well, so So tell me a little bit about you. So you're from Israel. Gal Bareket 03:15 So I'm from Israel, I had the privilege of joining system B in early May this year, mid May late this year. Previous to excessive A i A little bit perhaps about my background in the military, which provides a little bit of both spice and interest to the role. I served in the Israeli elite intelligence unit called at 200 were just a few great things that the military experience that is so far removed sometimes we have so far removed for someone who didn't get to go through it but essentially through college however, you have the you are being put in stressful situations and I had the privilege in the age of 19 to already have 200 to 400 people under my supervision and in addition you get to work in the army on on trying to focus on on solution rather than the problem after and that's something that helps to cultivate and help cultivate the myself throughout the years. Which then led is a little bit a little bit further about my personal background. I graduate from Tel Aviv University with a law major had had to work in a hand the work in Israeli parliament our sides Knesset MK MP MK members, parliament members in the Israeli Knesset and helping them legislate laws it's so it's something that in Israel also it's important to share that from the edge D getting a degree standpoint. You know how in America you do we go to preschool at pre law and then a law school in Israel when you finish with the military service and you go to university You automatically immediately choose a profession, if you will. And hence the law major that did allowed me to immediately pursue the degree itself, and bend practice law. How ever prior prior to practicing law is that in my last year of school, I was working on two companies at the time. And one of those two of those companies actually launched but I had to make a decision because I couldn't operate both at the same time, I chose the company that accessibly equity hired, it was a company in those fatality in the industry, we were working on trying to help bridge the communication gap, how funny between guests and hoteliers, or between guests and staff and between people, essentially to because communication is almost key to everything. And I'm sure we're going to talk about it a little bit over over our chat and it but in addition, the bridging the communication gap during my time the Israeli parliament, you could see that if the minister doesn't necessarily or the the Knesset member the necessarily came or a parliament member with a judicial background, the ability to legislate, the law becomes cumbersome, and hence you need a mediator to digest what you but what what the request was was was created and then able to push it forward. Now, this is a little bit so just to summarize a little bit about me some army time, great experience some to leave university, a growth towards working within touching the bills themselves understanding the cumbersome and hence why I get one of the many reasons why I'm attracted to accessibly because there's so little tweaks that can be done in order to make so many people live so much better. Michael Hingson 06:54 I'm curious, you, you raise something that just sort of prompts a question. serving in the military, that's something that everyone in Israel does. Right? When they're right, when they're growing up. What that is something that is really foreign to us over here in the United States, and that not everyone is required to do that. What do you think the real value of serving three years in the military gave you? Or why do you what do you think about having had to do that? Gal Bareket 07:26 I think that when a when a teen a get to the age of 1817 and starts a process, a process in which there is an entity called the army that started working on, on identifying various aspects about your personality, IQ and capabilities, is when it's today thinking about in hindsight, it's crazy. Back then, it seemed, it seemed it seemed normal, it seems like I'm being categorized in order to go to a place and trying to optimize me as resources or try to optimize the skill set that I bring to the table and see how it can help the the entire entity to grow and within those 17 between 17 to 18 as you go through the process, getting getting into the military getting into the military service, which is you know, like applying to college like sending out those envelopes. When you get there is but it but in an opposite direction you are being then targeted by the army in various units you can serve in whether it's combat or non combat alike, within the Army, then you get you have you get to have a when in contradictory to college, there is much more discipline, much more discipline in terms not necessarily the discipline that you would feel or think about when I say the word discipline but more order. organization skills you have for Israel is a country that knowns for it's a formality, the Army is a place where formalities finally being get structured. There is different entities that are in charge of different things in the army and then you get to understand how to when you get out of the army how to better succeed within the commercial world because you already understand some of the help within the intelligence unit in particular how to communicate when you are being trained how to how to be in charge of large portion of people at the same time and mitigate and mitigate and mitigate issues you are you're becoming a mini CEO of me as small medium enterprise company. It when you're between the ages of 18 to 22. And when you get released are like whoa, but what just happened? Did I just do that I learned all those things, and I can't share it with anyone in the world. Michael Hingson 10:05 But But you learned a lot of responsibility. You learned how to do those, which I'm assuming that you feel were very much a life building experience for you and one that you value 100% There's something you wouldn't change for the world. Gal Bareket 10:24 That is true. That is true. I can't it's like, it's like, you know, they say, I don't I don't regret things I did. I regret things I didn't do. Things that I did. This was part of the many actions that were supposed to bring me to the person that I am today. So I try to not regret my or my actions that I already took. Michael Hingson 10:46 What do you regret that you didn't do? Gal Bareket 10:49 Oh, i very i bet i I just dug myself my own hole. Michael Hingson 10:57 Just just popped out. It was it's a it's a great line. And I think you're absolutely right, we, you know, I once went to a meeting. And the people, the it was actually a church. And the pastor said, you know, the problem with how we view mistakes is that when you make a mistake, if you legitimately make a mistake, you've made the mistake. Now the question is, what are you going to learn from it, but you can't argue or spend your whole life worrying about the mistake you made? It's how you progress from it. And it's the same sort of thing. We learn, we make choices, and we do things. And once we've done them, they are they're part of us. But the real question is, what do we what do we learn? Or issue think back? After doing something? What is it that I didn't do that I could have done? And that's something that we're going to talk about? In the book, I mentioned that we're beginning to write a new book. And that's one of the issues that we're going to talk about is that, that the reality is it's it's not the choices so much we make, it's what do we learn from them, so that we can make better choices? Gal Bareket 12:08 Right, right. Look at the intersection of in hindsight and evaluate whether what how we how we actually impracticality took the whatever action that we were supposed to take and understand whether it was right or wrong, or how could we have got become became better every intersection probably yield an opportunity to self observation. Michael Hingson 12:32 It should. And one of the things that I experienced is a lot of people don't take that time later, to analyze what they do and what they did. And as I put it, I'm my own worst critic. I like to record speeches that I give, and I am these podcasts I listened to because I learned from them. And I recognize that I am, and should be harder on myself than anyone else could possibly be. If I learned to do self analysis, and I think that's an important part of life that all of us can, can learn to develop. Because when we analyze ourselves, if we look each day back at what we did, and what we didn't do, that we could have done or should have done, that, is what helps us move forward and enhances or can we help us move forward and enhance our lives? Gal Bareket 13:27 Right when we're we were consciously making decisions when we were unconscious of the decisions that were taking place, and we just let ourselves be part of I agree mycologists My only advice to you is just be constructive is yourself. If you're your worst critic, give yourself just make sure that you are not taking yourself to too much down before so you'll be able to actually get up. Michael Hingson 13:49 Yeah, I think that's the that's the point is that when you're your own worst critic, it's the point that you will see things maybe sooner than other people will or they don't want to tell you, but if you see it, the question is how you then deal with it. And you're absolutely right. This being your own worst critic isn't to tear yourself down, but it's to give you the opportunity to say how do I handle that different next time? Right. Thanks. And then remember next time, that's the other part of the of the challenge and the problem. It sounds like with with your experiences and so on having been in the military and gone through that life experience for several years. You've been put in a situation where you get to analyze a lot Gal Bareket 14:40 that's true. I almost everywhere every place I go every every interaction that I that I encounter I make sure to I need to make sure to be alert and keen and understanding for the for the for for something bad to happen. Proactive listening is is something that that the army is also not that the army was promoting initially when I was there but leaving the Army in being in keep endorsing proactive listening. And that's I think, where the most progress that can be done on an individual basis because then when actual conversations and and decision making are actually being taken under as conscious as they shouldn't, then you can actually move forward, learn processes, and look at things from a retrospective standpoint, create proper hindsight, and progress. Michael Hingson 15:37 And that's all we can ask ourselves to do. That's true, that makes perfect sense. Were you ever in combat in the military? Or were you removed from that somewhat. Gal Bareket 15:50 So thankfully, in the elite Intelligence Unit, what I did, I was I needed to facilitate the teams that went, I was an officer of operations. And part of my role was to make sure that the people that are going to various locations that don't necessarily as places that they want to be in or places that the entity the people that are there wants them to be there. I needed to create to make sure that everyone will literally to make sure that there will be safety for everyone. And constant communication, the hospitality and housing would work great. And never people would come we will come back, come back come back safely on both ends. Yeah, that's that's that's mainly was my own version of his offer, operational person I didn't I wasn't the first to come. But was that but I needed to be in charge of those who went there? Michael Hingson 16:46 Yeah. Well, that's a pretty awesome responsibility and an interesting skill to learn, which I'm assuming was very helpful you to you, once you got out of the military, because you learn how to deal with people and you learn to understand what people think and how they think someone. Gal Bareket 17:05 However, in the in their in life after the army, things are a little bit more relaxed. Yes. The quick decisions are important, but they are not necessarily some of them are life changing, or some of them are. But they are they can be taking, they can be taken with some thought behind them. And it's, it's not necessary. Yeah. Michael Hingson 17:35 I hear what you're saying. It's, it's different. Do you think a lot of people forget a lot of the lessons that they learn in the military? Given the way you describe it? Yeah. Gal Bareket 17:45 I think that I think that's life is is dissected into chapters, and each chapter that you go through for, you know, youth, growing up youth, then in Israel, it's the military time that is in the background, but you yourself are growing from 82 to 2223, depends how many years you decided to participate in the army. And there's all those intersection are those the parts are, are our parts where you grow from, grow, have evaluate whether this is the person, you know, am I and I don't like to speak about myself in the third day, but I'm his girl from the military is the same guy that is the same person that he is today? Or is there just a bunch of skill set and learnings and morals that I can take with me as as part of who I am, and then learn how to utilize them with with the person who grew immensely since that time? In the past. So yeah, this life life, life is interesting. This way, it throws you into chapters that you don't necessarily know when it starts when it's when it starts when it ends, because sometimes inertia just comes in. And so being conscious is continuing our previous anecdotes is really important. I know Michael Hingson 19:17 for me, having gone through the university and gotten a master's degree in physics, one of the things that I tell people is I don't use the physics directly today. But the disciplines the mindset, the thought process that I learned being very heavily involved in science and in the philosophy of science and having had the opportunity to study how people in science think and someone has helped immensely. So physics is something that I think was extremely valuable to me, although I don't use it because my life took some other turns. The skills and the disciplines I learned from it, are extremely valuable, and I wouldn't trade them for the world. Gal Bareket 20:01 Would you have? If you could have gone back? Would you have taken the route of pursuing physics? Or are you like, just the more on the morals from it? Michael Hingson 20:11 No, I would still, I would still have pursued physics, I learned a lot that I don't think I could have learned without being involved with it. And, again, when I was taking physics, I didn't know that my life would change in some of the ways that it did. Excuse me, but, but it did change. And so it's, it's all about growth. And it's all about learning how to accept that growth, and accept the choices that you make, I believe that I can trace a lot of my life back to choices that I made and how one choice led to another choice. And I think that's important for us to be able to do. And I don't say that in a negative way. But rather, the one choice led to another choice that led to another choice. And along the way, I learned from each one, which also caused me to help make the choices that I made. Gal Bareket 21:11 I understand and agree in 1,000%. Michael Hingson 21:15 So you, you went through the military, and then you came out. And I'm fascinated by the fact that then when you went through University and graduated with a law degree, and then started working in the legislature, I came at the legislature from a different standpoint, in that although I was in the sciences and someone, I also joined the National Federation of the Blind, a consumer organization, the largest civil rights organization for blind people. And we're very much about dealing with getting appropriate legislation to deal with the civil rights of blind people. And so I was very heavily involved for many years, in various ways, working with Congress and state legislatures. And so to understand the the law process, and some of the political negotiations, it's a fascinating world, unfortunately, I think that it's changed a lot, at least in this country in the last 40 years or so it's become much more divisive and much more political than it really should be. And you almost get to the point where you wonder if people are really looking out for the country anymore. Gal Bareket 22:30 Yeah, I think it's a sickness of every country. I think it's, it's, it's a sickness of, of either the parliamentarian system, or the presidential system, the ones that you that America has the presidential system with the two houses, and which automatically creates a lot of stagnation. The fact that there are two entities is that are part of the process of making a decision in Israel, the situation is the same in a parliamentarian system, but different because there are many parties that are supposed to form a coalition. And it happens to be that the minority then controls there has an ad portion and proportional power over the coalition and and then not the Your vote is not necessarily provide us the request of what it is that you are voting for. Michael Hingson 23:27 It's it's interesting, I think you raise a good point. But it also goes back to mindset, if everyone is really looking at it from a mindset of, yeah, we have different beliefs, we have different points of view about what needs to be done. But we want to do what is right for the benefit of our country. That's a lot different than I want to do what's right as far as I'm concerned, so I can win and gain more power. And that's where I think we've all diverged and deviated that there's too much I've got to be the winner. I've got to be the one to get the power. And the other side shouldn't have any power because they're just totally wrong. As opposed to recognizing that there's value on both sides. Gal Bareket 24:19 Yeah, yeah. That the political sphere is a sphere that provides a lot of desperation and inconvenience and others and things are so simple to just make them as you are saying they should be but you know, life flips. I find myself and I think I shared with you in our previous conversations, focusing on the things that I can change focus things on the thing, whether it within myself or within my nearby surroundings. I found myself getting as being less involved in an In politics with time speaking of the different entity and or even removing myself from almost complete completely, in order to focus on my, like my current life and accessibly, the the efforts that I'm doing to help the company is doing and letting me be part of it of making the this cliche as it sounds, making the world a better place focusing on those, yeah, focusing, which is, you know, the stuff that are in front of me, or even a year ahead or two years ahead, are within my capacity and bandwidth to influence. Michael Hingson 25:42 Yeah, you can worry all day about everything that goes on in the world. Or you can, excuse me, or you can learn to focus on the things that you have control over and not worry about the rest. And all too often, we focus on way too much stuff. And we have no effect or control over any of it. If we would learn more to focus we would drive ourselves less crazy. That's so you So you went but you you came out of college and you said you use had been involved in starting two companies, what were the two companies Gal Bareket 26:21 so one company was in the fashion industry. And what we were doing we used Ay ay ay an image, or AI image recognition and machine learning. We used we were helping it was several years ago now it's now it's a little bit more trending all over. But people that got into fashion blog websites, were looking at different items and not necessarily knew where to shop them or even look at their friends on social media and or various pictures and couldn't know what items are they're wearing the like to see where it was purchased from what we build an engine that is able to determine through image recognition, where is the picture is taken from or where is that what is what item is being is the person wearing, and where and the list of potential stores that is able to then facilitate that it was heavy tech. And that went on that that's that's here. Michael Hingson 27:26 Now did you didn't write code No, Gal Bareket 27:30 I you know, I was helping. So, it was the beginning of the road I was up to form formed a team creating terrible infrastructure and processes and then I learned that it would be less it was less prominent in Israel to start with. So, we we were we applied to an acceleration program in Boston, whoever the same time we in May in in the different company and they ended up pursuing for the next five and a half years until excessively in the in that company, that the time that I had to make a decision with this company was was moving to Boston the other company got accepted to an accelerator program in Berlin. So both received a global recognition and now it was a time to choose the the one have had a very tough choice great team on both ends, it's just that fashion is never was my expertise. So hence it was in a very easy check move towards hospitality service industry, AI bridging the communication gap things that are a little bit more in my day felt more in my day to day and hence I invested the my commercial life to a degree into that. Michael Hingson 28:55 So what was the hospitality company about Gal Bareket 29:00 so when West one guest comes to hotel today, they would they go to their rooms and ever you know be let's say before COVID Before digitalization went on a rapid scale up probably before COVID When the hotels when guests were finished their booking there was no way for the hotelier to properly start the communication with the guests and allowing the guests to get a seamless experience as the book get they can request the stuff they want pre arrival. They can continue the converse they have they noted in when they get to their room, they don't necessarily choose the landline they can use their own mobile device through their own medium of choice whether it be WhatsApp WeChat, line Facebook, etc. And then as they leave the the the hotel they can decide whether they want or not to continue or not continue the conversation. So we used we replaced the old landlines. During the room to the convenience of not without the need to download any app on your mobile device, you are able to then communicate with the front desk and request whatever it is that you need or maintenance or housekeeping and everything from the palm of your hands without the need to download anything. Michael Hingson 30:20 So you did that for a period of time? Is that company still working today? Is it still doing the things and setting up the procedures that you you started Gal Bareket 30:34 and know the company, the company had a great time and, and was working in various places globally until COVID hit when COVID COVID created the big impact for the hospitality industry. And however we were able to find our way through it and we're able to find the right integrator the concrete the right go to market strategies and create the right partnerships. One of these partnerships and ongoing conversations led to the conversations with the with decades share and gal that though that conversations then emerged into into into more than just the conversation in which the guys told us why wouldn't you guys want joining us, help us help us utilize AI bridging that we also need to bridge the communication gap to different degree. And we need we need a team that that scaled in the past in various aspects and is and is able to help us scale further from the from what the team was in amazingly able to accomplish with accessibility. Michael Hingson 31:49 So though dealing with Internet access is a lot different than dealing with the hospitality industry. What what piqued your interest about what Sher gal and deco were doing with accessibility. Gal Bareket 32:05 So many things, I'll start with the fact that the vision draws your attention, because it's almost possible to do and when something is impossible to do, it's worthwhile to, to get the hang of it and to try to try and do it by ourselves. The meeting with the with both with the sheer girl and vism the motivation and inspiration that came out of the meeting was a new that this is a company we would like to be part of and then perhaps Lastly, but most importantly, my wife's a mother was a social worker in New York City in which she works directly one on one with people with disabilities. She during you know we had throughout our time together we there were endless Commodore, there were ongoing conversations and the great I got to hear secondhand not firsthand challenges, barriers of people and to have the opportunity to have the opportunity back event to have a conversation about how to have the humble part in entering an entity that is working to do good was a no brainer. It that we are providing our ability to provide service, of course, but being but but moving away from one industry to the web accessibility industry, allowing us to also see how hotels are not Mrs. are not necessarily within compliance are Elia allowing us to see the web accessibility is the is a bigger picture, as the word focusing on digitizing itself. And as accessibility is taking a big stage within the big role on the stage of trying to have working on remediate on making the web accessible on the web. The World Wide Web is such a big word. We're making the world wide web accessible. So yeah, so you ask what what brings you to the company being part of an organism that that's what organism organization that's what it strive for, to take this www are making it accessible, and learning that as I get to accessibly how big the problem is, and that's something that I wasn't aware of. I was aware that it's there. I was aware that some people are facing it. I wasn't aware that it's growing. And I wasn't aware that it's it's how much it affects the day to day life. And as I started to training at accessibly and I was giving the opportunity of speaking with a people with a visually impaired all those technicalities of Have bed bow challenges that people are facing? I knew that this is its this is where I am supposed to be, this is what I need to serve. And this is this is how this is a company, I want to utilize my skill set, you know, to help grow? Michael Hingson 35:18 Well, and the fact is that, as you stated, what we call the accessibility gap is growing, because of the number of websites that are being created every minute, every day, and how small the number of those websites actually intentionally do what's necessary to bring access in. And I think one of the important concepts to remember about accessibility is you can have all the standards in the world, you can have all of the the requirements that define what access means. But access ultimately is about how usable is the website, right? And that's where it really comes. It's all about, can people use the website? And do the standards make the website as usable as it should be? Or is there more to it, and there is more to it. The standards are a great guideline, which is why we have today what we call the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines. But the fact is that it's all about usability. And I think that's been a very strong growth area for accessibility, because access to be when I joined in January was very much involved in talking about access from the standpoint of adhering to the guidelines, I think that there was an intent to want to make website usable, but focus more on the guidelines and the World Wide Web Consortium standards and so on. And is moved to understand that there's a lot more to it than that to make the website world very usable. Gal Bareket 37:12 I think accessibly is because it was always providing services, they just understood it. Now it's the time to provide the services from scale, at scale. And also, from an educational standpoint, access to be understood, as people were looking out for looking at, at it as a company as a thought leader in the industry as a company who were able to work on and assist many websites. As as we all know, it also received a bunch of heat from either the community or for members or whether whether it's legit or not legit, everything is legitimate desire legitimatize in my book, so it's all fine. The accessible understood that it needs to take needs to do several things it needs to provide a provide education or what we call free education or learning. And you mentioned the word access one of the tools that is coming out as part of the company's culture called Access campus, which its goal is to route and incept within the beginning of developers and marketeers mindset how the digital assets of a website should be accessible. There are there is a there you mentioned usability before Miko usability testing is a term that is taken from the user experience world from the tech industry from the development sphere. We now are trying to claim an access to B and the claim to fame that usability as part of the user experience of checking a website needs to kind of the QA of your website needs to be be done with people with what product or service we like to call user testing. People with disabilities that are using system as you mentioned in the beginning of the call like Jaws, or that are allowing them to view website and actually see if though if the digital assets are actually working or actually providing them with access successively decided that it's that it's more it's going to work in a more holistic fashion is going to work on an educational spectrum. And that's part of the founders vision to make to help people learn more about the field. Well, people understand not just from a compliance standpoint, but how to create products and tools and services that are from the get go are accessible. In addition for everyone who needs to get up to par access will be provided for access to be now so the professional solutions department The Department where which I am part of the goal is to allow remediation of the rest of the digital assets that are part of your website and or part of your organization. If you are an enterprise who is who has files that are problematic for the for your workers that are supposed to read a remediated file, an accessible file, then perhaps you need that service. And I would ask you, Michael, when, when you tackle a PDF, when you tackle a file, what are due? Are there any challenges that are in front of you check in immediate file for having having you having a person unstoppable challenge, taking a child taking, taking on a file? Michael Hingson 40:50 Well, sure, which is, of course, the whole point of now what we're talking about with access flow. But But yes, clearly, it depends on the PDF is like with everything, there's always the answer, it depends. There are many PDF documents that are not readable by a blind person with a screen reader. There's more to it than what Adobe does with its own internal optical character recognition to recognize the the information in the file. And sometimes that can be made to talk and give me the information that I want. And sometimes it can't. Likewise, with any website, sometimes, it verbalizes well, and many times, it doesn't verbalize extremely well, which means that I might be able to use the website, but it will take a lot of work to be able to use the website, or the website was constructed in a way that really makes it very usable for me without a lot of effort. Someone put it very well, when they once said that what blind people learn how to do is to muddle through and, and break their way through all of the barriers that exist on websites. So we can we can make them work. But a lot of times, it's very difficult to make them work or we have to spend so much time doing it that you wonder after a while if it's worth it. And that's of course, what excessive B is, is all about an excessive B, I think, excuse me excessively as someone recently said in a meeting I attended that excessive be in other companies like it, but I'm specifically focused on excessive be excessively has to customers. And it's something that excessively I think has learned over the past many months, that there are the customers who actually buy the service, that is the website owners and the website. Developers. And so it's the business community. But the other customer that accessibe B has, which is just as much and probably even more important for the company to consider is the end user. Because the end user is the the person or people who actually have to use the product that excessive B provides or products that excessive B provides. Right in excessively has has grown a great deal. And recognized that that second customer is extremely important in a way it does pay the bills, because the customers who use that site that uses accessibility and find it helpful are going to talk about it. And the community is pretty close knit. So the reality is it's important to to really focus on the the end user world as well and accessible has really started to do that which I think is incredibly good. Gal Bareket 44:14 Oh, I agree. I agree help during bridging the gap with your end users, which they are the actual service recipient of the work that you're trying to accomplish. And getting their feedback is priceless, is priceless. And can can be a great tool for for progress for change. And you can see I think you can see it with the growth of this solution with the current growth with the with the current organic growth. And my emphasis on organic on this dissolution department because you get to understand why people come to accessory. I'll give you an example. There's a there is a product that is VPAT is about Voluntary Product Accessibility Template, that template is something that companies are now understand that they need to obtain in order because the companies that are exploring whether they would like to do business with them wants to know if they are on they are taking steps to become accessible. So, that the market which is it is fascinating because the market is doing the right formations to allow a to allow having the discourse of accessibility all around. And the service when when it when people come for excessively, right now, with an organic growth growth, to get the VPAT service, it allows us to understand that they that organizations right now are are taking an active role in trying to make sure that they are fixing and adapting and removing and removing all of the barriers for people with disabilities. So, they were allowed to enjoy surfing the web properly and kindly and comfortably, which is most important. So some so I repaired manual audit, media or mediation, follow mediation, these are these are these are names of just aspects of the worldwide web or the digital assets that exist to be understood that it that it would do whatever it takes a 360 effort to make sure that its community will have a way not just not just to get into the website, but also use it conveniently and being able to actually you know, scroll between everything read the materials and have have have an equilibrium or have Bring, bring everyone to the same level. So we can all enjoy similar content. Michael Hingson 47:01 What is your role at accessibility? What is your job? Gal Bareket 47:05 So my role as chief solutions officer, I run the Department of taking chief solutions officer and we have solutions and services under our umbrella. Some of the reason why we added this solution into the component is because accessories working on providing every service to their businesses in a seamless, seamless and convenient fashion. Like it did with the AI overlay interface. The the convenience allows businesses to first to rapidly adapt technology and and being willing to make a change for the better good. So one of the one of the elements of those solution in the solution part is where we automate getting a person from a website directly to our dashboard, allowing to facilitate the entire work and offload in a seamless and automated way backed by accessories AI power engine and provide a service back to the client now the service aspect comes into play where with our accessibility experts is this team is a team of trained individuals developers that are doing the manual labor and have in touch and making sure to go to dot the tee to cross the t's and dot the eye around every single part of the website that nothing will get the NO FLOW will remain untouched. So in comparison perhaps to previously where our emphasis was on the on the AI engine itself and on the on the widget while getting slowly requests for the other remediation services. Now we are continuing putting our effort the company continue putting its effort as you know, Miko on on the AI interface but simultaneously, it opened a full bridge to allow every service every accessibility service that is related to the World Wide Web to arrive in our into our door in our footsteps and allowing us to be able to remediate and fix and resolve the issue whether it's just to bring up to compliance but in most part in my department, it's to make sure that the user will get a friendly experience when they get into the website. Michael Hingson 49:43 And so I get the impression from what you're saying that could involve the AI powered overlay. But it also could, could come about from other services that excessive B is or will be providing Gal Bareket 49:58 100% and person that it should go over it. Now when I say person, there's two people that are that we offer as a company, we offer our own, actually the expert team that we trained in house Cree with our own syllabus and our and our own materials, and made them and brought them up to par with looking at isup and other organization to bring them perhaps even further down their proficiency route. So there's that sweet expert who goes through the work themselves that in our part, and are integral part of the service. In addition, there is an addition there's also the technological effort that is being happening around this scene, continuing making a robust system, that its AI capabilities will be able to do the majority of the job in order to flag the difficulties to the person A, that is testing it. Now, that is the first person the second thing that the second option of people that can test your website is a product or a service that we called user testing. User testing is essentially bringing in people with disabilities with their assistive technology devices, which Michael perhaps you want to share what is what is even assistive technology for some because I am saying the word because I love the words, because I learned it, you are living it firsthand? Michael Hingson 51:33 Well, I think it's exactly what what it implies it's technologies that assist in making it possible for us to accomplish tasks. So in the case of the web, for blind people, it could be a screen reader or it could be access to a Braille display. But it is it is technology that allows us to interact with a computer to get the information that others obtain by looking at a screen. So the assistive technology. So the assistive technology is my, my lovely. Alexa decides to talk to me. So the assistive technology assists in helping to accomplish and perform tasks that we otherwise wouldn't be able to perform, because they're visual. And that is like reading a monitor. So even the Amazon Alexa can in some ways be assistive technology. But the the whole idea is that the technology helps us interact with our environment to accomplish the same tasks that you perform. Gal Bareket 52:52 So that's exactly it. So our end users, that's exactly what they're doing, they're using their tools, where we'd very to be a screen reader, whether it will be just scrolling through the keyboard by itself and see that the website is navigable and allowing the company at the end to see whether the website is actually user friendly, where it's where with all this is a technology to leads you to share with the world not just from the compliance standpoint, not just from a legal standpoint peep I am opening my store for people with disabilities and everybody are willing and we are inclusive and you know, we're stopping no one in the door and everybody are welcome to enter. Michael Hingson 53:36 So from a business standpoint, who and what companies are really the best opportunities for accessibility to help make the website more the website world more accessible. Gal Bareket 53:51 So here we are talking about all types of companies, from small to big, from small medium mom and pop store, to a big giants such as even Adobe or or enterprises, whether public or private companies, governmental organizations, educational organizations can also be benefit tremendously from working with us the excessively what it did with those manual services, automated solution AI backed components and having additional offerings to bring to the industry. It able to open up a full array of opportunities that are that can come from various angles, and they're coming today we're seeing we're seeing group from groups of hotels that are reaching out to us and then a public company in In public company in the US, to a flood of public companies in Israel, we seeing various entities that are interested in understanding how can they now be better, and provide better service, whether it's on the worldwide web or even internal, within their own organizations to to, to, to get better in their hiring processes, to perform better in their internal training for employee adaptation, as many aspects as you will, as you will aware, to those services, and think that these are all being taken in under my department within that umbrella. Michael Hingson 55:45 So there are companies that specialize in making websites more usable, accessible, or whatever, they have manual programmers that, that do that. And they bet a lot of expertise in it. Why accessibility over those or other companies like it Gal Bareket 56:05 says A B is a company that is ready for scale. And is and that's something that is most important, how many website Michael, are currently on? resolved? Michael Hingson 56:22 Well, I think the statistics that I think that we have found is over 98%. Gal Bareket 56:28 So even more and say, 90%, of how many 100,000 100 million? Michael Hingson 56:36 I would say we're talking in the billions at this point. Gal Bareket 56:41 So it's very simple. How many? Michael Hingson 56:47 A? Well, since we know since we know, for example, from our own studies that there are over 380 websites created every minute in the United States. And out of those, we're saying that roughly 2% are accessible. That's basically eight websites out of 390 every minute, Gal Bareket 57:09 right? So I'm looking at the numbers, as I'm talking with you right now, I do want to make a mistake in the US does 103 33 million websites are in the millions, right. And there is other countries with other numbers. But the fact that we are, we are not even meeting the surface, it's it's where we need to aim next. And there's so much work to be done. So accessible, his ability to scale is not just a word for itself, it allows it it allows the company to serve many entities at the same time. Scaling, it's not this is not just tech scaling is operation, it means that if we need tomorrow to hire X amount of people, we have the processes in place, the infrastructure in place and the capacity to do so it means that the company as a whole is working, to grow and having a with the bandwidth to gain all everything in it. In addition, and it's something that our visionary CEO, and is able to create, he constantly create ways to simplify from a technological standpoint, the entire process of have of fixing a website or building a website. And that allows us as a company to have, whether it's internal proprietary tools to provide the job quicker. So I turn around or turnovers are much quicker than other than other companies. Because we are we are building internal tools to help us get to where we want to be. And, and you know what, this is a problem, a big problem, the more companies that are entering the domain, that are trying to make the world a better place, we all win. So instead of comparing between the companies, we are in a joint effort to make sure that the more and more companies would enroll together, that this 100 and that the 2% would be 98%. And then we can fight over the 2% together. Michael Hingson 59:29 Yes, and and the reality is that none of the companies that are involved in this whole process of making websites usable are or should be the enemy of consumers. And I know you mentioned before, there's been a fair amount of heat that has been brought to bear on excessive B to I think, a greater degree than maybe some of the other companies but the heat It has been there. And there's probably been some justification. But there's also been a lot of misunderstanding. And I think that, and I've said it a couple of times, I think that what's most important is that we, as a community of persons with disabilities acknowledge the transformations that are taking place, excessively is not the company, both in messaging and an action that it was 10 months ago, it is different today. It is doing a lot more just doing different things. And I think that's extremely important for, for people to recognize the very fact that people like you are here, you mentioned, by the way that we are as a company, and I say we because I am the chief vision officer for accessibility. As listeners know, you mentioned that we look for people who can help with usability testing, and helping us to make the website more accessible. How can people explore doing that? Where would they go? Who would they contact? Or what would that process be? Do you know? Gal Bareket 1:01:17 So again, parts of our CEOs vision is to and and our, and our, and our CEO, our chief marketing officer and our CRO is to be able to support the community. And the way that we currently understand the community gets supported is through the various umbrella organizations such as the NFB that you mentioned before and allowing and then working in collaboration with these organizations that are not necessarily in it because they did not I didn't see that they were providing it but organization that provide the tools that facilitate the onboarding and recruitment of these type of individuals that some have said that they disobey some of the individuals we are bringing into we are opening roles within the the US market within a the new the New York office for people for people with disabilities over a two we'll be able to have to work with it to work with people disabilities closely to allows us to have not just Sing Sing Sing saying the word inclusion, but also living living it firsthand. So what they can do is they can go to our website, and enter and reach out through various ways through our through our emails to the to the solution department. And we would love to have a conversation with with them with each with each individual, either direct them to the right local organization in their place, we can work with the umbrella organization or works directly with with them. Michael Hingson 1:03:04 And I think that's important to to note that that there are ways that people can reach out so people can go to www dot accessibile. Calm, excessive B is spelled ACC e ss i b e.com. And as listeners of this podcast, no they can also reach out to me if they would like Michael M i ch AE L H AI at accessible calm. And I'm glad to help steer people to the right place or answer any other questions that that people have on the podcast. I think we're getting close to our time but is there any last thing that you would like to say or any point you'd like to make? Gal Bareket 1:03:48 I enjoyed this conversation with you Michael immensely. I think that I would have are totally finished with accessibly is growing and changing as a company just maybe echoing the last thing you mentioned. In you know, in ways that I haven't seen any other company grow and I sit on I sit on various flow advisory roles or board roles in different companies. There is there is a sense of fulfillment waking up in the morning and coming to the company there is ongoing communication that is day by day becoming better and better with between the various departments are working as a right organism to provide service for the industry. There is an immense care for the community. It's what people are waking up for in the morning and are trying to see whether the community was happy today was dissatisfied too then how could the community feel better and feel? And there are main efforts that are being done to take care of that on day two? The basis, the company is also taking into consideration the business aspect and then working on providing additional services, additional solutions, providing additional automation enhancing and improving all the processes or older processes that can now become better and are now better. And we are open to whoever wishes to come in receives type of each one of those services to come to us to see how seamless how short it is than the regular and what there are expected to, and how we are keep evolving and growing as a company, for ever for for for both our end users and our customers, which is wonderful to see is wonderful to see. And be part of Michael Hingson 1:05:52 the way I would also say that if any of our listeners, if you are a person with a website, and you want to see how accessible your website is, go to www dot accessable COMM And there you will see a link to something called ACE AC e which is the accessibility audit tool that you can run, plug in the name of your website. And you can get an audit that will show you how accessible your website is today, based on the guidelines and standards that exist in the world. And it will show you the things that you need to improve upon. So we'll give you a good idea. It's totally free. And if you want to work with accessibility, then the contact information is there to do that. To explore working with accessibility and letting accessibility help you make your website more usable. And for consumers. You can go and check any website as well with ace so we do invite you to do that as well. Well, Gal I really appreciate you being here. And we didn't talk about the fact that golf stands for wave like the wave in the ocean. You you said that? Typically Israeli names have have meanings other than to being just names or Gal Bareket 1:07:16 Abraham Hebrew names Hebrew days, right. Right. Michael Hingson 1:07:20 Now if I talk to enough people, I'll learn some Hebrew that way I guess. Gal Bareket 1:07:25 For sure. Michael Hingson 1:07:27 Well, I want to thank you again for being here with us. Go vericut. And definitely we will have to chat some more and, and compare some more stories. But thank you for being here on the unstoppable mindset. And I hope everyone will tune in next week. And of course, if you liked the show, please give us a five star review with your podcast host of choice or wherever you listen to podcasts. So thank you all for listening, and we'll see you next time Michael Hingson 1:08:02 You have been listening to the Unstoppable Mindset podcast. Thanks for dropping by. I hope that you'll join us again next week, and in future weeks for upcoming episodes. To subscribe to our podcast and to learn about upcoming episodes, please visit www dot Michael hingson.com slash podcast. Michael Hingson is spelled m i c h a e l h i n g s o n. While you're on the site., please use the form there to recommend people who we ought to interview in upcoming editions of the show. And also, we ask you and urge you to invite your friends to join us in the future. If you know of any one or any organization needing a speaker for an event, please email me at speaker at Michael hingson.com. I appreciate it very much. To learn more about the concept of blinded by fear, please visit www dot Michael hingson.com forward slash blinded by fear and while you're there, feel free to pick up a copy of my free eBook entitled blinded by fear. The unstoppable mindset podcast is provided by access cast an initiative of accessiBe and is sponsored by accessiBe. Please visit www.accessibe.com. accessiBe is spelled a c c e s s i b e. There you can learn all about how you can make your website inclusive for all persons with disabilities and how you can help make the internet fully inclusive by 2025. Thanks again for listening. Please come back and visit us again next week.
Regresa nuestro crossover veraniego con Jugando con los Abuelos. En esta oportunidad, aprovechando la proximidad de la espantosa Godzilla vs Kong, vamos a hablar de Kaijus. Hablaremos del final de la Segunda Guerra Mundial y de cómo esta nos trajo al primer Kaiju: Godzilla. Luego, los Abuelos nos contarán todo sobre King of Tokyo, un juego de Richard Garfield sobre esta temática. Imagen: Geek & Sundry Fuentes / Textos - PRICE, Lee (2016) 42. Gojira (Godzilla; 1954). Wonders in the dark. - ROPEIK, David (2018) How the unlucky Lucky Dragon birthed an era of nuclear fear. Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. Fuentes / Videos - KYODAI KINO (2018) From Nagasaki to 9/11: War, Politics and the New American Kaiju Boom. Youtube. - EXTRA CREDITS (2013) The Beast Macabre - What Makes a Monster Scary? - Extra Credits. Youtube. Fuentes / Sitios web - Wikipedia Música: El tema de la Tortulia es una versión de Caravan por Oleg Zobachev. El tema original es de Duke Ellington. El tema de Jugando con los Abuelos es Sing Sing Sing de Benny Goodman. El remix de ambos es cortesía de @amarillo114. Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
On this week's episode, Jamie and Rob continue their season-long theme of their “favorite things” by paying tribute to the singular life and work of Broadway dancer, actor, choreographer, director, and Fosse muse Ann Reinking, who passed away in December 2020. In addition to sharing their own reflections on Ann's remarkable career, Jamie and Rob are joined by Candy Brown (“Pippin”), Marilu Henner (“Over Here!”, “Chicago”), Bebe Neuwirth (“Sweet Charity”, “Chicago”), and Michael Berresse (“Chicago”) who share their own intimate remembrances of their dear friend and colleague. “We Got Annie” is a celebration of one of Broadway's greatest legends, the unique gifts of her talent, and the indelible impact she made upon theatre history. This week's music: “Magic To Do”, and “War Is A Science” from “Pippin”, “Long Ago and Far Away” by James Taylor. “Charlie's Place” from “Over Here! Original Broadway Cast”. “Voices and Visions” from “Goodtime Charley, Original Cast Recording”. “Hot Honey Rag”, “Me and My Baby” from “Chicago, New Broadway Cast Recording”. “Sing Sing Sing” from “Fosse”, “They'll Be Some Changes Made” from “All That Jazz, Original Soundtrack Collection”, “We Got Annie” from “Annie Motion Picture Soundtrack”. “There's Gotta Be Something Better Than This” from “Sweet Charity, 1986 Broadway Cast”. “Entr'acte”, “All That Jazz”, “Roxie”, “I Am My Own Best Friend”, and “Nowadays” from “Chicago, New Broadway Cast Recording”. “Everything Old Is New Again” from “All That Jazz, Original Soundtrack Collection”. Find us on Twitter & Instagram: @fabulousinvalid Facebook: www.facebook.com/fabulousinvalid Rob's reviews: www.stageleft.nyc Email us at: office@fabulousinvalid.com Jamie DuMont Twitter: @jamiedumont Instagram: @troutinnyc Rob Russo Twitter/Instagram: @StageLeft_NYC Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Do call it a comeback. I hope you're all ears, cause they're rocking their peers puttin' suckers in fear... or something like that. We've got all sorts of comebacks - mean, witty, kind, weird - there's something for everyone! Storytellers Jess Lampe is a former Peace Corps Volunteer and Cloud Solutions Architect. Coonoor is Founder & CEO of Mindhatch and author of "I Quit! The Life-Affirming Joy of Giving Up" Eric Brach is an English professor, husband, former world champion ultimate frisbee player, and NOT a scumbag. He's also the author of three non-fiction books ranging from sports to science to true crime, so if you're interested, here ya go. Connor, who sports a relaxed but focused worldview, spends most of his energy trying to accomplish at least one of his many lofty goals. Nic no longer bullies people based on their physical appearance thanks, in part, to years of self-reflection and therapy. She now taps into the deeper root of how people are flawed and uses that against them. Hooray for progress. Lisa Michelle Jackson is a comedian, writer, dancer, and artist in Austin, Texas. www.lisamichellejackson.com IG: lena7098 Meredith Newell is a Creative Director, writer, musician, artist, comedy performer and life-long smart ass. If you enjoy her storytelling style, check out her edu-tainment podcast miniseries, That's Messed Up, featuring episodes about everything from torture and carnival ride disasters to Scientology and North Korea. Music: Feelin' Alright by Gavin Luke, Sing Sing Sing by Tim Hirst, Streets of Wonder by Marc Torch, Too Much Charm by Got Happy
Volvemos a hacer nuestro crossover anual con Jugando con los Abuelos. Como siempre hablaremos de un juego de mesa y de sus raíces históricas de forma combinada. Y hoy el turno hoy es para Black Orchestra, que nos pone en los pies de un conspirador de terminado a matar a Adolf Hitler. Dado que no hubo uno, sino decenas de complots para matar a Hitler, mientras los Abuelos nos cuentan todos del juego nosotros hablaremos de cada uno de los complots. Algunos, como la bomba del 22 de Julio, fueron brillantemente planeados. Pero otros fallaron por personas que las casualidades más increíbles. Es drama humano hilarante del más puro. Buscaremos complot tras complot hasta encontrar uno que funcione. Ahora sí, ¡Hitler es hombre muerto! Desde Radio Camacuá, para todo el mundo, esto es Tortulia con los Abuelos. Imagen: Portada del juego de mesa Black Orchestra. Fuentes / Textos - Canal Historia. 6 Assassination Attempts on Adolf Hitler - HISTORY - Canal Historia. Killing Hitler: The many assassination attempts on Adolf Hitler - DARGIE, Richard. (2019) The Plots to Kill Hitler: The Men and Women Who Tried to Change History. Arcturus Publishing. ISBN 1839402350. - JONES, Nigel. (2009) Countdown to Valkyrie: The July Plot to Assasinate Hitler. Frontline Books. ASIN: B00DN5U49Q - TOI STAFF. (2020) Henry Wermuth, the man who tried to derail Hitler’s train, dies at 97. www.timesofisrael.com Fuentes / Sitios web - Wikipedia Música: El tema de la Tortulia es una versión de Caravan por Oleg Zobachev. El tema original es de Duke Ellington. El tema de Jugando con los Abuelos es Sing Sing Sing de Benny Goodman. El remix de ambos es cortesía de @amarillo114. Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
Sing, Sing, Sing Louis Prima (1910-1978) arr. Darmon Meader (b. 1961) additional lyrics by Peter Eldridge (b. 1962) and Darmon Meader Sing, sing, sing, sing, All you got to do is sing. Girls and boys, make a noise, Just try singin' with a swing. Sing, sing, sing, sing, Ev'rybody likes to sing, Summer, fall, winter, spring, These are all good times to sing. When the music comes around; Just join in with your own sound. Here's the thing you need to know: Just make it all up as you go. Sing, sing, sing, sing, All you got to do is sing. Shakespeare said, “The song's the thing,” When you sing it with a swing. You gotta try to sing it out, ring it out, get a reaction. If it don't swing, You know it don't mean a thing. Trumpets blare, cymbals ring, They all got their way to sing. When the music comes around, Just join in with your own sound. Sing, sing, sing, sing, Got to make the rafters ring. Slow down; why you're in a hurry? Relax; there's no need to worry. Got no use for second guessing. You've got notes that need expressing. It's callin' me, callin' you, The harmony's comin' thru. I guarantee that it's true: The melody gets to you. (Throw all caution thru the window; That's the only thing you gotta do To let it all begin now. I can never get enough. I used to sit around feelin' like a lump; Was nothin' in the world ever make me jump. But then I got the bug; You should see me know: Pontificating more than the law allows.) I'm singing in the shower and it's soundin' so nice (Hey! Feelin' better.) I'm hummin' by the hour and my hummin' delights (Oh! So much better!) I'm gonna do my singin' till the end of the day. (Light as a feather.) My blues are gone forever. I'm singing in the shower and it's soundin' so nice (No more denying,) I'm hummin' by the hour and my hummin' delights (So dulcifying,) I'm gonna do my singin' till the end of the day. (Electrifying,) Come on! Sing, sing, sing, sing, All you got to do is sing. Girls and boys, make a noise, Just try singin' with a swing. Sing, sing, sing,sing, Ev'rybody likes to sing, Summer, fall, winter, spring, These are all the best times to sing. When the music comes around; Just join in with your own sound. Here's the thing you need to know: Just make it all up as you go. Sing, sing, sing, sing, All you got to do is sing. Shakespeare said, “The song's the thing,” When you sing it with a swing. Stop all your tiptoein', And once you get goin', There'll be no stopping The melody's fillin' your heart an' soul. One, two, three, we're swingin', As you see, with no apology, So you might as well swing it, It's a kick in the pants. Now you're singin' with a swing, Sing, sing, sing, Yeah! “Sing, Sing, Sing” was performed by the Houston Chamber Choir with scat soloists Lauren Pastorek and Wayne Ashley at the 2016-2017 season's “In the Mood.”
Today on The VE Love to hear percussion? We'll turn the beat around and feature some great vinyl records that push the drums way up front...and we'll note the annual celebration this week of the rock drummer who became a pop superstar...plus some cool relics spun from 45's and even a drum-centric 78. I'm PC and this is the VE Peter Gabriel: Rhythn Of The Heat Joni Mitchell: The Jungle Line The VE with powerful drumming at the heart of Joni Mitchell's "The Jungle Line" from The Hissing Of Summer Lawns from 1975, and Peter Gabriel with "Rhythm Of The Heat," off Security in 1982. Rhythm, melody and harmony--that's what music is made of. But rhythm comes first...in life too...the beating of our mother's heart in the womb programs us to order our world with rhythm. Drummer Cozy Cole scored a late 50's hit with .... Cozy Cole: Topsy, Part 2 Cream: Toad The VE, drumming it into you this time around, with Ginger Baker bashing out "Toad" with Cream in 1966, and Cozy Cole, at the dawn of rock and roll, for "Topsy." Drummers have always been flamboyant, but before Keith Moon, Ringo Starr, or even Buddy Rich, the original wild-man drummer was Gene Krupa, who's jungle rhythm on Benny Goodman's "Sing SIng Sing" shook the rafters at Carnegie Hall in 1938. Around the same time, clarinet-competitor Woody Herman billed his orchestra as "The band that plays the blues," and his drummer, Frank Carlson, laid a hypnotic rhythm down for "The Golden Wedding." Woody Herman: The Golden Wedding Led Zeppelin: D'yer Maker The VE, Bonzo bashes the drums, and steals the show in "D'yer Maker," Led Zeppelin's warmest and wittiest record. Some legendary jazz drummers have passed inrecent years....Max Roach, Paul Motian...and just this year, Joe Morello, who played "Far More Drums" with The Dave Brubeck Quartet, a cool record not just for the grove, but for the pioneering way that Joe's drums were recorded in the early days of stereo. Dave Brubeck Quartet: Far More Drums side 2 The VE, with far more than just drums to keep time...Bongos rock--with Preston Epps and Chico Hamilton.... Preston Epps: Bongo Rock Tony Bennett/Chico Hamilton: Crazy Rhythm The VE with that crazy dope-smokin' beatnick---Tony Bennett? Together with Chico Hamilton, who appeared as himself in the New York-noir classic "The Sweet Smell Of Success." Sal Mineo starred in "The Gene Krupa Story," but the greatest matinee-idol drummer of all--Phil! This past Wednesday was once again, Phil Collins Day in Brooklyn, where the hipster parade in honor of the greatest pop-star drummer ever. The record that set Phil apart in his solo career...while still cranking out Genesis hits, was this deep, dark tune, ruined by radio overexposure through the years...but in spun fro the original vinyl, "In The Air Tonight, and still dramatic as ever. Phil Collins: In The Air Tonight Sandy Nelson Teen Beat The VE, drumming thorugh the library with relic, "Teen Beat" by Sandy Nelson...to a classic, from the debut by Santana... Santana: Soul Sacrifice The VE...latin rhythm to ...turn the beat around. Love to hear percussion? In the mid 70's, dance music reigned, and this hot 12 inch mix of Vicki Sue Robinson's disco anthem features a hot guitar solo by Steely Dan's Elliot Randall Vicki Sue Robinson: Turn The Beat Around And That's the VE...."Turn The Beat Around...a record that by doing just that, far outclasses the monotonous disco genre. Love to hear more percussion? Or past Vinyl Experience Shows?...Visit the archives at prn.fm. Please Like and Share The VE on Facebook, and follow me on twitter....I'm PC
Darren Wiebe, "Sing! Sing! Sing!" (Psalm 96) from the Various 2018 series. More sermons available online at www.gbcob.org.
Welcome to The Diad Presents! Depending on Hurricane Irma, this may be the last show for a little bit. Let's hope not! The show can be downloaded here, or streamed here: The picture of the excellent depiction of Shredder is here: And the track list below: # - Game - Track - System - Composer 1 - Double Dragon Neon - "City Streets 2 (Mango Tango - Neon Jungle)" - PSN/XBLA - Jake Kaufman (vocals by Jessie Seely) 2 - Katamari Damacy - Que Sera Sera - PS2 - Asuka Sakai & Natsuki Isaki (vocals by Charles Kosei) 3 - Jet Set Radio - Funky Radio - Dreamcast - B.B. Rights 4 - Mystical Ninja Starring Goemon - I Am Impact! - N64 - Shigeru Araki, Kato Yusuke, Saiko Miki & Yasumasa Kitagawa 5 - Thimbleweed Park - No Quarter - PC/XBO/PS4 - Steve Kirk 6 - Bust a Groove - Natural Playboy (Hiro's Song) - PSX - Tomoki Ishizuka (vocals by Kaleb James) 7 - Pizza Power - Turtles in Time - Arcade - Bob Bejan & Godfrey Nelson 8 - Sky High - Daytona USA - Sega Saturn - Takenobu Mitsuyoshi