Podcasts about somewhere along

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Best podcasts about somewhere along

Latest podcast episodes about somewhere along

Word of Mom Radio
Mallory Thomas on The Authors Alley with Dori DeCarlo on WoMRadio

Word of Mom Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2025 28:20


Mallory Thomas is a writer and reader of soft love stories that make you swoon, squeal, and blush. When she's not writing, she can be found picking up after her two kids, joking with her handsome husband, and planning trips to the beach. She's also a baby formula expert and content creator.Mallory strives to write books that are better than your phone-- she hopes the time spent reading her books will leave you happier and more hopeful than time spent on social media. On this episode, we are sharing her latest book, “Somewhere Along the Line”.Join host Dori DeCarlo on The Authors Alley and connect with Mallory at MalloryThomas.com, follow on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and YouTube. Get your copy of “Somewhere Along the Line”, too!Please support UnsilencedVoices.org a global 501(c)3 nonprofit that empowers survivors of domestic violence, sexual assault, and human trafficking.  We thank Smith Sisters and the Sunday Drivers for our theme song, "She is You".Be sure to connect with us on BlueSky, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and come tell us your story!WordofMomRadio.com - sharing the wisdom of women, in business and in life.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/word-of-mom-radio--5252572/support.

tiktok blue sky mompreneurs business women somewhere along wahms dori decarlo authors alley wordofmom
Kobo in Conversation
Anna Gomez on the things she's picked up to write about... somewhere along the way

Kobo in Conversation

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2024 34:20


Host Michael Tamblyn spoke with novelist Anna Gomez, author of Somewhere Along the Way. It's the story of Charlotte, or Charlie to her friends, a woman thrown into turmoil with the death of her father. She is given a collection of letters that her mother had been sending since she left Charlie and her dad so long ago. Those letters set Charlie on a journey, and we all get to come along for the ride. Anna Gomez on the things she's picked up to write about... somewhere along the way

write along the way picked up somewhere along anna gomez
Kobo in Conversation
Anna Gomez on the things she's picked up to write about... somewhere along the way

Kobo in Conversation

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2024 34:20


Host Michael Tamblyn spoke with novelist Anna Gomez, author of Somewhere Along the Way. It's the story of Charlotte, or Charlie to her friends, a woman thrown into turmoil with the death of her father. She is given a collection of letters that her mother had been sending since she left Charlie and her dad so long ago. Those letters set Charlie on a journey, and we all get to come along for the ride. Anna Gomez on the things she's picked up to write about... somewhere along the way

write along the way picked up somewhere along anna gomez
The Daily Poem
Henry Taylor's "Somewhere Along the Way"

The Daily Poem

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2024 4:05


Poet and translator Henry Taylor was born in Lincoln, Virginia on June 21, 1942. He earned a BA from the University of Virginia and an MA from Hollins University. Taylor's many poetry collections include Crooked Run (2006); Understanding Fiction: Poems 1986-1996; The Flying Change (1985), for which he received the Pulitzer Prize; An Afternoon of Pocket Billiards (1975); and The Horse Show at Midnight(1966). He has translated works from Bulgarian, French, Hebrew, Italian, and Russian. His translations include Black Book of the Endangered Species (1999) by the Bulgarian poet Vladimir Levchev and Electra (1988) by Sophocles. Taylor is a professor of literature and codirector of the MFA program in creative writing at American University in Washington, DC. In 2001 he was inducted into the Fellowship of Southern Writers.After winning the Pulitzer Prize in 1986 for his book, The Flying Change: Poems, poet Henry Taylor remarked to Joseph McLellan of the Washington Post: “The Pulitzer has a funny way of changing people's opinions about it. If you haven't won one, you go around saying things like ‘Well, it's all political' or ‘It's a lottery' and stuff like that. I would like to go on record as saying that although I'm deeply grateful and feel very honored, I still believe that it's a lottery and that nobody deserves it.” Despite his disbelief that he could earn such a prestigious award, the Pulitzer is not the only major prize Taylor has won. His other honors include the Witter Bynner Foundation Poetry Prize from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, and the Golden Crane Award of the Washington Chapter of the American Literary Translators Association.Taylor also has a sense for the comic. Indeed, the poet has remarked that he was first recognized as the author of several verse parodies, which he submitted to the magazine Sixties. “I was mildly nettled to find that they were better known, at least among poets, than anything else I had done,” Taylor reflects in the Contemporary Authors Autobiography Series. These parodies, along with other poems, appear in the author's first poetry collection, The Horse Show at Midnight (1966). This book also contains poems concerned with the unavoidable changes people must go through in life, a theme that dominates many of Taylor's verses. Dillard explains, “Henry Taylor has for all his poetic career been drawn inexorably to questions of time and mutability, of inevitable and painful change in even the most fixed and stable of circumstances.” The conflict between a desire for life to remain constant and predictable and the realization of the necessity for change in the form of aging, personal growth, and death creates a tension in Taylor's poems that is also present in his other collections, including An Afternoon of Pocket Billiards. Dillard calls this third collection, which contains all the poems previously published in Breakings, Taylor's “best work” up to that time, “clearly marking growth and progress to match his own changes in the years since The Horse Show at Midnight.”A lover of horses since his childhood in rural Virginia, Taylor uses an equestrian term for the title of his fifth book of poems, The Flying Change (1985). The name refers to the mid-air change of leg, or lead, a horse may sometimes make while cantering. Several of the poems contained in the collection describe similarly unexpected changes that occur in the course of otherwise predictable lives spent in relaxed, countryside settings. “Thus in the best poems here,” comments New York Times Book Review contributor Peter Stitt, “we find something altogether different from the joys of preppy picnicking. Mr. Taylor seeks for his poetry [a] kind of unsettling change, [a] sort of rent in the veil of ordinary life.” Some examples of this in The Flying Change are the poems “Landscape with Tractor,” in which the narrator discovers a corpse in a field, and “At the Swings,” in which the poet reflects on his cancer-stricken mother-in-law, while pushing his sons on a swing set. Other poems in the book explore the effects of such incidents as a small herd of deer suddenly interrupting the peace of a lazy day in which the narrator has been reflecting on his old age, or the surprise of seeing a horse rip its neck on a barbed wire fence.A number of critics, like Washington Times reviewer Reed Whittemore, laud Taylor's calm thoughtfulness in these and other poems, comparing it to the tone of other current poets. “Much contemporary verse is now so flighty,” says Whittemore, “so persistently thoughtless, that in contrast the steadiness of [The Flying Change], its persistence in exploring the mental dimensions of a worthwhile moment, is particularly striking, a calmness in the unsettled poetic weather.” Other critics, like Poetry contributor David Shapiro, also compliment the writer on his sensitivity to the atmosphere of the countryside. “Taylor is a poet of white clapboard houses that have existed ‘longer / than anyone now alive,'” observes Shapiro, who quotes the poet. “That is why Taylor can be such a satisfactory poet,” the reviewer concludes.Though he has written award-winning verses, Taylor remains under the radar. According to Garrett and others, this is due to Taylor's nonconformist approach. The critic continues: “In forms and content, style and substance, he is not so much out of fashion as deliberately, determinedly unfashionable. His love of form is (for the present) unfashionable. His sense of humor, which does not spare himself, is unfashionable. His preference for country life, in the face of the fact that the best known of his contemporaries are bunched up in several urban areas, cannot have made them, the others, feel easy about him, or themselves for that matter. They have every good reason to try to ignore him.” Whittemore compares Taylor's technically well-ordered style and leisurely reflections of life to the poetry of Robert Frost and Howard Nemerov. “Among 20th-century poets,” Whittemore concludes, “Mr. Taylor is ... trying to carry on with this old and honorable, but now unfavored, mission of the art. He enjoys such reflections, reaching (but modestly) for what, remember, we even used to call wisdom.”Taylor lives and works in Leesburg, Virginia.-bio via Poetry Foundation Get full access to The Daily Poem Podcast at dailypoempod.substack.com/subscribe

Kobo Writing Life Podcast
#352 - Inspiring Others and Being Inspired as an Author with Anna Gomez

Kobo Writing Life Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2024 45:46


In this episode, we spoke to award-winning women's fiction and romance author Anna Gomez, whose publications (and accolades) are many! She has written numerous romance novels under the pen name Christine Brae, and is one half of the best-selling series co-authored with Kristoffer Poloha, From Kona with Love. This swoon-worthy series is in development for film and television and has been mentioned in People Magazine, Hollywood Reporter, Variety, Home & Family, and Publishers Weekly. We spoke to Anna about her new release with Kobo Originals, Somewhere Along the Way, her writing career, her experience working in finance as well as authoring her many books, how travelling inspires her writing, her personal connections to her main characters, writing under a pen name, and more! We had a wonderful time talking to Anna and can't wait to share Somewhere Along the Way with long-time fans and new readers alike. Learn more on Anna's website, and follow Anna on Facebook, Instagram, and X/Twitter.

Sober Speak-  Alcoholics Anonymous 12 Step Recovery Podcast for AA  and Al-Anon

Episode 359 Ted Harbach- Big Meeting in the Sky Leave us a voice mail @ https://www.speakpipe.com/SoberSpeak Email us @ john@soberspeak.com Visit our website @ www.soberspeak.com

along the way somewhere along
Music For Small Audiences
MFSA118: Somewhere Along The Way

Music For Small Audiences

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2024 242:33


I played a really fun house party gig in the inner west last night, sharing the controls with two very good friends. We've played a lot of gigs together over the years, from sharing residencies here in Melbourne nearly twenty years ago through to countless club gigs, parties and get-togethers in all sorts of interesting places with many lovely people over the years in between. A good gig remains equal parts energising and cathartic. It's amazing to reflect on just how quickly twenty years can go by – and who we have each become in the process. Somewhere along the way we've each turned into actual adults. Hard to say where or when it happened, even with the benefit of hindsight. Thankfully, we have stayed connected to each other, and I’d like to think we’ve stayed true to ourselves. While we're each indubitably twenty years older than we were twenty years ago, and we’ve each added a few wrinkles and grey hairs since those heady nights of the noughties, nights like last night really reinforce the power and importance of enduring good friendships. It's also a friendly reminder of just how timeless shared musical bonds can be. While it's true that many of the ‘old school classics' we played last night were our up front and fresh new catches twenty years ago, it also goes to show that a good tune is a good tune is a good tune. As the old John Digweed saying goes, the only thing that matters is what comes out of the speakers. This is episode 118 of MFSA. There is some sensational music contained within, including a couple of bits of wax that I had been checking the post for regularly prior to their arrival. Enjoy.

My Camino - the podcast
A revisit of my chat with Scottish musician Amanda Chisolm

My Camino - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2024 61:15


Sorry I don't have anything new for you this week, it's been an incredibly busy week. I've finished tracking the new album and we now wait for the team behind the scenes to work their magic. If you'd like to add Somewhere Along the Way to your streaming service when it's relaunched as a single next week, go to https://www.danmullinsmusic.com/. We can work together to get it added to streaming service lists when it goes live July 5. Many thanks, Dan

The Camino Cafe
105 - "Somewhere Along the Way" - the upcoming documentary featuring Dan Mullins, with Filmmakers and Pilgrims, Andy Holloway and Simon Burn

The Camino Cafe

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2024 29:23 Transcription Available


Embark on a captivating odyssey with Andy Holloway and Simon Burn, the pioneering filmmakers of "Somewhere Along the Way," as we uncover the heartfelt narrative of Dan Mullins' musical resurgence on the Camino de Santiago. The Camino's ancient paths have long been a source of transformation, and in this episode, our guests share the profound impact these journeys had on them, from Andy's extensive explorations to Simon's life-altering walk. They reveal the stirring inception of their documentary—a harmonious blend of melodies, the pilgrim spirit, and Spain's cultural gems—and how they aim to immortalize Dan's story, a singer-songwriter breathing new life into his voice amidst the Camino's sacred backdrop and the group of Pilgrims walking with him from Leon to Santiago this coming May.Venture behind the scenes as we discuss the grit and grace of filming a pilgrimage, a labor of love met with both financial hurdles and physical demands. Our conversation shifts to the labyrinth of logistics from the weighty camera gear to the nightly shoots after a day's trek. Andy and Simon open up about their dedication to authentically capturing the Camino's essence, all while juggling their roles as observers and participants in this vibrant pilgrim community. They extend a heartfelt invitation for support, engaging our listeners with tales of their upcoming gatherings and the camaraderie that is the cornerstone of the Camino de Santiago experience.Support  the documentary  -  Somewhere Along The Way -  GoFundMe: https://www.gofundme.com/f/camino-documentary-filmSign up to Walk with Dan and the team:https://www.danmullinsmusic.com/walkLearn more about the CAMINO DOCUMENTARY: Somewhere Along The Way:  https://www.simonburncreative.com/camino-documentary-film-2024Connect with Andy: https://www.instagram.com/walkingmyway.camino/Connect with Simon Burn: https://www.simonburncreative.com/https://www.instagram.com/simonburncreative/Connect with Dan:https://www.danmullinsmusic.com/Recent Interview with Dan Mullins: https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/102-finding-harmony-in-silence-dan-mullins-journey/id1562037974?i=1000643661859Subscribe to the Camino Cafe Podcast and Camino News Update newsletter: https://facebook.us7.list-manage.com/subscribe?u=9ebcbfbdf1d686bb1a0e7cef5&id=c04098fd25

My Camino - the podcast
Special bonus episode to discuss Somewhere Along the Way, the documentary

My Camino - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2024 26:44


British-born, Canadian-based filmmaker Simon Burn joins me to discuss a documentary he is making when we walk the magical musical Camino in May 2024. The Go Fund Me page is here.... https://gofund.me/d1732119 And Simon's website is here..... https://www.simonburncreative.com/

The Extra Buttery Podcast
Episode 121 - "Somewhere along the line, they got lost." [Killers of the Flower Moon, The Marvels, The Holdovers]

The Extra Buttery Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2023 65:52


In the 121st episode of The Extra Buttery Episode, Jason and Robert discuss the new MAD MAX: FURIOSA trailer in the cold open before heading to Osage County with Martin Scorsese's KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON (7:57). In a jam-packed episode, Jason thinks Ridley Scott's lost the plot with NAPOLEON (25:11) and THE MARVELS (42:13) is flat-out not good while Robert believes Alexander Payne is back in form with THE HOLDOVERS (33:24) and finds some amusement with David Fincher's THE KILLER (55:03). Original theme music, intro, and outro composed and performed by Michael Spicer

Imperial Business Podcast
Humans of Imperial #11: Spandan Shah: Somewhere along the way…

Imperial Business Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2023 49:04


Spandan Shah had almost 10 years' experience in consulting roles with EY and KPMG in India, Ireland and the UK prior to starting his MBA at Imperial College Business School, so the next steps were clear… weren't they?  Spandan is the perfect example of someone who decided to try something new and take an opportunity. By founding sustainability and ESG advisory firm, GreenAlytics, Spandan is following his passion and using all of his skills and experience to help firms to identify, measure and report on key ESG requirements.  

Yasmin Mogahed
Somewhere along the way we started going about Islam from the outside in, instead of the inside out

Yasmin Mogahed

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2023 1:17


From Sparks to Light - Inspiring Stories for Challenging Times
Spirits, History, Estrellas And Love - A Camino Conversation With Dan Mullins, The Host Of My Camino

From Sparks to Light - Inspiring Stories for Challenging Times

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2023 58:47


A month ago I had the opportunity to talk to Dan Mullins, a Sydney-based singer/songwriter, broadcaster, podcaster and writer. Dan is the host of My Camino, an Australian based podcast that is heard around the world.Having walked two Caminos, with another one in the planning stages, I can honestly say that we Camino veterans are an unusual sort. The Camino family is strong. There's a kind of psychic energy that seems to draw us together, even years after we've made our journey. It's an experience that never leaves you, as the multitude of podcasts and books testify to. At the same time, the import of that journey seems to take on new meaning as we find ourselves reliving those steps when we find ourselves in the company of other pilgrims. It's a yearning we all hold,  as Dan says,  ~ to find what we're looking for.Dan is a veteran radio producer, having worked on the Alan Jones Show - the number one program in Sydney - for more than 16 years. As a musician, he was signed with Sony Publishing in the 1990s, toured the world and Australia with acts like Bryan Ferry, Desiree, Michelle Shocked, Stephen Cummings, Violent Femmes, Hothouse Flowers and The Church.Dan still performs 80 shows a year - he's a storyteller, a six-string troubador with soaring vocals and lilting melodies. He's played thousands of gigs, non-stop weekend after weekend, year after year, plying his trade in pubs and clubs the length and breadth of the country.Dan wrote the single, Somewhere Along the Way (the Camino Song) after walking in the footsteps of millions of pilgrims before him on the Camino de Santiago. It can be found on his album, Duende.This weekend I'll have the opportunity to share Camino stories with the audience of Occidental Center for the Arts, in Occidental California. If you're in the area, please stop by. You can find the information on my website.  I am so grateful to Dan Mullins for having me. I hope you enjoy our conversation.To learn more about Robert Maggio, the composer of our theme music, please check out his website.To learn more about Suzanne, visit her website. To learn more about the inspiration for this podcast, please check out Suzanne's memoir, Estrellas - Moments of Illumination Along El Camino de SantiagoFollow Suzanne on Social Media Instagram @mamasuzanne Facebook @ Suzanne Maggio author Twitter @ bottomofninth

Mark Hummel's Harmonica Party
Special Guest: Chris Cain

Mark Hummel's Harmonica Party

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2023 53:39


Guitar virtuoso Chris Cain began playing professionally as a teenager in local clubs, at festivals, and at private events. .Cain received four Blues Music Award nominations in 1987 for his debut album, Late Night City Blues, including Guitarist of the Year. He signed to Blind Pig Records in 1990 and released his second album, Cuttin' Loose, then released Can't Buy A Break in 1992 and Somewhere Along the Way in 1995. 2018 brought more nominations, including Blues Music Awards Guitarist of the Year, Blues Blast Awards Best Males Blues Artist and Best Contemporary Blues Album for the 2017 release, Chris Cain. Chris records for Alligator Records. Mark Hummel www.markhummel.com Chris Cain  http://chriscainmusic.com Patreon https://www.patreon.com/markhummel Accidental Productions https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOOnWFbj8SGiV34ixhO0Cwg

guitar loose guitarists cuttin blues music awards chris cain alligator records mark hummel somewhere along best contemporary blues album blind pig records
North Valley Baptist Church Preaching Podcast
Have You Lost Jesus Somewhere Along The Way? – Bro. Justin Cooper 

North Valley Baptist Church Preaching Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2022 33:36


Bro. Justin Cooper preached a message entitled "Have You Lost Jesus Somewhere Along The Way?" during the Wednesday Evening service on December 28, 2022, at North Valley Baptist Church in Santa Clara, California. View Archived Services at nvbc.org

Billy Joel A to Z
Somewhere Along the Line

Billy Joel A to Z

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2022 28:02


Somewhere Along the Line is the ninth song, just before Captain Jack, on the Piano Man Album released November 9, 1973. This one's definitely a strange one, as Billy talks about 4 things that will catch up to us somewhere along the line. Of course, Billy made it through all of those things so -- now the songs irrelevant. Good for him.

captain jack somewhere along
Mind Transforming Revelation
If you are suffering from anxiety somewhere along the way you believed a lie of the enemy

Mind Transforming Revelation

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2021 15:35


We are only to lend our focus to the father let him letting him direct the power he entrusted to us. The enemy covers this power and will whisper in attempts to gain your focus. Only focus on him long enough to put him between the crosshairs and pull the trigger. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/justin-bridges9/support

The #1 Musical Experience
"NOSTALGIA" - Miami Beach High School Class of 55 Album#1

The #1 Musical Experience

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2021 57:49


THE ORIGIN OF THIS MUSIC:Created by Gibbs Williams  It is hard to believe it has been decades since I graduated from Miami Beach Senior High School. It is even harder to believe that I received an invitation to attend the 65th reunion. Unfortunately, with the covid pandemic still in the air, although vaccinated, I thought it prudent better to pass up this event hoping conditions fare more salutary for the 70th. Although disappointed I would miss the reunion I was struck by a wave of pleasurable nostalgia.           Recalling those the best of those glorious days I remember the feelings of the cool Miami Beach breezes enveloping us on our weekly Friday night dances in the patio of our high school. All who attended seemed hypnotized with feelings of a pervasive feeling of at-one-ment in which we collectively bathed in what was then and even now experienced as our own unique mixture of heroin- like- atmosphere. This natural high was experienced by many of us as nothing short of pure unadulterated nostalgia. Nostalgia then and now was like our living in a collective commune protecting us from what probably would have been experienced as overwhelming normal adolescent pain if we had been open to feeling it.  I was especially nostalgic remembering my self and four other guys daring to form a small combo good enough to play at all of the school dances. We even played well enough that every New Years Eve a Miami Beach Hotel hired us to perform. Our Small combo consisted of Drums (Marvin Guccion), Bass (John Schaffer), Trombone (Peter Weill), Trumpet (Kenny Kupper) and Piano (Gibbs Williams). Unknowingly we had no knowledge that we were on the cutting edge of what would soon be an explosion of worldwide bands.           In is in this memorable context that I wish to share an album of some of those unforgettable songs which best seem to celebrate the richness not only of those glorious days from the 9th to the 12th grade, but all the years that have too quickly passed - as well as the years that are yet to come. It is unfortunate that we never recorded our iconic sounds. The best I can offer with the goal in mind of capturing the sounds we made are my original arrangements made on my Yamaha synthesizer. The songs we played were standards from the forties and fifties. I have titled this compilation Nostalgia.                                "NOSTALGIA" -  65 th REUNION - MIAMI BEACH HIGH SCHOOL - CLASS of 55 Moon Over Miami , Ebb Tide, Star Dust, It Might As Well Be Spring, Teguilla, The Hucklebuck, Five Foot Two, Somewhere Along the Way, Im In The Mood For Love, Again, Blue Moon, Miami Beach Rhumba, Because of You, Rock Around the Clock, Down By The Riverside, Tammy's In Love, Where Is Your Heart, Don't Blame Me, If I Loved You, I'll Take Manhattan, The Man I Love, A Secret Love, Autumn Leaves, Summer Time, Mona LIsa, Take the A Train,Perfidia, It's No Sin, It Had To Be You, For Me And My Gal, Thrill Me, You're Just In Love, Yellow Bird, Canadian Sunset, A Taste Of Honey, Too Young, Saint Louis Blues, My Foolish Heart, You Belong To Me, Sleepy Time Gal, Body and Soul, The Nearness Of You, Misty, Sweet Georgia Brown, Blue Skies, Tenderly, Some Enchanted Evening, Bali High, Bewitched, Once Upon A Time, As Time Time Goes By, Aways, Fight Song Of The Miami Beach Hight Marching Band A and B.       I know all was not perfect then as we were all struggling to survive adolescence so those days were hardly always serene. Yet, there was, and still is for me and I imagine for many of my class mates, a certain undeniable 'specialness' about our class which for many of us still acts like a permanent magnet pulling us back again and again to re-unite.       As for me, if we had been recognized as ground-breaking I am certain our lives at least vocationally would have taken a much different route. However, I can honestly say that I am happy to being a still practicing psychoanalyst in New York City - a happily married husband and father having started our own dynasty of four grandchildren. 

The #1 Musical Experience
"NOSTALGIA" - Miami Beach High School Class of 55 Album#2

The #1 Musical Experience

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2021 57:52


THE ORIGIN OF THIS MUSIC:Created by Gibbs Williams  It is hard to believe it has been decades since I graduated from Miami Beach Senior High School. It is even harder to believe that I received an invitation to attend the 65th reunion. Unfortunately, with the covid pandemic still in the air, although vaccinated, I thought it prudent better to pass up this event hoping conditions fare more salutary for the 70th. Although disappointed I would miss the reunion I was struck by a wave of pleasurable nostalgia.           Recalling those the best of those glorious days I remember the feelings of the cool Miami Beach breezes enveloping us on our weekly Friday night dances in the patio of our high school. All who attended seemed hypnotized with feelings of a pervasive feeling of at-one-ment in which we collectively bathed in what was then and even now experienced as our own unique mixture of heroin- like- atmosphere. This natural high was experienced by many of us as nothing short of pure unadulterated nostalgia. Nostalgia then and now was like our living in a collective commune protecting us from what probably would have been experienced as overwhelming normal adolescent pain if we had been open to feeling it.  I was especially nostalgic remembering my self and four other guys daring to form a small combo good enough to play at all of the school dances. We even played well enough that every New Years Eve a Miami Beach Hotel hired us to perform. Our Small combo consisted of Drums (Marvin Guccion), Bass (John Schaffer), Trombone (Peter Weill), Trumpet (Kenny Kupper) and Piano (Gibbs Williams). Unknowingly we had no knowledge that we were on the cutting edge of what would soon be an explosion of worldwide bands.           In is in this memorable context that I wish to share an album of some of those unforgettable songs which best seem to celebrate the richness not only of those glorious days from the 9th to the 12th grade, but all the years that have too quickly passed - as well as the years that are yet to come. It is unfortunate that we never recorded our iconic sounds. The best I can offer with the goal in mind of capturing the sounds we made are my original arrangements made on my Yamaha synthesizer. The songs we played were standards from the forties and fifties. I have titled this compilation Nostalgia.                                "NOSTALGIA" -  65 th REUNION - MIAMI BEACH HIGH SCHOOL - CLASS of 55Album1 Moon Over Miami , Ebb Tide, Star Dust, It Might As Well Be Spring, Teguilla, The Hucklebuck, Five Foot Two, Somewhere Along the Way, Im In The Mood For Love, Again, Blue Moon, Miami Beach Rhumba, Because of You, Rock Around the Clock, Down By The Riverside, Tammy's In Love, Where Is Your Heart, Don't Blame Me, If I Loved You, I'll Take Manhattan, The Man I Love, A Secret Love, Autumn Leaves, Summer Time, Mona LIsa, Take the A Train, Album 2Perfidia, It's No Sin, It Had To Be You, For Me And My Gal, Thrill Me, You're Just In Love, Yellow Bird, Canadian Sunset, A Taste Of Honey, Too Young, Saint Louis Blues, My Foolish Heart, You Belong To Me, Sleepy Time Gal, Body and Soul, The Nearness Of You, Misty, Sweet Georgia Brown, Blue Skies, Tenderly, Some Enchanted Evening, Bali High, Bewitched, Once Upon A Time, As Time Time Goes By, Aways, Fight Song Of The Miami Beach Hight Marching Band A and B.       I know all was not perfect then as we were all struggling to survive adolescence so those days were hardly always serene. Yet, there was, and still is for me and I imagine for many of my class mates, a certain undeniable 'specialness' about our class which for many of us still acts like a permanent magnet pulling us back again and again to re-unite.       As for me, if we had been recognized as ground-breaking I am certain our lives at least vocationally would have taken a much different route. However, I can honestly say that I am happy to being a still practicing psychoanalyst in New York City - a happily married husband and father having started our own dynasty of four grandchildren. 

Thru It All
EP 7 I Justin Mehr and Kam Mehr - The importance of family, sleeping on training tables with towels as blankets, and always being somewhere along the way

Thru It All

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2021 66:29


In the seventh episode of the Thru It All Podcast, we have Justin and Kam Mehr. We get into how much they value family and understanding that all they need is each other in this life. We also hear the days of living in a single room together with no kitchen, a plug-in stove, and one car while commuting each day to UCI. The days when Justin was sleeping on training tables while using towels as blankets and when Kam was walking in the rain with water up to his ankles, realizing we are all just somewhere along the way. Incredible episode with these guys, and as always thank you for tuning in! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Maureen From Quarantine
Pop-Up Podcast - Somewhere along the PCH in Hobson County - Vegan Power Nachos

Maureen From Quarantine

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2021 6:58


Maureen's Pop-Up Podcast shines the light from "Somewhere Along The Pacific Coast Highway in Hobson County" - Recipe for Power Vegan Nachos

Stars in the Rafters
15. After the sky weeps

Stars in the Rafters

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2020 27:06


1. The Shortest Day / The Open Door - Julie Vallimont (Brattleboro, VT). These two tunes by Julie feature Yann Falquet on guitar, Mark Roberts on banjo, Katie McNally on fiddle, and Julie on accordion and can be found on her album Dark Sky, Bright Stars. www.julievallimont.com  2. A strange feather, by Hafiz. Read by Charis Boke (Springfield, VT).  3. Somewhere Along the Road - Bob Mills (Montague, MA). Bob says, “This was written by Les Barker of England, who is known more for punny poems of the sort to elicit groans. I met Les in the late 90s in Albuquerque and found he was a much deeper poet than that, and then heard this song from June Tabor... which is about as deep as it goes.”  4. Journey, by Edna St. Vincent Millay. Read by Julie Vallimont (Brattleboro, VT), with D modal improvisation by Aaron Marcus (Montpelier, VT) on their tune “Meg and Jay.”  https://aaronmarcus.bandcamp.com/releases5. Testimony - Brendan Taaffe (Brattleboro, VT). This song, by Ali Burns, is an unreleased recording of a Bright Wings Chorus performance. www.brendantaaffe.com  6. An excerpt from The Prophet, by Kahlil Gibran. Read by Julie Vallimont (Brattleboro, VT).  7. After the Sky Weeps - Casey Murray and Molly Tucker (Boston, MA). Casey says, “This is a tune I wrote this spring after a rainstorm when I was feeling sad and thinking about how our planet could also be mourning as well. This tune is about the feeling of what might come after tears or sadness, such as release, hope, or emptiness. We originally arranged this tune for our housemates while we quarantined together, an ensemble of violin, viola, and three cellos.” https://caseymurraymusic.wixsite.com/home  The opening music is “The Pearl in Sorrow’s Hand” by Julie Vallimont, from her album Dark Sky, Bright Stars. Produced by Julie Vallimont. Mixed and mastered by Dana Billings. All content courtesy of the artists, all rights reserved. This series is supported in part by the Country Dance and Song Society, NEFFA, and Pinewoods Camp.

Women and Words
Women and Words: Kathleen Knowles reads an excerpt from Somewhere Along the Way

Women and Words

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2019 3:52


Pick up a copy of Somewhere Along the Way by Kathleen Knowles!

Unsung Podcast
Episode 92 (Part 2) - Somewhere Along the Highway by Cult of Luna

Unsung Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2019 52:25


You can find part one here: https://www.unsungpod.net/episodes/episode-92-somewhere-along-the-highway-by-cult-of-luna-part-1 Now it’s time for part two. After some lively discussion about their discography we pick things up as Chris talks about how fans generally rank their records, which then moves on to talk about the band’s status within metal music today. Weaver also talks about why he loves this record so much and we give the whole thing a good once over to boot. For many it’s a toss up between Salvation and Somewhere Along the Highway as to which is Cult of Luna’s best work. Do you think this record is the one for our discography? Vote below!" As our first proper foray into post-metal, we’d love to know what other albums of this kind you’d love for us to cover. So do let us know!

Unsung Podcast
Episode 92 (Part 1) - Somewhere Along the Highway by Cult of Luna

Unsung Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2019 49:47


Hey, look guys, sometimes we can be relevant to current musical trends! If those trends are simply the result of us covering bands who have just released new albums… This week we cover one of Dave’s all time top 3 favourite bands, a band he reckons haven’t produced a bad record. A band called Cult of Luna. Amongst the die hards, the title of best Cult of Luna album swithers between this and Salvation, the album directly before this one. Salvation marked the band entering new territory, incorporating more dynamics, augmenting their post-metal vibes with elements from post and prog rock. Somewhere Along the Highway those is where they really took it up a gear. In part one, we talk about the band’s history, laying the groundwork for why we think this is the best album from an unsung band. Part two can be found here: https://www.unsungpod.net/episodes/episode-92-part-2-somewhere-along-the-highway-by-cult-of-luna

Leaning Toward Wisdom
Somewhere Along The Way… (5023)

Leaning Toward Wisdom

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2019 26:49


 Somewhere along the way is a terrific lyric and song title by the band, DAWES. Click play on that video and give it a listen. These are the last lyrics to the song... But somewhere along the way I started to smile again I don't remember when Somewhere along the way Things will turn out just fine I know it's true this time So many things happen somewhere along the way. The older we get, the further up the trail we travel. Somewhere along the way just about anything and everything happens. Things we didn't bargain for. Other things we caused. Intentionally. Unintentionally. Every life consists of the good, the bad, the ugly and the beautiful. It's the dramatic contrasts that make up every life. Life may be a highway, but it's not quite like that open, clear and straight stretch. Well, not for long. Our lives have bumps, twists, turns, potholes and hazards. Unlike Waze, which warns us, life doesn't always provide ample notice. But today I'm not concentrating on the downside. Or the unexpected drama. Instead, I'm thinking of the things we've been able to figure out somewhere along the way. The lessons we learned. The growth we experienced. All because we're on this highway of our life with more road ahead of us to traverse. Feeling the need, if not the urgency, to get it even more figured out so we can have the best journey possible. Today, and I suppose every day, it should be about our collective efforts to help each other figure it out so we can make the trip profitable, impactful and memorable. Do you know what's mostly missing from that featured image for today's show? People. There are no people in that image and that makes the trip boring, unprofitable and pretty worthless. This morning I had a long breakfast meeting with one of my former clients - one of my very favorite former clients. We spent considerable time talking about relationships and why we matter to each other. Not just he and I, but why so many people in our lives matter. We both know it's because somewhere along the way we needed somebody, and somewhere along the way, we were needed by somebody. Let's face it. It's not all sunshine and rainbows. There's a considerable amount of hatred, bigotry, and judgment. Somewhere along the way, we lost our compassion. Somewhere along the way, grace gave way to harsh condemnation. Somewhere along the way many of us lost our way in how to build meaningful relationships with others. Somewhere along the way we lost our willingness to cut each other some slack. Somewhere along the way we lost our curiosity to confirm whether our assumptions or conclusions were accurate or not. Somewhere along the way we lost our way toward living more deeply honest lives, opting instead for Internet fame measured by followers, shares and likes. Somewhere along the way we lost our humanity. Our hearts grew colder, more judgmental and bitter. Resentment overtook us and somewhere along the way we embraced feeling victimized. We surrendered our hearts and our control over our own choices. Of course, we didn't all lose it. Or surrender it. But it's growing increasingly difficult to guard our hearts and protect ourselves from the hatred, intolerance and harsh judgment. Somewhere along the way lots of people got lost. I watched Operation Toussaint on Amazon Prime the other day. It's a documentary about Tim Ballard, an ex-Homeland Security officer who is now the founder and CEO of Operation Underground Railroad, a non-profit dedicated to rescuing enslaved children. According to Tim, the population of enslaved people is higher today than at any other time in human history. According to AntiSlavery.org, there are an estimated 5 million children enslaved throughout the world. That number proves the high demand of sick people willing to sell, buy and trade children for sex or work. Somewhere along the way these people stopped behaving as humans with care, concern, and compassion for children.

My Camino - the podcast
The gentle soul Theri K came into my life in April in San Anton

My Camino - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2018 36:20


The award-winning Australian filmmaker Bill Bennett has made a film about intuition. PGS the Way - Intuition is Your Personal Guidance System. The book of the movie is out this week. We were in Spain this year to shoot the video for Somewhere Along the Way (the Camino Song) and Bill spotted a young woman on the Camino. This is her story.......

My Camino - the podcast
The launch of Somewhere Along the Way (the Camino Song)

My Camino - the podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2018 26:55


My song Somewhere Along the Way (the Camino Song) was launched on July 26 by Alan Jones, Australia's #1 radio host. Alan tells the story of how the song came to life. Listeners called in to tell him what they think. The Camino provides!!!! danmullinsmusic.com

Sermons@FLC
Sermon: Somewhere Along the Spectrum of Hope - Day of Pentecost (B)

Sermons@FLC

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2018 12:32


Pr. Jon Niketh, preaching On the fiftieth day of Easter we celebrate the Spirit, through whom and in whom the people of God are created and re-created. Pentecost is sometimes called the church’s birthday, but might more appropriately be called its baptism day, since the gift of the Spirit is the fullness of baptism. Ezekiel’s vision shows the Spirit resurrecting and re-creating not just individuals but a whole people. Ezekiel 37:1-14 Life to dry bones Acts 2:1-21 Filled with the Spirit to tell God’s deeds John 15:26-27; 16:4b-15 Christ sends the Spirit of truth

Kitchen Party Ceilidh
KPC 2014 05 09 Podcast

Kitchen Party Ceilidh

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2017 59:20


Our forty-second episode, which aired on May 9, 2014, and featured part two of our in-studio visit with Cathie Ryan. The Bonny Men - The Jigs, The Bonny Men Battlefield Band - Ely Parker/Miss Martin's Wedding/The Primrose Lassies/Mr. Galloway Goes to Washington, The Road of Tears Kevin Crawford - Tommy's Mazurkas, In Good Company Martin Hayes & Dennis Cahill - My Love Is In America, The Lonesome Touch Cathie Ryan - The Wild Flowers, The Farthest Wave Cathie Ryan - Mo Nion O, Through Wind and Rain Interview with Cathie Ryan Cathie Ryan - Grandma's Song, performed live in-studio Cathie Ryan - Roisin Dubh, performed live in-studio Cathie Ryan - Somewhere Along the Road, Somewhere Along the Road Hogeye Navvy - Away Rio, Based On A True Story Jura Ceilidh Band with Jerry Holland - Boo Baby's Lullaby, A Trip To Cape Breton

washington somewhere along cathie ryan
Do The Work
Somewhere along the way, this got REALLY easy... DO THE WORK - Day 202

Do The Work

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2017 7:51


DO THE WORK PODCAST: A daily documentary of my life, behind Permaculture Voices blending together fatherhood, business, organization, and life hacking to make it all work.   Produced by podcaster, entrepreneur and dad of three daughters - Diego Footer. Support the show at http://www.permaculturevoices.com/support Listen to more episodes at http://www.permaculturevoices.com/support

workday along the way somewhere along diego footer permaculturevoices
Permaculture Voices
DTW202: Somewhere along the way, this got REALLY easy... DO THE WORK - Day 202

Permaculture Voices

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2017 7:51


DO THE WORK PODCAST:   A daily documentary of my life, behind Permaculture Voices blending together fatherhood, business, organization, and life hacking to make it all work.  Like a VLOG, but only audio.   Support the show at www.permaculturevoices.com/support

vlog workday along the way somewhere along permaculturevoices
Woodsongs Vodcasts
Woodsongs 730: The Makem & Spain Brothers and Runa

Woodsongs Vodcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2014 77:31


THE MAKEM & SPAIN BROTHERS are song collectors in the spirit of their forefathers preserving old folk songs and introducing a new generation to this rich musical history. The Makem's continue the lineage of one of Irish music's dynasties, begun by their grandmother Sarah Makem and father Tommy Makem, who is now considered an icon. The Spain Brothers learned Irish songs at their father's knee. This band of brothers have honed their craft over nearly two decades of international performances and are now a road-tested Irish vocal group. A host of various instruments and five male vocals, using precise three-part harmonies blend perfectly for what many describe as a wall of sound. RUNA draws on the diverse musical backgrounds of its band members and offers a contemporary and refreshing approach to traditional and more recently composed Celtic material. This award winning ensemble includes members that hail from Philadelphia, Dublin, Canada and Louisville, KY and have played with Solas, Riverdance, Slide, Clannad, Fiddlers' Bid, Moya Brennan, Eileen Ivers, Hazel O'Conner, Full Frontal Folk, Keith & Kristyn Getty, Barc�, T�ada, and the Guy Mendilow Band. The band won recently won an Independent Music Awards for Best Song in World/Traditional Category. The band recently released their third album, 'Somewhere Along the Road'.