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Episode 98 On the Banks of Plum Creek ch. 30 "Going to Town" Join us this week as we discuss pioneer thrift, flannel, gilt, Nellie's manners (or lack thereof), navy beans, challis, "When Johnny Comes Marching Home", "The Girl I Left behind Me", "My Old Kentucky Home", "Swanee River", and "Home Sweet Home".
Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 912, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: biblical quotes 1: Eccles. 11:1 says cast this "upon the waters: For thou shalt find it after many days". bread. 2: "The serpent beguiled me and I did eat". Eve. 3: She said, "Thou hast mocked me these 3 times and hast not told me wherein thy great strength lieth. Delilah. 4: These 3 friends of Daniel were bound and "cast into the midst of the burning fiery furnace". Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego. 5: Samson took hold of two pillars and said "Let me die with" these people. Philistines. Round 2. Category: jingles all the way 1: "Double your pleasure, double your fun" with this gum. Doublemint gum. 2: "I don't wanna grow up, I'm a" this "kid, they got the best for so much less, you'll really flip your lid". Toys"R"Us. 3: They're "The dogs kids love to bite". Armour hot dogs. 4: This motorcycle company likes to "Let the good times roll". Kawasaki. 5: "Call" this service company, "that's the name, and away go troubles, down the drain". Roto-Rooter. Round 3. Category: gems 1: Many samples of this fossilized resin come from sands that are 40 to 60 million years old. amber. 2: The word gem comes from Latin "gemma", meaning this stage of a flower. a bud. 3: Intaglio and cameo are principal forms of doing this to gemstones. carving (or engraving). 4: Australia's Lightning Ridge is known for its fine black ones. opals. 5: Opal and turquoise are found mostly in parts of world where there is little of this. water (rainfall, moisture). Round 4. Category: just us chickens 1: The name of this enclosure where chickens are confined comes from a middle English word for "basket". coop. 2: New Hampshires and Rhode Island reds usually produce eggs of this color. brown. 3: Chickens are often given grit to replenish the supply of stones in this digestive organ. gizzard. 4: This term is used to refer to a miniature member of a standard chicken breed. bantam. 5: Tyson Foods could tell you that this state leads the USA in broiler production. Arkansas. Round 5. Category: born on the fourth of july 1: 1826:Composed "Jeanie With The Light Brown Hair" and "Oh! Susanna". Stephen Foster. 2: P.T. Barnum's circus partner, he took his first bow on July 4, 1847. (James) Bailey. 3: Take our advice and name the columnists born in 1918 as Esther Pauline Friedman and Pauline Esther Friedman. Abigail Van Buren and Ann Landers. 4: 1807:His Red Shirts captured Sicily and Naples in 1860. Garibaldi. 5: Pennsylvania-born in 1826, he penned "Swanee River" only 25 years later. (Stephen) Foster. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia! Special thanks to https://blog.feedspot.com/trivia_podcasts/
Lux Radio Theatre, sometimes spelled Lux Radio Theater, a classic radio anthology series, was broadcast on the NBC Blue Network (1934–35) (owned by the National Broadcasting Company, later predecessor of American Broadcasting Company [ABC] in 1943–1945); CBS Radio network (Columbia Broadcasting System) (1935–54), and NBC Radio (1954–55). Initially, the series adapted Broadway plays during its first two seasons before it began adapting films. These hour-long radio programs were performed live before studio audiences. The series became the most popular dramatic anthology series on radio, broadcast for more than 20 years and continued on television as the Lux Video Theatre through most of the 1950s. The primary sponsor of the show was Unilever through its Lux Soap brand. Listen to our radio station Old Time Radio https://link.radioking.com/otradio Listen to other Shows at My Classic Radio https://www.myclassicradio.net/Podcast Service I Recommend https://redcircleinc.grsm.io/entertainmentradio7148 Remember that times have changed, and some shows might not reflect the standards of today's politically correct society. The shows do not necessarily reflect the views, standards, or beliefs of Entertainment Radio
Tributes to Jack Moelmann & Bob Dilworth Jack Moelmann website for full bio DTOS website for anyone wishing to make donations Start Name Artist Album Year Comments Baby Face; Carolina In The Morning; My Buddy; Lazy River Jack Moelmann At The Wurlitzer Theatre Pipe Organ [Becko BMC 101] 1973 2-9 Wurlitzer, Shakey's Pizza Parlour, Anaheim, CA; recorded in December 1973 with patrons in the premises 8:02 Where Do I Begin? Jack Moelmann At The Wurlitzer Theatre Pipe Organ [Becko BMC 101] 1973 2-9 Wurlitzer, Shakey's Pizza Parlour, Anaheim, CA; recorded in December 1973 with patrons in the premises 11:01 Satin Doll JaJack Moelmann At Home With... Jack Moelmann 1997 Rodgers/Pipe Hybrid, Jack Moelmann residence; 13 ranks Rodgers, 8 pipe (half Kilgen) 13:51 Stephen Foster: Jeanie With The Light Brown Hair; Swanee River; Beautiful Dreamer; Oh! Susanna; My Old Kentucky Home; Camptown Races Jack Moelmann At Home With... Jack Moelmann 1997 Rodgers/Pipe Hybrid, Jack Moelmann residence; 13 ranks Rodgers, 8 pipe (half Kilgen) 22:19 I've Got You Under My Skin Jack Moelmann Those Were The Days [Fox St. Louis Concert] 2015 4-36 Wurlitzer, Fox Theatre, St. Louis, MO; Concert August 23, 2015, organised by Jack Moelmann 26:30 Tritsch-Tratsch Polka Lyn Larsen Lyn [DTOS-1001] 2 1971 3-?? Kimball, Dickinson High School, Wilmington, Delaware 31:01 Open Your Heart Hector Olivera Hector Back To Back [EAR 10272-73] 2 3-28 Kimball, Dickinson High School, Wilmington, DE; Formerly Boyd Theatre, Philadelphia, PA 34:46 Promenade Clark Wilson ATOS 1992 Philadelphia 1992 3-43 Kimball, Dickinson High School, Wilmington, DE; 4 July 1992 38:08 The Kettle Boils Jonas Nordwall Still Having Fun After All These Years 1995 Jonas Nordwall, Donna Parker, Tom Hazleton; 3-43 Kimball, Dickinson High School (2 consoles), Wilmington, DE 42:08 On The Beautiful Blue Danube Bob Ralston God Bless America [SPOTOMA CD] 2000 3-66 Kimball, Dickinson High School, Wilmington, DE 47:20 Tico Tico Dave Wickerham dave@dickinson [DTOS CD] 2000 3-66 Kimball, Dickinson High School, Wilmington, DE 51:06 Smash And Grab Richard Hills Graduation 2005 3-66 Kimball hybrid, Dickinson High School, Wilmington, DE 53:55 My Old Flame Donnie Rankin Concert: Dickinson High School 2020-03 2020 3-66 Kimball with Dual Consoles, Dickinson High School, Wilmington, DE 58:54 I Let A Song Go Out Of My Heart Tedde Gibson Concert: Dickinson High School 2021-01-30 2021 3-66 Kimball, Dickinson Hight School, Wilmington, DE 61:58 Valse Triste (Sibelius) George Wright GW At Dickinson [Banda 202004] 1979 3-??, Dickinson High School, Wilmington, DE
The biggest names in Hollywood and Broadway recorded for AFRS during the war years, The American Forces Network can trace its origins back to May 26, 1942, when the War Department established the Armed Forces Radio Service (AFRS). The U.S. Army began broadcasting from London during World War II, using equipment and studio facilities borrowed from the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). The first transmission to U.S. troops began at 5:45 p.m. on July 4, 1943, and included less than five hours of recorded shows, a BBC news and sports broadcast. That day, Corporal Syl Binkin became the first U.S. Military broadcasters heard over the air. The signal was sent from London via telephone lines to five regional transmitters to reach U.S. troops in the United Kingdom as they prepared for the inevitable invasion of Nazi-occupied Europe. Fearing competition for civilian audiences the BBC initially tried to impose restrictions on AFN broadcasts within Britain (transmissions were only allowed from American Bases outside London and were limited to 50 watts of transmission power) and a minimum quota of British produced programming had to be carried. Nevertheless AFN programmes were widely enjoyed by the British civilian listeners who could receive them and once AFN operations transferred to continental Europe (shortly after D-Day) AFN were able to broadcast with little restriction with programmes available to civilian audiences across most of Europe (including Britain) after dark. As D-Day approached, the network joined with the BBC and the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation to develop programs especially for the Allied Expeditionary Forces. Mobile stations, complete with personnel, broadcasting equipment, and a record library were deployed to broadcast music and news to troops in the field. The mobile stations reported on front line activities and fed the news reports back to studio locations in London.---------------------------------------------------------------------------Entertainment Radio Stations Live 24/7 Sherlock Holmes/CBS Radio Mystery Theaterhttps://live365.com/station/Sherlock-Holmes-Classic-Radio--a91441https://live365.com/station/CBS-Radio-Mystery-Theater-a57491----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tonight's guest, Billy, had the sightings he's going to talk about on tonight's show about 15 to 16 years ago. At the time, he was living in Swanee County, Florida, near the Swanee River. Until he had his 1st sighting, he didn't believe in Sasquatch. That all changed the day he took his dogs for a walk, in the woods behind his house, though. You know what they say, seeing is believing. At least, that adage holds true for Billy. If you'd like to check out my new Bigfoot show, called "My Bigfoot Sighting," there are two ways to listen. You can listen using your favorite podcast app, like Spotify, Spreaker, etc., or you can use YouTube to listen to episodes of the show. Here's a link to the My Bigfoot Sighting Channel on Spotify...https://open.spotify.com/show/2gomYbQG2gM6gPFakCQYNL?si=M0dm3bDfR_ShTiJcHPWoyw&dl_branch=1And here's a link to Episode 1 of the show on YouTube… https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-VUHN...If you've had a Sasquatch sighting and would like to be a guest on Bigfoot Eyewitness Radio, please go to https://www.BigfootEyewitness.com and submit a report.If you've had a Sasquatch sighting and would like to be a guest on My Bigfoot Sighting, please go to https://www.MyBigfootSighting.com and let me know.If you'd like to help support the show, by buying your own Bigfoot Eyewitness t-shirt or sweatshirt, please visit the Bigfoot Eyewitness Show Store, by going to https://Dogman-Encounters.MyShopify.comThanks, as always, for listening!
In this week's episode, listen with us to Hugh Laurie's version of Swanee River from his 2011 Blues album, Let Them Talk. Shawn and Shawna perform the song as arranged by Hugh, and discuss a brief history of the song itself. If you're interested in blues piano, Shawn has some great tips on how to get started. Before working on this song, we had no idea that actor Hugh Laurie was a musician - and an accomplished one at that. We hope you enjoy listening to and learning about this song as much as we did.
Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 183, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: Lunch Counter Lingo 1: "Whistle berries" refers to these Boston legumes. baked beans. 2: Bow wow and Coney Island both refer to this food. a hot dog. 3: Number that Mel might have called out to say "We're all out of it". 86. 4: The name of this state is slang for maple syrup. Vermont. 5: This beverage is Adam's ale. water. Round 2. Category: Born On The Fourth Of July 1: This newsman was born on July 4, 1943, and not named Jerry Rivers. Geraldo Rivera. 2: P.T. Barnum's circus partner, he took his first bow on July 4, 1847. (James) Bailey. 3: An associate said of this "boss", "There's nothing more limited than a limited partner in the Yankees". Steinbrenner. 4: Take our advice and name the columnists born in 1918 as Esther Pauline Friedman and Pauline Esther Friedman. Abigail Van Buren and Ann Landers. 5: Pennsylvania-born in 1826, he penned "Swanee River" only 25 years later. (Stephen) Foster. Round 3. Category: Poetry Potpourri 1: He married Minnehaha, the "Loveliest of Dacotah Women". Hiawatha. 2: Milton work that begins, "Of man's first disobedience, and the fruit of that forbidden tree...". "Paradise Lost". 3: An 8-line stanza, it's usually the first 8 lines in an Italian sonnet. Octave. 4: Secretary to the Lord Deputy of Ireland, he idealized his boss as a knight in "The Faerie Queene". Edmund Spenser. 5: She described her nervous breakdown in her 1960 poetry collection "To Bedlam and Part Way Back". Anne Sexton. Round 4. Category: The Ocean 1: Ho, ho, ho! The North Pole sits near the center of this ocean. Arctic Ocean. 2: In the open sea where the Labrador Current meets the Gulf Stream, fog makes these even more of a shipping hazard. icebergs. 3: The 2 bodies whose gravitational pull on the Earth has the greatest effect on ocean tides. Sun and Moon. 4: 80% of U.S. lifeguard ocean rescues are prompted by this type of "current" (inaccurately called a "tide"). rips. 5: You cross it going from Mogadishu to the Maldives. Indian Ocean. Round 5. Category: Jazz 1: Known as the "First Lady of Song", she won 13 Grammy Awards, the most by any jazz artist. Ella Fitzgerald. 2: In the title of the album "Diz 'N' Bird In Concert", Diz is Dizzy Gillespie and Bird is this saxophonist. Charlie Parker. 3: In 1964 this jazz great reached the top of the pop charts with his vocal recording of "Hello, Dolly!". Louis Armstrong. 4: Induction into the Jazz Hall of Fame in Orlando is determined by a poll conducted by this leading jazz publication. Down Beat. 5: On April 7, 1986 she received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame -- nearly 27 years after her death. Billie Holiday. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia!
Jeni Slotchiver — American Heritage (ZOHO) Jump to CD giveaway form “Many people thought that this was the right time to do this,” said pianist Jeni Slotchiver on her new album, American Heritage. “I did it before, but the music was relevant then as it is now. My African American students had long wanted me to record this music. I was concerned with how they are going to take me recording this music. My students said, ‘Just do it. You play it and just record it.'” Slotchiver is a teacher who was born in a small town in South Carolina. She's built a career out of musical exploration and in 2018 she recorded American Heritage but it was delayed due to the pandemic. It pays homage primarily to African American composers of the 19th and early 20th century whose works laid the foundations of later forms of music such as jazz, blues and R&B. How does this music reflect everything from the Civil War to the civil rights movement? “I had a group of three pieces, and I called them ‘my holy water to Trinity.' The pieces were ‘Deep River,' ‘Troubled Water' and ‘Down by the Riverside.' “‘Deep River,' to me, is a story of suffering. ‘Troubled Water' has veiled references to streambeds, and how to avoid the blood hands for enslaved people who might be escaping the deep river. Crossing the river Jordan could mean escaping, getting out of their misery and pain, but can also be going to heaven and leaving all that suffering. ‘Down by the Riverside' existed before the Civil War, but it wasn't published until 1918. That piece became synonymous with freedom in the civil rights movement. “Besides our rich history of indigenous music from the North American Indians, this is our greatest body of American folkloric music. I really hadn't thought of it as that until I learned that ‘Shenandoah' and ‘Swanee River,' what most people think ‘Camptown Races' is, were not American folk songs, but originated as shanty songs. “From 1820 to 1860 when the clipper ships left Baltimore, they had what they call ‘checkered' crews. They were black and white crews. That's where the white sailors and dock workers learned these songs. It just fascinated me. Then I realized everything on the album, except for ‘Union,' came here or transformed itself in some way or another from enslaved people. “I recorded this in 2018 and then the pandemic happened. I maintained a very strong emotional connection to this music, and it's never changed. I've never gotten tired of any of these pieces.” Watch now To hear the rest of my conversation, click on the extended interview above, or download the extended podcast on iTunes or wherever you get your podcasts. Giveaway Giveaway Resources Jeni Slotchiver — American Heritage (Amazon) Jeni Slotchiver (Official site)
Lux Radio Theatre, sometimes spelled Lux Radio Theater, a long-run classic radio anthology series, was broadcast on the NBC Blue Network (1934–35) (owned by the National Broadcasting Company, later predecessor of American Broadcasting Company [ABC] in 1943 /1945); CBS Radio network (Columbia Broadcasting System) (1935-54), and NBC Radio (1954–55). Initially, the series adapted Broadway plays during its first two seasons before it began adapting films. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sherlock Holmes Radio Station Live 24/7 Click Here to Listen https://live365.com/station/Sherlock-Holmes-Classic-Radio--a91441 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/lux-radio-theatre/donations Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Al Jolson in Swanee River!
Excerpt of the 02 Apr 1945 Lux Radio Theatre broadcast of Swanee River. This radio adaptation of the movie biography of songwriter Stephen Foster featured Al Jolson as E.P. Christie, and Dennis Morgan as Stephen Foster. Included in this podcast are two songs from the hour broadcast, "Oh, Susannah!" and "April Showers." The complete broadcast recording, along with other Jolson radio shows, is available at the Official Al Jolson Website at www.jolson.org.
Our second episode brings us to a small town in the Northern part of the U.S. where we, surprisingly, find a deep Blues history. We follow Paramount Records through the peak of success, recording landmark artists that changed Western popular music forever, but this music, at several times, was almost lost forever. We follow the thin thread of events and recent efforts that have gone into preserving this important musical history. Here’s an external link to every Musical Mention in this episode: 0:50 Muddy Waters 0:51 B.B King 0:54 Blind Lemon Jefferson 0:56 Charley Patton 0:57 Skip James 1:09 Blues 1:12 Africa 1:50 Skip James 2:03 Big Bill Broonzy 2:07 Bill Big Broonzy: The Man That Brought The Blues to Britain 2:14 Paramount Records 3:44 Jazz 3:55 Johann Sebastian Bach 3:55 Ludwig Van Beethoven 3:55 Johannes Brahms 3:59 Franz Joseph Haydn 3:59 Wenzel Müller 3:59 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart 4:06 Vaudevillan Performers 4:08 Dixieland Jazz 4:10 Creole Music 4:14 Military Bands 4:49 Al Jolson 6:11 Pop music 6:19 Wisconsin Chair Company 6:28 Phonographs 7:21 Alex Van Der Tuuk 7:31 Paramount’s Rise and Fall 7:55 Classical Music (Western) 8:05 Vaudeville 8:10 Country Music 8:37 Mamie Smith 8:38 Crazy Blues 9:09 Race Records 10:10 J. Mayo “Ink” Williams 10:31 Blues Music 11:15 Bessie Smith 11:17 Jelly Roll Morton 12:31 Alberta Hunter 12:32 Monette Moore 12:53 Blind Lemon Jefferson 13:48 Charley Patton 13:52 Dockery Farms 13:57 Robert Johnson 14:29 Pony Blues 14:31 Banty Rooster Blues 15:10 Swanee River 15:21 Juke Joints 15:46 Delta Blues 16:59 Metal Masters 19:25 Grafton House of Blues 19:34 Angie Mack Riley 19:56 Blues 19:56 Jazz 19:56 Country Music 22:43 PBS History Detective: Paramount Records Episode 22:59 Charley Patton 22:59 Skip James 22:59 Blind Lemon Jefferson 23:27 Louis Armstrong 23:27 Ma Rainey 23:27 Son House 24:28 Delta Blues 24:49 Elvis Presley 25:22 Paramount’s Rise and Fall 25:29 Agram Blues 25:41 Jack White Box Set 25:54 Dean Blackwood 25:55 Revenant Records 27:10 Paramount Box Set #1 27:28 Grammy Award 27:57 The World Music Foundation 28:05 World Music 29:10 Folklore Music 29:18 Zydeco 29:22 Cajun Music 29:36 Rolling Stones 29:41 Love in Vain 30:10 Elmore James 30:01 Howlin’ Wolf 30:04 Muddy Waters 30:28 The Country Blues, by Samuel Charters 30:40 Columbia Records 30:42 Okeh Records 30:43 Paramount Records
Introduction When I was in grade school my classmates and I sang "Old Folks at Home" (also known as "Swanee River"; that’s how I knew it.) Swanee River is a minstrel song written by Stephen Foster in 1851. Since 1935 it has been the official state song of Florida, although in 2008 the original lyrics were revised. Here is the chorus from this 1851 song: “All de world am sad and dreary, Eb-rywhere I roam; Oh, darkeys, how my heart grows weary, Far from de old folks at home!” Stephen Foster, is known as “The Father of American Music” because of the many lyrical and extremely popular songs he wrote, including "Camptown Races", "My Old Kentucky Home", "Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair", and "Beautiful Dreamer". Foster used the Negro dialect of the day for the lyrics. Should a song like this be sung today? No. Should we rip songs like this and the people who wrote and performed them from our history books, to be replaced by accusations of hate and racism? How about people like Robert E. Lee and Kate Smith? No. Not at all. Should we know and learn from our history--all of it? Yes. Of course. And that’s the topic of today’s 10-minute podcast. Continuing Let’s start the discussion by saying that we cannot learn from history if we do not understand it. Insert your favorite quote about learning from history here. That part is clear on its face, yes? And if we distort and twist that history before erasing it, things get even worse. Here is today’s Key Point. And, yes, we are getting to it early. We need to know, to really get it, that people like Stephen Foster, Robert E. Lee and Kate Smith are not hard-core Nazis, KKK riders or even sad little David Duke. They are ordinary people, like you and me. The lesson we need to learn is how to be sufficiently educated, aware and caring to keep evolving as individuals and as a society. We need to be continually evolving and constantly improving. Tearing down statues and reputations while rewriting history books in an effort to make yesterday look like we think it should have been make that learning and evolving impossible. All of us, including the “tear it down” advocates, need to remember that the learning and evolving needs to continue forever. What we do today will be judged through the lens of history tomorrow. And don’t we want future generations to be learning and improving rather than accusing and tearing down the history we create? I hold Robert E. Lee accountable for most of the death and destruction in the Civil War, a war that killed more Americans than all of our other wars put together. General Lee was asked by Abraham Lincoln to head the Union Army, but Lee refused, and proved the wisdom of Lincoln’s request by brilliantly leading the Confederates to victory after victory over the superior but poorly led Union forces. Lee’s mistake was in seeing his loyalty to his state, Virginia, as more important than his loyalty to the United states. At the end of the war, Lee petitioned to have his citizenship restored. Because of a clerical error, it never happened. Kate Smith, had a radio, television, and recording career spanning five decades, which reached its pinnacle in the 1940s. Smith became known as “The Songbird of the South” after her enduring popularity during World War II. Later, sports teams including the Philadelphia Flyers and New York Yankees featured her. I remember how the Flyers thought that having her sing a ringing rendition of “God Bless America” before games was a lucky charm. Ms. Smith was the featured performer in tours that raised the equivalent of $10B (billion) in today’s dollars to fight Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan in WWII. Then came the news of her 1931 recordings of "That's Why Darkies Were Born" and "Pickaninny Heaven." Both songs contained clearly racist lyrics. And they were 2 of 3,000 songs she recorded. At the same time, Smith was noted for having African-American musicians and entertainers on her radio show in ...
Stephen Foster (1826-1864) was America’s first great songwriter and the first to earn his living solely through his music. He composed some 200 songs, including such classics as “Oh! Susanna,” “Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair,” “Old Folks at Home (Way down upon the Swanee River),” and “Camptown Races (Doo-dah! Doo-dah!).” He virtually invented popular music as we recognize it to this day, yet he died at age thirty-seven, a forgotten and nearly penniless alcoholic on the Bowery. The author reveals Foster’s contradictory life while disclosing how the dynamics of nineteenth-century industrialization, westward expansion, the Gold Rush, slavery, and the Civil War infused his music, and how that music influenced popular culture.
100th EPISODE!! This week, the guys sit down with one of their favorite guests, local legendary guitarist and all around amazing human, Leonard Interior. This conversation goes in MANY directions, enjoy. Music break is Django Reinhardt's rendition of the classic, Swanee River. Exec. Produced by Cyrus Poe
Stoneybrook is resplendent with colorful new characters, including Susan, who secretly struggles to find meaning in a world that makes no sense. This week, Jack and Tanner return to some old favorites when they discuss the bees we find in every corner of our lives, what Australians eat for brekky, and the horrifying, ongoing significance of June 10th. Make sure to catch Jack and Tanner's guest appearances on the Real Weird Sisters podcast as well, where they sort the citizens of Stoneybrook into Hogwarts houses. Find that here: http://www.realweirdsisters.com/sortinghatbsc/ Music Credits: "Clair de Lune" by Claude Debussy, performed by Laurens Goedhart "Dubstep Cello | Prelude from Suite No. 1 for Cello" by J.S. Bach, remixed by Emberz Royalty Free Music by Emberz Download: http://www.emberzmusic.com Follow Emberz: http://www.youtube.com/emberzmusic http://www.soundcloud.com/emberzmusic "By the Swanee River” by Arthur Pryor's Band "Spiegel Im Spiegel” by Arvo Pärt
It’s time to get some solid recommendations from Eric Reanimator for great compilations on Episode 19 of Love That Album: The Compilation Edition. Both albums focus on Canadian troubadour Stomping Tom Connors, probably most famous for The Hockey Song. The first album is called Bring Your Own Plywood and features Calgary rock and country artists recording cover versions of songs written by Connors. Artists such as Agriculture Club, Knucklehead, and The Spam Avenger line up to record their favourite tunes from his monstrously large songbook. Then Eric talks about Unreleased Songs from the Vault Collection, Vol. 1 where Connors himself records some of his favourite classic country and folk songs he originally sang when he started out in the fifties. Using just his guitar and voice, he turns his focus to well known and loved songs such as the Darktown Strutter’s Ball, Truck Drivin’ Man, and Swanee River. Originally planned to be a 10 volume set, Connors unfortunately passed away after only the first volume was released.Thanks again to Eric for another fine program. You can download the show by searching for Love That Album in the iTunes store or downloading streaming directly from http://lovethatalbum.blogspot.com Send the show feedback at rrrkitchen@yahoo.com.au (written or mp3 voicemail) or join the Facebook group at http://www.facebook.com/groups/lovethatalbum If you enjoy what you hear, please tell a friend or ten to tune in.
Shrunken Head Lounge Surf Radio Show Running Time: 29 minutes 30 seconds The Women Of Surf!!! 1. The Fashions - Surfin' Back To School (1:44)2. The Honeys - Surfin' Down the Swanee River (1963) (2:17)3. The Beach Girls - He's My Surfin' Guy (1963) (2:31)4. Surf Bunnies - Surf Bunny Beach (2:02)5. ANDREA CARROLL-HEY, BEACH BOY (2:20)6. Dee Dee Sharp - Riding The Waves (2:17)7. Ellie Gee The Jets - Red Corvette (2:41)8. Hal Blaine The Young Cougars - Dance With The Surfin' Band (2:06)9. The Surfer Girls -Draggin' Wagon (2:21)10. The Surfettes - Sammy The Sidewalk Surfer (2:20)11. WESTWOODS- I MISS MY SURFER BOY TOO (2:28)12. Annette Funicello - Surfer boy (2:15)
Not unlike my Swanee in G but a tad different.. I really like rattling this one off for some reason, usually mixed in with April Showers...!
Not unlike my Swanee in G but a tad different.. I really like rattling this one off for some reason, usually mixed in with April Showers...!
Lux Radio Theatre, sometimes spelled Lux Radio Theater, a long-run classic radio anthology series, was broadcast on the NBC Blue Network (1934–35) (owned by the National Broadcasting Company, later predecessor of American Broadcasting Company [ABC] in 1943 /1945); CBS Radio network (Columbia Broadcasting System) (1935-54), and NBC Radio (1954–55). Initially, the series adapted Broadway plays during its first two seasons before it began adapting films. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Sherlock Holmes Radio Station Live 24/7 Click Here to Listen https://live365.com/station/Sherlock-Holmes-Classic-Radio--a91441 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/lux-radio-theatre/donations Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands Privacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy