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Chad Cromwell was born in Paducah, Kentucky, on June 14th, 1957. When he was three years old his family moved to Memphis, Tennessee, where he grew up. He started playing drums at the age of eight, wearing headphones as he played along to records in an upstairs room of his parents' home. By the age of twelve he was playing in garage bands in the local neighborhood. Among Chad's early influences were drummer Al Jackson and the artists of Stax Records, and artists such as Al Green on Willie Mitchell's Memphis based label, Hi Records. Jim Stewart, founder of Stax Records, along with Bobby Manuel, started a production company called The Daily Planet after the sale of Stax. Chad "hung out" and subsequently worked for The Daily Planet and learned more about rhythm and recording than anywhere else thus far. In fact, Jim and Bobby were key influences on Chad's style of drumming. In 1975, upon graduating high school, Chad flew to London to join two Memphians who already had gigs. Dave Cochran was playing bass for Chris Spedding, and Robert Johnson (not the legendary) was playing with Jon Entwhistle in Ox. Robert had been offered a record deal with Elton John's label, Rocket Records, and called fellow Memphian, Chad, along with David Cochran to record as Lash LaRue. Chad also got an "education" with Larry Raspberry & The Highsteppers, a very high powered rhythm and blues band. This was his first extensive touring band (piled into the back of a van, pulling a trailer). *******SUBSCRIBE/RATE/REVIEW!!! www.richredmond.com/listen The Rich Redmond Show is sponsored by: Big Dot Lighting - Commercial LED Lighting Specialists and Bruce Cline Home Loans & Mortgage Refinance | Movement Mortgage www.musiciansmortgage.com Through associations with a recording studio in Memphis, Chad caught an ear on the West Coast. He started playing with legendary guitarist Joe Walsh in 1986, a collaboration which produced two albums, Got Any Gum? and Ordinary Average Guy, and resulted in multiple US and worldwide tours. The following year, 1987, Chad got the call to record with one of the world's most prolific songwriters, Neil Young. These sessions became Neil Young & The Bluenotes. After touring to promote this record, and producing MTV's 'Video of the Year,' "This Note's For You," Neil's interest circled back to 3-piece Rock & Roll which led to the New York and San Francisco recording sessions that ultimately became the album Freedom. In 1990, Chad moved to Nashville, got married and started a family. Richard Bennett and Tony Brown were among the first producers to call in Chad for sessions in Nashville. Richard and Tony have been extremely helpful in helping Chad to create a very successful recording career. Formal recognition from his peers came in 1996 when Chad was nominated for the Nashville Music Awards as Chad's career has seen him in the studio and on stage/TV/touring with an impressive list of major recording artists. In addition to those already mentioned, Chad has worked with Willie Nelson, Jackson Browne, Boz Scaggs, Wynonna, Bonnie Raitt and Peter Frampton. Chad recorded and toured with Mark Knopfler for the ten years. His playing can be heard on each and every solo recording of Knopfler's including his most recent Shangri La. During the Summer of 2006, Chad toured with Crosby, Stills,Nash and Young. Chad performed on Neil Young's Heart of Gold Movie directed by Johnathan Demme. Chad spent 2006 recording and touring with Neil Young and CSNY's "Freedom of Speech Tour". Chad also recorded tracks featured on a new box set release These Days by acclaimed country music star Vince Gill. Some Things That Came Up: -Playing live versus recording -Lightning in a bottle -Hearing the nuances of the players across multiple artists -Ed Sullivan show inspired Chad -Meeting his wife via Joe Walsh -Eddie Izzard, "Death or Cake” bit -Playing for Joe the very first time without a rehearsal -Nashville celebs are just regular people, except the ones who aren't -Chad's encounter with Sting -Getting into Film and TV composition -Thick skin and persevering through the storms and fires of life -Rollin Stone “Unknown Legends” piece -A+R for Craviotto drums with Sam Bacco -Getting Little Richard's autograph -The best martini in LA Socials: @chad.cromwell 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
This week, we’re taking a look at one of the manliest flicks ever created – Mercenary Fighters starring Peter Fonda and Reb Brown‘s guttural scream! Plus, we listened to the utter misfire that is Neil Young – here backed by the Bluenotes – playing horn tinged soul on This Note’s For You. Joining us to talk about these fine specimens is Matt Bahen, of The Schomberg Fair – one of the Toronto independent music scene’s greatest bands. Be sure to check out their website, and listen to some of their tunes. You can also check out Matt’s incredible paintings as well. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/time-bandits/message
We’re playing 28 jams on episode 61, and 20 of them nominees for Jam of the Year. So listen on Soundcloud while you can! In other news, Bo ran into Kelly if it Counts IRL, and it was weird! Intro: “Supposed To Do” - Ta-ku Jam of the year in: “Put Your Money on Me” - Arcade Fire Jam of the year out: “Running Back” - Wale ft. Lil Wayne Jam of the year in: “I’m the One” - DJ Khaled ft. Justin Bieber, Quavo, Chance the Rapper, and Lil Wayne Jam of the year out: “My Crew (Woo)” - Cadence Weapon Jam of the year in: “Let Me Breathe” - Action Bronson Jam of the year out: “Legend Has It” - Run the Jewels Jam of the year in: “Cruiser” - The Stevens Jam of the year out: “Gummy” - Brockhampton Jam of the year in: “Bad and Boujee” - Migos ft. Lil Uzi Vert Jam of the year out: “Tonite” - LCD Soundsystem Jam of the year in: “Soak” - Zola Jesus Jam of the year out: “Be Here Now” - The Mynabirds Road trip jam in: “Hit Em Up Style” - Carolina Chocolate Drops Casey’s road trip jam out: “Last One Out of Liberty City” - Less Than Jake Jam of the year in: “Rock and Roll McDonald’s” - Wesley Willis Jam of the year out: “Bagbak” - Vince Staples Jam of the year in: “Marlon Brando” - Alex Cameron Jam of the year out: “Truth” - Kamasi Washington Side Bar: “The Beautiful People” - Marilyn Manson and “Black Skinhead” - Kanye West Jam of the year in: “Another Weekend” - Ariel Pink Jam of the year out: “Once Upon a Time” - The Diplomats Neil Young jam in: “Down by the River” - Neil Young and Crazy Horse Casey’s Neil Young jam out: “Razor Love” - Neil Young Bo’s Neil Young cop out: “This Note’s for You” - Neil Young Jam of the year in: “Forever War” - Meteor For Casey’s jam of the year and The JOTY, you’ve got to listen to the end, y’all. (304) 518-JAMS leave a message
Prof. Jan Toporowski (SOAS University of London) The publication of Anwar Shaikh’s book Capitalism, Competition, Conflict, Crises presents an opportunity to reconsider the classical theory of interest, on which much of the structure of the book is based (Shaikh 2016 chapter 10). This Note takes issue with the classical theory of interest that is the foundation of Shaikh’s monetary economics and the theory of bank profit that arises from that classical view. The Note argues that the classical theory of money applies to a very particular capitalist economy in which the monetary sector or banking are external to capitalist production. However, when credit is endogenous to capitalist production, the rate of interest is no longer governed by the rate of profit in the real economy, and the rate of profit of the banking sector does not depend on the actual rate of interest. This Note does not claim to represent Shaikh’s book, or even its core argument. The criticism in this Note proceeds by describing the banking system in which the classical theory of interest holds true and then explaining how, in the credit system that emerged with capitalism, that classical theory of interest does not hold. The Note concludes by arguing that debt and interest perform a purely distributional function in a credit economy, unrelated to the rate of profit from production around which Shaikh builds his analysis. Jan Toporowski is Professor of Economics and Finance at SOAS University of London. Speaker(s): Prof. Jan Toporowski (SOAS), Dr. Gregor Semieniuk (SOAS) Event Date: 01 March 2017 Released by: SOAS Economics Podcast
Rollo May was a brilliant 20th century existential psychologist and this book is a great look at the courage it takes to fully express ourselves as we create our ideal lives. We'll explore the fact that the word courage comes from the French word for "heart" and that, just as the heart pumps blood to all the organs of our body, so does courage pump blood to all our other virtues—without courage, we're effectively dead. This Note is packed with Big Ideas to make sure your courage is beating strong.
Rollo May was a brilliant 20th century existential psychologist and this book is a great look at the courage it takes to fully express ourselves as we create our ideal lives. We'll explore the fact that the word courage comes from the French word for "heart" and that, just as the heart pumps blood to all the organs of our body, so does courage pump blood to all our other virtues—without courage, we're effectively dead. This Note is packed with Big Ideas to make sure your courage is beating strong.
Mathematik, Informatik und Statistik - Open Access LMU - Teil 01/03
This Note generalizes two estimators of the quadratic regression with measurement errors by Fuller and Wolter and Fuller to the polynomial case.