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Crap Throwing Clavin

What you don't hear in "More Than a Feeling" is pretty amazing...

 

 

Edited by Crap Throwing Clavin
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12 hours ago, Crap Throwing Clavin said:

What you don't hear in "More than a feeling" is pretty amazing...

 

 


That was fun to watch.

Late for work now.

 

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Crap Throwing Clavin

Considered putting this in the food thread, but...

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Also...

Bleu Oyster Smelt

Red Hot Chili Peppers.

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  • 2 weeks later...
Crap Throwing Clavin

Bass and guitar set the tempo.  Oscar Peterson says "okay..." and goes off on an improv across three different blues/swing styles.  This is batshit insane...

 

 

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MothersMilk

Another thread, I forget which one, was discussing the annoying ads out there. If you have an Android phone this is a great browser that takes away those annoying ads. For me it's YouTube that is the prime target on the phone. 

 

Highly recommend this one. It's a fast easy download and you can listen to your favorite full albums all the way through without the bs ads. No disappointments. 

 

https://adblockplus.org/android-install

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On 5/30/2022 at 8:32 PM, Ann said:
“Hello darkness, my old friend…” Everybody knows the iconic Simon & Garfunkel song, but do you know the amazing story behind the first line of The Sounds of Silence?
 
It began 62 years ago, when Arthur “Art” Garfunkel, a Jewish kid from Queens, enrolled in Columbia University. During freshman orientation, Art met a student from Buffalo named Sandy Greenberg, and they immediately bonded over their shared passion for literature and music. Art and Sandy became roommates and best friends. With the idealism of youth, they promised to be there for each other no matter what.
 
Soon after starting college, Sandy was struck by tragedy. His vision became blurry and although doctors diagnosed it as temporary conjunctivitis, the problem grew worse. Finally after seeing a specialist, Sandy received the devastating news that severe glaucoma was destroying his optic nerves. The young man with such a bright future would soon be completely blind.
 
Sandy was devastated and fell into a deep depression. He gave up his dream of becoming a lawyer and moved back to Buffalo, where he worried about being a burden to his financially-struggling family. Consumed with shame and fear, Sandy cut off contact with his old friends, refusing to answer letters or return phone calls.
 
Then suddenly, to Sandy’s shock, his buddy Art showed up at the front door. He was not going to allow his best friend to give up on life, so he bought a ticket and flew up to Buffalo unannounced. Art convinced Sandy to give college another go, and promised that he would be right by his side to make sure he didn’t fall - literally or figuratively.
 
Art kept his promise, faithfully escorting Sandy around campus and effectively serving as his eyes. It was important to Art that even though Sandy had been plunged into a world of darkness, he should never feel alone. Art actually started calling himself “Darkness” to demonstrate his empathy with his friend. He’d say things like, “Darkness is going to read to you now.” Art organized his life around helping Sandy.
 
One day, Art was guiding Sandy through crowded Grand Central Station when he suddenly said he had to go and left his friend alone and petrified. Sandy stumbled, bumped into people, and fell, cutting a gash in his shin. After a couple of hellish hours, Sandy finally got on the right subway train. After exiting the station at 116th street, Sandy bumped into someone who quickly apologized - and Sandy immediately recognized Art’s voice! Turned out his trusty friend had followed him the whole way home, making sure he was safe and giving him the priceless gift of independence. Sandy later said, “That moment was the spark that caused me to live a completely different life, without fear, without doubt. For that I am tremendously grateful to my friend.”
 
Sandy graduated from Columbia and then earned graduate degrees at Harvard and Oxford. He married his high school sweetheart and became an extremely successful entrepreneur and philanthropist.
 
While at Oxford, Sandy got a call from Art. This time Art was the one who needed help. He’d formed a folk rock duo with his high school pal Paul Simon, and they desperately needed $400 to record their first album. Sandy and his wife Sue had literally $404 in their bank account, but without hesitation Sandy gave his old friend what he needed.
 
Art and Paul's first album was not a success, but one of the songs, The Sounds of Silence, became a #1 hit a year later. The opening line echoed the way Sandy always greeted Art. Simon & Garfunkel went on to become one of the most beloved musical acts in history.
 
The two Columbia graduates, each of whom has added so much to the world in his own way, are still best friends. Art Garfunkel said that when he became friends with Sandy, “my real life emerged. I became a better guy in my own eyes, and began to see who I was - somebody who gives to a friend.” Sandy describes himself as “the luckiest man in the world.”
 

 

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1 hour ago, B-Man said:

 

 

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.

 

Umm, didn't the 70's give us Barry Manilow, Disco, and Debbie Boone?

 

Yes, there was GREAT music in the 70's.  But there was a LOT of really bad music that sold a lot of copies.

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7 hours ago, Taro T said:

 

Umm, didn't the 70's give us Barry Manilow, Disco, and Debbie Boone?

 

Yes, there was GREAT music in the 70's.  But there was a LOT of really bad music that sold a lot of copies.

.

I adore Barry Manilow.  

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Crap Throwing Clavin
23 hours ago, Taro T said:

 

Umm, didn't the 70's give us Barry Manilow, Disco, and Debbie Boone?

 

Yes, there was GREAT music in the 70's.  But there was a LOT of really bad music that sold a lot of copies.

 

The big difference between then and now is that there was great music in the '70s, but everything now is shit.

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