10at10 Club
Main Discussion Area => Regional 10@10's across the time zones! => Topic started by: RGMike on July 15, 2008, 09:01:12 AM
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Woo Hoo! Mr Simon's on the Ceiling -- or is it the floor? BOS either way.
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Woo Hoo! Mr Simon's on the Ceiling -- or is it the floor?
Figured you'd be pleased to get that one.
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VHM the 'oo -- saw a cool docu on VHI Classic last nite about the making of Who's Next.
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VHM the 'oo -- saw a cool docu on VHI Classic last nite about the making of Who's Next.
I thought for sure you'd pick up on the line about "He-man drag in a glittering ballroom".
Remember seeing this a few years later and realizing that Sting was the Bellboy?
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BOS The Getaway segueing into "Outlaw Man".
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VHM the 'oo -- saw a cool docu on VHI Classic last nite about the making of Who's Next.
I thought for sure you'd pick up on the line about "He-man drag in a glittering ballroom".
Remember seeing this a few years later and realizing that Sting was the Bellboy?
in the movie version, yeah. And Ray Winstone (now famous for Beowulf) is Jimmy's friend Kevin.
OMFG, Iggles covering David Blue's "Outlaw Man" -- BOS2FRA.
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That Eagles was new to me. VHM; sounded like Lindsey Buckingham on one of his unhinged Tusk trips.
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BOS3 Rev. Al -- lawdamercy!
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Take me by the hand, Rev. Al!
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That Eagles was new to me. VHM; sounded like Lindsey Buckingham on one of his unhinged Tusk trips.
from Wiki:
David Blue (February 18, 1941—December 2, 1982), born Stuart David Cohen, was an American singer-songwriter and actor. He was an integral part of the Greenwich Village folk music scene in New York, which included Bob Dylan, Phil Ochs, Dave Van Ronk, Tom Paxton, and Eric Andersen. Blue is perhaps best known for writing the song "Outlaw Man" for the Eagles, which was included on their 1973 Desperado album, as well as released as their second single from it. Blue's original version of "Outlaw Man" was the lead track of his own Nice Baby And The Angel album, issued on CD (with the entire David Blue catalogue) in 2007 on Wounded Bird Records.
In 1975 Blue joined Dylan's Rolling Thunder Revue and he appeared in Renaldo and Clara, the 1978 movie that was filmed during that tour. Blue acted in other films including, The American Friend (directed by Wim Wenders, 1977), The Ordeal Of Patty Hearst (a 1979 TV movie) and Human Highway (by Neil Young, 1982).
He died of a heart attack when he was 41 years old, while jogging in Washington Square Park in New York City.
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VHM ABB, goin' south -- didn't we hear this recently?
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VHM an only-from-Ginger track: John Martyn, "May You Never".
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BOS3 Bonnie, covering Randy Newman's "Guilty" a year before he released his own version.
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uh-oh, Bowie's pulling the waiters again.
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"Jean Genie" is perhaps my least favorite of Bowie's singles. Just didn't have the oomph of his other work of the period.
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Conjunction Junction, what's yo' function? Playin' "Mind Games", obviously. BOS4 John.
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post-set question: I wonder how many people still think Spoon's "Don't You Evah" is Beck. I sure did for many weeks.