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WA2K Radio is now on the air

 
 
Raggedyaggie
 
  1  
Reply Sun 19 Jun, 2005 07:52 pm
Our Letty just told us the song, Edgar. :wink:
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sun 19 Jun, 2005 08:07 pm
Very Happy
0 Replies
 
JLNobody
 
  1  
Reply Sun 19 Jun, 2005 11:25 pm
Well, Letty, Dys arrived safe and unarrested. We talked ourselves (before and after dinner and drinks) into near exhaustion (actually my wife did most of the talking). Dys is off to bed and I'm sitting here thinking that that was a big A2K IN PERSON.
We had a great time with him. As he went in to bed. I shook his hand and said, "It's great to meet you." He answered "You'll get to used to it." I suspect that is vintage Dys.
0 Replies
 
McTag
 
  1  
Reply Mon 20 Jun, 2005 02:53 am
Dys is a caution, and no mistake. Warm regards to him, and other A2K friends.

My "bouffant croot" was boef en croute- did anybody guess it? No
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Mon 20 Jun, 2005 03:42 am
Anne Murray

For almost as long as there has been a viable music industry in Canada, there has been Anne Murray. She was arguably the country's first popular musical artist whose fame transcended the country's national borders. Her tremendous success paved the way for future female Canadian performers like k.d. lang, Celine Dion, Shania Twain, and Alanis Morissette.

Morna Anne Murray was born on June 20, 1945 in the small coal-mining town of Springhill, Nova Scotia. Her father, James Carson Murray, was a physician and her mother Marion, was a registered nurse who chose to focus her life on raising her family. Anne learned her characteristic determination and perseverance from them, and growing up surrounded by five brothers - David, Daniel, Harold, Stewart and Bruce.

Like most teenagers, Anne loved music. It was the age of rock 'n roll, and she'd sing along with favourites like Buddy Holly, Bobby Darin and Connie Francis. But unlike most others her own age, Anne's exposure to music extended far beyond rock, to a wide variety of other music styles, including the classics, country, gospel, folk, even her parents', Patti Page, Bing Crosby and Rosemary Clooney albums. She loved them all.

. Anne studied piano for six years, and at 15 began taking classical voice lessons. Every Saturday morning for two years, Anne would get on a bus and ride for two hours to her lesson. Then she'd visit with her grandparents until it was time to take the two-hour trip back home. Her mother recalls "I think it was grade 11, at her graduation that she sang 'Ava Maria'. Anne noticed people were crying in the audience. That's when she knew that her voice must be good." After finishing high school, Anne spent a year at Mt. Saint Vincent, a Catholic women's college in Halifax, then entered the University of New Brunswick in Fredericton to study Physical Education. Her studies didn't diminished her passion for music, and in her second year at university, her friends managed to convince her to audition for Singalong Jubilee, a popular Canadian summer television show shot in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Anne didn't get the job, since there were already enough altos in the cast, but she did make an impression.

Two years later, co-host and associate producer Bill Langstroth tracked her down and asked her to appear on the show. She did, and at the end of the summer, she began teaching high school phys-ed in Summerside, Prince Edward Island. But her first year of teaching also became her last when she was offered a spot on a television show called "Let's Go". She decided to give show business a try.

Anne soon became a popular fixture on Singalong Jubilee, and even recorded an album with the cast from the show. The show's musical director, Brian Ahern, convinced Anne to record her first solo album in 1968. Accepting the offer, Murray recorded and released her debut album, "What About Me". The record was well-received and popular for an independent album, thereby earning the attention of Capitol Records, whose Canadian division signed her to a long-term contract in 1969.

In the fall of 1969 Capitol released "This Is My Way", her first album on the Capitol label. It was this LP that produced her breakthrough hit single, "Snowbird", and the first time in history that an American gold record was awarded to a solo Canadian female.

Following the success of "Snowbird," Anne moved to Los Angeles, where she began to regularly appear on Glen Campbell's syndicated television show. It was a chaotic and exhausting time, and Anne felt she was burning out. She didn't like the Californian lifestyle, and eventually returned to Canada.

For a while, it looked like "Snowbird" would be Anne Murray's only big hit, since none of her follow-up singles gained much attention; only "A Stranger in My Place" cracked the Top 40. A cover of Gordon Lightfoot's "Cotton Jenny" in early 1972 returned her to the higher regions of the country Top 40, peaking at number 11, while its follow-up "Danny's Song" became a Top Ten hit on both the pop and country charts in early 1973. Following two minor country hits, she returned to the Top Ten early in 1974 with "Love Song." The single was followed by two Top Ten country hits -- the number one, "He Thinks I Still Care" and "Son of a Rotten Gambler."

Following those two success, Murray spent a number of years struggling to crack either the pop or country Top 40; during this time, she concentrated on raising a family (she married Bill Langstroth and had a son) more than her musical career.

Anne entered her period of greatest commercial success in 1978, as a cover of the Everly Brother's "Walk Right Back" climbed to number four on the country charts, followed shortly afterward by "You Need Me," her biggest hit since "Snowbird". The single reached number four on the country charts and topped the pop charts, going gold by the end of the year and earning her another Grammy Award.

For the next eight years, she had a virtually uninterrupted string of Top Ten country hits, highlighted by nine number one hits: "I Just Fall in Love Again" (1979), "Shadows In The Moonlight" (1979), "Broken Hearted Me" (1979), "Could I Have This Dance" (1980), "Blessed Are the Believers" (1981), "A Little Good News" (1983), "Just Another Woman in Love" (1984), "Nobody Loves Me like You Do" (1984) and "Now And Forever (You and Me)" (1986). Murray prospered during the era of Urban Cowboy, since her music drew as much pop and easy listening as it did from country.

Murray's sales began to decline in the latter half of the '80s, primarily due to the shifting tastes of the country audience, who were beginning to seek out harder-edged, new performers. Nevertheless, she maintained a dedicated following during the late '80s and '90s through her occasional recordings and her concerts. ("Feed This Fire" became a surprise Top Ten hit in the summer of 1990).

In her career, Anne has stacked up a mountain of awards, including four Grammys, three American Music Awards, three Country Music Association Awards, three Canadian Country Music Association Awards, 25 Juno Awards, and an induction into the Juno Hall of Fame in 1993.

Anne is a Companion of the Order of Canada, the highest honour that can be awarded to a Canadian civilian. She was the first inductee into the Canadian Association of Broadcasters' Hall of Fame. She has her own star at Hollywood and Vine, and on Canada's Walk of Fame on King Street in Toronto and has been inducted into Nashville's Walkway of Stars.

With all this success, Anne wanted to give something back to her community. So when her hometown of Springhill needed to boost the local economy after the coal mines closed, Anne was happy to support their effort to foster tourism, and to lend her name and memorabilia to the Anne Murray Centre, which opened in 1989. Brimming with hundreds of photographs, awards and memorabilia representing a lifetime of achievement, the Centre traces Anne's life from her early years in the tiny coal-mining community to her present stature as a world-acclaimed vocalist.

In 1997, Anne was inducted into the Canadian Association of Broadcaster's Hall of Fame. In 1999, Anne finished work on her 31st CD, "What a Wonderful World"; a double album of inspirational songs which includes a duet with her 20-year-old daughter Dawn. In the meantime, Anne Murray continues to do what she loves best - perform live.

"Where do I fit?" she asks, "I don't know. I've tried to erase any labels. I'm a singer. When I sing a country song, I'm a country singer. When I sing a pop song, I'm a pop singer. I've even had singles where one side was a pop hit and the flip side a country hit."

Anyone who's seen Anne Murray in concert knows that she makes a special connection with her audience. "I think that when you leave a performance, you should feel that you know the performer a little better." Just one more reason why, even after over 30 years, she continues to delight her fans - both old and new alike.

http://www.classicbands.com/murray.html

COULD I HAVE THIS DANCE
Anne Murray

I'll always remember the song they were playin'
The first time we danced and I knew
As we swayed to the music and held to each other
I fell in love with you

CHORUS
Could I have this dance for the rest of my life
Would you be my partner every night
When we're together it feels so right
Could I have this dance for the rest of my life

I'll always remember that magic moment
When I held you close to me
As we moved together, I knew forever
You're all I'll ever need.

CHORUS

CHORUS
0 Replies
 
Raggedyaggie
 
  1  
Reply Mon 20 Jun, 2005 05:23 am
Good Morning WA2K. It's a beautiful day here. Hope you all are enjoying the same.
Nice Murray bio, Bob. I love that song, but my favorite Anne Murray song is You Needed Me.

Some June 20 birthday celebs:

1819 Jacques Offenbach Cologne, French composer (Tales of Hoffmann) died 1880
1905 Lillian Hellman, playwright/author (New Orleans, LA; died 1984)
1909 Errol Flynn actor (Captain Blood, Robin Hood, Against All Flags) ; died 1959
1924 Chet Atkins, guitarist (Luttrell, TN; died 2001)
Audie Murphy, World War II hero and actor (Kingston, TX; died 1971)
1928 Martin Landau actor (Mission Impossible, Space 1999, Tucker)
1931 Olympia Dukakis, actress (Lowell, MA) (Moonstruck, The Cemetery Club; Steel Magnolias
1933 Danny Aiello, actor (New York, NY) (Moonstruck)
1934 Martin Landau, actor (New York, NY) (Crimes and Misdemeanors, Oscar, Ed Wood)
1942 Brian Wilson, singer/songwriter and member of the Beach Boys (Hawthorne, CA)
1945 Anne Murray, singer (Springhill, Nova Scotia, Canada)
1946 Bob Vila, handyman/TV personality (Miami, FL)
Andre Watts, pianist (Nuremberg, Germany)
1950 Lionel Richie, singer/songwriter (Tuskegee, AL)
1952 John Goodman, actor (St. Louis, MO)
1953 Cyndi Lauper, singer (New York, NY)
1967 Nicole Kidman, actress (Honolulu, HI)

http://www.itickets.com/parts/aimages/1232.jpghttp://www.boldoutlaw.com/images/flynn4a.jpg
http://www.cnn.com/SHOWBIZ/Movies/9806/16/afi.top100/link.landau.jpghttp://www.notesfromhollywood.com/images/dukakis.jpg
http://www.oldies.com/images/boxart/large/bk/bk1129.jpg
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Francis
 
  1  
Reply Mon 20 Jun, 2005 05:31 am
HELLO
Lionel Richie

I've been alone with you inside my mind
And in my dreams I've kissed your lips a thousand times
I sometimes see you pass outside my door
Hello, is it me you're looking for?

I can see it in your eyes
I can see it in your smile
You're all I've ever wanted, (and) my arms are open wide
'Cause you know just what to say
And you know just what to do
And I want to tell you so much, I love you ...


I long to see the sunlight in your hair
And tell you time and time again how much I care
Sometimes I feel my heart will overflow
Hello, I've just got to let you know

'Cause I wonder where you are
And I wonder what you do
Are you somewhere feeling lonely, or is someone loving you?
Tell me how to win your heart
For I haven't got a clue
But let me start by saying, I love you ...

Hello, is it me you're looking for?
'Cause I wonder where you are
And I wonder what you do
Are you somewhere feeling lonely or is someone loving you?
Tell me how to win your heart
For I haven't got a clue
But let me start by saying ... I love you
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Mon 20 Jun, 2005 06:18 am
Good morning, WA2K radio and fans.

JL, we are glad to know that dys made it there without citations, and that remark of his was, of course, our dys. Love it!

Hey, McTag, now I'm wondering what beef en croute is? <smile> Hey, Brit. I could look it up, but that ain't no fun.

Bob, Thanks for that bio. I remember Anne Murray's "Snowbird", and knowing that she is from Nova Scotia explains a few things.

Raggedy, thanks for the celeb updates. I remember Martin Landau for many things, but most for his portrayal of Bela Lugosi in Ed Wood. Great actor! Incidentally, I had no idea that "Lay, Lady, Lay" was the song that edgar meant. I was simply finding a way to say goodnight. Razz

Francis, the words to that song by Richie are truly lovely. Thanks, France, for sharing them with our listeners.

It's a sunwashed day here, folks. Nice to be alive!
0 Replies
 
McTag
 
  1  
Reply Mon 20 Jun, 2005 06:49 am
Well, as Francis knows well, boef en croute is filet of beef baked in pastry. Very tasty, very nice.
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Letty
 
  1  
Reply Mon 20 Jun, 2005 06:55 am
Yorkshire pudding, McTag? That I know. Proving once again, listeners, that the way to a man's heart is through his belly.
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Francis
 
  1  
Reply Mon 20 Jun, 2005 07:02 am
McTag wrote:
Well, as Francis knows well, boeuf en croûte is filet of beef baked in pastry. Very tasty, very nice.


When well baked it is delicious!
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Letty
 
  1  
Reply Mon 20 Jun, 2005 07:21 am
and while Francis and McTag discuss table d'hote, we turn our attention to ehBeth, because yesterday was her birthday:

http://www.able2know.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=53961&start=30
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Walter Hinteler
 
  1  
Reply Mon 20 Jun, 2005 07:54 am
Francis wrote:
McTag wrote:
Well, as Francis knows well, boeuf en croûte is filet of beef baked in pastry. Very tasty, very nice.


When well baked it is delicious!


Capitistist's food - cheaper version of it is "Würstchen im Schlafrock" = 'sausage in dressing gown' :wink:
0 Replies
 
Francis
 
  1  
Reply Mon 20 Jun, 2005 08:02 am
About dressing gown :

MUSIC: W. Lambegt/D. Schoufs
LYRICS: D. Schoovearts

He said baby, what's your name
Are you new in this town?
Since you walked in things don't look the same
How about sticking around?
The place was dark and the band played loud
His voice sounded kind of dry
He said: who's that guy with the funny smile?
She said:
He's just a friend of mine (x 3)
They talked a little, drank a lot
As the evening went by
The place got crowded and the air too hot
He said: Lets go out for a while
The night was clear and the wind was soft
As they walked side by side
He said: who's that guy following us about?
She said:
He's just a friend of mine (x 3)
He was nice and gentle, still rough enough
To keep her satisfied
She said: hold it baby, it gets too much
I feel like I'm gonna die
He took her home in the early mornin'
She said: please do come inside
He said: who's that guy in the dressing gown?
She said:
He's just a friend of mine (x 3)
He said who's that guy in the dressing gown
She said baby don't you mind
He's just a friend, just a friend,
He's just a friend of mine
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Mon 20 Jun, 2005 08:15 am
Walter, I declare. I prefer to think of your dish as frankfurts in frills.<smile>

Francis, that song was REALLY something else, right listeners?

Need to listen to that again!

Station break: This is cyberspace, WA2K radio.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Mon 20 Jun, 2005 08:35 am
News in depth:

Flotilla Marks French and Indian War

Published: 6/20/05












ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) - The clothing is wool and linen, not Gore-Tex. The tents are canvas, not nylon. And wooden casks stand in for coolers. Aboard the flotilla of replica longboats that set out Monday to commemorate the 250th anniversary of the French and Indian War, nearly everything would be right at home in the 18th century - except the sunscreen.

"Unlike the 18th century, most of our people will be using sunblock," Victor Suthren, the organizer of the Lake Champlain Longboat Flotilla, said in a telephone interview before setting sail on Lake Champlain Monday morning from Isle La Motte, Vt.

During the five-day re-enactment voyage, Suthren's group of four boats will be joined by other longboats as well as vessels known as bateaux. In all, 12 wooden boats crewed by 65 Americans and Canadians, all but five of them men, will make up the flotilla, Suthren said.

The flotilla, flying under French colors of the mid-1700s, is scheduled to arrive Saturday at Fort Ticonderoga, where more than 800 re-enactors from the U.S, Canada and Britain are expected to gather for two days of battle re-enactments, fort officials said.

The boats are modeled after those used in at the time of the 1755 French supply voyages that brought men and supplies to Ticonderoga - called Carillon before a British-led force captured the stronghold and renamed it in 1759.

Bill Glidden, 58, a retired New York Army National Guard major, said he worked out on a rowing machine for months and took 2-mile walks several times a week to get ready for the voyage.

"I just want to see what the experience is like," said Glidden, of Plattsburgh. "As long as we don't get tipped over and find our gear at the bottom of the lake, I'm going to appreciate this trip."

The flotilla will make a 100-mile zigzag course starting at the Vermont island near the Canadian border and ending in New York's Essex County, 85 miles north of Albany, if weather cooperates. The itinerary includes overnight camp-outs along the New York and Vermont shores.

Some of the boats are equipped with well-camouflaged motors for emergency situations. Like any vessel plying the lake, the boats are required to carry U.S. Coast Guard-approved safety gear such as life vests and flares. But the rest of the accouterments, from clothing to camping supplies to the replica swivel guns mounted on some of the boats, will be accurate to the 18th century, Suthren said.

The Ticonderoga gathering is the first in a summer-long series of events being held in Pennsylvania, upstate New York and New England to mark the 250th anniversary of the war.

When I was a kid, I always thought that The French and Indian war was between the French and the Indians.
0 Replies
 
AngeliqueEast
 
  1  
Reply Mon 20 Jun, 2005 08:38 am
Love!
From Oleta Adam's cd "Circle of One"
JUSTIN GUARINI LYRICS

"Get Here"

You can reach me by railway, you can reach me by trailway
You can reach me on an airplane, you can reach me with your mind
You can reach me by caravan, cross the desert like an Arab man
I don't care how you get here, just get here if you can
You can reach me by sail boat, climb a tree and swing rope to rope
Take a sled and slide down the slope, into these arms of mine
You can jump on a speedy colt, cross the border in a blaze of hope
I don't care how you get here, just get here if you can

There are hills and mountains between us
Always something to get over
If I had my way, surely you would be closer
I need you closer oh closer

You can windsurf into my life, take me up on a carpet ride
You can make it in a big balloon, but you better make it soon
You can reach me by caravan, cross the desert like an Arab man yeah
I don't care how you get here, just get here if you can

I don't care, I need you right here right now
I need you right here right now right by my side
Yeah yeah yeah
I don't care how you get here, just get here, get here
I don't care how you get here, just get here if you can
Get here if you can
0 Replies
 
Francis
 
  1  
Reply Mon 20 Jun, 2005 08:40 am
And then notions go by...
0 Replies
 
AngeliqueEast
 
  1  
Reply Mon 20 Jun, 2005 08:45 am
Love!
From Natalie Cole's cd "Snowfall On The Sahara"

Snowfall on the Sahara

Your love like wine
Tasting sweeter to me everyday
Your kiss, divine and it melts the cold inside away
All of my life I've been waiting for a love like this
And now that you're here, romance is just a second away
It's gonna stay

Till the snowfalls on the Sahara and the sun freezes over
Till the Mojave Red turns into blue
When my lungs get tired of breathing
And my heart stops its beating
Then I'll stop loving you

And if the dark, when there's no one calling out your name
Well I'll hold you so tight
And I'll whisper to you once again and again

When the snowfalls on the Sahara and the sun freezes over
When the Mojave Red turns into blue
When the music's no longer playing and the faithless start praying
I'll stop loving you

When the snowfalls on the Sahara (oh, oh)
And the sun freezes over
When the Mojave Red turns into blue (that's a long time)
When my lungs get tired of breathing
And my heart stops its beating
I'll stop loving you
I don't wanna miss a single heartbeat

Sometimes my words get in the way
But I hear your love just fine---
Just fine-----
And its gonna take a long time

When the snowfalls on the Sahara and the sun freezes over
When the Mojave Red turns into blue (that's a long time)
When the music's no longer playing and the faithless stop praying
I'll stop loving you
(Repeat chorus)
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Mon 20 Jun, 2005 08:56 am
Well, there's Angel of the morning, listeners. I love the travel song, and from snowfall on the Sahara to midnight at the oasis, I must do a wee bit of traveling up the coastal highway.

Until then:

knights in white satin
The Moody Blues Nights In White Satin


Nights in white satin, never reaching the end
Letters I've written, never meaning to send
Beauty I'd always missed, with these eyes before
Just what the truth is, I can't say anymore
'Cause I love you, yes I love you, oh, how I love you

Gazing at people, some hand in hand
Just what I'm going through they can't understand
Some try to tell me, thoughts they cannot defend
Just what you want to be, you will be in the end
And I love you, yes I love you
Oh, how I love you, oh, how I love you

Nights in white satin, never reaching the end
Letters I've written, never meaning to send
Beauty I'd always missed, with these eyes before
Just what the truth is, I can't say anymore
'Cause I love you, yes I love you
Oh, how I love you, oh, how I love you

'Cause I love you, yes I love you
Oh, how I love you, oh, how I love you

(spoken)
Breathe deep in the gathering gloom
Watch lights fade from every room
Bedsitter people look back and lament
Another day's useless energy's spent
Impassioned lovers wrestle as one
Lonely man cries for love and has none
New mother picks up and suckles her sun
Senior citizens wish they were young
Cold-hearted orb that rules the night
Removes the colors from our sight
Red is grey and yellow white
And we decide which is right
And which is an illusion?

Notion for the day:
idee fixe.
0 Replies
 
 

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