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WA2K Radio is now on the air

 
 
colorbook
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Sep, 2005 03:59 pm
Pennies from Heaven

Ev'ry time it rains, it rains pennies from heaven
Don'tcha know each cloud contains pennies from heaven?
(You'll find your fortune fallin' all over town)
(Be sure that your umbrella)
Is upside down

Trade them for a package of sunshine and flowers
If you want the things you love, you must have showers
(So when you hear it thunder) Don't run under a tree
There'll be pennies from heaven for you and me

(Ev'ry time it rains, it rains)Â…Pennies from heaven
(Don'tcha know each cloud contains)Â…Pennies from heaven?
(You'll find your fortune fallin') All over town
(Be sure that your umbrella) Is upside down

Trade them for a package of sunshine and flowers
If you want the things you love you must have showers
(So when you hear it thunder) Don't run under a tree
There'll be pennies from heaven for you and for me
0 Replies
 
Lord Ellpus
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Sep, 2005 04:01 pm
Money...Pink Floyd

Money, get away
Get a good job with more pay and your O.K.
Money it's a gas
Grab that cash with both hands and make a stash
New car, caviar, four star daydream,
Think I'll buy me a football team
Money get back
I'm all right Jack keep your hands off my stack.
Money it's a hit
Don't give me that do goody good bullsh*t
I'm in the hi-fidelity first class traveling set
And I think I need a Lear jet
Money it's a crime
Share it fairly but don't take a slice of my pie
Money so they say
Is the root of all evil today
But if you ask for a rise it's no surprise that they're
giving none away
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Sep, 2005 04:14 pm
Hmmm. Well, ellpus, I hope it was ecoli free.<smile>

ah, the money songs, folks. I didn't realize that money sang, but I have heard that it talks.

Love the Pennies from heaven, colorbook.

Artist/Band: Kristofferson Kris
Lyrics for Song: Love of Money
Lyrics for Album: Repossessed / Third World Warrior
Chorus:
Love of money is the root of all evil
Love of money is the root of all evil
Love of money is the work of the devil
Love of money

She began running for the border and her life
Like the wind, straight into the terror of the night
And she survived, bargaining her body for their gold
In the end all she had to sell them was her soul
That's the way it goes

Chorus:
Love of money is the root of all evil
Love of money is the root of all evil
Love of money is the work of the devil
Love of money

We began reaching for the future like a dream
In a land where everything was free
Wordly men turned their profits into war
No one knows who we're really fighting for

Chorus:
Love of money is the root of all evil
Love of money is the root of all evil
Love of money is the work of the devil
Love of money

Chorus:
Love of money is the root of all evil
Love of money is the root of all evil
Love of money is the work of the devil
Love of money


Album Lyrics: Repossessed / Third World Warrior [2004]



Kris Kristofferson
0 Replies
 
booman2
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Sep, 2005 04:38 pm
Letty, (sniff)...that was beautiful.

....Legend Alert!...Awonderful special on the life of Dylan wa on PBS last night. I believe part is on tonight.
0 Replies
 
dyslexia
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Sep, 2005 04:41 pm
She arrives in all her splendor each night at nine o?clock
Her chariot is the crosstown bus that stops right down the block
Now the old piano minstrel plays her tune as she walks in
And the Queen of the Silver Dollar?s home again

Chorus: She?s the Queen of the Silver Dollar
She rules this smokey kingdom
Scepter is a wine glass and a bar stool is her throne
Now the jesters flock around her tryin? to win her
favors
To see which one will take the
Queen of the Silver Dollar home

Now her royal dress is satin it?s shabby and it?s torn
Her royal jewels are rhinestones her shoes are scuffed and worn
Of the many roads she?s been down, and the places that she?s seen
Well, they all look at her and say God save the queen

Chorus:

Now the Queen of the Silver Dollar is not as haughty as she seems
She was once an ordinary girl with ordinary dreams
But there?s a man who found her and he brought her to this world
He?s the one who made a queen of a simple country girl
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Sep, 2005 04:59 pm
Ah, Boo. Glad that I touched your heart. <smile>

dys, a silver dollar. Used to have a couple. Great song, buddy. As a matter of fact, where I taught they had a silver dollar saloon, and that is true.

Played by Jerry Garcia with an unknown band at Burlingame in 1962. Thanks to Matt Schofield for the lyrics.

I was born in East Virginia
North Carolina I did go
There I met the fairest maiden
Her name and age I did not know

Well her hair was dark in color (note 1)
And her cheeks were rosy red
On her breast she wore a white lily
Where I longed to lay my head

I don't want the greenback dollar (note 3)
I don't want the big gold chain
All I want is your love darling
Won't you please come back again

I wish I was in some dark hollow (note 2)
Where the sun would never shine
Than for you to be in some man's arms
And to know you'll never be mine

Hoyt Axton did that song as well, folks
0 Replies
 
spendius
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Sep, 2005 05:04 pm
Don't miss No Direction Home.I've seen it all.Don't miss it and CONCENTRATE!!!.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Sep, 2005 05:09 pm
Well, folks. Spendius has changed the theme, but that's ok. We're quite flexible here on WA2K:

I Concentrate On You Lyrics



Whenever skies look gray to me and trouble begins to brew
Whenever the winter winds become too strong
I concentrate on you

When fortune cries "Nay, nay" to me
And people declare "You're through"
Whenever the blues become my only songs
I concentrate on you

On your smile, so sweet, so tender
When at first my kiss you do decline
On the light in your eyes when you surrender
And once again our arms intertwine

And so when wise men say to me
That love's young dream never comes true
To prove that even the wise men can be wrong
I concentrate on you

<instrumental to end>
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Sep, 2005 06:34 pm
Well, listeners. We found Francis. He's somewhere amid the desert springs.

Thinking of that, brings me around to thinking of that.<smile>

but this song is lovely:


Words and music by sting

I dream of rain
I dream of gardens in the desert sand
I wake in vain
I dream of love as time runs through my hand

I dream of fire
Those dreams that tie two hearts that will never die
And near the flames
The shadows play in the shape of the man's desire

This desert rose
Whose shadow bears the secret promise
This desert flower
No sweet perfume that would torture you more than this

And now she turns
This way she moves in the logic of all my dreams
This fire burns
I realize that nothing's as it seems

I dream of rain
I dream of gardens in the desert sand
I wake in vain
I dream of love as time runs through my hand

I dream of rain
I lift my gaze to empty skies above
I close my eyes
The rare perfume is the sweet intoxication of love

I dream of rain
I dream of gardens in the desert sand
I wake in vain
I dream of love as time runs through my hand

Sweet desert rose
Whose shadow bears the secret promise
This desert flower
No sweet perfume that would torture you more than this

Sweet desert rose
This memory of hidden hearts and souls
This desert flower
This rare perfurme is the sweet intoxication of love.

What a quiet and wonderful time of night, listeners.
0 Replies
 
djjd62
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Sep, 2005 06:40 pm
One Last Love Song
The Beautiful South

I once had a friend who I loved from my heart
But I went on and left her 'fore I'd made a start
Now I'm moaning the blues like the rest of the charts
Take me back

So I'll cry with a limp
Just get by on a limb
Till these blue eyes of mine they are closed
So here's to an old fashioned peck on the cheek
And farewell my sweet Northern Rose

Give me one last love song
To bring you back, bring you back
Give me one last video, just dressed in black, dressed in black
Give him a chorus and that bit at the end
Where he wails on and on 'bout the loss of a friend
Let him scream loudly 'well this love could mend'
Let it die, let it die

Those bloody great ballads we hated at first
Well I bought them all, now I'm writing worse
Save us from baldness and saving the earth
Take me back

And I'll smile with a limp
And I'll love with a limp
Till the clouds disappear from above
And as the storm moves away all I can say
Is there's a towel on the door for your love

Give me one last love song
To bring you back, bring you back
Give me one last video, just dressed in black, dressed in black
Give him a chorus and that bit at the end
Where he wails on and on 'bout the loss of a friend
Let him scream loudly 'well this love could mend'
Let it die, let it die, let it die
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Sep, 2005 06:56 pm
Ah, dj. That is beautiful, truly.

It's that time of night, listeners.

Lavender Cry




Won't you buy my sweet blooming lavender,
Sixteen branches one penny,
Ladies fair make no delay,
I have your lavender fresh today,
Buy it once, you'll buy it twice,
It makes your clothes smell sweet and nice.
It will scent your pocket handkerchiefs,
Sixteen branches for one penny,
As I walk through London streets
I have your lavender nice and sweet,
Sixteen branches for a penny.
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Sep, 2005 07:15 pm
Some of you know of my interest in wildlife. Just saw an exciting news release. I posted it on the wildlife forum but thought I'd share it with our audience.

Scientists capture giant squid on camera

LONDON (Reuters) - Japanese scientists have taken the first photographs of one of the most mysterious creatures in the deep ocean -- the giant squid.

Until now the only information about the behavior of the creatures which measure up to 18 meters (59 feet) in length has been based on dead or dying squid washed up on shore or captured in commercial fishing nets.

But Tsunemi Kubodera, of the National Science Museum, and Kyoichi Mori of the Ogasawara Whale Watching Association, both in Tokyo have captured the first images of Architeuthis attacking bait 900 meters (yards) below the surface in the cold, dark waters of the North Pacific.

"We show the first wild images of a giant squid in its natural environment," they said in a report on Wednesday in the journal Proceedings B of the Royal Society.

Little is known about the creatures because it has been so difficult to locate and study them alive. Large ships and specialist equipment, which is costly, are needed to study deep sea environments.

The Japanese scientists found the squid by following sperm whales, the most effective hunters of giant squid, as they gathered to feed between September and December in the deep waters off the coast of the Ogasawara Islands in the North Pacific.

They used a remote long-line camera and depth logging system to capture the giant squid in the ocean depths.

"The most dramatic character of giant squids is the pair of extremely long tentacles, distinct from the eight shorter arms. The long tentacles make up to two-thirds of the length of the dead specimens to date," the scientists said in the journal.

They added that the giant squid appear to be a much more active predator than researchers had suspected and tangled their prey in their elongated feeding tentacles.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Sep, 2005 07:21 pm
Wow, Bob. That's an underwater terror. I'm not certain, but I recall that the giant squid has a huge beak that it uses to rip and tear.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Sep, 2005 07:28 pm
nevertheless, a little song for your report:


Giant squids at the bottom of the ocean
Have a better time than we.
Giant squids at the bottom of the ocean
Have a much better time than we do.
- Baterz, "Giant Squids", from "Baterz Out of Hell"

So, I say, folks. Let 'em party on without us, Boston
0 Replies
 
dyslexia
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Sep, 2005 07:33 pm
speaking of squid;
I don't want my arms around you, no not much
I don't bless the day I found you, no not much
I don't need you like the stars don't need the sky
I won't love you longer than the day I die

You don't please me when you squeeze me, no not much
My heads the lightest from your very slightest touch
Baby, if you ever go could I take it maybe so
Oh but would I like it, no not much

Like the song I'm singing doesn't mean a rhyme,
I don't want you near me only all time

You don't thrill me when you hold me, no not much
My heads the lightest from your very slightest touch.
Baby if you ever go could I take it maybe so
Oh but would I like it, no not much
No not much
0 Replies
 
djjd62
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Sep, 2005 07:36 pm
All in the Family Parody
The Simpsons

Homer: Oy, the way the Bee Gee's played,
Marge: Movies John Travolta made,
Homer: Guessing how much Elvis weighed,
Homer & Marge: Those were the days!

Marge: And you knew where you were then,
Homer: Watching shows like "Gentle Ben",
Homer & Marge: Mister, we could use a man like Sheriff Lobo again!

Homer: Disco Duck and Fleetwood Mac,
Marge: Coming out of my eight-track,
Homer & Marge: Michael Jackson still was black, those were the days!
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Tue 27 Sep, 2005 07:45 pm
wonder if I would be safe in the arms of morpheus, right now.

Goodnight all you creature lovers.


With a smile and, of course:


From Letty with love.
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Wed 28 Sep, 2005 01:06 am
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Wed 28 Sep, 2005 01:11 am
Ed Sullivan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

For Sir Edward Sullivan, the Lord Chancellor of Ireland, see Edward Sullivan (lawyer).


Edward Vincent Sullivan (September 28, 1901 - October 13, 1974) was an American entertainment writer and television host, best known as the emcee of a popular TV variety show that was at its height of popularity in the 1950s and 1960s.

Sullivan was originally a newspaper sportswriter and theater columnist for the New York Daily News. His column concentrated on Broadway shows and gossip. He also did show business news broadcasts on radio. Sullivan continued writing for The News throughout his broadcasting career.

In 1948, the CBS network hired Sullivan to do a weekly Sunday night TV variety show which became The Ed Sullivan Show. The show was broadcast from CBS Studio 50 on Broadway in New York City, which in 1967 was renamed the Ed Sullivan Theater (and is now the home of The Late Show with David Letterman).

Sullivan himself seemed to have little acting ability and his mannerisms on camera were somewhat awkward and often caricatured by comedians who called him "Old Stone Face" due to his deadpan delivery. Columnist Harriet Van Horne alleged that "he got where he is not by having a personality, but by having no personality; he is the commonest common denominator." According to the crazyabouttv.com website, Sullivan replied with a short note:

Dear Miss Van Horne, You bitch. Sincerely, Ed Sullivan

He was married to Sylvia Weinstein from April 28, 1930 until her death on March 16, 1973, and they had 1 child.

Somehow Sullivan still seemed to fit the show; he appeared to the audience as an average guy who brought the great acts of show business to their home televisions.

In the 1950s and 1960s, Sullivan was a respected starmaker because of the number of performers that became household names after appearing on the show. He had a knack for identifying and promoting top talent and paid a great deal of money to secure that talent for his show.

There was another side to him, he could be very quick to take offense if he felt that he had been crossed and could hold a grudge for a long time.

Jackie Mason, Bo Diddley and The Doors became intimately familiar with that negative side of him. Jackie Mason was banned from the series in 1969 when Sullivan gestured to wrap things up and Sullivan believed Mason replied on live television with the finger. The Doors were banned in 1967 after they were asked to remove the lyric "Girl, we couldn't get much higher" from their song "Light My Fire" (as CBS censors believed it was too overt a reference to drug use) and sang the song with the lyrics intact. (The Rolling Stones was a different story. They agreed to change the Lyrics from "Let's Spend the Night Together" to "Let's Spend Some Time Together".)

On November 20, 1955, Bo Diddley was asked by Sullivan to sing Tennessee Ernie Ford's hit "Sixteen Tons". Come air time, Diddley sang his #2 hit song, "Bo Diddley". He, too, was banned from the show.

In 1961. Sullivan was asked by CBS to fill in for an ailing Red Skelton on The Red Skelton Show. He perfomed some of Skelton's characters successfully. One character was renamed "Eddie the Freeloader" (normally "Freddie the Freeloader).

In August of 1956 he was injured in an automobile accident that occurred near his country home in Southbury, Connecticut and had to take a medical leave from the show missing the September 8 appearance of Elvis Presley on his show (something he earlier stated never would happen but he later changed his mind). The fact he had to play catch up to featuring such a star on his show made him determined to get the next big sensation first. In 1964, he achieved that with the first live American appearance of The Beatles.

Sullivan paid for the funeral of dancer Bill 'Bojangles' Robinson out of his own pocket. He also defied pressure to exclude African American musicians from appearing on his show.

Sullivan died at the age of 73 in 1974 of cancer of the esophagus and is interred in the Ferncliff Cemetery, Hartsdale, New York.

He has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6101 Hollywood Blvd.

During the 1920s, as a theatre critic, Sullivan once suggested that Swedish playwright August Strindberg needed to re-write the second act of a play. Unfortunately, Strindberg had been dead for a decade.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ed_Sullivan
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Wed 28 Sep, 2005 01:16 am
Al Capp
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Al Capp (September 28, 1909 - November 5, 1979) was an American cartoonist best known for the satiric comic strip, Li'l Abner. He also wrote the comic strips Abbie and Slats and Long Sam. His given name was Alfred Gerald Caplin.

He was a native of New Haven, Connecticut. He lost his right leg in a trolley accident as a young boy.

After apprenticing with cartoonist Ham Fisher, Capp started Li'l Abner in 1934. It started out in the preexisting comic-strip genus of hillbilly parody, but evolved into one of the most imaginative, popular, and well-drawn strips of the 20th century, featuring outlandish characters and bizarre situations.

The comic strip starred Li'l Abner Yokum, the lazy, dumb, but good-natured and strong hillbilly who lived in Dogpatch with Mammy and Pappy Yokum. Whatever energy he had went into evading the marital goals of Daisy Mae, his well-endowed girlfriend, until Capp finally gave in to reader pressure and allowed the couple to marry. This was such big news that the happy couple made the cover of Life magazine.

Abner's home town of Dogpatch was peopled with an assortment of memorable characters, including Marryin' Sam, Wolf Gal, Lena the Hyena, Indian Lonesome Polecat, and a host of others, notably the beautiful, full-figured women Stupefyin' Jones and Moonbeam McSwine. Perhaps Capp's most popular creations were the Shmoo, creatures whose incredible usefulness and generous nature made them a threat to civilization as we know it. Another famous character was Joe Btfsplk, who wanted to be a loving friend but was "the world's worst jinx", bringing bad luck to all those nearby. Btfsplk always had a small dark cloud over his head.

Li'l Abner also featured a comic-strip within the comic-strip Fearless Fosdick (a parody of Dick Tracy).

The Dogpatch residents regularly combatted the likes of city slickers, business tycoons, government officials and intellectuals with their homespun wisdom and ingenuity. Situations often took the characters to other parts of the globe, including New York City, tropical islands, and a miserable frozen land of Capp's invention, "Lower Slobovia."

During and after World War II, Capp worked without pay going to hospitals to entertain patients, especially to cheer recent amputees and explain to them that the loss of a limb did not mean an end to a happy and productive life.

At its peak, Li'l Abner was read daily by 70 million Americans (when the US population was only 180 million). Many communities staged "Sadie Hawkins Day" events, after a similar annual event in the strip in which the tables were turned from what was then the general order of things, and women were allowed to ask men out without any shame or stigma. A frenetic musical comedy adaptation of the strip opened on Broadway in 1956, and was made into a motion picture.

Capp (and a platoon of assistants) kept the strip going through the 1960s. No matter how much help he had, Capp insisted on drawing the faces and hands himself. Frank Frazetta, later famous as a fantasy artist, drew the beautiful women in the strip's later years.

In the '60s, Capp's politics swung from liberal to conservative, and instead of caricaturing big business types, he began spoofing counterculture icons such as Joan Baez (in the character of Joanie Phoanie, a wealthy folksinger who offers an impoverished orphanage one million dollars' worth of "protest songs"). He became a popular speaker on college campuses during the era, attacking anti-war protesters and demonstrators, including John Lennon at his Bed-In for Peace. In 1971, however, he was charged with the attempted rape of a coed at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. It developed that there were similar allegations from at least four other campuses. Capp pleaded no contest and withdrew from public speaking.

Li'l Abner lasted until 1977, and Capp died two years later, at his home in South Hampton, New Hampshire.

In 1968 a theme-park called Dogpatch USA opened at Jasper, Arkansas based on Capp's work and with his support. The park was a popular attraction during the 1970s but was abandoned in 1993 due to financial difficulties and remains unused and in disrepair.

His younger brother Elliot Caplin also became a comic strip creator, best known for writing the soap opera strip The Heart of Juliet Jones.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Capp
0 Replies
 
 

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