106
   

WA2K Radio is now on the air

 
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sat 18 Mar, 2006 06:03 am
Good morning, McTag and McTurtle. <smile>

Well, listeners, it seems that we are having a car show in our little studio.

Believe it, folks, Letty knows what a Subaru is but had no idea of the meaning.

After coffee, I'll ask for a test drive, guys.

We also appreciate our edgar's optometrist's song. Thanks, Texas.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sat 18 Mar, 2006 06:24 am
Well, folks, my sister came through again. Here is the man of many teeth that I was thinking did "I Don't Have a Wooden Heart."

http://www.crystalgrand.com/images/Ehumperdinck.jpg

Later, some bubble gum music in honor of that bubble car.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sat 18 Mar, 2006 06:36 am
Build Me Up Buttercup - Song Lyrics
Originally performed by The Foundations
The song hit # 3 on the Top 40 charts in 1969
Remade by the group "Torch" in the 80s but never charted
Included in the thoroughly forgettable movie "Mallrats" in 1995, a new version by "The Goops" brought the song to the attention of the current MTV generation.




Why do you build me up (build me up) Buttercup, baby
Just to let me down (let me down) and mess me around
And then worst of all (worst of all) you never call, baby
When you say you will (say you will) but I love you still
I need you (I need you) more than anyone, darlin'
You know that I have from the start
So build me up (build me up) Buttercup, don't break my heart

"I'll be over at ten", you told me time and again
But you're late, I wait around and then
I went to the door, I can't take any more
It's not you, you let me down again

(Hey, hey, hey!) Baby, baby, try to find
(Hey, hey, hey!) A little time and I'll make you mine
(Hey, hey, hey!) I'll be home
I'll be beside the phone waiting for you
Ooo-oo-ooo, ooo-oo-ooo

Why do you build me up (build me up) Buttercup, baby
Just to let me down (let me down) and mess me around
And then worst of all (worst of all) you never call, baby
When you say you will (say you will) but I love you still
I need you (I need you) more than anyone, darlin'
You know that I have from the start
So build me up (build me up) Buttercup, don't break my heart

You were my toy but I could be the boy you adore
If you'd just let me know
Although you're untrue, I'm attracted to you all the more
Why do I need you so

(Hey, hey, hey!) Baby, baby, try to find
(Hey, hey, hey!) A little time and I'll make you mine
(Hey, hey, hey!) I'll be home
I'll be beside the phone waiting for you
Ooo-oo-ooo, ooo-oo-ooo

Why do you build me up (build me up) Buttercup, baby
Just to let me down (let me down) and mess me around
And then worst of all (worst of all) you never call, baby
When you say you will (say you will) but I love you still
I need you (I need you) more than anyone, darlin'
You know that I have from the start
So build me up (build me up) Buttercup, don't break my heart

I need you, more than anyone, baby
You know that I have from the start
So build me up (build me up) Buttercup, don't break my heart
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 18 Mar, 2006 08:38 am
America once had a bubble car, too. THe AMC Pacer.

http://static.flickr.com/37/114125415_599cf8942f.jpg
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 18 Mar, 2006 08:40 am
Joe Dowel had the hit record of Wooden Heart, following Elvis Presley's version in the film GI Blues.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sat 18 Mar, 2006 08:55 am
Hey, edgar. They called the Pacer a bubble car? My word. I didn't know that, Texas.

I realize that all sorts of people did "...Wooden Heart...", but Englebert is the one that I recall having done it.

We had a Morris Mini-Minor once. The guys at the radio station called it the blue bathtub. <smile>

How about a little car music:

This goes way back, folks

Kershaw Sammy
Lyrics for Song: Chevy Van
Lyrics for Album: Politics, Religion And Her
I gave a girl a ride in my wagon
Now she crawled in and took control
She was tired as her mind was draggin'
And I said get some sleep--we'll get on down the road

Like a picture she was laying there
And moonlight dancing off her hair
She woke up and took me by the hand
She's gonna love me in my Chevy van
And that's all right with me

Her young face was like that of an angel
And her long legs were tanned and brown
Better keep your eyes on the road son
Better slow this vehicle down 'cause

'Cause like a picture she was laying there
And moonlight dancing off her hair
She woke up and took me by the hand
She's gonna love me in my Chevy van
And that's all right with me

I put her out in a town that was so small
You could throw a rock from end to end
A dirt road main street, she walked off in her barefeet
And it's a shame I won't be passin' through again

Like a picture she was laying there
And moonlight dancing off her hair
She woke up and took me by the hand
We made love me in my Chevy van
And that's all right with me

Yeah like a picture she was laying there
And moonlight dancing off her hair
She woke up and took me by the hand
We made love me in my Chevy van
And that's all right with me

All right with me
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 18 Mar, 2006 08:58 am
The Pacer was not called a bubble car, but it had enormous windows and looked like a bubble. The picture doesn't do it justice.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sat 18 Mar, 2006 09:05 am
Well, how about a news break, folks.

On the Where Am I Thread, Satt recognized my place as Charleston, South Carolina, and at the same time, I read this item:

Educators Shed Light on Northern Slavery By FRANK ELTMAN, Associated Press Writer
Fri Mar 17, 2:07 AM ET



OYSTER BAY, N.Y. - A group of mostly white seventh and eighth graders sleepily sauntered into their school library, soon to get a surprise awakening about a part of their town's history they never knew existed.


"Did anybody in this room know there were 60 enslaved Africans, people, human beings, buried a mile from here?" Alan Singer, a professor at Hofstra University, asked them. "Those people have been erased from history. It is as if they never existed."

Singer and Mary Carter, a retired middle school social studies teacher, were in Oyster Bay recently to speak to the kids ?- part of a quest to develop a public school curriculum guide focusing on slavery's impact in the northern U.S., specifically New York.

Their efforts have been buoyed by state legislation enacted last year creating the Amistad Commission to examine whether the slave trade is being adequately taught in New York schools.

The commission, one of a number formed around the country in recent years, is named for the slave ship Amistad, which was commandeered by slaves who eventually won their freedom in the U.S. Supreme Court.

"Many people are surprised when you talk about slavery's existence in New York," Carter said. "They're surprised because it's taught as something that happened in the South."

The article goes on to say that slaves practically built the city.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 18 Mar, 2006 09:08 am
I am not out to be difficult this morning, but I thought Joe Dowell deserved to be given a moment in the spotlight also.

23 January 1940, Bloomington, Indiana, USA. Pop singer/songwriter Dowell bought a $10 guitar and wrote his first song "Tell Me" when he was 13 years old. In later years he took part in talent contests and just before his 21st birthday decided to try his luck in Nashville. He signed to Smash Records, and a version of "Wooden Heart" (Muss I Denn) - using bass guitar and organ instead of tuba and accordion - reached number 1 in the US charts in August 1961. The main reason for this was that Elvis Presley's original was only available in Europe. After two other US hits, Joe went into advertising and had his own radio show in Illinois.
0 Replies
 
Letty
 
  1  
Reply Sat 18 Mar, 2006 09:21 am
edgar, you're not being difficult, Texas. That's what our little cyber radio is all about, right folks?

I have never heard of Joe Dowell, and I appreciate the info.

So, for our edgar:

LITTLE RED RENTED ROWBOAT
Joe Dowell

REFRAIN
Little red rented rowboat little red rented rowboat
Not much better than no boat
But at least it will go when I row row row at least it will go when I row

I saw two pretty girls sunbathing on a pier
They wore jeans way down to here
I waved, they waved, they said they'd like a ride
So I helped them climb inside to share my

REFRAIN

(row row row row row)
Along came a sailboat big enough for two
The skipper saw the girls I knew what he would do
He waved, and they waved, then he helped them inside
Just one girl to ride there in my

REFRAIN

(row row row row row)
Hot-rod motorboat roared up behind
The girl took a look and I could read her mind
She waved, and he waved, he helped her climb inside
Leaving me with wounded pride
(row row row row row)
One hour later I saw them again
Motorboat out of gas, sailboat out of wind
The girls waved, and I waved, and then I passed them by
With my nose held way up high me and my

REFRAIN

(fade while repeating "row row row your boat")
0 Replies
 
Raggedyaggie
 
  1  
Reply Sat 18 Mar, 2006 09:50 am
Good morning WA2K.

I'd like to thank the PD for the lovely Hawaiian segment last evening. I do believe that the PD's sister and I are on the same wave length. I've liked every song she's recommended so far. Very Happy

And -
Today I'd like to wish a Happy 36th Birthday to Queen:

http://www.smh.com.au/ffximage/2005/03/18/latifah_narrowweb__200x248.jpg
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Sat 18 Mar, 2006 10:12 am
BEEP BEEP
The Playmates

(very slowly)
Beep beep beep beep
His horn went beep beep beep
While riding in my Cadillac
What to my surprise
A little Nash Rambler was following me
About one third my size
The guy musta wanted to pass me by
As he kept on tooting his horn
I'll show him that a Cadillac is not a car to scorn
Beep beep beep beep
His horn went beep beep beep

(slowly)
I pushed my foot down to the floor
To give the guy the shake
But the little Nash Rambler stayed right behind
He still had on his brake
He musta thought his car had more guts
As he kept on tooting his horn (beep beep)
I'll show him that a Cadillac is not a car to scorn
Beep beep beep beep
His horn went beep beep beep

(normal speed)
My car went into passing gear
And we took off with gust (whoosh)
Soon we were going ninety
Musta left him in the dust
When I peeked in the mirror of my car
I couldn't believe my eyes
The little Nash Rambler was right behind
You'd think that guy could fly
Beep beep beep beep
His horn went beep beep beep

(quickly)
Now we were doing a hundred and ten
This certainly was a race
For a Rambler to pass a Caddy
Would be a big disgrace
The guy musta wanted to pass me by
As he kept on tooting his horn (beep beep)
I'll show him that a Cadillac is not a car to scorn
Beep beep beep beep
His horn went beep beep beep

(very quickly)
Now we're going a hundred twenty
As fast as I can go
The Rambler pulled along side of me
As if we were going slow
The fella rolled down his window
And yelled for me to hear
"Hey buddy how do I get this car outa second gear?"
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Sat 18 Mar, 2006 10:16 am
Peter Graves
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Peter Aurness (born March 18, 1926 [1]), better known as Peter Graves, is an American actor. He is perhaps best known for his starring role in the television series Mission: Impossible from 1966 to 1973.

Graves was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota to Rolf Cirkler Aurness and Ruth Duesler, descendants of German, Norwegian and English immigrants; his brother is actor James Arness (Gunsmoke). Graves attended the University of Minnesota, where he was a member of Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity.

Graves has made more than 70 screen and TV films and series. He is also well known for the following roles:

* The German spy posing as an American POW in the movie Stalag 17
* Captain Clarence Oveur in Airplane! and Airplane II: The Sequel.

During the 1990s, he hosted the documentary series Biography on A&E. He also acted in a number of films featured on Mystery Science Theater 3000, which subsequently featured running jokes about Graves' Biography work and presumed sibling rivalry with Arness.

Graves has been married to Joan Endress since 1950. They have three daughters.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Graves_%28actor%29
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Sat 18 Mar, 2006 10:18 am
John Updike
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


John Hoyer Updike (born March 18, 1932) is an American writer born in Reading, Pennsylvania. He lived in nearby Shillington until he was 13. Updike's most famous works are his Rabbit series (Rabbit, Run, Rabbit Redux, Rabbit Is Rich, Rabbit At Rest, and Rabbit, Remembered). Rabbit is Rich and Rabbit at Rest both won Pulitzer Prizes for Updike. Describing his subject as "the American small town, Protestant middle class", Updike is well known for his careful craftsmanship and prolific writing, having published 21 novels and more than a dozen short story collections as well as poetry, literary criticism and children's books. Hundreds of his stories, reviews and poems have appeared in The New Yorker since the 1950s. His works often explore sex, faith, death, and their interrelationship.


Overview

As a child, Updike suffered from psoriasis and stammering, and he was encouraged by his mother to write. Updike entered Harvard University on a full scholarship. He served as president of the Harvard Lampoon before graduating summa cum laude (he wrote a thesis on George Herbert) in 1954 with a degree in English before joining The New Yorker as a regular contributor. In 1957, Updike left Manhattan and moved to Ipswich, Massachusetts, which served as the model for the fictional New England town of Tarbox in his 1968 novel, Couples. In 1959 he published a well-regarded collection of short stories, The Same Door, which included both "Who Made Yellow Roses Yellow?" and "A Trillion Feet of Gas." Other classic stories include "A&P," "Pigeon Feathers," "The Alligators," and "Museums and Women."

He favors realism and naturalism in his writing; for instance, the opening of Rabbit, Run spans several pages describing a pick-up basketball game in intricate detail. His writing typically focuses on relationships between people; friends, married couples or extramarital liasions. Couples and the Rabbit tetralogy particularly follow this pattern. Through the four Rabbit books, the changing social, political and economic history of America forms the background to the Angstroms' marriage and acts occasionally as a commentary on it - and vice versa.

On occasion Updike abandons this setting, examples being The Witches of Eastwick (1984, later made into a movie of the same name), The Coup (1978, about a fictional Cold War era African dictatorship), and in his 2000 postmodern novel Gertrude and Claudius (a prelude to the story of Hamlet illuminating three versions of the legend including William Shakespeare's). Other important novels include The Centaur (National Book Award, 1963), Couples (1968) and Roger's Version (1986). In addition to Harry 'Rabbit' Angstrom, a recurrent Updike alter-ego is the moderately well-known, unprolific Jewish novelist Henry Bech who is chronicled in three comic short story cycles, Bech: A Book (1970), Bech is Back (1981) and Bech At Bay: A Quasi-Novel (1998). His stories involving the socially-conscious (and social-climbing) couple "The Maples" are widely considered to be autobiographical, and several were the basis for a television movie entitled Too Far to Go starring Michael Moriarty and Blythe Danner which was broadcast on NBC. Updike stated that he chose this surname for the characters because he admired the beauty and resilliency of the tree.

While Updike has continued to publish at the rate of about a book a year, critical opinion on his work since the early nineties has been generally muted, and sometimes damning. Nevertheless, his novelistic scope in recent years has been wide: retellings of mythical stories (Tristan and Isolde in Brazil, 1994; a Hamlet prequel in Gertrude and Claudius, 2000), generational saga (In The Beauty of the Lilies, 1996) and science fiction (Toward the End of Time, 1997). In Seek My Face (2002) he explored the post-war art scene; in his most recent novel Villages (2004), Updike returns to the familiar territory of infidelities in New England. His 22nd novel, Terrorist, is due for publication in June 2006.

A large anthology of short stories from his formative career, titled The Early Stories 1953-1975 (2003) won the 2004 PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction. He wrote that his intention with the form was to "give the mundane its beautiful due."

Updike is a well-known and practicing critic (Assorted Prose 1965, Picked-Up Pieces 1975, Hugging the Shore 1983, Odd Jobs 1991, More Matter 1999), and is often in the center of critical wars of words. In retaliation for Updike's review of Tom Wolfe's novel A Man In Full, Wolfe called him one of "my Three Stooges" (the other two were John Irving and Norman Mailer). Updike has also been involved in critical duels with Gore Vidal and John Gardner, authors notorious for their criticism.

He has four children and currently lives in Beverly Farms, Massachusetts with his second wife, Martha. His new book is a collection of essays on art, Still Looking (Knopf, 2005).

Updike has long been rumoured to be among the front runners for the Nobel Prize in Literature. In 1998 Updike received an L.D. from Bates College.

Quotations

[Rabbit] loves men, uncomplaining with their pot bellies and cross-hatched red necks, embarrassed for what to talk about when the game is over, whatever the game is. What a threadbare thing we make of life! Yet what a marvelous thing the mind is, they can't make a machine like it; and the body can do a thousand things there isn't a factory in the world can duplicate the motion. (Rabbit at Rest)

Tell your mother, if she asks, that maybe we'll meet some other time. Under the pear trees, in Paradise. (Rabbit at Rest)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Updike
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Sat 18 Mar, 2006 10:21 am
Charley Pride
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Charley Frank Pride (born March 18, 1938 in Sledge, Mississippi) is a former Negro League baseball player who became one of the few African Americans to have a successful career in modern country music.

Background

Pride was one of eleven children born to desperately poor sharecroppers. His father named him Charl Frank Pride, but due to a typing error on his birth certificate, he was legally born as Charley Frank Pride. He grew up dreaming of being a baseball player and met his future wife, Rozene, while playing for the Memphis Red Sox in Memphis, Tennessee (which was a Negro-American League team). Pride played guitar and sang while touring as a baseball player.In 1958 when he was in Memphis, Charley Pride visited Sun Studio and recorded some songs. One song has survived on tape, released in England on an lp-box. The song is a slow stroll in walking tempo called "Walkin (the stroll)"


Early music success

When it became clear that he would not become a Major League Baseball player, he turned to music as a full time career. He was introduced to producer Jack Clement, who gave him two songs to record, "Snakes Crawl at Night" and "Atlantic Coastal Line." Clement gave Pride's two-song demo to the head of RCA Records in Nashville, Chet Atkins, who signed him to the label. Atkins and Clement considered not disclosing that he was black until the records were established, but Atkins decided that it was unfair to all concerned. Pride's first single was broadcast in January 1966. Within a short period of time, both songs became hits.


Music career

Pride has garnered more than 36 number one country singles and sold over 70 million records (singles, albums, compilation inclusions). His fame is world-wide, during the 1980's his Golden Greats album reached Number 1 on the UK Country music charts.

"Kiss An Angel Good Morning" was a million-selling crossover single and helped Pride land Country Music Association Awards as Entertainer of the Year in 1971 and Top Male Vocalist in 1971 and 1972.

Other Pride standards include "Is Anybody Goin' To San Antone?", "I'm So Afraid of Losing You Again", "Mississippi Cotton Picking Delta Town", "Someone Loves You Honey", "When I Stop Leaving I'll Be Gone", "Burgers and Fries", and "You're So Good When You're Bad". Like many other country performers, he has paid tribute to Hank Williams with performances of Williams' classics "Kaw-Liga" and "Honky Tonk Blues", both of which are on the album There's a Little Bit of Hank in Me.

Chronology

* May 1, 1993: Pride accepted an invitation to join the Grand Ole Opry, in the process becoming the first African-American honoree in its more than 70-year history.
* 1994: Pride released his autobiography, Pride: The Charley Pride Story (published by William Morrow).
* June 1994: Pride was honored by the Academy of Country Music with its prestigious Pioneer Award.
* January 1996: Pride was honored with a Trumpet Award by Turner Broadcasting, marking outstanding African-American Achievement. His "Roll On Mississippi" was considered as the official song of his home state, a stretch of Mississippi highway was named for him, and he headlined a special Christmas performance for President and Mrs. Clinton at the White House.
* July 1999: Pride received his own star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
* October 4, 2000, Charley was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. His name was announced by Brenda Lee.
* 2003: Pride's album Comfort of Her Wings is released on Music City Records.


Trivia

* March 18, 1974 - At Pompano Beach training camp, Pride played for the Texas Rangers against pitcher Jim Palmer and the Baltimore Orioles. Pride grounded out and singled in two at-bats, as the Orioles won, 14-2.

* Pride returned to his hometown of Sledge and purchased the cotton farm where he had been born.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charley_Pride
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Sat 18 Mar, 2006 10:28 am
Wilson Pickett
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Wilson "Wicked" Pickett in 1981
Born
March 18, 1941
Prattville, Alabama
Died
January 19, 2006
Ashburn, Virginia

Wilson Pickett (March 18, 1941 - January 19, 2006) was an African-American R&B and soul singer. Known for his raw, passionate delivery, he was a major figure in the development of Southern soul music.

Early life

Pickett was born in Prattville, Alabama, and grew up singing in Baptist church choirs.

He was the youngest of 11 children and called his mother "the baddest woman in my book", telling historian Gerri Hirshey: "I get scared of her now. She used to hit me with anything, skillets, stove wood ?- (one time I ran away and) cried for a week. Stayed in the woods, me and my little dog." Pickett eventually left to live with his father in Detroit in 1955.


Early musical career

In Detroit, he formed a gospel music group called the Violinaires. The group accompanied Sam Cooke, The Soul Stirrers, The Swan Silvertones, and The Davis Sisters on church tours across the country. Meanwhile, Pickett's family was struggling to make ends meet, and when Sam Cooke and Aretha Franklin began singing secular music (which was then and remains a more lucrative direction), Pickett was persuaded to do the same.

Pickett's first major break came when he was invited to join The Falcons in early 1959. One of the first vocal groups to bring gospel into a popular context, thus paving the way for soul music, The Falcons also featured some notable members who went on to become major solo artists; when Pickett joined the group, Eddie Floyd and Sir Mack Rice were also members of the group. Pickett's biggest success with The Falcons came in 1962, when "I Found a Love," featuring Pickett on lead vocals, peaked at #6 on the R&B charts.

Soon after recording "I Found a Love," Pickett cut his first solo recordings, including "I'm Gonna Cry," his first collaboration with Don Covay, an important figure in Southern soul music. Around this time, Pickett also recorded a demo for a song he co-wrote called "If You Need Me." A slow-burning soul ballad featuring a spoken sermon, Pickett sent the demo to Atlantic Records. Jerry Wexler, a producer at Atlantic Records, heard the demo and liked it so much, he gave it to one of the label's own recording artists, Solomon Burke. Burke's recording of "If You Need Me" became one of his biggest hits and is now considered a soul standard, but Pickett was crushed when he discovered that Atlantic had given away his song. "First time I ever cried in my life," Pickett would later recall.

The Atlantic Years

Pickett's first major success as a solo artist came with "It's Too Late," an original composition he wrote (not to be confused with the Chuck Willis standard of the same name). Entering the charts on July 27, 1963, it eventually peaked at #7 on the R&B charts. Its success convinced Wexler and Atlantic to buy his contract from Double L Records in 1964.

Atlantic paired him with famed producer Bert Berns, with whom Pickett recorded "Come Home Baby," a pop duet with New Orleans singer Tammi Lynn, but the single failed to chart.

Pickett's breakthrough would come at Stax Records's recording studio in Memphis, where he recorded "In the Midnight Hour" (1965), perhaps his best-remembered hit.

The genesis of "In the Midnight Hour" was a recording session on May 12, 1965 in which producer Jerry Wexler approached studio musicians Steve Cropper and Al Jackson (from Stax Records house band Booker T. and the M.G.'s) and said, "Why don't you pick up on this thing here?" He performed a dance step. Cropper later explained in an interview that Wexler told them that "this was the way the kids were dancing; they were putting the accent on two. Basically, we'd been one-beat-accenters with an afterbeat; it was like 'boom dah,' but here this was a thing that went 'um-chaw,' just the reverse as far as the accent goes." The song that resulted from this encounter established Pickett as a star and also gave Atlantic Records, a bona fide hit.

Pickett recorded three sessions at Stax during that single trip to Memphis; in addition to "In the Midnight Hour," he also recorded "Don't Fight It," "634-5789" and "Ninety-Nine and One-Half (Won't Do)," three original compositions he co-wrote with Eddie Floyd and Steve Cropper, all of which are considered soul classics.

For his next sessions, Pickett would not return to Stax; the label's owner, Jim Stewart banned all outside productions in December 1965. As a result, Wexler took Pickett to Fame studios, another recording studio with an even closer association to Atlantic Records. Located in a converted tobacco warehouse in nearby Muscle Shoals, Alabama, Fame was very influential in shaping soul music, and Pickett recorded some of his biggest hits there, including "Mustang Sally," "Funky Broadway," and what is perhaps the definitive version of "Land of 1000 Dances".

Pickett was also a popular songwriter, with songs he wrote recorded by such artists as Led Zeppelin, Van Halen, The Rolling Stones, Aerosmith, the Grateful Dead, Booker T. and the MGs, Genesis, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Hootie & the Blowfish, Echo & The Bunnymen, Roxy Music, Bruce Springsteen, Los Lobos, The Jam, Ani DiFranco, among others.

By the early 1970s, Pickett had released several more hits, including a cover of The Beatles' "Hey Jude" (with a young Duane Allman on guitar) and a cover of "Sugar, Sugar" by The Archies. His last hit song was "Fire and Water" in 1972.

Later life

Pickett continued to record sporadically with several different labels, but outside of music, his life remained troubled. In 1987, he was given two years' probation and fined $1,000 for carrying a loaded shotgun in his car. In 1991, he was arrested for allegedly yelling death threats while driving a car over the mayor's front lawn in Englewood, New Jersey, and less than a year later was charged with assaulting his girlfriend.

Conversely, Pickett was continuously honored for his past musical contributions. Pickett was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1991, and his music was prominently featured in the film The Commitments, with Pickett as an off-screen character. In 1993, he was given a Pioneer Award by the Rhythm and Blues Foundation.

In 1993, he was convicted of drunk driving and sentenced to one year in jail after hitting an 86 year-old man with his car. Pickett had been previously convicted of various drug offenses.

Several years after his release, he returned to the studio and received a Grammy nomination for the 1999 album It's Harder Now. Pickett spent the twilight of his career playing dozens of concert dates a year until 2004, when he began suffering from health problems.

Pickett died of a heart attack January 19, 2006 at a hospital near his Ashburn, Virginia home and was laid to rest next to his mother in Louisville, Kentucky. Billy Joel and his band, during a concert in Boston Gardens the night of Pickett's death, performed an outstanding rendition of "In the Midnight Hour" in honor of Pickett.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilson_Pickett

Midnight Hour

Wilson Pickett

I'm gonna wait 'till the midnight hour
That's when my love comes tumbling down
I'm gonna wait 'till the midnight hour
I'm gonna take you girl and hold you
Do all things I told you in the midnight hour

I'm gonna hold you in my arms and see the twinkle in your eyes
I'm gonna wait 'till the midnight hour
That's when my love begins to shine
You're the only girl I know
Really love you so in the midnight hour
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Sat 18 Mar, 2006 10:33 am
Irene Cara
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Irene Cara (born Irene Caratinni-Escalera on March 18, 1959 in The Bronx, New York City) is an American-born singer actress of Cuban and Puerto Rican descent.

Her first jobs as a teen came on television, getting a role on the soap Love of Life and the classic kids' show The Electric Company.

She is best remembered for singing the themes from Fame and Flashdance. She played Coco Hernandez in Fame, Sparkle in Sparkle, and Angela in romance thriller classic Aaron Loves Angela.

She won both the 1983 Academy Award for Best Song and the 1984 Grammy Award for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance for "Flashdance (What A Feeling)", from Flashdance.

Along with her successful career in acting, Cara released two albums in the 1980s: Anyone Can See in 1982, and What A Feelin' in 1983.

In June 2005, Irene won the third round of NBC's hit TV show Hit Me Baby One More Time, performing "Flashdance (What a Feeling)" and covered Anastacia's hit "I'm Outta Love" with her current band, Hot Caramel.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irene_Cara


What A Feeling :: Irene Cara

First when there's nothing
but a slow glowing dream
that your fear seems to hide
deep inside your mind.
All alone I have cried
silent tears full of pride
in a world made of steel,
made of stone.

well i hear the music
close my eyes
feel the rhythm
wrap around
take a hold of my heart

What a feeling.
Bein's believin'.
I can have it all, now I'm dancing for my life.

Take your passion
and make it happen.
Pictures come alive, you can dance right through your life.

Now I hear the music,
close my eyes, I am rhythm.
In a flash it takes hold
of my heart.

What a feeling.
Bein's believin'.
I can have it all, now I'm dancing for my life.

Take your passion
and make it happen.
Pictures come alive, now I'm dancing through my life.

What a feeling.
What a feeling I AM MUSIC NOW
Bein's believin'. I AM RHYTHM NOW
Pictures come alive, you can dance right through your life.
What a feeling. I CAN REALLY HAVE IT ALL
What a feeling. PICTURES COME ALIVE WHEN I CALL
I can have it all I CAN REALLY HAVE IT ALL
Have it all PICTURES COME ALIVE WHEN I CALL
CALL CALL CALL CALL WHAT A FEELING
I can have it all BEIN'S BELIEVIN
Bein's believin' TAKE YOUR PASSION
MAKE IT HAPPEN
make it happen WHAT A FEELING
what a feeling BEIN'S BELIEVIN' (fade)
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Sat 18 Mar, 2006 10:36 am
Vanessa Lynn Williams
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Vanessa Lynn Williams (born March 18, 1963) is a pop/R&B/theatrical singer and actress. She made history when she became the first African American woman to be crowned Miss America in 1983, but then was forced to resign her title in scandal. She then engaged in a successful career in music, film, theater, and television.


Early life

Vanessa Williams was born in The Bronx in New York City; she and her brother grew up in suburban Millwood, New York. Prophetically, her parents put "Here she is Miss America" on her birth announcement. [Entertainment Tonight December 11 2005]

Her parents, Milton and Helen Williams, were both music teachers who held advanced degrees in the subject. Vanessa studied piano and French horn growing up, but was most interested in singing. She received a scholarship and attended Syracuse University as a theatre arts major, but later dropped out of college to pursue a career in entertainment. She also won scholarships for being selected as Miss America.


Miss America

Williams began competing in beauty pageants in the early 80s, and won Miss New York in 1983. She then went on to Atlantic City where she was crowned Miss America 1984 on September 17, 1983. Prior to the final night of competition, Williams won both the Preliminary Talent and Swimsuit Competitions earlier in the week.

Controversy erupted in the summer of 1984 when it was discovered that in 1982 she had posed nude for photographs ?- including scenes of graphic exposure and lesbian theming ?- that were about to be published in the September 1984 issue of adult magazine Penthouse without her permission. After several days of media frenzy, Williams chose to resign her position on July 23, 1984. The crown was given to Suzette Charles, 54 days before the start of the pageant for Miss America 1985.


Music

Soon after, she entered the music industry with her 1988 debut album, The Right Stuff, which reached gold status and earned her three Grammy Award nominations, including one for Best New Artist.

Her most notable songs have included "Dreamin'", "Running Back To You", "Love Is", "The Sweetest Days", "Colors of the Wind", and "Oh How The Years Go By". Her biggest hit and signature song is "Save the Best For Last", which topped the Billboard Hot 100 for five weeks in 1992. In total, Williams has sold six million records and received fifteen Grammy Award nominations.

In 2005, Vanessa released her eighth studio album, Everlasting Love, a collection of covers of her favorite 1970s songs.


Film, Theatre, and Television

In the 80s, she also began a career in acting with guest roles in tv series, such as The Love Boat, T.J. Hooker and The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, and roles in made-for-TV movies, such as Perry Mason: The Case of the Silenced Singer and The Jacksons: An American Dream.

Her other TV appearances include Saturday Night Live, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, LateLine, Ally McBeal and Boomtown.

She played the nymph Calypso in the 1997 Hallmark Entertainment miniseries The Odyssey, starring Armand Assante.

She later won staring roles in feature movies, such as Eraser, co-starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, Soul Food, for which she won the Best Actress award at the NAACP Image Awards, Dance With Me.

Her other movies include Hoodlum, opposite Laurence Fishburne, Adventures of Elmo in Grouchland (as the Queen of Trash), Shaft, opposite Samuel L. Jackson, and Johnson Family Vacation, alongside Cedric the Entertainer.

Williams has appeared in several Broadway theatre productions, including major roles in Kiss of the Spider Woman in 1994 and Stephen Sondheim's Into the Woods in 2002. In the latter, she was disguised under heavy costuming and makeup.

She has also appeared in a number of advertisements for Radio Shack, starting in 2001. Recently Williams has become the spokesmodel for Proactiv Solution. She currently stars in the UPN drama South Beach, which started airing in early 2006.


Personal life

Williams is the mother of four children. Three of her children are from her first marriage to her then-manager Ramon Hervey, which ended in 1997. She married again in 1999 to NBA basketball star Rick Fox, previously of the Los Angeles Lakers. They have one daughter named Sasha.

After The National Enquirer published pictures of Fox kissing another woman in mid-2004, Fox's publicist announced that the couple had been separated for over a year. A few months later on August 11, Fox filed for divorce. During some press interviews, Williams casted some doubt on the status of their relationship. But while visiting the Howard Stern radio show in early 2005, she said that while she and Fox were intimate with each other briefly during the holidays, a reconciliation was unlikely. [1]. In early 2006, Williams began dating 29-year-old actor Rob Mack, whom she met on the set of her show South Beach. [2]

Her father Milton Williams passed away in January 2006 at the age of 70.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanessa_Lynn_Williams
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Sat 18 Mar, 2006 10:39 am
Queen Latifah
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Queen Latifah (real name: Dana Elaine Owens, born March 18, 1970) is an American Grammy Award-winning rap artist and singer, and an Academy Award-nominated actress.

Early life

Latifah was born in Newark, New Jersey to African-American parents Lancelot Owens (a police officer) and Rita (a high-school art teacher); they divorced when she was eight years old. Her first performance involved singing the number "Home" from the musical, The Wiz, in a high school play. Her stage name, Latifah, means "delicate" and "sensitive" in Arabic. It was given to her when she was eight by her cousin. While in high school, she was a power forward on her basketball team. Her father also gave her lessons in karate and firearms use.

Music career

Latifah started her career beatboxing for the rap group Ladies Fresh. In 1988, local DJ Mark the 45 King heard a demo version of Latifah's single, "Princess of the Posse", and gave the demo to Fab Five Freddy (who at the time hosted Yo! MTV Raps). Freddy helped Latifah sign with Tommy Boy Records. They released Latifah's first album, All Hail the Queen, in (1989); at the time, she was 18. This debut managed to be both a critical and commercial success and was followed by the albums Nature of a Sista and Black Reign, which contained the hit single, U.N.I.T.Y.. After releasing four rap albums (the fourth being Order in the Court, released in 1998), she released a soul/jazz standards album in 2004 called The Dana Owens Album.


Acting career

From 1993 to 1998, Latifah had a starring role on Living Single, a FOX sitcom; she also wrote and performed its theme music. She began her film career as a supporting actress in movies like House Party 2 (1991) and Set It Off (1996).

Her first big role was in the film version of the musical Chicago; her performance as Matron "Mama" Morton received an Academy Award nomination for "Best Supporting Actress". Latifah did not win the Oscar in 2003; however, that year she co-starred with Steve Martin in the film Bringing Down the House, which was a big success at the box office. Since then, she has had both leading and supporting roles in a multitude of films that received varied critical and box office receptions, including Scary Movie 3, Barbershop 2: Back in Business, Taxi, and Beauty Shop.

Her latest film, released in early 2006, is a romantic comedy/drama entitled Last Holiday. Latifah has received some notably positive reviews for the role, including a statement by film critic Richard Roeper that "this is the Queen Latifah performance I've been waiting for ever since she broke into movies" [1]. Her next film role will be in a remake of Hairspray, playing Motormouth Maybelle opposite John Travolta; filming will begin in the fall of 2006, for a summer 2007 release.[2]

Other work

Latifah is a celebrity spokesperson for Cover Girl cosmetics; she has starred in several commercials for the line, as well as a commercial with fellow spokeswoman and singer, Faith Hill. She has also had her own talk show, The Queen Latifah Show, from 1999 to 2001.

On January 4, 2006, Latifah received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. She is the first female hip hop artist to be given this honor.

Personal life

Latifah's older brother Lance was killed in 1992, in a biking accident involving the motorbike that Latifah had just bought him. She still wears the key to the motorbike around her neck and dedicated Black Reign to him. In 1993, she was the victim of a carjacking, in which a friend of hers was shot. In 1996, she was arrested due to possession of a small amount of marijuana and a hand gun; she was fined and sentenced to two years probation.

In her 1999 autobiography, Ladies First: Revelations of a Strong Woman, Latifah discussed how her brother's death lead to a bout of depression and drug abuse, which she later recovered from.

Because of her portrayal of a lesbian in Set It Off and her avoidance of discussing her romantic life, tabloid media sometimes speculate that she is a lesbian. Latifah responded to these rumors in her autobiography by saying: "It's insulting when someone asks, `Are you gay?' A woman cannot be strong, outspoken, competent at running her own business, handle herself physically, play a very convincing role in a movie, know what she wants--and go for it--without being gay? Come on."

In early 2003, she had breast reduction surgery to relieve back pain. She also works out with a trainer and kickboxes [3].

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queen_Latifah
0 Replies
 
bobsmythhawk
 
  1  
Reply Sat 18 Mar, 2006 10:40 am
Into a Belfast pub comes Paddy Murphy, looking like he'd just been run over by a train. His arm is in a sling, his nose is broken, his face is cut and bruised and he's walking with a limp.

"What happened to you?" asks Sean, the bartender.

"Jamie O'Conner and me had a fight," says Paddy.

"That little shite, O'Conner," says Sean, "he couldn't do that to you, he must have had something in his hand."

"That he did," says Paddy, "a shovel is what he had, and a terrible lickin' he gave me with it."

"Well," says Sean, "you should have defended yourself, didn't you have something in your hand?"

"That I did," said Paddy... "Mrs. O'Conner's breast, and a thing of beauty it was, but useless in a fight."
0 Replies
 
 

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