Posted on 08/22/2021 8:56:04 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
Everly Brothers - When Will I be Loved 1983 | August 8, 2019 | Televisie Rewind
(Excerpt) Read more at youtube.com ...
Talk Is Cheap (2019 - Remaster)You Don't Move Me (2019 - Remaster) | March 28, 2019 | Keith Richards
SEASICK STEVE+JOHN PAUL JONES Last Po’ Man GUITARE EN SCENE FESTIVAL FRANCE 2012
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vp0VNnWncgQ
I was looking for somethin’ else, and found this list, looks like one I made, must be demographics, or maybe just a fan, or a stalker. ;^)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KBAN1thF0-4&list=RDMM&start_radio=1&rv=vp0VNnWncgQ
Unhappy ending, troubled, purportedly a creepy guy, but great player.Bob Brozman Death Come Creepin | May 2, 2013 | Richard Grainger
Provided to YouTube by Universal Music GroupC Stomp Blues | November 12, 2018 | Bob Brozman - Topic
Heh.
Nice list.
This is more the kind I tend to gravitate towards these days.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JV3dlrCPhDM&list=PLECjWs6xP-L_sRM2gD2v2DlcVU4H4IgkG
one of the best pmg's live video.Pat metheny - first circle (from more travels dvd) | Aug 25, 2011 | 초코와 라떼 아빠
RIP Lyle.
This was just released. The last piece by Lyle.
Lyle Mays - Eberhard
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BylqOtOIMdE
Dave Rawlings Machine performs "Going To California" (By Led Zeppelin) live at the Georgia Theatre in Athens, Ga. Dave Rawlings Machine is comprised of Dave Rawlings, Gillian Welch, John Paul Jones (Led Zeppelin), Willie Watson (Old Crowe Medicine Show), and Paul Kowert (Punch Brothers).Dave Rawlings Machine - Going to California (Live at Georgia Theatre) | December 24, 2013 | LiveandBreathing
She is stunning.
Different thing from me, a link to a TV show theme song:Rules of Engagement Full Theme Song (How Many Ways - Señor Happy) | April 29, 2014 | TV Stuff
half of her audience is made up of deaf men. ;^)
Partridge Family - She’d Rather Have The Rain (1971)
Out On The YouTube
Posted on 9/17/2021, 9:16:43 PM by SamAdams76
https://freerepublic.com/focus/chat/3995974/posts
One Mozart Song [K448] Calms The Brains of People With Epilepsy, And We May Finally Know Why
sciencealert.com | 17 SEPTEMBER 2021
Posted on 9/18/2021, 5:36:53 PM by BenLurkin
https://freerepublic.com/focus/chat/3996152/posts
(this would work in the "drugs" topic)Some Scots can't say "purple burglar alarm" | August 28, 2021 | Limmy
“Singing don’t worry about a thing...cause every little thing gonna be alright,”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=blo-_9WFpSU
You got nothing Toulouse-Lautrec, or somethin’...
Stand Up and Fight Back
November 7, 2014
Jimmy Cliff - Topic
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qeXeVMvW-ZI
Not a proper GGG topic, just thought you'd like to unwind a bit before bed.
The EPIC OF GILGAMESH is the earliest great work of literature that we know of, and was first written down by the Sumerians around 2100 B.C.
Ancient Sumer was the land that lay between the two rivers, the Tigris and Euphrates, in Mesopotamia. The language that the Sumerians spoke was unrelated to the Semitic languages of their neighbors the Akkadians and Babylonians, and it was written in a syllabary (a kind of alphabet) called "cuneiform". By 2000 B.C., the language of Sumer had almost completely died out and was used only by scholars (like Latin is today). No one knows how it was pronounced because it has not been heard in 4000 years.
What you hear in this video are a few of the opening lines of part of the epic poem, accompanied only by a long-neck, three-string, Sumerian lute known as a "gish-gu-di". The instrument is tuned to G - G - D, and although it is similar to other long neck lutes still in use today (the tar, the setar, the saz, etc.) the modern instruments are low tension and strung with fine steel wire. The ancient long neck lutes (such as the Egyptian "nefer") were strung with gut and behaved slightly differently. The short-neck lute known as the "oud" is strung with gut/nylon, and its sound has much in common with the ancient long-neck lute although the oud is not a fretted instrument and its strings are much shorter (about 25 inches or 63 cm) as compared to 32 inches (82 cm) on a long-neck instrument.
For anyone interested in these lutes, I highly recommend THE ARCHAEOMUSICOLOGY OF THE ANCIENT NEAR EAST by Professor Richard Dumbrill.
The location for this performance is the courtyard of Nebuchadnezzar's palace in Babylon. The piece is four minutes long and is intended only as a taste of what the music of ancient Sumer might have sounded like.The Epic Of Gilgamesh In Sumerian | June 9, 2014 | Peter Pringle
THANK YOU!
I majored in Ancient, Medieval and Renaissance history. Had to read it, IIRC. But college was a long time ago. :)
Thanks for posting this!
Very cool. I’m an amateur musicologist (B.A). I love these kinds of stories - thanks for posting.
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