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FReeper Canteen - Tunes For Our Troops - 9 June 2012
Our Troops Rock!!!!!!! | The Canteen DJ's

Posted on 06/08/2012 5:58:40 PM PDT by AZamericonnie


 

 

*****

~ Tunes For Our Troops ~

*****

~ Support The Artists ~
 

Support the artists you hear throughout the Canteen!
Click on the links below! Keep the music going!

ArtistDirect Internet Radio AOL Music Sonique (Lycos) Real Radio

Live365 971TheRiver  l  GotRadio  l  Wherehouse  l  Target  l Shoutcast

AFRTS VH1 l XM Radio BET audiophile Virgin Radio Soma (Alternative)

Acaza l AudioRealm l VH1 Yahoo! Launch Music Radio Disney Live-Radio Net

ITunes l Amazon l Salsa Radio l MTV l CMT l Ticketmaster l Billboard l ClubFM


*****

Warning: Not all the music you hear below will be appropriate for children! Please click with caution. Thank you!

*****



Tunes For The Troops
 



 


This music is provided for the entertainment of our Troops, Veterans, Allies & their families!

Enjoy the variety of musical selections that the Canteen Deejays provide throughout the thread. Please ping any DJ with your requests for the Troops!


All music is removed on Monday.
Thanks to all the DeeJay's for their time & effort providing entertainment for the Troops!

*Canteen Mission Statement*

Showing support and boosting the morale of
our military and our allies military
and the family members of the above.
Honoring those who have served before.
 

 



Accept - Against The World
 

Anthrax - One World

B.B. King - Peace to the World
 
Boney M - Somewere In The World

Bucky Covington - A Different World
 
Celtic Woman - One World

Chicago - Colour My World
 
Chris Squire & Billy Sherwood - Watching The World

Coldplay - Us Against The World
 
Dave Matthews Band - One Sweet World

Def Leppard - Kings Of The World
 
Dionne Warwick - All The Love In The World

Dragonforce - Fallen World
 
Duran Duran - Ordinary World

Earth, Wind & Fire - That's The Way Of The World
 
Emmylou Harris - Goodnight Old World

Eva Cassidy - What A Wonderful World
 
Foreigner - Two Different Worlds

Grand Funk - This Is A Man's World
 
Herman's Hermits - There's A Kind Of Hush All Over The World

Howlin' Wolf - Sitting On Top Of The World
 
Iron Maiden - Brave New World


James Brown - Its A Mans World
 

Janis Joplin - As Good As You've Been To This World

Judas Priest - Take On The World
 
Kreator - Death To The World






TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Free Republic
KEYWORDS: canteen; military; troopsupport
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To: BIGLOOK
Aloha, Big Guy! How are things going with you today?

8Jun1969 was one of my rare visits to our base camp at An Hoa. A nice couple of days aside from being rocketed. We were rocketed our first night back. One of our Corpsmen was out in the four-holer when the rockets hit. He was unhurt - we had a good laugh about it after it was over.



Nos genuflectitur ad non princeps sed Princeps Pacem!

Listen, O isles, unto me; and hearken, ye people, from far; The LORD hath called me from the womb; from the bowels of my mother hath he made mention of my name. (Isaiah 49:1 KJV)

21 posted on 06/08/2012 6:22:39 PM PDT by ConorMacNessa (HM/2 USN, 3/5 Marines RVN 1969 - St. Michael the Archangel defend us in Battle!)
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To: Cindy
Hiya Cindy Sue...."A Walk In The Country -- A Meditation For Relaxation "...may need to put this on my daily routine!:)

Thanks so very much for all your work & hope you have a very relaxing weekend as well! *hugs*

22 posted on 06/08/2012 6:25:52 PM PDT by AZamericonnie
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To: AZamericonnie
Sorry Connie! Working 12 hours tomorrow and whatever I can get in after Mass on Sunday. Our Boss Monkeys are giving us no respite.



Nos genuflectitur ad non princeps sed Princeps Pacem!

Listen, O isles, unto me; and hearken, ye people, from far; The LORD hath called me from the womb; from the bowels of my mother hath he made mention of my name. (Isaiah 49:1 KJV)

23 posted on 06/08/2012 6:26:13 PM PDT by ConorMacNessa (HM/2 USN, 3/5 Marines RVN 1969 - St. Michael the Archangel defend us in Battle!)
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To: AZamericonnie; GodBlessUSA; mylife; Kathy in Alaska; MS.BEHAVIN; Drumbo; StarCMC; EsmeraldaA; ...

LOVE YOU CANTEEN DJ'S!!!
Thanks for your hard work!
GodBlessUSA; mylife; AZAmericonnie; Kathy In Alaska; Ms.Behavin; drumbo; StarCMC; EsmeraldaA; ConorMacNessa; acad1228; LibertyValance; Cindy; Starwise; 50mm; gomez; iron munro; publius (and me)

YOU ROCK OUT LOUD!!
God bless our troops!!!

Thanks for a great thread
and all your hard work, Connie!

24 posted on 06/08/2012 6:26:24 PM PDT by luvie (This space reserved for heroes)
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To: Kathy in Alaska
Hi Everybody!

~From My Dad's Wacky Friends~

Photobucket<

Warning
  • US Marines
  • Do not feed.
  • Avoid eye contact.
  • Do not provoke.
  • No prolonged stopping.
  • No flash photography.
  • No French reporters.

25 posted on 06/08/2012 6:28:29 PM PDT by SkyDancer ("Talent Without Ambition Is Sad - Ambition Without Talent Is Worse")
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To: Jet Jaguar
Bump? Bump? C'mon JJ.....at least make it a "bumpity bump"! LOL

Hope you have a super weekend with lot's of R&R. You deserve it! *Hugs*

26 posted on 06/08/2012 6:29:05 PM PDT by AZamericonnie
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To: AZamericonnie

Hi Everybody!

(((HUGS)))


27 posted on 06/08/2012 6:29:29 PM PDT by left that other site
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To: The Mayor

Great lesson this eveing Mayor & thank you for it! *Hugs*

Hoping you & yours have a great weekend.


28 posted on 06/08/2012 6:31:57 PM PDT by AZamericonnie
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To: ConorMacNessa
And grabbing the gold....Mac!!


29 posted on 06/08/2012 6:33:21 PM PDT by Kathy in Alaska
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To: LUV W

Evening Miss Luvie....did I get my fix tonight? I couldn’t handle two weeks in a row! LOL

*Hugs*


30 posted on 06/08/2012 6:34:33 PM PDT by AZamericonnie
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To: SkyDancer
LOL, Sky!



1st Marine Division

I had the honor of serving with that outfit - OORAH and Semper Fi!



Nos genuflectitur ad non princeps sed Princeps Pacem!

Listen, O isles, unto me; and hearken, ye people, from far; The LORD hath called me from the womb; from the bowels of my mother hath he made mention of my name. (Isaiah 49:1 KJV)

31 posted on 06/08/2012 6:35:22 PM PDT by ConorMacNessa (HM/2 USN, 3/5 Marines RVN 1969 - St. Michael the Archangel defend us in Battle!)
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To: SkyDancer

ROFL!!! Good evening Janie...love your Dad’s friend & our troops humor!

All is well with you down unda? *Hugs*


32 posted on 06/08/2012 6:37:18 PM PDT by AZamericonnie
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To: 2LT Radix jr; acad1228; AirForceMom; Colonel_Flagg; AliVeritas; aomagrat; ariamne; armyavonlady; ...




USAF Concert Band~Armed Forces Medley

WE LOVE YOU ALL!!!





Armed Forces Humor..If You Need a Good Laugh!
Video

33 posted on 06/08/2012 6:38:57 PM PDT by luvie (This space reserved for heroes)
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To: left that other site

Good evenin’ M/L & hope you have a super weekend...any special plans? *Hugs*


34 posted on 06/08/2012 6:39:29 PM PDT by AZamericonnie
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To: Jet Jaguar


35 posted on 06/08/2012 6:40:07 PM PDT by Kathy in Alaska
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To: Kathy in Alaska; laurenmarlowe; BIGLOOK; alfa6; EsmeraldaA; SandRat; mylife; TMSuchman; PROCON; ...


Welcome To All Who Enter This Canteen, To Our Serving Military, To Our Veterans, To All Military Families, To Our FRiends and To Our Allies!





Missing Man Setting

“The Empty Chair”

By Captain Carroll “Lex” Lefon, USN (ret), on December 21st, 2004

“In the wardroom onboard the aircraft carrier from which I recently debarked was a small, round table, with single chair. No one ever sat there, and the reasons, both for the table being there, and for the fact that the chair was always empty, will tell the reader a little bit about who we are as a culture.The wardroom, of course, is where the officers will dine; morning, noon and evening. It is not only a place to eat – it is also a kind of oasis from the sometimes dreary, often difficult exigencies of the service. A place of social discourse, of momentary relief from the burdens of the day. The only things explicitly forbidden by inviolable tradition in the wardroom are the wearing of a cover or sword by an officer not actually on watch, or conversation which touches upon politics or religion. But aboard ships which observe the custom, another implicit taboo concerns the empty chair: No matter how crowded the room, no matter who is waiting to be seated, that chair is never moved, never taken.

The table is by the main entrance to the wardroom. You will see it when you enter, and you will see it when you leave. It draws your eyes because it is meant to. And because it draws your eyes it draws your thoughts. And though it will be there every day for as long as you are at sea, you will look at it every time and your eyes will momentarily grow distant as you think for a moment. As you quietly give thanks.

As you remember.

The small, round table is covered with a white linen tablecloth. A single place setting rests there, of fine bone china. A wineglass stands upon the table, inverted, empty. On the dinner plate is a pinch of salt. On the bread plate is a slice of lemon. Besides the plate lies a bible. There is a small vase with a single red rose upon the table. Around the vase is wound a yellow ribbon. There is the empty chair.

We will remember because over the course of our careers, we will have had the opportunity to enjoy many a formal evening of dinner and dancing in the fine company of those with whom we have the honor to serve, and their lovely ladies. And as the night wears on, our faces will in time become flushed with pleasure of each other’s company, with the exertions on the dance floor, with the effects of our libations. But while the feast is still at its best, order will be called to the room – we will be asked to raise our glasses to the empty table, and we will be asked to remember:

The table is round to show our everlasting concern for those who are missing. The single setting reminds us that every one of them went to their fates alone, that every life was unique.

The tablecloth is white symbolizing the purity of their motives when they answered the call to duty.

The single red rose, displayed in a vase, reminds us of the life of each of the missing, and their loved ones who kept the faith.

The yellow ribbon around the vase symbolizes our continued determination to remember them.

The slice of lemon reminds us of the bitterness of their fate.
The salt symbolizes the tears shed by those who loved them.
The bible represents the faith that sustained them.
The glass is inverted — they cannot share in the toast.
The chair is empty — they are not here. They are missing.

And we will remember, and we will raise our glasses to those who went before us, and who gave all that they had for us. And a part of the flush in our faces will pale as we remember that nothing worth having ever came without a cost. We will remember that many of our brothers and sisters have paid that cost in blood. We will remember that the reckoning is not over.

We many of us will settle with our families into our holiday season, our Christmas season for those who celebrate it, content in our fortune and prosperity. We will meet old friends with smiles and laughter. We will meet our members of our family with hugs. We will eat well, and exchange gifts and raise our glasses to the year passed in gratitude, and to the year to come with hope. We will sleep the sleep of the protected, secure in our homes, secure in our homeland.

But for many families, there will be an empty chair at the table this year. A place that is not filled.

We should remember.”

Thanks To Alfa6 For The Narrative Of “The Empty Chair.”

Schumann - Traumerei
(Click)


Never Forget Those Who Sacrificed All That We Could Live In Freedom!!






Nos genuflectitur ad non princeps sed Princeps Pacem!

Listen, O isles, unto me; and hearken, ye people, from far; The LORD hath called me from the womb; from the bowels of my mother hath he made mention of my name. (Isaiah 49:1 KJV)

36 posted on 06/08/2012 6:40:47 PM PDT by ConorMacNessa (HM/2 USN, 3/5 Marines RVN 1969 - St. Michael the Archangel defend us in Battle!)
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To: HopeandGlory
And a close second....Nana Hope snags the silver!!


37 posted on 06/08/2012 6:42:09 PM PDT by Kathy in Alaska
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To: AZamericonnie; ConorMacNessa; Drumbo; Esmerelda; Kathy in Alaska; MS.BEHAVIN; LUV W; StarCMC
When it comes to the music of Johannes Brahms, most people are introduced to it by a music teacher who is the local church organist, can’t properly pronounce the Italian words that define musical instructions, and relies on a lesson plan that uses the hackneyed word “neoclassical” to describe him. Then she’ll play a recording of the First Symphony that is performed too slowly and ponderously. The impression is one of thick harmonies, but boring, boring, boring!

How can anyone relate to someone who looks like this?

This is a man hiding behind his beard in the later, more successful years of his life when he could afford Cuban cigars.

But this is what he looked like as a young man.

He was short with a high-pitched voice, saw his hairline recede early in life, chain-smoked cigarettes once out of his teens, and had a difficult personality with a dangerous wit.

His father played a variety of instruments, but settled on string bass. Cafes, restaurants and theaters all had need of musicians in the years before Muzak, and Daddy Brahms was known around Hamburg as a “beer fiddler”.

I got a chance to see this in action recently at the Spoleto Music Festival in Charleston. A small group of waltzes by Lanner, the inventor of the waltz, was programmed with an ensemble of three violins and string bass. The bass player kept the pulse with one note per bar. Sometimes a bass player of that era could skip a bar and grab his stein for a gulp. It wasn’t all that much of a living.

Born in 1833 in Hamburg, Johannes was a blond, blue-eyed boy with a load of musical talent, and Daddy had him learn a whole slew of instruments. But Jo (pronounced in German as “Yo”) settled on the piano, for which he had a serious gift. At his first recital at age 10, he played the Beethoven Quintet for Piano and Winds, and an impresario tried to talk the family into taking him to America to turn him into the next Mozart. Young Jo’s teacher put a stop to that foolishness and turned him over to his own teacher, who figured out that the boy had a gift for piano but had real fire in his belly for composing. He put Jo on a diet of Haydn, Mozart and Beethoven.

But you have to live, and by the age of 13, Jo was playing piano in the waterfront dives of Hamburg where the drinking, dancing – and other goings on – were continuous. Jo was as fair and pretty as a girl, and it was the wrong place for an impressionable kid, especially when the girls poured beer down his throat, passed him around, and fondled his gestüffenpoken. He probably got it worse from the sailors. Hamburg was a tough town, and if you couldn’t handle yourself, you were likely to get the scheiss beaten out of you. Seeing people having sex in public scarred him for the rest of his life, gave him a bad view of human sexuality and women, and gave him a taste for hookers in his later years. He was never to marry and had a serious Madonna Complex for any woman he loved. Freud would have paid handsomely to have him as a patient. Yet in his later years, Brahms spoke of that experience with some degree of pride. “I would not on any account have missed this period of hardship in my life, for I am convinced that it did me good.” But at the age of 14, Jo Brahms was turning into an alcoholic.

Daddy rescued him by sending to live in the country for the summer with an amateur musician, and it turned Jo’s life around. He was up at 5 AM for a skinny dip in the river, practiced the piano, and then walked out into the countryside with the daughter of the family, immersing himself in German Romantic poetry. He got the opportunity to conduct the local choral society and write a few pieces for them which he later destroyed. Brahms was a ruthless self-critic and knew which of his pieces were good and which didn’t live up to his standards. Thus his juvenile songs went into the fireplace.

Fifteen and sixteen year old Jo performed in a series of recitals, in one of which he handled Beethoven’s difficult Waldstein Sonata. In his later teens, he was teaching piano to the student overflow from his two piano teachers and playing piano in theaters and restaurants. He was not an easy person to get along with and had a prickly personality prone to mercurial blowups. In the ongoing conflict between German classicism and the “new music” of Berlioz, Liszt and Wagner, Brahms sided with classicism.

At the age of 18, Jo Brahms finally wrote a short piece that he felt was worth saving from the fireplace, and it has stood the test of time. It is demonic, and from the first bars there is no doubt that this is a young man who has settled on his composing style. He has found a voice.

A scherzo is traditionally in 3/4, although that’s not a hard and fast rule. The format for this piece is AAB-CCD-AB-EF-AB. The CCD and EF sections are labeled “trios” for reasons going back to the Baroque era that have nothing to do with the number three. Music can be strange sometimes.

Brahms: Scherzo in E-flat minor, Op. 4

38 posted on 06/08/2012 6:42:18 PM PDT by Publius (Leadershiup starts with getting off the couch.)
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To: 2LT Radix jr; 80 Square Miles; acad1228; AirForceMom; AliVeritas; aomagrat; ariamne; ...

~~Tunes For The Troops~~

 

Leon Redbone - It's A Lonely World

 
Want more information about the artists we play? Perhaps you'd like to buy concert tickets or their CDs? Click the links provided at the top of the thread for more information!


39 posted on 06/08/2012 6:43:17 PM PDT by AZamericonnie
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To: AZamericonnie

Greetings and Salutations.


40 posted on 06/08/2012 6:44:14 PM PDT by Drumbo ("Democracy can withstand anything but democrats." - Jubal Harshaw [Robert A. Heinlein])
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