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 Music

The place to review or just chat about all Music & Videos.


Music Discussion Board

Feel free to talk about ANY Music you are interested in.

Embedding files from YouTube is welcome on this board.

Also any Hyper Links you wish to use.

This is a public board. All members, regardless of membership level (this includes pawns) are welcome to post here.

YOUTUBE has changed the way it codes it's Video Embed's. To make it work now you must right-click on the Video itself, and select 'Copy Embed HTML'. The Embed link under the Video does NOT work at present on BrainKing.

Please note - ANY material posted here deemed offensive or plagiarized will be removed immediately. The posting user(s) will be banned. This is not negotiable. Plagiarism is posting any original writings of another person without proper reference. Such material will be removed to avoid copyright infringements.



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8. 六月 2006, 03:40:50
TexasToest 
I kinda felt like we ought to know that.  Yes, Groucho, 59, my age!!!!!!!!!!!!  I guess that's when things start happening.  

8. 六月 2006, 07:24:06
Papa Zoom 
题目: Re:
TexasToest: I started losing my hair at 26. That's when things started happening for me ;)

9. 六月 2006, 03:29:01
TexasToest 
题目: Re: Aging and balding musicians
Groucho:  I started getting silver hairs when I was 11.  Now, it looks all silver to me, but my aunt told me the other day it's still blonde.  I happen to think bald and balding men are extremely attractive.  I mean, look at this list: 

Jimi Hendrix - Was Sy Sperling's (Hair Club for Men) first celebrity client.

Jimmy Buffett - singer/song writer

Alan Jackson - is known to never take his trademark cowboy hat off for any occasion. The reason behind this is he has been bald since college and hides this by keeping what little hair he has left long.

Les Paul

Paul Shaffer - composer/bandleader/multi-instrumentalist, bald since the early-1990's

Ringo Starr - former drummer of the Beatles and present-day solo artist

 Michael Balzary - musician in Red Hot Chili Peppers


9. 六月 2006, 05:36:46
awesome 
题目: Re: Aging and balding musicians
TexasToest:

Sinead O'Connor

9. 六月 2006, 07:24:16
TexasToest 
题目: Re: Aging and balding musicians
awesome:  Hahaha!  Point well taken.  But, I tried to pick naturally bald people, and there weren't any women on that list.

9. 六月 2006, 07:32:55
Papa Zoom 
题目: Re: Aging and balding musicians
TexasToest: I'm in good company :)

9. 六月 2006, 07:47:21
TexasToest 
题目: Re: Aging and balding musicians
Groucho:  Yes, you are in the company of some very talented people.  See???????

9. 六月 2006, 13:01:28
Nirvana 
题目: Re: Aging and balding musicians
Groucho:
www.baldrus.com

(sorry, I couldn't resist!)

10. 六月 2006, 01:40:49
Papa Zoom 
题目: Re: Aging and balding musicians
Nirvana: I kinda look like Kelly Slater.

12. 六月 2006, 06:58:14
TexasToest 
题目: Re: Aging and balding musicians
TexasToest修改(12. 六月 2006, 07:01:49)
Nirvana:  Cool site.  Thanks. 

Where is everybody?  I see The San Francisco Chronicle panned A Prairie Home Companion.  Are we in mourning?  I love that show on radio, and listen enraptured each Saturday.  But, at one time, I don't remember when, they tried putting it on TV.  In my opinion, it flopped then too.  So, the lack of enthusiasm for the movie by the critics doesn't surprise me.  

I guess for me, the show is the music.  There have been so many talented musicians on that show.  I always look forward to hearing Dallas' own expats (to Virginia) Robin and Linda Williams.  Tish Hinojosa has been there telling her own stories in music.  I remember once there was a balalaika troup on.  That was a thrill.  I think the movie would have been much better received had they had more musicians in it. 

The Chronicle spoke of Keillor singing 10 songs in the movie.   He can sing, but his singing isn't his formost talent. 
Garrison Keillor's monologues are his biggest contribution to the radio show.  Keillor is such a wonderful story teller, that on the radio the magic is that the listener enjoys such vivid mental visuals of the stories that become a personal voyage because (s)he is getting those visions out of her/his own imagination.  Those images don't come across too well on the screen, because the audience doesn't use its imagination when listening to the tales.  They are watching the man standing on a stage spewing words.  On radio, I think Keillor is a musician in his own rite, even though he doesn't convert his thoughts into music.  His stories are melodic in the telling.  It's almost like the difference between reading a
book, and seeing the movie.  The music, and the monologues belong together.

Any other opinions?

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