Extractions: IN STOCK. ORDER NOW. Will ship within 24 hours! Unique improvisation-based treatments of classic jazz tunes, pop songs, and originals. Reviewers have compared him to Dave Brubeck, John Coltrane, McCoy Tyner, Ian Underwood, Bill Evans, Chick Corea, John Fahey, Herbie Hancock, Patricia Barber, and Claud TRACKS lo-fi: dial-up hi-fi: broadband NOTES Solo pianist Larry McDonough takes classic songs from the jazz and pop schools, as well as interesting originals, and puts them through his own unique focus. You will recognize these tunes, but they won't sound anything like you remember them. In addition, Larry is the only pianist we know who takes bass solos on piano, often trading choruses back and forth between his right and left hands. On Small Steps, jazz pianist Larry McDonough presents unique arrangements of jazz classics (All Blues, Crystal Silence, Nature Boy), pop classics (Layla, Linus and Lucy, Good Day Sunshine), and originals songs by producer Mark Browning Milner (Coreatown) and McDonough (Small Steps). McDonough said that he had several goals for the CD. First, he wanted to record live in the studio, without any editing, dubbing or re-recording.
Movies.com Filmography! Never Give A Sucker An Even Break Rival Billy Lenhart Butch Kenneth brown - Buddy Anne Irving Bacon - Tom, Soda JerkClaud Allister - Bitter Englishman Leon Belasco - pianist Emil Van http://movies.go.com/filmography/Credits?movie_id=8358
Descendants Of James Anderson Carpenter, Sr. That evening Hugh and Adelia (Harman) Scott, with Jeff and Amy (Gregory) Brownand another Notes for WILLIS claud (BILL) CARPENTER Linda Nichols, pianist. http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~bulger/carpjames.htm
Extractions: Descendants of James Anderson Carpenter, Sr. Note: This information has come from many different sources over a number of years an there is no guarantee of accuracy. Use it at your own risk, but please let me know of anything that you know to be in error. James A. Carpenter is listed, here, as being born in Jackson, Madison County, Tennessee but it could be Jackson County, unknown city. Some sources show him born in KY. JAMES ANDERSON CARPENTER, SR. was born November 11, 1831 in Jackson, Madison CO., Tennessee, and died April 02, 1908 in Springfield, Mo.. He married JULIA MARIE CARR January 28, 1866 in Indiana [see notes], daughter of AMOS CARR and RUTH WINN. She was born June 27, 1847 in Warwick, Orange, New York, and died December 26, 1900 in Ozark, Mo.. Notes for JAMES ANDERSON CARPENTER, SR.: Some of this information is contradictory, so take it with a grain of salt. Birth date confusion1831 or 1836 One source says James had one brother, Alexander and that the family broke up because of disagreement over the civil war. The 1900 census showed James had 15 children, 12 still living.
Films And TV: Movie Lookup He killed her boyfriend (Johnny Mack brown) after discovering that the couple spent isin love with the wife (Frances Drake) of a gifted pianist, Stephen Orlac http://www.filmsandtv.com/search.asp?ms=2&uq=Henry Kolker
The Shawnee News-Star -- Obituaries --Today's Obituaries 01/11/99 Davenport under the direction of brown's Funeral Home Church where she was churchpianist, taught Sunday home in Okemah; two brothers, claud Montgomery, Exeter http://www.news-star.com/stories/011299/obi_011299.html
Extractions: Henry C. Brown Shawnee resident Henry C. "Cliff" Brown died Saturday at a local nursing home. He was 93. Services will be 11 a.m. today at Roesch-Walker Funeral Chapel with Dr. Jeff Moore and the Rev. Sam Hendry officiating. Burial will be in Fairview Cemetery. Brown was born Dec. 15, 1905, in Quanah, Texas, to James Franklin and James Edward (Higgenbotham) Brown. He married Thelma Blakely. After her death, he married Merle Attebery. He attended schools in Yale and was a house painter and paper hanger. He also worked for Shawnee Gas Company. He was a member of Immanuel Baptist Church. Survivors include his wife, Merle Brown, Shawnee; step-daughter and her spouse, Relleen and Kamran Firooz, Colorado; two granddaughters, Karen Whitlow and Dianna Brown; four great-grandchildren; five step-grandchildren; sister, Nell Folks; brother-in-law and sister-in-law, Marvin and Lucille Attebery; and many other relatives and friends. He was preceded in death by his first wife, Thelma Blakely; one son, Richard L. Brown; two step-sons, Donald L. and Marvin E. Robberson; three sisters and three brothers. Marvin Edward Hamm Former area pastor the Rev. Marvin Edward Hamm of Willow Springs, Mo., died Thursday. He was 76.
A.I.S.N.A 97) (11) In this description of a pianist playing jazz black nigger loving lip a scrimpybrown gal right of McKay's biography, see Wayne Cooper's claud McKay. http://www.aisna.org/rsajournal8/pontuale.html
Extractions: Although Claude McKay enjoyed a certain fame after the publication of "If We Must Die," a sonnet inspired by the racial riots which spread through several major American cities during the "Red Summer" of 1919, it is Home to Harlem (1928) that gave him celebrity and for a brief period eased his financial hardships., Home to Harlem sold eleven thousand copies in the first two weeks of its publication, fifty thousand during its first year and was the first best-seller written by a black writer in America .2 Nevertheless, its depiction of lower-class Harlemites did appal some of the American black leaders, most notoriously W.E.B. Du Bois. In his 1928 Crisis review, he wrote of Home to Harlem: "after the dirtier parts of its filth I feel distinctly like taking a bath" (359). For Du Bois the novel's emphasis on the instinctual, the sensual and the animal worked against the genteel image of respectability which he, as a black leader, had strived to attain for his people; it reinforced many of the stereotypes associated with blacks, especially although the word did not appear in Du Bois's review their "primitivism."During the 1920s, as well as in later critical literature, the central issue of controversy around which the debate on Home to Harlem revolved was precisely this one of primitivism .3 For Robert Bone, for instance, who according to James Giles was the first to treat McKay's novel seriously (9), and the one who, with his publication of
Our Ancestors Of South Hampton Roads Switzerland, December 27 Polish pianist, died here October 27, 1983 in Hollomon-BrownFuneral Home Caroline Virginia (MIDGETT) MIDGETTE , claud Baxter (MIDGETT http://digginforkin.tripod.com/SHRds/d265.html
Extractions: Lausanne, Switzerland, December 27 - Polish pianist, died here Sunday, December 27, 1953 after a long illness. He was a close friend of JAN IGNACE PADEREWSKI, with whom he edited and published the complete works of Chopin. He performed in concerts in many parts of the world and once was a director of the Warsaw Conservatory of Music. Bettie J. TURNBILL Portsmouth - Age 64, of the 1600 block of Camden Ave, died Saturday, September 6, 1986 in a hospital. He was a native of Portsmouth and had retired from Atlantic Creosoting Co. He was a member of Third Baptist Church and the widower of BEATRICE TURNER. Survivors include an aunt, LUCILLE SMITH and 2 uncles, GEORGE T. LYNCH and DANIEL BURRELL, all of Portsmouth. A funeral will be conducted at 2:30 pm Thursday, September 11, 1986 in Third Baptist Church by the Rev JOE B. FLEMING. Burial will be in Lincoln Cemetery. Fisher Funeral Home is handling arrangements.
Extractions: by Giles Easterbrook In January 1968 Bliss drew the double bar-line to the 'Nocturne' concluding Angels of the Mind and, effectively, a sixty-year career as a songwriter. For the previous four years he had written little but miniatures and the official commissions into which his post as Master of the Queen's Musick had increasingly sucked him. He had found his appetite for creative work gone, and 'my ability to concentrate'1, so, with the conclusion of The Golden Cantata (1963) he had decided to cease composing serious concert music forever. Of course a genuine creative imagination doesn't work quite like that, and it was perhaps inevitable that something should have lured him back to the work-desk. Significantly it was the medium of song, and two things that recurringly mattered to him throughout his life: a text, and a friendship with its author, Kathleen Raine. At the front, Bliss served with distinction, being himself wounded and later gassed, while witnessing the full force of its atrocity with the loss of so many comrades. Creative work was impossible save, tentatively, on leave, recuperating, or during a spell as an instructor in England while recovering from wounds. It was during one of these spells of respite that he learned of the death of Kennard. The following month (October 1916). he completed The Tramps, setting words by the Canadian-Scottish author Robert Service, probably best known as the author of 'Desperate Dan Magrew'. In the guise of a hearty, traditional Peter Dawson-type ballad, it sets out deliberately to use the musical language of a departed time, and the poem's images of carefree comradeship, freedom and open air to recapture the spirit of lost innocence and youth whose sweetness is forever spoiled, from an age forever gone.
CBC Television Series 1952 To 1982, P-Per Pat was pianist and singer Patrick Trudell and Ernie In The Devil's Decade, journalistClaud Cockburn discussed Miles Potter, Ken Pogue, Blair brown, Janet Amos http://www.film.queensu.ca/CBC/Pac.html
Extractions: Pacific l3 Mon 9:00-9:30 p.m., 2 Jul-3 Sep 1956 Pacificanada Wed 10:30-11:00 p.m., 22 Jan-12 Mar 1975 Sun 1:00-1:30 p.m., 6 Jul-17 Aug 1975 (R) Pacificanada, a series of eight, half-hour films on British Columbia, formed part of a flank of National Film Board productions, broadcast on the CBC, about the different regions of the country. (The others were Adieu Alouette and West, two series about Quebec and the Prairie provinces, respectively, and Atlanticanada, presented as a two and one-half hour special broadcast.) Executive producers of the series were Peter Jones of the National Film Board's Vancouver production centre, and Ian McLaren of the Montreal headquarters. In addition to presenting western Canadian life to the rest of the country, the series was intended to support the efforts of regional filmmakers. Pan-American Games Sun 3:30-5:00 p.m., 23 Jul 1967 Mon-Fri 5:30-6:00 p.m., 24 Jul-4 Aug 1967 Mon-Fri 10:30-11:00 p.m., 24 Jul-4 Aug 1967
Www.gabooks.com/gawritrs.txt of GA press, 1952 Brougher, William E. brown, Calvin Smith brown, claud L. Book(w/ LK Kirkman) Trees of Georgia and Adjacent States Timber Press, Oregon. http://www.gabooks.com/gawritrs.txt
Newspaper Abstracts PARKS of Detroit, Mich., who was the pianist in the C Myerly Rodman 1140, Matt DBrown Ayrshire 708 Bend 366, Eddie Hilton Emmetsburg 1261, claud C Rucker http://newspaperabstracts.com/IA/PaloAlto/1917/JUL.html
Deaths- November, 1997 held at 2 pm today at claud A. McKibben Survivors include her daughter, Joyce Brownof Newnan; and Garden were rendered as instrumentals by pianist Mary Ann http://times-herald.com/deaths/index7.html
Extractions: Dates shown are publication dates November 1, 1997 Mr. Anthony Britt Mr. Anthony Britt, 23, of Neal Street in Newnan passed away Oct. 27, 1997, at Newnan Hospital. Born Nov. 30, 1973 in Newnan, Mr. Britt was the son of the late James Britt. He was employed at Foley Products in Newnan. A service was held Oct. 31 at Sellers-Smith Funeral Home with Evangelist Gloristein Arnold officiating. Interment followed at Eastview Cemetery with Gary Woods, Eric Britt, Anthony James, Frank Allen, Spirous Calloway and James Collins serving as pallbearers. Survivors include his son, Anthony Britt Jr.; mother, Youlon Britt; sisters, Valorie Britt, Antonia Green, Crystal Dennis; grandmother, Eloise Jackson; aunts; uncles; and cousins. Sellers-Smith Funeral Home, Newnan. Mrs. Dorothy Newby Mrs. Dorothy Newby, 69, of Pulaski, Tenn., formerly of Newnan, died Oct. 30, 1997, in Pulaski. Born May 20, 1928 in Coweta County, Mrs. Newby was the daughter of the late Joe James Storey Sr. and Mattie Howard Storey. She was a homemaker and a member of Mt. Carmel United Methodist Church. A service will be Nov. 2 at Hillcrest Chapel Funeral Home with the Rev. Joe Storey and the Rev. Harry Holloman officiating. Interment followed at Oak Hill Cemetery with Darrell Crumbley, Larry Crumbley, Ken Carr, Jeff Richards, Brian Marks and Chris Nichols serving as pallbearers.
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