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Official Great Works Draft (3 Viewers)

Re-post after a flurry of make-up picks.....

SKIPPED

34.11 - Thatguy (autoskip)

35.10 - Thatguy (autoskip)

35.12 - Mister CIA

36.11 - Thatguy (autoskip)

36.16 - Doug B (autoskip)

37.05 - Doug B (autoskip)

37.10 - Thatguy (autoskip)

37.12 - Team CIA (autoskip)

37.16 - Scott Norwood/Anborn (timed out)

37.18 - Genedoc/Bonzai (timed out)

37.19 - Tirnan (autoskip if not around)

38.02 - Tirnan (autoskip if not around)

38.03 - Genedoc (autoskip due to prior timeout)

38.05 - Scott Norwood (autoskip due to prior timeout)

38.09 - Team CIA (autoskip)

38.10 - El Floppo (autoskip)

38.11 - Thatguy (autoskip)

38.13 - Tides of War (autoskip)

38.14 - BobbyLayne (autoskip)

38.16 - Doug B (autoskip)

38.17 - Timscochet - OTC until :37

38.18 - Postradamus - On Deck

38.19 - Rodg - In The Hole

38.20 - Krista (Pick PMed to MfB)

39.01 - Fennis (Hopefully PMed to MfB)

39.02 - Rodg

39.03 - Postradamus

39.04 - Timscochet

39.05 - Doug B (autoskip)

39.06 - Abrantes

39.07 - BobbyLayne (autoskip if hasn't returned)

 
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tim's timed out I believe so here we go....

38.18

Time for a sports record that holds a special place in my heart as a lifelong REDS fan:

MLB's All-Time hit leader, Charlie Hustle - Pete Rose's 4,256 career hits

Rank Player Hits Bats

1. Pete Rose 4256 B

2. Ty Cobb+ 4189 L

3. Hank Aaron+ 3771 R

4. Stan Musial+ 3630 L

5. Tris Speaker+ 3514 L

Quite a margin there for the top5 all time. I don't see this record being broken anytime soon either.

 
tim's timed out I believe so here we go....

38.18

Time for a sports record that holds a special place in my heart as a lifelong REDS fan:

MLB's All-Time hit leader, Charlie Hustle - Pete Rose's 4,256 career hits

Rank Player Hits Bats

1. Pete Rose 4256 B

2. Ty Cobb+ 4189 L

3. Hank Aaron+ 3771 R

4. Stan Musial+ 3630 L

5. Tris Speaker+ 3514 L

Quite a margin there for the top5 all time. I don't see this record being broken anytime soon either.
Awesome, awesome pick.
 
tim's timed out I believe so here we go....

38.18

Time for a sports record that holds a special place in my heart as a lifelong REDS fan:

MLB's All-Time hit leader, Charlie Hustle - Pete Rose's 4,256 career hits

Rank Player Hits Bats

1. Pete Rose 4256 B

2. Ty Cobb+ 4189 L

3. Hank Aaron+ 3771 R

4. Stan Musial+ 3630 L

5. Tris Speaker+ 3514 L

Quite a margin there for the top5 all time. I don't see this record being broken anytime soon either.
Awesome, awesome pick.
:homer: perhaps? :lol:

 
tim's timed out I believe so here we go....

38.18

Time for a sports record that holds a special place in my heart as a lifelong REDS fan:

MLB's All-Time hit leader, Charlie Hustle - Pete Rose's 4,256 career hits

Rank Player Hits Bats

1. Pete Rose 4256 B

2. Ty Cobb+ 4189 L

3. Hank Aaron+ 3771 R

4. Stan Musial+ 3630 L

5. Tris Speaker+ 3514 L

Quite a margin there for the top5 all time. I don't see this record being broken anytime soon either.
Awesome, awesome pick.
:homer: I love the Cash pick too. One of my favorite albums.
 
Okay, I'll go ahead and finish out my songs category, I think I owe 5 picks, so this should make it 4 again.



Purple Rain by Prince

I love this song. Love the guitar solo, the lyrics, it's all awesome. I would post a link to it but Prince I can't find any actual versions on Youtube.

 
My bad on not being more involved/verbose/etc.

Really busy, need Gene to get back to do this draft justice.

 
timschochet has been suspended for a couple of days. He's not sure why, he tells me he thinks he was reported for using a bad word in French- (by whom, he wonders?) In any case, he will return Sunday or Monday and will have to update the OP at that time. He apologizes for the inconvienence.

In the meantime, he has asked me to select the following pick

38.17 The Gold Rush (film)

 
timschochet has been suspended for a couple of days. He's not sure why, he tells me he thinks he was reported for using a bad word in French- (by whom, he wonders?) In any case, he will return Sunday or Monday and will have to update the OP at that time. He apologizes for the inconvienence.

In the meantime, he has asked me to select the following pick

38.17 The Gold Rush (film)
:homer:
 
38.19 - Don Lockwood in Singin' In the Rain - Gene Kelly - Acting Performance

An iconic performance by one of the all-time greats. His famous dance scene has to be one of the most famous scenes in the history of movies.

Fun tid-bit about scene:

In the famous dance routine in which Gene Kelly sings the title song while twirling an umbrella, splashing through puddles and getting soaked to the skin, he was actually dancing in water with a little bit of milk added, so that the water puddles and raindrops would show up better on film. Kelly was sick with a 103-degree fever at the time. In addition, Kelly managed to perform the entire song in one take, thanks to cameras placed at predetermined locations.

 
Okay, I'll go ahead and finish out my songs category, I think I owe 5 picks, so this should make it 4 again.



Purple Rain by Prince

I love this song. Love the guitar solo, the lyrics, it's all awesome. I would post a link to it but Prince I can't find any actual versions on Youtube.
here ya go
Awesome. Thanks :thumbup: How badass is this song? So badass.
I like it alright. Prince isn't my favorite but no doubt he's got a ton of talent.
 
The Gold Rush (1925) is the quintessential Chaplin/Little Tramp film, with a balance of slapstick comedy and pantomime, social satire, and emotional and dramatic moments of tenderness. It was Chaplin's own personal favorite film, that showcases the classic Tramp character (referred to as "The Little Fellow" in the re-release version) as a romantic idealist and lone gold prospector at the turn of the century, with his cane, derby, distinctive walk, tight shabby suit, and mustache.

Classic scenes include the starvation scene of two cabin-marooned prospectors boiling and fastidiously eating a stewed shoe, the Tramp's cabin-mate deliriously imagining his companion as a large chicken, the teetering cabin on the edge of a cliff, and Chaplin's lonely fantasized New Year's Eve party (with the dancing dinner rolls routine) when he waits for a girl who never comes.

Chaplin declared several times that this was the film that he most wanted to be remembered for.

 
38.19 - Don Lockwood in Singin' In the Rain - Gene Kelly - Acting Performance

An iconic performance by one of the all-time greats. His famous dance scene has to be one of the most famous scenes in the history of movies.

Was it the movie or the performance that was previously taken?
 
Quick update then I'm out till later tonight, won't be able to update again until probably after 10 Central.

Re-post after a flurry of make-up picks.....

SKIPPED

35.10 - Thatguy (autoskip)

35.12 - Mister CIA

36.11 - Thatguy (autoskip)

36.16 - Doug B (autoskip)

37.05 - Doug B (autoskip)

37.10 - Thatguy (autoskip)

37.12 - Team CIA (autoskip)

37.16 - Scott Norwood/Anborn (timed out)

37.19 - Tirnan (autoskip if not around)

38.02 - Tirnan (autoskip if not around)

38.05 - Scott Norwood (autoskip due to prior timeout)

38.09 - Team CIA (autoskip)

38.10 - El Floppo (autoskip)

38.11 - Thatguy (autoskip)

38.13 - Tides of War (autoskip)

38.14 - BobbyLayne (autoskip)

38.16 - Doug B (autoskip)

39.03 - Postradamus

39.04 - Timscochet

39.05 - Doug B (autoskip)

39.06 - Abrantes

39.07 - BobbyLayne (autoskip if hasn't returned)

39.08 - Tides of War

39.09 - Big Rocks

39.10 - Thatguy (autoskip)

39.11 - El Floppo (autoskip if not here in first 15)

39.12 - Team CIA (autoskip)

39.13 - Uncle Humuna

39.14 - MisfitBlondes

39.15 - Bob Lee Swagger

39.16 - Scott Norwood

39.17 - DC Thunder

39.18 - Genedoc

39.19 - Tirnan

39.20 - Yankee23Fan

 
39.03

:thumbup: Alright no more Hendrix sniping. I have to have this song, IMO the best electric blues song ever recorded by the greatest guitarist to ever strap on a 6 string.

RED HOUSE - Jimi Hendrix

 
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The Gold Rush (1925) is the quintessential Chaplin/Little Tramp film, with a balance of slapstick comedy and pantomime, social satire, and emotional and dramatic moments of tenderness. It was Chaplin's own personal favorite film, that showcases the classic Tramp character (referred to as "The Little Fellow" in the re-release version) as a romantic idealist and lone gold prospector at the turn of the century, with his cane, derby, distinctive walk, tight shabby suit, and mustache.

Classic scenes include the starvation scene of two cabin-marooned prospectors boiling and fastidiously eating a stewed shoe, the Tramp's cabin-mate deliriously imagining his companion as a large chicken, the teetering cabin on the edge of a cliff, and Chaplin's lonely fantasized New Year's Eve party (with the dancing dinner rolls routine) when he waits for a girl who never comes.

Chaplin declared several times that this was the film that he most wanted to be remembered for.
ummm... wait... that voice...
 
tim's timed out I believe so here we go....

38.18

Time for a sports record that holds a special place in my heart as a lifelong REDS fan:

MLB's All-Time hit leader, Charlie Hustle - Pete Rose's 4,256 career hits

Rank Player Hits Bats

1. Pete Rose 4256 B

2. Ty Cobb+ 4189 L

3. Hank Aaron+ 3771 R

4. Stan Musial+ 3630 L

5. Tris Speaker+ 3514 L

Quite a margin there for the top5 all time. I don't see this record being broken anytime soon either.
This pick is quite a Gamble
 
With his 39th pick, timschochet selects yet another villain to go along with Anthony Hopkins in The Silence of The Lambs and Ralph Fiennes in Schindler's List:

29.04 Anthony Perkins in Psycho

Oddly enough, as the iconic Norman Bates, Perkins is a combination of the above two characters previously chosen: he is a man with the calculation and ruthlessness of Hannibal Lector, yet he is incredibly insecure, like Goeth. The attribute Perkins adds to the role is madness; he is more insane than he is evil, and unlike the other two he is not at all in control of his surroundings, but a victim of them. Despite his weaknesses, the viewer is not empathetic to Perkins; he makes himself seem weak so that we only feel a sort of pitiful contempt for him. This makes the fact that he is even the villain at all one of the great shocks in movie history.

The final scene of the movie remains one of the all time horror moments in film and is a great tribute to this performance.

 
38.13 - CIVILl DISOBEDIENCE - Henry David Thoreau

Non-Fiction

From Wikki............................

Civil Disobedience (Resistance to Civil Government) is an essay by Henry David Thoreau that was first published in 1849. It argues that people should not permit governments to overrule or atrophy their consciences, and that people have a duty to avoid allowing such acquiescence to enable the government to make them the agents of injustice. Thoreau was motivated in part by his disgust with slavery and the Mexican-American War.

“That government is best which governs least”

An aphorism sometimes attributed to either Thomas Jefferson or Thomas Paine—“That government is best which governs least”—actually was first found in this essay.[4] Thoreau was paraphrasing the motto of The United States Magazine and Democratic Review: “The best government is that which governs least.”[5]

[edit] Summary

Thoreau asserts that because governments are typically more harmful than helpful, they therefore cannot be justified. Democracy is no cure for this, as majorities simply by virtue of being majorities do not also gain the virtues of wisdom and justice. The judgment of an individual’s conscience is not necessarily or even likely inferior to the decisions of a political body or majority, and so “t is not desirable to cultivate a respect for the law, so much as for the right. The only obligation which I have a right to assume is to do at any time what I think right.… Law never made men a whit more just; and, by means of their respect for it, even the well-disposed are daily made the agents of injustice.”[6]

Indeed, he points out, you serve your country poorly if you do so by suppressing your conscience in favor of the law because your country needs consciences more than it needs conscienceless robots.

Thoreau says that it is disgraceful to be associated with the United States government in particular: “I cannot for an instant recognize as my government [that] which is the slave’s government also.”[7]

The government, according to Thoreau, is not just a little corrupt or unjust in the course of doing its otherwise-important work, but in fact the government is primarily an agent of corruption and injustice. Because of this, it’s “not too soon for honest men to rebel and revolutionize.”[8]

Political philosophers have counseled caution about revolution because the upheaval of revolution typically causes a lot of expense and suffering. However, Thoreau says that such a cost/benefit analysis isn’t appropriate when the government is actively facilitating an injustice like slavery. Such a thing is fundamentally immoral and even if it would be difficult and expensive to stop it, it must be stopped because it is wrong. “This people must cease to hold slaves, and to make war on Mexico, though it cost them their existence as a people.”[9]

Thoreau tells his audience that they cannot blame this problem solely on pro-slavery Southern politicians, but must put the blame on those in, for instance, Massachusetts, “who are more interested in commerce and agriculture than they are in humanity, and are not prepared to do justice to the slave and to Mexico, cost what it may.… There are thousands who are in opinion opposed to slavery and to the war, who yet in effect do nothing to put an end to them.”[10] (See also: Thoreau’s “Slavery in Massachusetts” which also advances this argument.)

He exhorts people not to just wait passively for an opportunity to vote for justice, because voting for justice is as ineffective as wishing for justice; what you need to do is to actually be just. This is not to say that you have an obligation to devote your life to fighting for justice, but you do have an obligation not to commit injustice and not to give injustice your practical support.

Paying taxes is one way in which otherwise well-meaning people collaborate in injustice. People who proclaim that the war in Mexico is wrong and that it is wrong to enforce slavery contradict themselves if they fund both things by paying taxes. Thoreau points out that the same people who applaud soldiers for refusing to fight an unjust war are not themselves willing to refuse to fund the government that started the war.

In a constitutional republic like the United States, people often think that the proper response to an unjust law is to try to use the political process to change the law, but to obey and respect the law until it is changed. But if the law is itself clearly unjust, and the lawmaking process is not designed to quickly obliterate such unjust laws, then Thoreau says the law deserves no respect and it should be broken. In the case of the United States the Constitution itself enshrines the institution of slavery, and therefore falls under this condemnation. Abolitionists, in Thoreau's opinion, should completely withdraw their support of the government and stop paying taxes, even if this means courting imprisonment.

“Under a government which imprisons unjustly, the true place for a just man is also a prison.… where the State places those who are not with her, but against her, – the only house in a slave State in which a free man can abide with honor.… Cast your whole vote, not a strip of paper merely, but your whole influence. A minority is powerless while it conforms to the majority; it is not even a minority then; but it is irresistible when it clogs by its whole weight. If the alternative is to keep all just men in prison, or give up war and slavery, the State will not hesitate which to choose. If a thousand men were not to pay their tax bills this year, that would not be a violent and bloody measure, as it would be to pay them, and enable the State to commit violence and shed innocent blood. This is, in fact, the definition of a peaceable revolution, if any such is possible.”[11]

Because the government will retaliate, Thoreau says he prefers living simply because he therefore has less to lose. “I can afford to refuse allegiance to Massachusetts…. It costs me less in every sense to incur the penalty of disobedience to the State than it would to obey. I should feel as if I were worth less in that case.”[12]

He was briefly imprisoned for refusing to pay the poll tax, but even in jail felt freer than the people outside. He considered it an interesting experience and came out of it with a new perspective on his relationship to the government and its citizens. (He was released the next day when "someone interfered, and paid that tax.")[13]

Thoreau said he was willing to pay the highway tax, which went to pay for something of benefit to his neighbors, but that he was opposed to taxes that went to support the government itself — even if he could not tell if his particular contribution would eventually be spent on an unjust project or a beneficial one. “I simply wish to refuse allegiance to the State, to withdraw and stand aloof from it effectually.”[14]

Because government is man-made, not an element of nature or an act of God, Thoreau hoped that its makers could be reasoned with. As governments go, he felt, the U.S. government, with all its faults, was not the worst and even had some admirable qualities. But he felt we could and should insist on better. “The progress from an absolute to a limited monarchy, from a limited monarchy to a democracy, is a progress toward a true respect for the individual.… Is a democracy, such as we know it, the last improvement possible in government? Is it not possible to take a step further towards recognizing and organizing the rights of man? There will never be a really free and enlightened State until the State comes to recognize the individual as a higher and independent power, from which all its own power and authority are derived, and treats him accordingly.”[15]

[edit] Influence

[edit] Mohandas Gandhi

Main article: Civil disobedience movement

Indian independence leader Mohandas Gandhi was very impressed by Thoreau’s arguments. In 1907, about one year into his first satyagraha campaign in South Africa, he wrote a translated synopsis of Thoreau’s argument for Indian Opinion, credited Thoreau’s essay with being “the chief cause of the abolition of slavery in America”, and wrote that “Both his example and writings are at present exactly applicable to the Indians in the Transvaal.”[16] He later concluded:

Thoreau was a great writer, philosopher, poet, and withal a most practical man, that is, he taught nothing he was not prepared to practice in himself. He was one of the greatest and most moral men America has produced. At the time of the abolition of slavery movement, he wrote his famous essay “On the Duty of Civil Disobedience”. He went to gaol for the sake of his principles and suffering humanity. His essay has, therefore, been sanctified by suffering. Moreover, it is written for all time. Its incisive logic is unanswerable.[17]

[edit] Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

American civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was also influenced by this essay. In his autobiography, he wrote:

During my student days I read Henry David Thoreau’s essay On Civil Disobedience for the first time. Here, in this courageous New Englander's refusal to pay his taxes and his choice of jail rather than support a war that would spread slavery’s territory into Mexico, I made my first contact with the theory of nonviolent resistance. Fascinated by the idea of refusing to cooperate with an evil system, I was so deeply moved that I reread the work several times.

I became convinced that noncooperation with evil is as much a moral obligation as is cooperation with good. No other person has been more eloquent and passionate in getting this idea across than Henry David Thoreau. As a result of his writings and personal witness, we are the heirs of a legacy of creative protest. The teachings of Thoreau came alive in our civil rights movement; indeed, they are more alive than ever before. Whether expressed in a sit-in at lunch counters, a freedom ride into Mississippi, a peaceful protest in Albany, Georgia, a bus boycott in Montgomery, Alabama, these are outgrowths of Thoreau’s insistence that evil must be resisted and that no moral man can patiently adjust to injustice.[18]
 
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tim's timed out I believe so here we go....

38.18

Time for a sports record that holds a special place in my heart as a lifelong REDS fan:

MLB's All-Time hit leader, Charlie Hustle - Pete Rose's 4,256 career hits

Rank Player Hits Bats

1. Pete Rose 4256 B

2. Ty Cobb+ 4189 L

3. Hank Aaron+ 3771 R

4. Stan Musial+ 3630 L

5. Tris Speaker+ 3514 L

Quite a margin there for the top5 all time. I don't see this record being broken anytime soon either.
This pick is quite a Gamble
True, the voters may snub him for it.
 
tim's timed out I believe so here we go....

38.18

Time for a sports record that holds a special place in my heart as a lifelong REDS fan:

MLB's All-Time hit leader, Charlie Hustle - Pete Rose's 4,256 career hits

Rank Player Hits Bats

1. Pete Rose 4256 B

2. Ty Cobb+ 4189 L

3. Hank Aaron+ 3771 R

4. Stan Musial+ 3630 L

5. Tris Speaker+ 3514 L

Quite a margin there for the top5 all time. I don't see this record being broken anytime soon either.
This pick is quite a Gamble
True, the voters may snub him for it.
You Bet
 
####.

I was going to go in a completely direction with my last song, which is an iconic modern masterpiece but only when considered with the artist/band that wrote/performed it orginally. Instead, I'm going to go with a song that has worked in just about every iteration I've ever heard- and they're wide-ranging: Ella, The Doors, Billie, Coltrane, Blakey, Professor, Bird, Zombies, and especially Janis. From Porgy and Bess by Gershwin.

38.10 Song, Summertime- Music by George Gershwin

I'll add some video links shortly...

eta:

Billie Holiday

Bill Evans

Ella Fitzgerald

Didn't know that about the Ukranian lullaby- white folk and their music theft...
 
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tim's timed out I believe so here we go....

38.18

Time for a sports record that holds a special place in my heart as a lifelong REDS fan:

MLB's All-Time hit leader, Charlie Hustle - Pete Rose's 4,256 career hits

Rank Player Hits Bats

1. Pete Rose 4256 B

2. Ty Cobb+ 4189 L

3. Hank Aaron+ 3771 R

4. Stan Musial+ 3630 L

5. Tris Speaker+ 3514 L

Quite a margin there for the top5 all time. I don't see this record being broken anytime soon either.
This pick is quite a Gamble
True, the voters may snub him for it.
You Bet
Not on my own team.
 
####.

I was going to go in a completely direction with my last song, which is an iconic modern masterpiece but only when considered with the artist/band that wrote/performed it orginally. Instead, I'm going to go with a song that has worked in just about every iteration I've ever heard- and they're wide-ranging: Ella, The Doors, Billie, Coltrane, Blakey, Professor, Bird, Zombies, and especially Janis. From Porgy and Bess by Gershwin.

38.10 Song, Summertime- Music by George Gershwin

I'll add some video links shortly...

From Wiki

"Summertime" is the name of an aria composed by George Gershwin for the 1935 opera Porgy and Bess. The lyrics are by DuBose and Dorothy Heyward, and Ira Gershwin[1]. The song soon became a popular jazz standard.

Gershwin is said to have based this song on a Ukrainian lullaby, Oi Khodyt Son Kolo Vikon (A Dream Passes By The Windows), which he heard in a New York City performance by Oleksander Koshetz’s Ukrainian National Chorus.

Gershwin began composing the song in December 1933, attempting to create his own spiritual in the style of the African American folk music of the period. It is sung multiple times throughout Porgy and Bess, first by Clara in Act I as a lullaby and soon after as counterpoint to the craps game scene, in Act II in a reprise by Clara, and in Act III by Bess, singing to Clara's baby.
Didn't know that about the Ukranian lullaby- white folk and their music theft...
:blackdot: The Doors?

 
tim's timed out I believe so here we go....

38.18

Time for a sports record that holds a special place in my heart as a lifelong REDS fan:

MLB's All-Time hit leader, Charlie Hustle - Pete Rose's 4,256 career hits

Rank Player Hits Bats

1. Pete Rose 4256 B

2. Ty Cobb+ 4189 L

3. Hank Aaron+ 3771 R

4. Stan Musial+ 3630 L

5. Tris Speaker+ 3514 L

Quite a margin there for the top5 all time. I don't see this record being broken anytime soon either.
This pick is quite a Gamble
It should be said, that as the judge of Sports Records, I hate and always have hated Pete Rose. I couldn't stand the whole Charlie Hustle schtick and nearly killing Ray Fosse in a play at the plate in a meaningless All Star game was the last straw.Nevertheless, you have to respect this record, so it will be judged fairly.

 
I love Charlie Hustle. I kinda appreciate people not liking him. Makes me like him even more for some reason. At least he never juiced. Betting on baseball doesn't even register with me, I just don't really give a #### :kicksrock: It's a disease in the vein of alcoholism and drug abuse, and there are players in the hall who have those addictions. He played great baseball all the time as hard as he could. The best player for a youngster to emulate on the field (assuming he won't turn out to be a gambler). I really don't think anyone will break the record in my lifetime.

 
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####.

I was going to go in a completely direction with my last song, which is an iconic modern masterpiece but only when considered with the artist/band that wrote/performed it orginally. Instead, I'm going to go with a song that has worked in just about every iteration I've ever heard- and they're wide-ranging: Ella, The Doors, Billie, Coltrane, Blakey, Professor, Bird, Zombies, and especially Janis. From Porgy and Bess by Gershwin.

38.10 Song, Summertime- Music by George Gershwin

I'll add some video links shortly...

From Wiki

"Summertime" is the name of an aria composed by George Gershwin for the 1935 opera Porgy and Bess. The lyrics are by DuBose and Dorothy Heyward, and Ira Gershwin[1]. The song soon became a popular jazz standard.

Gershwin is said to have based this song on a Ukrainian lullaby, Oi Khodyt Son Kolo Vikon (A Dream Passes By The Windows), which he heard in a New York City performance by Oleksander Koshetz’s Ukrainian National Chorus.

Gershwin began composing the song in December 1933, attempting to create his own spiritual in the style of the African American folk music of the period. It is sung multiple times throughout Porgy and Bess, first by Clara in Act I as a lullaby and soon after as counterpoint to the craps game scene, in Act II in a reprise by Clara, and in Act III by Bess, singing to Clara's baby.
Didn't know that about the Ukranian lullaby- white folk and their music theft...
:moneybag: The Doors?
Yes, The Doors
 
tim's timed out I believe so here we go....

38.18

Time for a sports record that holds a special place in my heart as a lifelong REDS fan:

MLB's All-Time hit leader, Charlie Hustle - Pete Rose's 4,256 career hits

Rank Player Hits Bats

1. Pete Rose 4256 B

2. Ty Cobb+ 4189 L

3. Hank Aaron+ 3771 R

4. Stan Musial+ 3630 L

5. Tris Speaker+ 3514 L

Quite a margin there for the top5 all time. I don't see this record being broken anytime soon either.
This pick is quite a Gamble
It should be said, that as the judge of Sports Records, I hate and always have hated Pete Rose. I couldn't stand the whole Charlie Hustle schtick and nearly killing Ray Fosse in a play at the plate in a meaningless All Star game was the last straw.Nevertheless, you have to respect this record, so it will be judged fairly.
I am Glad I do not Have a Charley Hustle Horse on my squad
 
####.

I was going to go in a completely direction with my last song, which is an iconic modern masterpiece but only when considered with the artist/band that wrote/performed it orginally. Instead, I'm going to go with a song that has worked in just about every iteration I've ever heard- and they're wide-ranging: Ella, The Doors, Billie, Coltrane, Blakey, Professor, Bird, Zombies, and especially Janis. From Porgy and Bess by Gershwin.

38.10 Song, Summertime- Music by George Gershwin

I'll add some video links shortly...

From Wiki

"Summertime" is the name of an aria composed by George Gershwin for the 1935 opera Porgy and Bess. The lyrics are by DuBose and Dorothy Heyward, and Ira Gershwin[1]. The song soon became a popular jazz standard.

Gershwin is said to have based this song on a Ukrainian lullaby, Oi Khodyt Son Kolo Vikon (A Dream Passes By The Windows), which he heard in a New York City performance by Oleksander Koshetz’s Ukrainian National Chorus.

Gershwin began composing the song in December 1933, attempting to create his own spiritual in the style of the African American folk music of the period. It is sung multiple times throughout Porgy and Bess, first by Clara in Act I as a lullaby and soon after as counterpoint to the craps game scene, in Act II in a reprise by Clara, and in Act III by Bess, singing to Clara's baby.
Didn't know that about the Ukranian lullaby- white folk and their music theft...
:moneybag: The Doors?
Yes, The Doors
... get some other standards going there too
 
Tim is :moneybag:

Should I respect someone who might have been probationed for cursing in French???

I Give Up - but who was weak enough to report that??

Many questions - who has the answers??

 
####.

I was going to go in a completely direction with my last song, which is an iconic modern masterpiece but only when considered with the artist/band that wrote/performed it orginally. Instead, I'm going to go with a song that has worked in just about every iteration I've ever heard- and they're wide-ranging: Ella, The Doors, Billie, Coltrane, Blakey, Professor, Bird, Zombies, and especially Janis. From Porgy and Bess by Gershwin.

38.10 Song, Summertime- Music by George Gershwin

I'll add some video links shortly...

From Wiki

"Summertime" is the name of an aria composed by George Gershwin for the 1935 opera Porgy and Bess. The lyrics are by DuBose and Dorothy Heyward, and Ira Gershwin[1]. The song soon became a popular jazz standard.

Gershwin is said to have based this song on a Ukrainian lullaby, Oi Khodyt Son Kolo Vikon (A Dream Passes By The Windows), which he heard in a New York City performance by Oleksander Koshetz’s Ukrainian National Chorus.

Gershwin began composing the song in December 1933, attempting to create his own spiritual in the style of the African American folk music of the period. It is sung multiple times throughout Porgy and Bess, first by Clara in Act I as a lullaby and soon after as counterpoint to the craps game scene, in Act II in a reprise by Clara, and in Act III by Bess, singing to Clara's baby.
Didn't know that about the Ukranian lullaby- white folk and their music theft...
:moneybag: The Doors?
Yes, The Doors
Cool!Forget not hearing this before, I didn't even know it exisited!

:thumbup:

 

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