Evil Ronnie wrote:Steely Dan, Gaucho
Habibi wrote:Evil Ronnie wrote:Steely Dan, Gaucho
"The Cuervo Gold, the fine Colombian............."
Classic stuff, but I prefer Aja or even better, the cryptic Royal Scam.
Cathy2 wrote:I thought others might be curious to hear this music:
The Vanished Army had the least choices. I suspect the poor quality is related to the microphone rather than the presentation.
University of Illinois wrote:A question that always comes up is why Sousa’s papers are at Illinois. The answer is friendship and professional admiration.
In the early 1900s, Sousa struck up what would become a 30-year friendship with A.A. Harding, Illinois’ first director of bands.
According to Paul Bierley, the primary Sousa biographer, Sousa greatly admired Harding’s work and believed that “the University of Illinois Band was the best college band in the world.” Sousa even composed a “University of Illinois March” in 1929 and performed it on the Illinois campus the next year; on that occasion he was made an honorary conductor of Illinois’ concert band.
Sousa promised Harding he would bequeath most of his band music library to Illinois, and following his death in March of 1932, his widow kept that promise: 18,000 pounds of music in 39 trunks were delivered to the campus.
The U. of I. holds 74 percent of the extant Sousa materials, including original scores and parts, published music and manuscripts, personal papers, photographs, programs, news clippings, broadsides, memorabilia and one of Sousa’s batons, a pair of his white kid gloves, which he always wore while conducting, his music stand and podium.
Among the manuscripts are the band parts for Sousa’s Christmas Day 1896 composition “The Stars and Stripes Forever,” which 101 years later would be declared the national march of the United States.
The Sousa Archives and Center also has a good selection of band instruments and uniforms, Native American instruments and some unidentified instruments.
The collection, in the Harding Band Building and under the aegis of the University Library, has grown to include the music, instruments and artifacts of many former Sousa band members, including first cornetist Herbert L. Clarke and vocal soloist Virginia Root.
Sousa’s biographer described Sousa as “an incredible genius” and “truly an American phenomenon.”
Evil Ronnie wrote:Habibi wrote:Evil Ronnie wrote:Steely Dan, Gaucho
"The Cuervo Gold, the fine Colombian............."
Classic stuff, but I prefer Aja or even better, the cryptic Royal Scam.
Habibi,
Gaucho was the middle selection this evening between Aja and The Nightfly. I became inspired after watching the Classic Albums: Steely Dan/Aja dvd earlier today.
http://www.amazon.com/Classic-Albums-St ... 494&sr=1-1
My all time favorite Steely Dan album is Aja and Deacon Blues is my favorite Song of theirs. What's yours?
philw wrote:ZZ TOP
jesus just left chicago