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Saving the GOP...
HK wrote:
Eisboch wrote: "HK" wrote in message m... Eisboch wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NrzXLYA_e6E Why anyone thinks the GOP is *worth* saving is beyond me. Lots of things in this world are beyond you. Eisboch And you. I said it first. nena nena nena Yeah? Top this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fs0nB...om=PL&index=42 A female Liberace. |
Saving the GOP...
On Jun 12, 6:34*am, HK wrote:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NrzXLYA_e6E Why anyone thinks the GOP is *worth* saving is beyond me. -- That's Harry in a nutshell. So narrow minded he simply can't see anyone else's point of view. Personally, while being somewhat left of center, I have enough sense to know that we need a multiple party system of checks and balances. |
Saving the GOP...
On Jun 12, 8:13*am, TopBassDog wrote:
On Jun 12, 7:04*am, HK wrote: Eisboch wrote: "HK" wrote in message om... Eisboch wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NrzXLYA_e6E Why anyone thinks the GOP is *worth* saving is beyond me. Lots of things in this world are beyond you. Eisboch And you. I said it first. *nena nena nena Yeah? Top this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fs0nB...List&p=7860F24... -- The modern GOP is little more than an army of moral absolutists led by a gang of moral nihilists. Smith is an excellent organist, Herr Krause. But what does she have to do with the subject in which you started: "Saving the GOP?"- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Harry's an organ. Guess which one! |
Saving the GOP...
On Jun 12, 8:37*am, Loogypicker wrote:
On Jun 12, 8:13*am, TopBassDog wrote: On Jun 12, 7:04*am, HK wrote: Eisboch wrote: "HK" wrote in message om... Eisboch wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NrzXLYA_e6E Why anyone thinks the GOP is *worth* saving is beyond me. Lots of things in this world are beyond you. Eisboch And you. I said it first. *nena nena nena Yeah? Top this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fs0nB...List&p=7860F24... -- The modern GOP is little more than an army of moral absolutists led by a gang of moral nihilists. Smith is an excellent organist, Herr Krause. But what does she have to do with the subject in which you started: "Saving the GOP?"- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Harry's an organ. Guess which one!- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - based on his tryst with Stumpy (Von Brunn), one would have to think Harry was a big fat vagina... |
Saving the GOP...
"HK" wrote in message m... Eisboch wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... Yeah? Top this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fs0nB...om=PL&index=42 She was good, no doubt. Too bad it isn't a B3. Here's a B3. In fact, in some of the sections of the video, Monaco is playing the exact B3 I have in the music shop. I have pictures and a CD of him playing it that came with the organ when I bought it. He has an interesting background. As a young kid, around the age of 11, he was learning to play an accordion but contracted some form of a neurological disease. He totally lost control of the muscles that control finger movements. He had to relearn, by shear will power, the ability to control movement of his hands and fingers. Even today if you watch closely the way he forms chords on the organ keyboard and attacks the keys is a bit different from what you would normally expect. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8xVU_BLow5M Eisboch Great organist, to be sure, but even though he is playing a tribute to Jimmy Smith, Jimmy Smith he ain't. His name isn't Jimmy Smith, agreed. But his style, interpretation and technique is certainly spot on, an opinion shared by most contemporary jazz musicians. In that "Tribute" he didn't really get carried away because he was doing the song exactly as Smith did. I've seen and heard others, including some classic blues that knock your socks off. I just have a particular fascination with the sound of a tweaked Hammond B3/Leslie combination. Another unbelievable B3 artist was Billy Preston. He could make his very modified B3 sing. Gives me goosebumps. Eisboch |
Saving the GOP...
HK wrote:
Eisboch wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... Yeah? Top this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fs0nB...om=PL&index=42 She was good, no doubt. Too bad it isn't a B3. Here's a B3. In fact, in some of the sections of the video, Monaco is playing the exact B3 I have in the music shop. I have pictures and a CD of him playing it that came with the organ when I bought it. He has an interesting background. As a young kid, around the age of 11, he was learning to play an accordion but contracted some form of a neurological disease. He totally lost control of the muscles that control finger movements. He had to relearn, by shear will power, the ability to control movement of his hands and fingers. Even today if you watch closely the way he forms chords on the organ keyboard and attacks the keys is a bit different from what you would normally expect. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8xVU_BLow5M Eisboch Great organist, to be sure, but even though he is playing a tribute to Jimmy Smith, Jimmy Smith he ain't. You got all that out of watching the video? WOW |
Saving the GOP...
"HK" wrote in message m... Eisboch wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... Yeah? Top this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fs0nB...om=PL&index=42 She was good, no doubt. Too bad it isn't a B3. Here's a B3. In fact, in some of the sections of the video, Monaco is playing the exact B3 I have in the music shop. I have pictures and a CD of him playing it that came with the organ when I bought it. He has an interesting background. As a young kid, around the age of 11, he was learning to play an accordion but contracted some form of a neurological disease. He totally lost control of the muscles that control finger movements. He had to relearn, by shear will power, the ability to control movement of his hands and fingers. Even today if you watch closely the way he forms chords on the organ keyboard and attacks the keys is a bit different from what you would normally expect. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8xVU_BLow5M Eisboch Great organist, to be sure, but even though he is playing a tribute to Jimmy Smith, Jimmy Smith he ain't. You know what? You don't know what you are talking about. There is no way you even bothered to watch or listen to the Tribute that I linked. It's over 13 minutes long and the tribute doesn't start until about half way through. You responded to the link within 4 minutes of me posting it. There's no way you could have even heard it. I call BS. Eisboch |
Saving the GOP...
"jim1" wrote in message ... HK wrote: Great organist, to be sure, but even though he is playing a tribute to Jimmy Smith, Jimmy Smith he ain't. You got all that out of watching the video? WOW He didn't watch the video. He just commented, as usual. Eisboch |
Saving the GOP...
"Eisboch" wrote in message ... "HK" wrote in message m... Eisboch wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... Yeah? Top this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fs0nB...om=PL&index=42 She was good, no doubt. Too bad it isn't a B3. Here's a B3. In fact, in some of the sections of the video, Monaco is playing the exact B3 I have in the music shop. I have pictures and a CD of him playing it that came with the organ when I bought it. He has an interesting background. As a young kid, around the age of 11, he was learning to play an accordion but contracted some form of a neurological disease. He totally lost control of the muscles that control finger movements. He had to relearn, by shear will power, the ability to control movement of his hands and fingers. Even today if you watch closely the way he forms chords on the organ keyboard and attacks the keys is a bit different from what you would normally expect. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8xVU_BLow5M Eisboch Great organist, to be sure, but even though he is playing a tribute to Jimmy Smith, Jimmy Smith he ain't. You know what? You don't know what you are talking about. There is no way you even bothered to watch or listen to the Tribute that I linked. It's over 13 minutes long and the tribute doesn't start until about half way through. You responded to the link within 4 minutes of me posting it. There's no way you could have even heard it. I call BS. Eisboch You know the response, HE never said he did listen to it. |
Saving the GOP...
Eisboch wrote:
"HK" wrote in message m... Eisboch wrote: "HK" wrote in message ... Yeah? Top this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fs0nB...om=PL&index=42 She was good, no doubt. Too bad it isn't a B3. Here's a B3. In fact, in some of the sections of the video, Monaco is playing the exact B3 I have in the music shop. I have pictures and a CD of him playing it that came with the organ when I bought it. He has an interesting background. As a young kid, around the age of 11, he was learning to play an accordion but contracted some form of a neurological disease. He totally lost control of the muscles that control finger movements. He had to relearn, by shear will power, the ability to control movement of his hands and fingers. Even today if you watch closely the way he forms chords on the organ keyboard and attacks the keys is a bit different from what you would normally expect. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8xVU_BLow5M Eisboch Great organist, to be sure, but even though he is playing a tribute to Jimmy Smith, Jimmy Smith he ain't. His name isn't Jimmy Smith, agreed. But his style, interpretation and technique is certainly spot on, an opinion shared by most contemporary jazz musicians. In that "Tribute" he didn't really get carried away because he was doing the song exactly as Smith did. I've seen and heard others, including some classic blues that knock your socks off. I just have a particular fascination with the sound of a tweaked Hammond B3/Leslie combination. Another unbelievable B3 artist was Billy Preston. He could make his very modified B3 sing. Gives me goosebumps. Eisboch Well, I was "exposed" to that sort of organ playing (but not that level) at a very young age. My dad was an advanced amateur organist, and we always had a Hammond, Wurlitzer or Gulbransen in the living room. The last organ was another Hammond, with a Leslie speaker that my dad "stashed" in a corner of the adjacent dining room, much to the annoyance of my mother. He did his own repairs, too, with boxes of tubes, harmonic drawbars, et cetera, in the basement. Great hobby for him, especially in the dead of winter, when the boat biz in New Haven was as moribund as creative thought coming from the GOP. :) Funny thing...he couldn't read a note of music. He'd buy those "Fake Books" from Goldie's Music Store in downtown New Haven, and each would have literally thousands of scores in them. My dad bought the books for the song titles. He'd play "by ear," and once he heard a song, it was "his" forever. He knew most of the songs in the books...the titles just jolted the melodies in his mind. I think I told you once he got opportunities to sit in during shows of the local theater organ society, held at the Whalley Theater. I wonder if the Whalley still exists, and whether it still has its Mighty Wurlitzer? Do you remember the Whalley? It was the big first-run theater in New Haven. Large to me then, but by today's standards, not so large, I bet. We had another great theater in New Haven, the Loew's Poli. It was downtown. Very fancy. Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney performed there. The Poli family had a large mansion on Forest Road in New Haven, and a huge multi-house enclave out at Woodmont. The house they lived in in the summer was a convent or religious retreat the last time I saw it. -- The modern GOP is little more than an army of moral absolutists led by a gang of moral nihilists. |
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