Jintara poonlarp biography of michael jackson
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Oliver Vanetta Lynn, Jr., better known as Doolittle Lynn was an American talent manager and country music figure, best known as the husband of country music legend Loretta Lynn. Over the course of their often-tumultuous nearly year marriage, Doolittle was instrumental in developing Lynn's musical talent and country music career, purchasing her first guitar, getting her first radio appearances, and serving as her de facto talent manager for many years. In addition to his ongoing support for his young wife's career, Loretta wrote about her husband, "[He] thought I was something special, more special than anyone in the world, and never let me forget it Doo was my security, my safety net". He was also known to be violent, an alcoholic, and a womanizer who was a somewhat reluctant participant in his wife's life as a country music celebrity. Nonetheless, he was a central figure in many of his wife's hits, including "Fist City", "The Pill", "Don't Come Home A-Drinkin'", and "You Ain't Woma
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MUSIC IN THAILAND: CLASSICAL THAI MUSIC, LUK THUNG, MOR LAM, ROCK AND FULL MOON PARTIES
MUSIC IN THAILAND
Thai music for all intents and purposes follows a the pentatonic scales with the exception of tuned percussion which have seven note octaves. Most music is two beat with a stress on the second beat. Melody structures are complex because of frequent transpositions. Singing melodies are often conceived as narratives.
Classical Thai music developed in the royal court while folk and popular music sprung up in the countryside and the cities among ordinary people. Phra Charoen, a monk at the monastery at Wat Tham Krabok, records geological data with instruments and pairs it with the traditional bar phases in Thai music.
According to Wikipedia: The music of Thailand reflects its geographic position at the intersection of China and India, and reflects trade routes that have historically included Persia, Africa, Greece and Rome. Thai musical instruments are varied and reflect ancien
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Thread: (My) Old Music Notebooks
Grumpy Old Man:I'm oooooold! And I'm not happy! And I don't like things now compared to the way they used to be. All this progress -- phooey! In my day, we didn't have these video tapesand video discsthat you could watch whenenver you wanted. There was only one record player in each town -- and if you were lucky it could play at 16rpm. Otherwise you'd have to buy a reel-to-reel tape recorder. And you'd record that solo with a little awful microphone stuck in front of the built-in speaker of the record player. And you'd play that solo over and over for seventeen hours, and your brain became an angry mob full of mutant notes and licks gone freaky -- and you waited for years and by the time you got the solo right, you were senile and arthritic and you couldn't remember your own name. You were born, sold your soul down at the crossroads, and ya died! And that's the way it was and we likedit!
Life was simpler then. There wasn't all