EDUCATIONAL INCUBATION & HATCHING CHAT THREAD, w/ Sally Sunshine Shipped Eggs

Wahoooo day 7 candle show 12 of 18 eggs are great growing awesomely and 6 are questionable even better news my 6 BCM eggs are part of the ones growing great
Wonderful! Good luck
fl.gif
 
GOOD MORNING, COFFEE CREW! GRAB YOUR CUP, AND HAVE A PRODUCTIVE MONDAY!!


Beer crew here. I was up at 5 to change legbands on pullets but by the time I got out there it was starting to get light and they all escaped when I opened the door.
My wife gave me crap for going outside after dark last night when I should have done the legbands.

Snow in the mountains here would be awesome. People there count on it for a living
I hope it keeps snowing. I'm going skiing in February and am praying for great conditions.

Wouldn't matter. They all run together anymore.

"Left a good job in the city
Workin' for the man every night and day
But I never lost a minute of sleepin'
Worrying 'bout the way things might have been...."
Quote:
Proud Mary!!!
John Fogerty wrote it just after he got out of the National Guard in '68.
Ike and Tina Turner didn't cover it till 1970. By that time, the Club Imperial across the street from my house already had air conditioning so I wasn't serenaded to sleep by that tune like I had been to their other songs or other artists years earlier.

A tribute to Leon Russell, who died in his sleep this weekend at 74 in Nashville.
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/14/a...r-and-musicians-musician-dies-at-74.html?_r=0

0.jpg


With only about 450 songs to his credit, he wasn't quite as prolific as another amazing songwriter we lost this year (Prince) but he was a long time studio musician before his first hit song in '70. He wrote songs for so many other musicians like the Carpenters and Joe Cocker. He even played with Frank Sinatra, Aretha Franklin, the Byrds, Rolling Stones, Herb Alpert, the Beach Boys and the Monkees.
Along with his first bandmate, JJ Cale, they were responsible for the style of music known as the 'Tulsa Sound'.

He wrote "A Song for You" covered by so many other people including Donny Hathaway.

0.jpg


you choose which is better

0.jpg


One More Love Song

0.jpg


Wild Horses

0.jpg


I don't know if the story is true but I had heard back in the late 70s that Carol King's "You're so Vain" was about him but I really don't think so. He was pretty humble -- for a musician. She always kept it a secret.

He wasn't inducted into the Rock & Roll hall of fame and the Songwriters HOF till 2011.
 
Last edited:
A tribute to Leon Russell, who died in his sleep this weekend at 74 in Nashville.
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/14/a...r-and-musicians-musician-dies-at-74.html?_r=0

0.jpg


Not quite as prolific as Prince (another we lost this year) because he only wrote about 450 songs. A long time studio musician before his first hit song in '70. He wrote songs for so many other musicians like the Carpenters and Joe Cocker. He even played with Frank Sinatra, Aretha Franklin, the Byrds, Rolling Stones, Herb Alpert, the Beach Boys and the Monkees.
Along with his first bandmate, JJ Cale, they were responsible for the style of music known as the 'Tulsa Sound'.

He wrote "A Song for You" covered by so many other people including Donny Hathaway.

0.jpg


you choose which is better

0.jpg


One More Love Song

0.jpg


Wild Horses

0.jpg


I don't know if the story is true but I had heard back in the late 70s that Carol King's "You're so Vain" was about him but I really don't think so. He was pretty humble -- for a musician. She always kept it a secret.

He wasn't inducted into the Rock & Roll hall of fame and the Songwriters HOF till 2011.

I hadn't heard, that's a shame.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom