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Posts Tagged ‘so’

Enduro Alaska – The End of the Season?

September 13th, 2011 20 comments

The Metamucil Mulisha confronts the end of the riding season.

Duration : 0:5:22

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2pac | California Love ft Danny Live on SNL (Full Version)

April 25th, 2011 25 comments

2pac feat Danny Boy, Big Syke & Roger Troutman live
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Duration : 0:3:54

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36 crazyfists-only a year or so

April 7th, 2010 8 comments

One of the most beautiful songs i ever heard,just beautiful and from the the heart!!
Lyrics:
I want you to come home.
I’m tired of being alone.
And it’s making me sick not knowing if you’re safe and alright
The kids are growing up so fast.
And knowing you’re missing them.
And they’re missing you, has given me a pain so deep inside.
Something from this world and this war.
Lately I feel like I’ve been becoming someone else.
Someone I don’t recognise, and someone I don’t even like.
I need you here to help me remember what it’s like to truly be alive.
Everyday I try my best to not get completely overwhelmed with you being gone.
Please tell me how to be strong.
Because everyday I am so worried I could lose you.
There are so many things going on, so many things I want to share with you.
I’m selfish for wanting you home, I know, but I really cant help it.
I need you.
We need you.
I love you completely.
I just want you to come home.

Only a year or so they said…
You wont miss out on anything.
Save me from, free me from dispair.
I just want you to come home.
When the world is really dead.

I lay at night thinking of you and the kids.
Trying to put this into perspective of this day in the world.
So much is happening in my life and I cant seem to put a finger on who I am.
And these are the times I wonder what I was thinking.
I mean what the was I thinking.
Everyone says we’re heroes, but I feel like I’ve abandoned you.
I could feel the blood racing through my body, and know that I’m growing distant from the world.

Only a year or so they said…
You wont miss out on anything.
Save me from, free me from dispair.
And know that I’m growing distant from the world.
When the world’s really dead.
The wait is over.
Stuck inside this mess.
Dying alone, you’re all on your own.
Praying to get out alive.
Alive, praying to get out alive.
Alive, praying to get out alive.

Duration : 0:3:40

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Doctor Ross : “Thirty Two Twenty” – (Fortune Records) Flint, MI blues!

December 17th, 2009 5 comments

http://www.myspace.com/fortunerecordsdetroit
Doctor Ross was a one man band and blues master!

Doctor Ross : “Thirty Two Twenty”
1958 Blues straight outta Flint, MI

BIO:
Doctor Ross
October 21, 1925 May 28, 1993 “Doctor Ross the harmonica boss”,

Biography by Jason Ankeny
Isaiah “Doc” Ross was a throwback to a bygone era; a true one-man band, he played harmonica, acoustic guitar, bass drum and high-hat simultaneously, creating a mighty racket harking back to the itinerant country-blues players wandering the Delta region during the earlier years of the 20th century. Born Charles Isaiah Ross on October 21, 1925 in Tunica, Mississippi, he took early inspiration from the music of Robert Johnson, Blind Boy Fuller and Sonny Boy Williamson I; primarily a harpist — hence his nickname “The Harmonica Boss” — he only added the other instruments in his arsenal in order to play a USO show while a member of the army during World War II. (The “Doc” moniker was acquired because he carried his harmonicas in a doctor’s bag.) Upon his release from the military, Ross settled in Memphis, where he became a popular club fixture as well as the host of his own radio show on station WDIA; during his club residency he was witness to a number of brutal murders, however, and swore off appearances in such venues during the later years of his life. During the early 1950s, Ross recorded his first sides — among them “Chicago Breakdown” — for labels including Sun and Chess; in 1954 he settled in Flint, Michigan, where he went to work as a janitor for General Motors, a position he held until retiring. In 1965 he cut his first full-length LP, Call the Doctor, and that same year mounted his first European tour; as the years passed Ross performed live with decreasing frequency, however, and was infamous for backing out of shows to catch his beloved Detroit Tigers on television. Upon winning a Grammy for his 1981 album Rare Blues, he experienced a career resurgence, and played festival dates to great acclaim prior to his death on May 28, 1993.

Duration : 0:2:49

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