Category: Reader Tips

Reader Tips

Good evening ladies and gentlemen, welcome to SDA Late Nite Radio. Tonight, for your delectation, here are Stan Getz, Jim McNeely, Marc Johnson, and Victor Lewis, as the Stan Getz Quartet, performing Desafinado and Girl from Ipanema ¤ (7:26).

For those listeners who are, like me, fans of Stan, here for the record and your ease of access are our previous Late Nite Radio shows featuring Mr. Getz: 2009-08-11, 2009-06-07, 2008-12-02, 2008-08-26, 2008-07-02, and 2007-10-20.

Your Reader Tips are, as always, welcome in the comments.

Reader Tips

Good evening ladies and gentlemen, welcome to SDA Late Nite Radio. Tonight, for your delectation, here is Mr. Victor Borge performing some of his classic variations on Happy Birthday ¤ and Part II ¤.

Right, now that we’ve got the shtick under our belt, additional Borge variations, per Pyotr Tchaikovsky, Frederic Chopin, Johannes Brahms, Franz Liszt, Johann Sebastian Bach, Richard Wagner, Ludwig van Beethoven, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Johann Strauss, Irving Berlin, and “modern music”, are also available.

Oh dear ~ I laughed so hard I cried 😉

Your Reader Tips are, as always, welcome in the comments.

Reader Tips

Welcome to the Wednesday (EBD) edition of SDA Late Nite Radio.
Tonight, under the aegis of SDA’s ongoing Cultural Outreach Program, which was hopelessly designed to further awareness and understanding between disparate communities, we present a Queen’s English translation of a volubly heated freestyle Rap Battle. The debate format is as follows: practitioner Hydrogen asserts his thesis, Boost is given the opportunity to provide his counterargument, and then the floor is opened to questions and comments.
Feel free to flamboast your crunkest Cronkites furilla in the comments.

Reader Tips

 
 

Good evening ladies and gentlemen, welcome to SDA Late Nite Radio. Tonight, for your delectation, here are Johnny Cymbal and the boys performing Mr. Bass Man, with Ronnie Bright (from The Valentines) on bass, in 1963 (2:39). Johnny was born in Scotland, he was adopted by Nikolas Cymbal (who was a Polish national and a member of the Free Polish Forces stationed in Scotland during World War II), they emigrated to Canada, and then Johnny moved to Cleveland, where he first worked with Sid Lawrence at the age of 13. And the rest, as they say, is history.

Your Reader Tips are, as always, welcome in the comments.

Reader Tips

It’s been hard not to notice in the last few years that women are disproportionately represented among the group of conservatives who take courageous stands and give no quarter to useful idiots. For some reason, conservative women like Sarah Palin, Kate, Kathy Shaidle, Michelle Malkin, Ann Coulter and many others – and even Democrats like Camille Paglia – are more likely than the men-folk to step to the front lines, and less likely to waffle and beat around the bush and pointlessly split hairs when important issues are being addressed.
Welcome to the Wednesday (EBD) edition of SDA Late Nite Radio. Tonight, in tribute to the women who continue to change the terms of the debate, we present a song about a strong woman who takes control of her own life by changing – to an invigoratingly epic degree – that which needs to be changed. Here’s Lucinda Williams in a live performance of Changed The Locks. Turn it up.
Feel free to change the Reader Tips thread with your timely and interesting tips and comments.

Reader Tips

Good evening ladies and gentlemen, welcome to SDA Late Nite Radio. Tonight in remembrance, lest we forget, here is In Flanders Fields sung by the Summit High School Concert Choir. The poem was written by Canadian physician and Lieutenant Colonel John McCrae, on May 3, 1915, after he witnessed the death of his friend, Lieutenant Alexis Helmer, only 22 years old, the day before.

Your Reader Tips are, as always, welcome in the comments.

Reader Tips


 

Good evening ladies and gentlemen, welcome to SDA Late Nite Radio. Tonight, for your delectation, here is our old friend Mr. Herbert von Karajan conducting the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, with the Vienna State Opera Ballet, performing one of the great dance tunes from the history of western civilization, Johann Strauss II‘s classic An der schönen blauen Donau ¤ §, Op. 314, in Vienna, in 1987 (10:44).

Your Reader Tips are, as always, welcome in the comments.

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