#chris ethridge
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youngerthanyesterday · 1 month ago
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Flying Burrito Brothers (looking stylish) | 1969
📸: Jim McCrary
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jt1674 · 5 months ago
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desertsquiet · 1 year ago
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joegramoe · 2 years ago
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I would give everything I own
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cbjustmusic · 2 years ago
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Raul Malo performing "Hot Burrito #1". ________________________ Hot Burrito #1 Songwriters: Gram Parsons and Chris Ethridge
You may be sweet and nice But that won't keep you warm at night 'Cause I'm the one who showed you how To do the things you're doing now
He may feel all your charms He may hold you in his arms But I'm the one who let you in I was right beside you in the end
Once upon a time You let me feel you deep inside Then nobody knew, nobody saw But do you remember the way you cried?
I'm your toy, I'm your old boy But I don't want no one but you to love me No, I wouldn't lie You know I'm not that kind of guy
Once upon a time You let me feel you deep inside And nobody knew, nobody saw Do you remember the way you cried?
I'm your toy, I'm your old boy But I don't want no one but you to love me No, I wouldn't lie You know I'm not that kind of guy
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dearyallfrommatt · 2 years ago
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“Big Bayou“
Swampwater.
This band was fronted by a Cajun fiddler named Gib Guilbeau, He was a name in the ‘70s West Coast country rock and played with all the names. Swampwater formed in 1969 to back Linda Ronstadt whose backing band, the Stone Ponys, had split up. This is a pretty good indication of their overall sound, Cajun-flavored country rock, and it’s worth a listen. Guilbeau also played with a reborn Flying Burrito Brothers, The band had broken up in ‘73 but after Gram Parsons's death, their manager pulled together a new band with Chris Ethridge and “Sneaky” Pete Kleinow. All I’m going to say about that is I hope everyone got paid.
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dzgrizzle · 2 years ago
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The short film based on my story, “Moonlight Sonata, With Scissors,” is now available for streaming on Vimeo! I am extremely proud of how indie filmmakers Chris Ethridge and Dayna Noffke adapted my short story into an awesome film! You can rent it for $5.00 for a one-week rental period.
There is also a behind-the-scenes interview with Chris, available to watch for free. I especially like how the interviewer, Jeff Howard, talks about the film being a “closed loop” story – but instead of having an unreliable narrator (a favorite horror trope), the story has a reliable narrator who lives in an unreliable world.
All the links are here in my blog post:
And here is my Linktree with links to all my other sites: https://linktr.ee/dzgrizzle
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ear-worthy · 1 year ago
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"How Long Gone" Podcast Extends North American Tour
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 Live podcast tours offer fans a chance to see their favorite podcasters live. For the podcasters, there are two obvious benefits, besides the money made on the tour. First, the podcasters receive that immediate feedback from the live audience that they don't receive while recording. Second, attendance at these live events demonstrates how dedicated the fans of the show are.
 How Long Gonejoined theTalkhouse podcast network last year, delivering their singular brand of charm, unscriptable humor and colorful commentary on all things culture, fashion and fitness to widespread fan and critical acclaim spanning The New York Times, Esquire, Rolling Stone, W Magazine, Interview Magazine, Vulture and more. Hosts Chris Black and Jason Stewart have taken the show on the road with sold-out live shows in the US and UK. They just wrapped a May stint with an appearance at LA’s Just Like Heaven festival and are thrilled to continue with additional North American appearances throughout June. Tickets are available here. 
 Maintaining a tireless clip of three shows per week, and a growing audience of more than half a million monthly listeners, the podcast has welcomed an illustrious array of guests from the worlds of music (Jenny Lewis, Phoebe Bridgers, Waxahatchee, Amen Dunes, Caroline Polachek, Modest Mouse, Shamir, Sleater-Kinney), film (BJ Novak, Paul Scheer, Lee Pace), journalism and media (Bret Easton Ellis, The New Yorker's Naomi Fry, GQ's Will Welch, The Guardian’s Laura Snapes), art and design (Aries' Sofia Prantera, Chloe Wise, Roe Ethridge), culinary arts (Carla Lalli Music, Ghetto Gastro, Uncle Paulie), fellow podcasters (Chapo Trap House, Zane Lowe), and comedy (Moshe Kasher, Bowen Yang, Tom Scharpling, Cat Cohen, Esther King, Robby Hoffman).
Over the past four years, How Long Gone has expanded its brand to include collaborations with record label Jagjaguwar, MatchesFashion, Palmes and others. 
 Black and Stewart have built How Long Gone into something compelling and unique. First launched in the early weeks of the pandemic as a way for the pair to stay in touch and chat with their (smart, successful, often famous) friends, How Long Gone has now run for more than 450 episodes, each one acting like a comedy show, in-depth interview and niche scene report rolled into one.
How Long Gone Tour Dates - TICKETS
6/19: Chicago, IL @ Bottom Lounge
6/20: Toronto, ON @ Great Hall
6/26: Atlanta, GA @ Terminal West
6/27: Washington, DC @ The Atlantis
6/28: Philadelphia, PA @ Johnny Brenda’s
7/01: St Paul, MN @ Turf Club
 Black, 40, works as a creative consultant for brands such as Thom Browne and J Crew; Stewart, 42, is a DJ who threw an influential weekly party at Los Angeles’ now-defunct Cinespace club and taught Zac Efron how to DJ for the 2015 electronic dance music movie We Are Your Friends. Neither are bothered by the idea that their discussion of insidery restaurants, bars, publications and parties – many of which are discussed totally sans-context – may seem too niche. Black describes this quality as the podcast’s “special sauce”, and both hosts agree it is an inherent part of the appeal.
“The way I grew up was like, if you’re hanging out with cool older kids, and they mention a band or a place or a movie, instead of saying, ‘Oh, I don’t know what that is,’ you just laugh and smile, and then you go home, take the time to research what they’re talking about, and discover it yourself,” says Stewart in a Guardian article. “I want to create that for this generation.”
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How Long Gone has inadvertently become one of the most insightful looks at sobriety in podcasting. Black is sober, after battling an addiction to prescription opiates in his 30s, while Stewart still drinks and takes drugs; the resulting conversations they have on the podcast about drugs and sobriety are vastly different from those on more specifically wellness-minded shows.
In general, How Long Gone has an air of unproduced reality that sets it apart from a lot of the more scripted-feeling chat shows that abound. Celebrity guests seem endeared to Black and Stewart’s conversational style, which means that How Long Gone’s interviews often feel more revealing. 
Check out How Long Gone and the tour dates and ticket info. 
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kulturegroupie · 3 years ago
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The Flying Burrito Brothers, 1969
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shadowland · 3 years ago
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THE FLYING BURRITO BROTHERS (1969) playing poker in Laurel Canyon
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jt1674 · 8 months ago
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desertsquiet · 3 years ago
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Obsessed with these
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joegramoe · 2 years ago
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Waylon, Willie and Flying Burrito Brother Chris Ethridge!
By Rick Henson
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mitjalovse · 6 years ago
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Charles Lloyd, a jazz saxophonist, found himself collaborating with many interesting musicians, so the fact he played on the debut by Roger McGuinn, the singer of The Byrds, shouldn't shock us. However, the tune in the link might, because the composition provides us with a mix of his old band and The Beach Boys. No surprise here, he actually asked Bruce Johnston of the latter group to join him on a piano, though we can be sure he can be heard on the harmonies as well. Thus, the entire song gives us a glimpse into a possible cooperation between the two already mentioned collectives. Nonetheless, this doesn't suggest the piece merely follows their templates, since the ditty feels like Roxy Music after their reunion thanks to Mr. Charles Lloyd. I mean, the theme of ennui is also there.
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plakatierenverboten · 6 years ago
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The Flying Burrito Brothers: Hot Burrito #1
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1264doghouse · 2 years ago
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Willie Nelson, Chris Ethridge & Dickey Betts
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