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Dickie Landry - Hang The Rich (JD Twitch Edit) on DFA
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demifiendrsa · 1 year
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Star Wars: Visions Volume 2 | Official Trailer
Star Wars: Visions volume 2 will stream on Disney+ on May 4, 2023.
Volume 2 shorts:
“Sith” by Rodrigo Blaas at El Guiri Studios (Spain)
A former Sith apprentice, leading a peaceful, but isolated life, is confronted by the past when her old master tracks her down.
ÚRSULA CORBERÓ as Lola
LUIS TOSAR as Sith Master
ÚRSULA CORBERÓ and LUIS TOSAR also voice their characters in the Spanish dub.
“Screecher’s Reach” by Paul Young at Cartoon Saloon (Ireland)
A young girl, seeking reprieve from her days in a rural workhouse, discovers a legendary haunted cave with her friends. The cave’s dark pull will change the trajectory of her life forever.
EVA WHITTAKER as Daal
ALEX CONNOLLY as Baython
NOAH RAFFERTY as Quinn
MOLLY MCCANN as Keena
ANJELICA HUSTON as Sith Mother
NIAMH MOYLES as Ghost
“In the Stars” by Gabriel Osorio at PunkRobot Studio (Chile)
Two sisters, the last of their kind who live in hiding on their ravaged land, squabble about how to survive with the Empire encroaching. On a water run, the sisters must fight back when they are discovered.
VALENTINA MUHR as Koten
JULIA OVIEDO as Tichina
KATE DICKIE as Officer
AMPARO NOGUERA as Officer
VALENTINA MUHR and JULIA OVEIDO also voice their characters in the Spanish Dub
“I Am Your Mother” by Magdalena Osinska at Aardman Animations (United Kingdom)
Young pilot Anni, who is embarrassed by her sweet, but clingy mum, must team with her for a madcap family race at the academy. Along the way, their relationship is tested by the elements, their old ship, other racers...and each other!
MAXINE PEAKE as Kalina Kalfus
CHARITHRA CHANDRAN as Annisoukaline Kalfus
DAISY HAGGARD as Dorota Van Reeple
BEBE CAVE as Julan Van Reeple
DENIS LAWSON as Wedge Antilles
“Journey to the Dark Head” by Hyeong Geun Park at Studio Mir (South Korea)
A hopeful mechanic and disillusioned young Jedi team up for a risky and unlikely quest to turn the tide of the galactic war, but dark forces tail them.
Korean language cast:
JANG YE NA as Ara / Young Ara
LEE KYUNG TAE as Toul
YUN YONG SIK as Bichan
CHWANG KWANG as Interpreter
CHOI SOO MIN as Master Duta
SHIN YONG WOO as Master Leesagum / Shopkeeper
LIM CHAE HEON as Training Partner
LEE SO YOUNG as Master Moru / Another Jedi
English Dub cast:
ASHLEY PARK as Ara / Young Ara
EUGENE LEE YANG as Toul
DANIEL DAE KIM as Bichan
ALBERT KONG as Interpreter / Jedi Master A
GREG CHUN as Shopkeeper / Master Leesagum / Training Partner / Padawan
JONELLA LANDRY as Master Duta
JUDY ALICE LEE as Master Moru / Another Jedi
“The Spy Dancer” by Julien Chheng at Studio La Cachette (France)
The premier dancer at a famous, Imperial-frequented cabaret uses her unique skill-set to spy for the Rebellion, but the presence of a mysterious officer threatens to derail her mission.
CAMILLE COTTIN as Loi’e
LAMBERT WILSON as Jon
KAYCIE CHASE as Hétis
RUDI-JAMES JEPHCOTT as The Officer
BARBARA WEBER-SCAFF as Mee’ma & Additional Voices
BRUCE SHERFIELD as Additional Voices
TAYLOR GASMAN as Additional Voices
“The Bandits of Golak” by Ishan Shukla at 88 Pictures (India)
Fleeing from their village by train and pursued by ferocious Imperial forces, a boy and his force-sensitive younger sister seek refuge in a vibrant and dangerous dhaba.
SURAJ SHARMA as Charuk
SONAL KAUSHAL as Rani
NEERAJ KABI as Inquisitor
LILLETE DUBEY as Rugal
SAHIL VAID as Maghadi and Scavenger     
RICHARD JOEL as Scavenger     
SUMANTO RAY as Conductor, Jangori Leader and Dhoona      
RAJEEV RAJ as Helper
AVIRAL KUMAR as Stormtrooper      
ISH THAKKAR as Stormtrooper and Alien     
AADITYA SHARMA as Stormtrooper and Alien    
SHIVANI DARBARI as Crowd
“The Pit” by LeAndre Thomas and Justin Ridge at D'ART Shtajio (Japan) and Lucasfilm Ltd. (United States of America)
A fearless young prisoner, forced to dig for kyber by the Empire, plans a risky escape for he and his people.
DAVEED DIGGS as Crux
ANIKA NONI ROSE as Eureka / Mother
JORDYN CURET as Livy
CEDRIC YARBROUGH as Old Prisoner
STEVE BLUM as Commander
MATTHEW WOOD as Stormtroopers
“Aau’s Song” by Nadia Darries and Daniel Clarke at Triggerfish Animation Studios (South Africa)
An alien child who longs to sing is raised by her loving, but stern father to stay quiet because of the calamitous effect her voice has on the crystals in the nearby mines.
MPILO JANTJIE as Aau (dialogue)
DINEO DU TOIT as Aau (singing)
TUMISHO MASHA as Abat
CYNTHIA ERIVO as Kratu
FAITH BALOYI as Attu
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cyanidetooth · 1 year
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Don Cherry & Jon Appleton! François Tusques & Don Cherry! Holy Tongue! Cosmic Drag! CIA Debutante! Graham Lambkin! The Cat & Bells Club! Dream Mega! Debt Rag! Soft Shoulder! Receptacles! Model/Actriz! Parlor Walls! Deerhoof! Timmy's Organism! Gluer! The Dark! Divorcer! Why Bother? The Toads! Rainbow Of Death! Y Pants! Gregory Kramer! Carl Stone! Dickie Landry!
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nwdsc · 2 years
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(▶︎ Solos | Dickie Landry (feat. Richard Peck, Robert Prado, Rusty Gilder, Jon Smith, Alan Braufman, David Lee) | Unseen Worldsから)
Solos by Dickie Landry (feat. Richard Peck, Robert Prado, Rusty Gilder, Jon Smith, Alan Braufman, David Lee)
On February 19, 1972, a crew of mostly Louisiana-raised musicians came together at the Leo Castelli Gallery on West Broadway in Soho to perform a wholly improvised concert. This ensemble’s solos spring from collective improvisations and a tumultuous backbeat, loosely inspired by the creations of Coltrane, Coleman, Albert Ayler, and their brethren. The de facto leader was Richard “Dickie” Landry, a saxophonist and keyboardist who joined composer Philip Glass’s group in 1969. Landry had become a fixture in downtown New York’s loft and art scenes at the close of the 1960s, after he high-tailed it by car from Louisiana to the Lower East Side and auspiciously encountered Ornette Coleman at the Village Gate the night of his arrival. For this concert, fellow Glass reedists Jon Smith and Richard Peck joined in, alongside Rusty Gilder and Robert Prado, both doubling on bass (upright and electric) and trumpet. The drum chair was occupied by New Orleans firecracker David Lee, Jr., who brought alto saxophonist Alan Braufman along for the session (Braufman was the only non-Louisiana player in the band). The ensemble stretched out in the gallery for several hours in a configuration reflecting those that took place at Landry’s Chinatown loft, documented in photos by artists Tina Girouard and Suzanne Harris that adorn the inside of the original gatefold album jacket. Recorded live by Glass’ sound engineer Kurt Munkacsi, the album was released as a double LP on Chatham Square, the small imprint Landry and Glass co-ran, in a stark greyscale cover and simply titled Solos. The order of the players’ improvisations was laid out on the album inner labels, though unsurprisingly there’s a fair amount of blend. At the end of the day Solos is beyond category, a rousing exploration of instrumentation, rhythm, and life. This first-time reissue is remastered from the original master tapes, released as a 2LP gatefold with period photos and new liner notes by Clifford Allen, and an additional 30 minutes of bonus material in the digital edition, included with the download code. クレジット2022年10月7日リリース For Bobby Ramirez Dickie Landry: Tenor & Soprano Sax, Electric Piano Richard Peck: Tenor Sax Robert Prado: Trumpet & Bass Rusty Gilder: Trumpet & Bass Jon Smith: Tenor Sax Alan Braufman: Alto Sax David Lee: Drums Kurt Munkacsi: Engineer, 16 Track Skully, Butterfly Productions, Inc Recorded Live Feb. 19, 1972 Leo Castelli Gallery, N.Y.C., 420 W. Broadway Tina Girouard: Photographs, Cover Suzanne Harris: Photographs D. Norsen: Layout, Design Remastering: Stephan Mathieu Produced by Dickie Landry & Leo Castelli
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brookstonalmanac · 12 days
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Birthdays 9.11
Beer Birthdays
Vince Marsaglia (1908)
Geno Acevedo (1961)
Martin Dickie (1982)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Brad Bird; animator, actor (1957)
Harry Connick Jr.; singer, actor (1967)
Elizabeth Daily; actor, pop singer (1961)
D.H. Lawrence; English writer (1895)
Tommy Shaw; rock musician (1953)
Famous Birthdays
Bernardo Accolti; Italian poet (1465)
Juhani Aho; Finnish author (1861)
Hiroshi Amano; Japanese physicist (1960)
Philip Ardagh; English author (1961)
Richard Ashcroft; English singer-songwriter (1971)
William Boyce; English organist and composer (1711)
Paul "Bear" Bryant; Chicago Bears coach (1913)
Stefano Cagol; Italian artist, photographer & director (1969)
Jesus Christ; religious leader (3 BCE)
Cathryn Damon; actress and dancer (1930)
Roxann Dawson; actress (1958)
Brian de Palma; film director (1940)
Pierre de Ronsard; French poet & author (1524)
Betsy Drake; actress (1923)
Andre Dubus III; novelist & short story writer (1950)
Lola Falana; singer, actor (1942)
Gianluigi Gelmetti; Italian composer (1945)
Richard D. Gill; English-Dutch mathematician (1951)
Tony Gilroy; screenwriter, film director (1956)
Mickey Hart; rock drummer (1943)
O. Henry; writer (1862)
Taraji P. Henson; actress (1970)
Elizabeth Henstridge; English actress (1987)
Thomas Hill; painter (1829)
Earl Holliman; actor (1928)
James Jeans; Engllish physicist (1877)
Leo Kottke; rock guitarist (1945)
Tom Landry; Dallas Cowboys coach (1924)
Ludacris; rapper (1977)
Amy Madigan; actor (!950)
John Martyn; English-Scottish singer-songwriter (1948)
Virginia Madsen; actor (1961)
Kristy McNichol; actor (1962)
Jessica Mitford; English writer (1917)
Moby; pop singer (1965)
Vjenceslav Novak; Croatian author & playwright (1859)
Mungo Park; Scottish surgeon and explorer (1771)
Ariana Richards; actress (1979)
Ed Sabol; film producer, co-founded NFL Films (1916)
Mick Talbot; pop musician (1959)
James Thomson; Scottish poet & playwright (1700)
Mary Watson Whitney; astronomer (1847)
Carl Zeiss; German lensmaker (1816)
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djch3 · 4 months
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Hang The Rich from Dickie Landry
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hereitgoesthen · 2 years
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ddzzaaii · 5 years
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lugshars-playlist · 5 years
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theories-of · 7 years
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Dickie Landry Grey Void, 2002
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trustpansy · 7 years
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Dickie Landry: New York Stories by Tabitha Denholm, Jan 8, 2014
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pilotseason2020 · 5 years
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Casting Updates, Mar 10
CLARE-HOPE ASHITEY, ADRIANNA MITCHELL & PEPI SONUGA, Harlem’s Kitchen
LANDRY BENDER, IAN DUFF & FORREST GOODLUCK, The Republic of Sarah
DALE DICKEY & DIANA MARIA RIVA, Prospect
ANDY GARCIA, Rebel
SHELLEY HENNIG, ALICE LEE, TIANA OKOYE & NICK CAFERO, Crazy for You
JESSE JAMES KEITEL & NATALIE ALYN LIND, The Big Sky
X MAYO, American Auto
LUCCA DE OLIVEIRA & DEVYN A. TYLER, Clarice
MEAGHAN RATH and SADIE CALVANO & ALANNA UBACH, Jury Duty
LULU WILSON, Valley Trash
A Primetimer Pilot Preview has been posted for The Republic of Sarah
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moma-prints · 4 years
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Having Been Built on Sand with Another Base (Basis) in Fact (Auf sand gebaut mit einer andern basis tatsächlich), Lawrence Weiner, Richard "Dickie" Landry, 1978, MoMA: Drawings and Prints
Committee on Prints and Illustrated Books Fund Size: cover: 12 1/8 × 12 1/4" (30.8 × 31.1 cm) Medium: 12-inch vinyl record
http://www.moma.org/collection/works/184622
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grigori77 · 4 years
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Summer 2020′s Movies - My Top Ten Favourite Films (Part 1)
20.  THE OUTPOST – it’s been a great year for war movies already, but summer was definitely where the genre really blew up, showering a TRIO of crackers on us, starting with this intensely rugged actioner about the Battle of Kamdesh in 2009 Afghanistan, in which a small group of American soldiers fought against an overwhelming Taliban force in extremely hostile terrain.  Director Rod Lurie (The Last Castle, The Contender) hasn’t had the most impressive career so far, but he shines here, as does a powerful ensemble cast which includes Scott Eastwood, Caleb Landry Jones and Orlando Bloom.
19.  BIT – the first notable feature from indie director Brad Michael Elmore is an enjoyably offbeat little vampire flick in which small-town transgender teen Laurel (Supergirl’s Nicole Maines) moves out to Los Angeles and gets swept up in the strictly girls-only revolution of local head vamp Duke (Goliath’s Dianna Hopper) and her feminist pack. Maines and Hopper are both phenomenal, while Elmore does wonders with his tiny budget and really pays off on his film’s intriguing ideas.
18.  DA 5 BLOODS – Spike Lee’s latest joint must be the most tripped-out and subversive Vietnam War movie since Apocalypse Now, letting his politically-charged mixture of reportage and personal drama run riot with particularly colourful results as we follow a group of ageing black Vets on their journey to retrieve the remains of a fallen comrade and a fortune in illicit gold. The cast are uniformly excellent, particularly Delroy Lindo as traumatised hothead Paul, while there’s a magnificent turn from Chadwick Boseman in one of his final roles.
17.  THE LOVEBIRDS – director Michael Showalter reunites with Kumail Nanjiani, star of his indie hit The Big Sick, for this riotous screwball comedy in which lovers Jibran and Leilani (Nanjiani and Insecure’s Issa Rae) find their faltering relationship tested to breaking point when they’re forced to prove their innocence after being framed for murder by a corrupt cop.  The laughs come thick and fast, but there’s an endearing warmth that adds emotional heft to the story, bolstered by the leads’ palpable chemistry.
16.  UNHINGED – Russell Crowe brings every motorist’s worst nightmare to life as Tom Cooper, a deranged psychopath who harasses struggling divorcee Rachel (Slow West and Mortal Engines’ Caren Pistorius) and her son to increasingly terrifying extremes after one bad day leads to a road-rage misjudgement.  The overblown revenge thriller plot works best if you don’t think about it too much, but the incredibly game cast give their all and director Derrick Borte (The Joneses) keeps the tension cranked up to breaking point.
15.  THE NEW MUTANTS – the last ever Fox-based X-Men movie slumps into cinemas with little fanfare after a series of increasingly lamentable delays with an inevitable sense of Marvel Studios going through the motions out of mere obligation to what was once the franchise that MADE them.  It’s truly criminal treatment because this is a CRACKING film, the property taking an intriguing swerve into horror movie territory as five young mutants trapped in a shadowy government institute are terrorized by their own worst fears.  The Fault in Our Stars’ director Josh Boone shows a surprisingly sure hand with the superheroics AND the scares, but the film really belongs to its uniformly excellent young cast, particularly Game of Thrones star Maisie Williams as shapeshifter Rahne Sinclair and Anya Taylor-Joy as fan favourite Illyana Rasputin.  It’s another worthy mutant-fest, which makes it all the more heartbreaking watching with the knowledge that, now that the X-Men and their ilk have been officially folded into the all-encompassing behemoth of the MCU, it’s the opening chapter of a new franchise we’ll never get to see …
14.  BECKY – ambitious indie directing duo Jonathan Millott and Cary Murnion have been on my ones-to-watch list for a while now (ostensibly after their horror comedy Cooties but mainly thanks to supercharged single-shot action thriller Bushwick), but they’ve really outdone themselves with this left-field survival horror, in which a pack of neo-Nazi prison-breakers led by brutal genius Dominick (a cannily cast-against-type Kevin James) find themselves up against something they never bargained for – Anabelle: Creation star Lulu Wilson’s eponymous, unexpectedly lethal 13 year-old girl.
13.  THE VAST OF NIGHT – despite its far more understated, super-low budget origins, there’s a strong dose of Super 8 in the DNA of this astounding debut from writer-director Andrew Patterson, an intriguingly ambitious first-contact sci-fi thriller set in small town America in the 1950s.  Some Kind of Hate’s Sierra McCormick and newcomer Jake Horowitz are the endearingly sparky core of the film, putting the rich quick-fire screenplay through its paces while Patterson displays uncannily sophisticated flair behind the camera.  I can’t wait to see what he’s going to deliver in the future …
12.  IN SEARCH OF DARKNESS – not just the best feature I’ve watched so far in what’s already been an unusually strong year for documentary films, but one of the best I’ve watched in a good long while, this epic examination of ALL the key horror cinema releases of the 1980s and their enduring cultural impact makes for undeniably engrossing viewing.  Despite clocking in at OVER FOUR HOURS, it never outstays its welcome, with writer-director David A. Weiner’s fascination for the subject proving overwhelmingly infectious.
11.  GET DUKED! – four wayward teenage boys are pursued by gun-toting aristocratic psychopaths in the Scottish Highlands while doing their Duke of Edinburgh Award (well, it was that or Borstal) in this gleefully OTT comedy masterpiece from debuting writer-director Ninian Doff.  One of last year’s major festival hits, it’s an absolute riot, a blissfully unapologetic non-PC laugh-fest powered by a quartet of astonishing turns from its young leads and brilliant support from Eddie Izzard, Kate Dickie and James Cosmo.
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Bob Dylan - The Set-Breakers (2010s One-Offs) 
Hey, we’ve got a guest post + guest comp today, courtesy of Ray Padgett. If you haven’t signed up for Ray’s excellent Dylan newsletter, by all means do so. Great writing, great live recordings — and even some very interesting scoops, including interviews with Rolling Thunder bassist Rob Stoner and Dickie Landry, the saxophonist who sat in with Bob and band for one weird night in 2003. Today, Ray shares his collection of Dylan one-offs from the past 10 years ... a great listen. Take it away, Ray ... 
Among the general public, Bob Dylan still retains the reputation for unpredictable shows that, for better or worse, can go anywhere. But anyone paying attention knows that hasn't been true for a few years. Starting in roughly 2013, he instituted what fans soon nicknamed The Set - an unchanging setlist he'd play every night. But it's really Sets, plural - setlists usually change some between tours, but rarely night to night. In December, he wrapped ten nights at the Beacon having played the exact same setlist at every show.
So, having finished a decade with relatively static setlists, and with a now uncertain touring future for Bob ahead, I wanted to investigate the songs he played only once the entire 2010s. I'm calling them the Set-Breakers. I found 16, not counting a few short instrumentals ("Freebird, "Sweet Home Chicago"). Some of these songs he played plenty of times before the 2010s. For others, this is their only performance ever.
For many of those true one-offs, the covers especially, the reason he played them that night is clear. "Learning to Fly" after Tom Petty died. "Moon River" in Johnny Mercer's hometown of Savannah, Georgia, and "Shadows" in Gordon Lightfoot's Canada (he didn't play Lightfoot's actual home province of Ontario that tour, so maybe he figured Alberta was close enough). "1952 Vincent Black Lightning" got its only outing shortly after he played a few dates with Richard Thompson. Dylan's own Lennon tribute "Roll On John" got its two outings in England (since that's not technically a one-off, I made it a bonus track alongside six-timer "Huck's Tune").
At a St. Paul show in 2013, he went one step further, introducing "Suzie Baby" with an unusually loquacious tribute: "I lived here a while back, and since that time, I've played all over the world, with all kinds of people. Everybody from Mick Jagger to Madonna… But the most beautiful person I've ever been on the stage with was a man who is here tonight, who used to sing a song called 'Suzie Baby.' I want to say that Bobby Vee is actually here tonight. Maybe you can show your appreciation with just a round of applause. So, we're gonna try to do this song, like I've done it with him before once or twice."
Other one-offs got trotted out for special events. The only "The Times, They Are a-Changin'" came at a 2010 White House performance; the only "Maggie's Farm at the Grammy Awards the next year (in an enjoyable shambles of a performance with Mumford and Sons and The Avett Brothers). For the ridiculously-named Americanarama tour in 2013, he played several one-off covers with Jeff Tweedy and Jim James.
Finally, of course, there are the true surprises, the song he played once for no clear reason and then dropped. In earlier decades, this happened all the time. It was much rarer in the 2010s. But any appearance of a "Saving Grace" or "Standing in the Doorway" is welcome - one time is better than none. When Bob finally is able to get back on the road, I'm sure we will all take whatever we can get. But a one-night-only surprise here and there never goes unappreciated.
The Set-Breakers: Bob Dylan's 2010s One-Offs
1. The Times They Are A-Changin' (2010-02-09 - White House)
2. Maggie's Farm (w/ The Avett Brothers, Mumford & Sons) (2011-02-13 - Grammys)
3. I Dreamed I Saw St. Augustine (2011-06-11, Cork, Ireland)
4. My Back Pages (2012-07-08, Montreux Jazz Festival, Switzerland)
5. Saving Grace (2012-08-29, Johnstown, PA)
6. Shadows (2012-10-09, Edmonton, AB)
7. Delia (2012-10-27, Las Vegas, NV)
8. Suzie Baby (2013-07-10, St Paul, MN)
9. 1952 Vincent Black Lightning (2013-07-14, Clarkston, MI) - incomplete
10. Twelve Gates To The City (w/ Jim James, Jeff Tweedy) (2013-07-15, Toronto, ON) - incomplete
11. Let Your Light Shine On Me (w/ Jim James, Jeff Tweedy) (2013-07-19, Bridgeport, CT)
12. Sad Songs and Waltzes (2015-06-20, Mainz, Germany)
13. Standing in The Doorway (2017-04-01, Stockholm, Sweden)
14. Learning to Fly (2017-10-21, Broomfield, CO)
15. Moon River (2018-11-06, Savannah, GA)
16. Will The Circle Be Unbroken (w/ Neil Young) (2019-07-19, Kilkenny, Ireland)
Bonus: Huck's Tune (2014-04-04, Tokyo, Japan)
Bonus: Roll On John (2016-11-26, London, England)
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brookstonalmanac · 1 year
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Birthdays 9.11
Beer Birthdays
Vince Marsaglia (1908)
Geno Acevedo (1961)
Martin Dickie (1982)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Brad Bird; animator, actor (1957)
Harry Connick Jr.; singer, actor (1967)
Elizabeth Daily; actor, pop singer (1961)
D.H. Lawrence; English writer (1895)
Tommy Shaw; rock musician (1953)
Famous Birthdays
Paul "Bear" Bryant; Chicago Bears coach (1913)
Jesus Christ; religious leader (3 BCE)
Brian de Palma; film director (1940)
Lola Falana; singer, actor (1942)
Tony Gilroy; screenwriter, film director (1956)
Mickey Hart; rock drummer (1943)
O. Henry; writer (1862)
James Jeans; Engllish physicist (1877)
Leo Kottke; rock guitarist (1945)
Tom Landry; Dallas Cowboys coach (1924)
Ludacris; rapper (1977)
Amy Madigan; actor (!950)
Virginia Madsen; actor (1961)
Kristy McNichol; actor (1962)
Jessica Mitford; English writer (1917)
Moby; pop singer (1965)
Mick Talbot; pop musician (1959)
Carl Zeiss; German lensmaker (1816)
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