🚂😄 Daaaang, man's got enough pull he can call up the railway and say, "Could y'all send a train while I'm playing here?" and the railway says, "Sure, just give us a bit." 😉
After a lengthy intro, great to hear your version of Meade "Lux" Lewis's (& Keith Emerson) classic - I learnt it when I was 14. (Great Aunt used to play for the silent films.)
That was one of the best show's ever. Having not one but two trains and seeing the people on the other side of tracks, it was like a movie set. Just awesome.
Excellent Playing Dr B. this reminds me of an amazing happening way back in 1984 as my brother and I wander down a street in the old French quarters in New Orleans, we stopped outside and all wooden building which we thought was a church hall , there was a wooden stall outside with some old long playing records in a box, we had a look to some old jazz records the we noticed that the door slightly open so we pushed it back and walk in, there was a short hallway with a door on the left hand side leading into this room which had wooden benches on the floor and a small stage or platform at the front, was nobody else around, we set down as it was nice and cool after about 10 or so minutes people begin to wondering and sit down on the wooden benches, in the shortest time place was full up, my brother and were expecting a preacher to walk out at any moment but no out wondered about 10 old men and one woman, all of them had playing instruments, the set down on chairs on the stage and the lady began to play the piano followed by the men except for one old man who appear to have fallen asleep or had died in his chair, his hands were folded across his chest and he was holding banjo, his head was slightly dropped to one side, this scared the heck out of me as I thought the poor guy had passed away. The music got louder and faster music and would suddenly stop, one of the players would play solo, this went on for a little while and all of a sudden the dead man with the banjo stood up straight and started playing his banjo like I never heard banjo played before it was stunningly brilliant jazz concert, I’ve never seen anything like it before or sense. For a long time after I tried to figure out who was the old lady playing the piano, she was very thin and fragile and she wore a bell on her leg to company her playing the piano, quite a few years later I saw the program on TV about American jazz players who lived and toured France in the early years and among those players was the world-famous Sweet Emma Barrett: Bill Bailey and that old church type building that we stumbled into we later discovered was called jazz world famous Old Preservation Hall, At that time i did not know very much about jazz and would not have been able to hold a conversation with a jazz follower,
Big up shaun just seen the China video gained a sub and likes for life mate wish ye good health for the future we need people like you big up shaun 🙌🏼🙌🏼🙌🏼👌🏼
May I ask how on spec you can remember all the tunes you are asked to play.Even I in my dotage cannot remember every song and tune my grandchildren ask me for.
Fyi THE SIX-MONTHLY REPORT ON HONG KONG 1 JULY TO 31 DECEMBER 2023 By UK secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs P. 26 //Government applies for injunction to ban ‘Glory to Hong Kong’ song ‘Glory to Hong Kong’ is a song written during the 2019 anti-Extradition Bill protests. As recorded in the last Six-monthly Report, on 5 June the DoJ applied to the High Court for an injunction to prohibit, on national security grounds, four types of unlawful acts related to the song - intention of inciting secession or acting seditiously, insulting China’s national anthem, assisting others to commit these acts, or authorising others to commit these acts...
@@carladean6117 Do you have province’s or burrows or towns? You could have said or do you just have the country with no division? I know you have London which I assume is classified as a city. You could have explained better.