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November 20, 2008

JOHNNY CASH (1968 MEDLEY) + Rich Fagan: CHERI OTERI'S FATHER'S MURDERER (alegd.): EMERY'S MEMORIES: Ralph Emery is giving this show away FREE--TNN)


http://www.emerysmemories.com/

This is one of the most incredible finds in Country Music History...
Ralph Emery was digging around in his warehouse and found a TV show he produced in 1968!
It stars ... Junior Samples... Sue Thompson... Warner Mac ... and special guests Johnny Cash & June Carter!
This show has NEVER aired anywhere.... until now! It is only available in this collection!
Johnny Cash performs a medley of hits with the original Tennessee three... and John & June
close the show with Jackson!



http://www.truecrimeweblog.com/

A video of noted songwriter turned alleged killer Rich Fagan, performing on the old Ralph Emery show on TNN in the late 80s or early 90s.


Ralph Emery is giving this show away FREE .... to you the country music
fan.... just for trying Emery's Memories! Order the collection and try it for 30 days... if you are not completely satisfied.. return it for a full refund but keep The Lost Show of Johnny Cash just for trying this great collection.

FLUFFO: JINGLE SINGING (NASHVILLE NOW with Ralph Emery)

D.C. performs one of many commercial jingles he has written for companies through the years.

Totally Minnie: MINNIE MOUSE AND ELTON JOHN: Don't Go Breakin My Heart (80s tv movie: this really brings back a lot of memories...for someone!)


My favorite scene from "the 80's tv movie "Totally Minnie" (the only scene I still remember watching when I was little). A duet singing "Don't Go Breakin My Heart." Awesome 80's quality...

REVOLUTION! (yeah! tpa)

ANYONE WHO THINKS THEY'RE FREE IS DREAMING!
ITS EVERYONE'S DUTY TO SEE LOOSE CHANGE
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/loose-change...

THIS IS A GREAT SITE FOR STUDENTS!NYCLU.ORG is a Comprehensive resource for civil liberties issues.Also getting legal assistance. Detailed discussion of many major issues, resources, activities, and links to local chapters.American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of New York Advocate of individual rights litigating, legislating, and educating the public on a variety of issues.
http://nyclu.org/


Lennon said the song was inspired by the May 1968 uprising in France. May 1968 is the name given to a series of protests and a general strike that caused the eventual collapse of the De Gaulle government in France. The vast majority of the protesters espoused left-wing causes, but the established leftist political institutions and labor unions distanced themselves from the movement. Many saw the events as an opportunity to shake up the "old society" in many social aspects and traditional morality, focusing especially on the education system and employment.It began as a series of student strikes that broke out at a number of universities and lycées in Paris, following confrontations with university administrators and the police. The de Gaulle administration's attempts to quash those strikes by further police action only inflamed the situation further, leading to street battles with the police in the Latin Quarter, followed by a general strike by students and strikes throughout France by ten million French workers, roughly two-thirds of the French workforce. The protests reached the point that de Gaulle created a military operations headquarters to deal with the unrest, dissolved the National Assembly and called for new parliamentary elections for 23 June 1968.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/May_1968

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revolution_(The_Beatles)
Another song called "Revolution" was released by the London psychedelic group Tomorrow in September 1967, a year before the John Lennon song. Tomorrow's lyric "Have your own little revolution, NOW!" contrasts with Lennon's lyric, including the opening lines, "You say you want a revolution/ Well, you know/ We all want to change the world."
The first version of "Revolution" to be released (though the last to be recorded) was the B-side of the "Hey Jude" single, released in late August 1968.
A product of the recording sessions for The Beatles (aka The White Album), "Revolution" featured distorted guitars and an electric piano solo by session musician Nicky Hopkins. This track is said to be one of the loudest and most aggressive Beatles songs; it begins abruptly with a loud, overdriven electric guitar played by Lennon, a thundering, compressed drum beat from Ringo Starr and a ferocious scream from Lennon (the scream was an overdub added when Lennon double tracked his vocal. Paul McCartney performed the scream on the semi-live performance for the promotional film, because Lennon could not deliver the scream and catch his breath again in time to launch into the first verse).
The musical form is a simple rock and roll chord progression, but the highly processed elements and hyperbolic approach distinguished the track from nearly anything that had come before; the sound of "Revolution" is often cited as presaging heavy metal. "Revolution" later appeared on the 1970 Hey Jude compilation album created for the U.S. market and other compilations.
The Beatles performed the song semi-live (with live vocals performed over a pre-recorded instrumental track) in a specially produced promotional film shot by director Michael Lindsay-Hogg at the same time as the Hey Jude promotional film. The film received its world premiere in Britain on David Frost's ITV television programme, 4 September 1968. As the Beatles were singing the vocals live on the film, they elected to incorporate part of the vocal arrangement from the slower Revolution 1 version of the track. McCartney and Harrison added the "shoo-bee-doo-wah" backing vocals unique to that version behind Lennon's lead vocal - thus making the vocals on the film performance a hybrid of the two versions of the song.