Last Of The Mississippi Jukes
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Last Of The Mississippi Jukes
True Blues music by The Mississippi House Rockers Blues Band performing live at a true Mississippi Juke Joint The Echo Lounge in Meridian Mississippi. The Mississippi House Rockers were featured in the documentary "Last of The Mississippi Jukes" starring Morgan Freeman featuring the Subway Lounge in Jackson Mississippi. Jimmy King the owner of the Subway Louge is seen here singing with The House Rockers!
Starring: Chris Thomas King, Bobby Rush, Greg "Fingers" Taylor
Directed By: Robert Mugge
Genre: Documentary, Black, Music
Synopsis: A close look at the disappearing venues where rural blues originated. A Starz Original Production. USA - 2002 - TV14
© 2002 STARZ ENCORE ENTERTAINMENT
@mrjyn
August 4, 2009
"I've Got a Woman" performed by The Mississippi House Rockers Live at The Echo Lounge in 2009!
Cat Head
Cat Head
To purchase this video from us, call us at (662)624-5992, or send us an email. Price does not include shipping (or sales tax for Mississippi residents). Call or email for final cost.
- JUKE; 1997 Yellow Cat Productions; VHS only, $22.
- Juke Joint Saturday Night: Live from Margaret's Blues Diamond Lounge; 1991 Juke Joint Productions; VHS only, $16.
- Son House and Bukka White: Masters of the Country Blues; 2000 Yazoo; DVD $20, VHS $16.
Last of the Mississippi Jukes, A Robert Mugge Film; 2003 Sanctuary; DVD only, $25.
- Muddy Waters: Got My Mojo Working. Rare Performances, 1968-1978; 2000 Yazoo/Shanahachie; DVD only, $20.
Now on YouTube - Local News - NYTimes.com
Now on YouTube - Local News - NYTimes.comNews Near You draws from a variety of sources. VidSF prepares to videotape a segment with Ronn Vigh.
Published: August 2, 2009With its ability to collect articles and sell advertisements against them, Google has already become a huge force in the news business — and the scourge of many newspapers. Now its subsidiary YouTube wants to do the same thing to local television.
YouTube, which already boasts of being “the biggest news platform in the world,” has created a News Near You feature that senses a user’s location and serves up a list of relevant videos. In time, it could essentially engineer a local newscast on the fly. It is already distributing hometown video from dozens of sources, and it wants to add thousands more.
YouTube says it is helping TV stations and its other partners by creating a new — but so far not fiscally significant — source of revenue.
But news media companies may have reasons to be wary. Few TV stations have figured out how replicate profits on the Internet. YouTube can easily act as another competitor.
So for now, most of the YouTube videos near you come from nontraditional sources: radio stations, newspapers, colleges and, in the case of a fledgling San Francisco outfit called VidSF, three friends who despise the local TV diet of fires and homicides.
“It really levels the playing field,” said Kieran Farr, a founder of VidSF who covers the city’s culture and uploads his segments to YouTube.
News Near You, started in the spring, is only part of YouTube’s push into news video. This summer, the company invited the more than 25,000 news sources listed on Google News to become video suppliers. The site is also promoting videos from ABC News, The Associated Press, Reuters and other outlets.
This year, it began featuring breaking news videos — including ones submitted by citizens in Iran, where protests are being captured by cellphone users — on its home page.
So far, the localized videos are no replacement for a print or TV diet of news. On Sunday, visitors near Baltimore saw a news report about a teen assistance program; in Chicago they saw a WGN-TV feature about street performers; and in Los Angeles, they saw a review of an electric motorcycle produced by The Los Angeles Times. Producers often count the views in hundreds, not thousands.
To date, nearly 200 news outlets have signed up with YouTube to post news packages and split the revenue from the advertisements that appear with them. In addition, Google searches now show YouTube videos alongside news articles, helping the videos reach a wider audience.
YouTube’s sheer breadth — it is visited by 100 million Americans each month — makes it a powerful force for promotion, as well as a potential threat to entrenched media companies. And those companies already have more than enough to worry about: much of the local media marketplace has collapsed in recent years as classified ads have moved online, automakers have curtailed ad spending and news and entertainment options have proliferated.
YouTube, meanwhile, is still trying to turn a profit nearly three years after it was acquired by Google. Because copyright concerns prevent it from placing ads on amateur videos, it has striven to sign up professional partners to seed the site with ad-friendly content. News is one obvious option.
“Google can only gain by splitting revenue with people who have feet on the street in local markets,” said Terry Heaton, a senior vice president at AR&D, a company that advises locally focused media organizations.
Google said in June that it was pleased with YouTube’s trajectory and indicated that it expected the site to be profitable in the not-too-distant future, but did not specify when.
While YouTube can gain by adding local video, it remains to be seen whether established news outlets will benefit. Google’s scraping of print headlines and links has led some to assign blame to the company for the financial struggles of newspapers. The chief executive of Dow Jones recently called Google a “digital vampire” that was “sucking the blood” from newspapers by harvesting their free articles.
What YouTube is doing is somewhat different. It is not sending digital spiders around the Web to collect videos automatically; instead, it is asking news outlets to sign up as partners and promising a wider audience for their material.
YouTube’s push to organize local news video began in earnest in the spring when the News Near You module was introduced. The module uses the Internet address of a visitor’s computer to determine the user’s location and whether any partners are located within a 100-mile radius. If so, seven days of local videos are displayed.
Blues News From Clarksdale | Sing All Kinds | Memphis Flyer
Blues News From Clarksdale | Sing All Kinds | Memphis FlyerBlues News From Clarksdale
Posted by Andria Lisle on Tue, Aug 4, 2009 at 7:00 AM
Unlike their rock-and-roll counterparts, who are busy over-analyzing the death of music magazines or pondering the navigational routes of social networking sites, blues fans Roger Stolle and Jeff Konkel aren't content to cool their heels while the music biz struggles to reinvent itself for modern times.
Last year, the duo, respective owners of the Clarksdale, Miss.-based Cat Head record label and retail store and the Missouri-based Broke and Hungry CD imprint, combined their mission via M for Mississippi: A Road Trip Through the Birthplace of the Blues, a blues tourism-oriented documentary film that celebrates contemporary performers such as guitarists Duck Holmes, T-Model Ford, Robert "Bilbo" Walker and the late Wesley "Junebug" Jefferson, who succumbed to cancer on July 22.
As Stolle told me back in May, "the main goal of the project was to get people to come to Mississippi and to promote these artists so they get booked other places. It's easy to sell the idea of blues museums or institutions that celebrate the blues of the past, but we wanted to promote the idea that even in the 21st century, you're able to travel here and experience the blues yourself."
One week later, the DVD won a Blues Music Award. And in late July, Stolle and Konkel took the show on the road to the Notodden, Norway Blues Festival, where they screened the documentary and staged a showcase with Ford, Robert Belfour, and 80-year old L.C. Ulmer (pictured above).
This weekend, the entire crew will repeat their performances — on their home turf this time, at the Sunflower River Blues & Gospel Festival in downtown Clarksdale. Bettye Lavette headlines the free, two-day festival, which also features James "Super Chikan" Johnson, Cedric Burnside and Lightnin' Malcolm, Shardee Turner and the Rising Star Fife and Drum Band, and more. Go here for a complete schedule.
If you head down to C'dale, don't miss the Cat Head Mini Blues Fest, slated for Sunday morning, or the myriad nighttime club shows, such as harmonica great Big George Brock's Saturday night gig at the Hopson Commissary. And be sure to check out the latest Mississippi Blues Trail markers erected by the state's Blues Commission.
Billy Lee Riley dies at 75; rockabilly pioneer did 'Flyin' Saucers Rock and Roll' - Los Angeles Times
Billy Lee Riley dies at 75; rockabilly pioneer did 'Flyin' Saucers Rock and Roll' - Los Angeles Times
Charlie Gillett/RedfernsBilly Lee Riley, performing in 1956, is best-known for his 1957 singles “Flyin’ Saucers Rock and Roll” and “Red Hot.” He also worked as a studio musician in Los Angeles.Billy Lee Riley dies at 75; rockabilly pioneer did 'Flyin' Saucers Rock and Roll'
Charlie Gillett/RedfernsBilly Lee Riley, performing in 1956, is best-known for his 1957 singles “Flyin’ Saucers Rock and Roll” and “Red Hot.” He also worked as a studio musician in Los Angeles.The raucous performer and songwriter recorded for Sun Records for four years and later worked as a studio musician in L.A. His other big single was 'Red Hot.'By Dennis McLellanBilly Lee Riley, a rockabilly pioneer and songwriter who recorded for the legendary Sun Records label and is best remembered for his 1957 singles "Flyin' Saucers Rock and Roll" and "Red Hot," has died. He was 75.
August 4, 2009
Riley died Sunday of colon cancer that had spread to the bone at a hospital in Jonesboro, Ark., said his wife, Joyce.
Elvis Week 2009 - August in Memphis
Elvis Week 2009 - August in Memphis
Tuesday August 4, 2009August 4, 2009 - Last Day to Buy Graceland Elvis Week Tickets Online - The deadline to purchase tickets online for Elvis Week 2009 events sold through Graceland is Tuesday, August 4 at 5 p.m. Tickets for all Ticketmaster events will continue to be for sale leading up to the events by calling 800-745-3000, at any Ticketmaster Outlet, or online at Ticketmaster.com. Tickets may also be purchased in person at the Cannon Center Box Office.
The annual Elvis Week celebration at Graceland is a nine-day gathering of friends and fans from around the world to celebrate Elvis Presley's life and career. Events, which take place each year on and around the anniversary of Elvis' death on August 16, 1977, include tribute concerts, movies, an annual Candlelight Vigil and much more.
Previous Wise Words -- Archive Listing
Wise Words Archive - Click on title to go there.Previous Wise Words -- Archive Listing
Title Author Company Source 1
New Product News
2
Brian Donaghey and
Steve WateridgeThe Research Business International
Admap
3
Alan Sharpe
Marketing
(Canada)
4
Positioning Before Branding
What Every CEO should understandMichael Smock and Rod Watkins
Darwin's Crucible
Darwin's Crucible White Paper Series
5
John Crowther
Banks Hoggins O'Shea/FCB
Admap
6
Anon
Direct
7 What's My Line? Brett Shevack Partners & Shevack/Wolf Shevack Inc.
Direct 8 Sprechen Sie Deutsch?
Not In Too Many German Ads!
Jack Willhoft
Jack Willhoft Direct 9 How to Protect Your Slogan Timothy R V Foster AdSlogans.com Direct 10 Anon Brand Fidelity Direct 11 The Psychology of the Slogan
Valerie Noble Valerie Noble Direct 12 Tips On Taglines Larry Chase Web Digest For Marketers Direct 13 The Spearhead of Branding Earl Carter Earl Carter Direct 14 DELETED DELETED DELETED DELETED 15 The Advertising Slogans of The Billion Dollar Club Suzanne Bidlake Suzanne Bidlake ACNielsen 16 Creating An Impact
Developing An Ad That Packs A PunchDennis Altman Dennis Altman U of KY School of Journalism & Telecommunications 17 How To Write A
College SloganGeorge Felton Columbus Society of Communicating Arts Direct 18 Protecting Slogans Ivan Hoffman, B.A., J.D. Ivan Hoffman, B.A., J.D. Direct 19 The end of the
end lineHarriett Green Campaign Campaign 20 Creating effective names and taglines that will attract new business Robert Middleton Action Plan Marketing Action Plan Marketing 21 Advertising Slogans And Distinctiveness: Nestlé vs Mars UK Charles Swan The Simkins Partnership The Simkins Partnership