LaShun Pace - Gift to Greater Kansas City Concert 07

  • Length: 7:38
  • Rating: 5.00 (2 ratings)
  • Views: 276' favoriteCount='3
  • Author: btcogic

Tags: burrell  chrystal  City  clark  gospel  judith  Kansas  kim  LaShun  mcallister  Missouri  music  Pace  praise  rucker  sisters  worship 

LaShun Pace singing "All Things Working" at the Historic Boone Tabernacle COGIC. Bishop Lemuel F. Thuston, pastor.

CPC Demo Reel Summer 2008

  • Length: 1:18
  • Rating: ( ratings)
  • Views: 34
  • Author: cperko1

Tags: animation  art  chris  colvard  cpc  demo  experimental  filmmaker  perkowitz  reel  uic 

Summer 2008 Video Reelcperko1@uic.edumusic clips: Tim Kinsellabg music: Clark

jaron legrair singing "Circle of Life"

  • Length: 1:30
  • Rating: 5.00 (1 ratings)
  • Views: 150
  • Author: letsGO4GOD

Tags: burrell  circle  clark  disney  dorinda  elton  gospel  jaron  karen  kim  legrair  life  lion  music  nikki  of  ross  sisters  twinkie 

this is @ the University of Akron School of Music Choral concert. they sang a medley of broadway selections. jaron's singing the solo...

ROY CLARK-YESTERDAY

  • Length: 3:23
  • Rating: 4.83 (6 ratings)
  • Views: 1555' favoriteCount='9
  • Author: oldcountrytunes

Tags: Clark  country  music  Roy 

Born in southside Virginia, Clark grew up as a teenager in southeast Washington, D.C. where his father worked at the Washington Navy Yard. At the age of 14, Clark began playing banjo, guitar, and mandolin, and he won two National Banjo Championships by the age of 17. He was simultaneously pursuing a sporting career, first as a baseball player, and then as a boxer, before switching over to music full time. At the age of 17, he had his first appearance on the Grand Ole Opry.By 1955, he was a regular on Jimmy Dean's Washington, D.C. television program. Dean, who valued punctuality among musicians in his band, the Texas Wildcats, fired Clark for habitual lateness, telling him "you're the most talented person I've ever fired." In 1960, Clark went out to Las Vegas where he worked as guitarist in a band led by former West Coast Western Swing bandleader-comedian Hank Penny. When Dean was tapped to host The Tonight Show, he asked Clark to appear, introducing him to a national audience for the first time. Subsequently, Clark appeared on The Beverly Hillbillies as a recurring character (actually two, he played businessman Roy Halsey and Roy's mother, Myrtle). Once, on an episode of the Sunday evening Jackie Gleason Show that was dedicated to country music, Clark played a blistering rendition of "Down Home". Later, he even appeared on an episode of The Odd Couple where he played "Malagueña".In 1963, Clark signed to Capitol Records and had three top 10 hits. He switched to Dot Records and again had hits. He later recorded for ABC Records, which had acquired Dot, and MCA Records, which absorbed the ABC label.In 1969, Clark and Buck Owens were the hosts of Hee Haw. The show was dropped by CBS Television in 1971 but continued to run in syndication for twenty more years.In 1983, Clark opened the Roy Clark Celebrity Theatre in Branson, Missouri, becoming the first famous country music star to have his own venue there, and launching a trend which would eventually cause Branson to become an important center of country performance. Clark frequently played his own Branson nightclub during the '80s and '90s. He has since closed the venue (which briefly became the unlikely professional home of the Platters and is currently owned by Merrill Osmond) and gone back to a fairly light touring schedule that usually includes a performance with Ramona Jones and the Jones Family Band at their annual tribute to Clark's old "Hee Haw" co-star Grandpa Jones in Mountainview, Arkansas.In addition to his musical skill, Clark has often displayed his talents as a comedian and actor. During his years on the variety show Hee Haw, Clark entertained the audience in numerous comedy sketches, including a recurring feature where he played the clerk of the "Empty Arms Hotel", a character similar to that portrayed by John Cleese in the British sitcom Fawlty Towers. Clark released several albums of his comedic performances, to varying critical acclaim and commercial success.Clark has endorsed Mosrite, Gretsch, and many other brands of guitar during his career. He currently endorses Heritage Guitars, which makes a Roy Clark model.[1]On 22 August 1987, Clark was made a member of the Grand Ole Opry.For many years Clark has made his home in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Roy Clark Elementary School in Tulsa's Union School District was named in his honor in 1978.His official website is now: http://www.royclark.orgA PART OF THE BIOGRAPHY IN WIKIPEDIA.

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