My First Ever Vlog

  • Length: 6:3
  • Rating: 5.00 (1 ratings)
  • Views: 6
  • Author: markish17

Tags: 5AG  Buck  Harry  Julia  Musical  Nunes  Potter  the  Theater  vlogbrothers  What 

I do apologize for the crappy lightingi tried though....Music:Moving Too FastThe Last 5 Years (Jason Robert Brown)www.youtube.com/whatthebuckshowwww.youtube.com/5AwesomeGirlswww.youtube.com/vlogbrotherswww.youtube.com/jaaaaaaa

Emotional Brilliance dance with Leonard Cohen's song

  • Length: 5:38
  • Rating: ( ratings)
  • Views: 191
  • Author: ZuniBlue

Tags: and  ascension;  Cohen;  dreams;  emotional  freedom.  infinite  Leonard  marry  nature;  our  Soul  Spirit  spiritual  welcome  your 

Music moving though me making me ALIVE. Some say Sad, yet - please, notice - this is Spirited Face.

Time Slips Aways

  • Length: 3:34
  • Rating: 4.83 (24 ratings)
  • Views: 219
  • Author: BCBband

Tags: Band  BCB  City  Nelson  Oklahoma  Willie 

Stereo: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_6owQukXjIE&fmt=18BCB Band sings "Time Slips Aways" by Willie Nelson.Arriving at the beginning of 1961, Price's invitation began a watershed year for Nelson. Not only did he play with Price — eventually taking members of the Cherokee Cowboys to form his own touring band — but his songs also provided major hits for several other artists. Faron Young took "Hello Walls" to number one for nine weeks, Billy Walker made "Funny How Time Slips Away" into a Top 40 country smash, and Patsy Cline made "Crazy" into a Top Ten pop crossover hit. Earlier in the year, he signed a contract with Liberty Records and began releasing a series of singles that were usually drenched in strings. "Willingly," a duet with his then-wife Shirley Collie, became a Top Ten hit for Nelson early in 1962, and it was followed by another Top Ten single, "Touch Me," later that year. Both singles made it seem like Nelson was primed to become a star, but his career stalled just as quickly as it had taken off, and he was soon charting in the lower regions of the Top 40. Liberty closed its country division in 1964, the same year Roy Orbison had a hit with "Pretty Paper."When the Monument recordings failed to become hits, Nelson moved to RCA Records in 1965, the same year he became a member of the Grand Ole Opry. Over the next seven years, Willie had a steady stream of minor hits, highlighted by the number 13 hit "Bring Me Sunshine" in 1969. Toward the end of his stint with RCA, he had grown frustrated with the label, which had continually tried to shoehorn him into the heavily produced Nashville sound. By 1972, he wasn't even able to reach the country Top 40. Discouraged by his lack of success, Nelson decided to retire from country music, moving back to Austin, TX, after a brief and disastrous sojourn into pig farming. Once he arrived in Austin, Nelson realized that many young rock fans were listening to country music along with the traditional honky tonk audience. Spotting an opportunity, Willie began performing again, scrapping his pop-oriented Nashville sound and image for a rock- and folk-influenced redneck outlaw image. Soon, he earned a contract with Atlantic Records. Shotgun Willie (1973), Nelson's first album for Atlantic, was evidence of the shift of his musical style, and although it initially didn't sell well, it earned good reviews and cultivated a dedicated cult following. By the fall of 1973, his version of Bob Wills' "Stay All Night (Stay a Little Longer)" had cracked the country Top 40. The following year, he delivered the concept album Phases and Stages, which increased his following even more with the hit singles "Bloody Mary Morning" and "After the Fire Is Gone." But the real commercial breakthrough didn't arrive until 1975, when he severed ties with Atlantic and signed to Columbia Records, which gave him complete creative control of his records. Willie's first album for Columbia, The Red Headed Stranger, was a spare concept album about a preacher, featuring only his guitar and his sister's piano. The label was reluctant to release with such stark arrangements, but they relented and it became a huge hit, thanks to Nelson's understated cover of Roy Acuff's "Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain."

Forrest Gump Theme New Version

  • Length: 2:45
  • Rating: ( ratings)
  • Views: 11
  • Author: robinpierce78

Tags: Forrest  Gump  Image  Moving  Music  Pierce  pop  Robin  Theme 

CHEESY AS F*** man, sorry that the strings are so fuck, hard drive problems meant terrible patches but you gotta do what ya gotta do!

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