Sunday brunch
- Length: 3:49
- Rating: ( ratings)
- Views: 19
- Author: thegingerloft
Tags: ambiant and cocktails dining drink drinking fine foods friend friendly loft lounge music place restaurant to with
This is not my first brunch but it is my first clip about some friends coming to have brunch. Inside you will see Jeanine and Marc and sitting outside Sofian and Anne Sophie with their friend Sam.
It's All Over Now - Cover Bobby Womack/Rolling Stones
- Length: 3:30
- Rating: 5.00 (28 ratings)
- Views: 406' favoriteCount='1
- Author: paulekotz
Tags: blues paulekotz rock roll rolling soul stones womack world
A veteran who paid his dues for over a decade before getting his shot at solo stardom, Bobby Womack persevered through tragedy and addiction to emerge as one of soul music's great survivors. Able to shine in the spotlight as a singer or behind the scenes as an instrumentalist and songwriter, Womack never got his due from pop audiences, but during the late '60s and much of the '70s, he was a consistent hitmaker on the R&B charts, with a high standard of quality control. His records were quintessential soul, with a bag of tricks learned from the likes of Sam Cooke, Wilson Pickett, and Sly Stone, all of whom Womack worked closely with at one time or another. Yet often, they also bore the stamp of Womack's own idiosyncratic personality, whether through a lengthy spoken philosophical monologue or a radical reinterpretation of a pop standard. An underrated guitarist, Womack helped pioneer a lean, minimalist approach similar to that of Curtis Mayfield, and was an early influence on the young Jimi Hendrix. Additionally, his songs have been recorded by numerous artists in the realms of both R&B and rock, and the best of them rank as all-time classics.Bobby Dwayne Womack was born in Cleveland on March 4, 1944. His upbringing was strict and religious, but his father Friendly also encouraged his sons to pursue music as he had (he sang and played guitar in a gospel group). In the early '50s, while still a child, Bobby joined his siblings Cecil, Curtis, Harry, and Friendly Jr. to form the gospel quintet the Womack Brothers. They were chosen to open a local show for the Soul Stirrers in 1953, where Bobby befriended lead singer Sam Cooke; following this break, they toured the country as an opening act for numerous gospel groups. When Cooke formed his own SAR label, he recruited the Womack Brothers with an eye towards transforming them into a crossover R&B act. Learning that his sons were moving into secular music, Friendly Womack threw them out of the house, and Cooke wired them the money to buy a car and drive out to his Los Angeles offices. The Womack Brothers made several recordings for SAR over 1960 and 1961, including a few gospel sides, but Cooke soon convinced them to record R&B and renamed them the Valentinos. In 1962, they scored a Top Ten hit on the R&B charts with "Lookin' for a Love," and Cooke sent them on the road behind James Brown to serve a boot-camp-style musical apprenticeship. Bobby eventually joined Cooke's backing band as guitarist. The Valentinos' 1964 single "It's All Over Now," written by Bobby, was quickly covered by the Rolling Stones with Cooke's blessing; when it became the Stones' first U.K. number one, Womack suddenly found himself a rich man.
Ronnie Bass Live Performance
- Length: 7:11
- Rating: 2.50 (2 ratings)
- Views: 74
- Author: thebrandnewday
Tags: art bass CGI CRG flute Friendly Gallery hip-hop lil music needs open performance recorder ronnie series sky the too video wayne world you
Live performance at CRG Gallery, New York, September 2008. Part of CRG's Open Video Series,Friendly, curated Sam Clagnaz and Tommy Hartung. Artists included: Uri Aran, Ronnie Bass, Paul Clagnaz, Sam Clagnaz, Leif Elggren, William Earl Kofmehl III, Tommy Hartung, Carl Micheal Von Hausswolff, J.J. Peet, Mariah Robertson, Michael Stickrod, Michael Nason & Brendan Harman
S1 Cutscene Music: A Friendly Warning
- Length: 1:53
- Rating: ( ratings)
- Views: 37
- Author: Ziming
Tags: Friendly Music Shenmue Warning
S1 Cutscene music: A Friendly Warning
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