Alice Coltrane Harp Improvisation Moochin' About 10" Alice in Chains
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A Thesis Submitted for the Degree of PhD at the University of Warwick Permanent WRAP URL: http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/ 84893 Copyright and reuse: This thesis is made available online and is protected by original copyright. Please scroll down to view the document itself. Please refer to the repository record for this item for information to help you to cite it. Our policy information is available from the repository home page. For more information, please contact the WRAP Team at: [email protected] warwick.ac.uk/lib-publications Culture is a Weapon: Popular Music, Protest and Opposition to Apartheid in Britain David Toulson A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History University of Warwick Department of History January 2016 Table of Contents Acknowledgements………………………………………………………………...iv Declaration………………………………………………………………………….v Abstract…………………………………………………………………………….vi Introduction………………………………………………………………………..1 ‘A rock concert with a cause’……………………………………………………….1 Come Together……………………………………………………………………...7 Methodology………………………………………………………………………13 Research Questions and Structure…………………………………………………22 1)“Culture is a weapon that we can use against the apartheid regime”……...25 The Cultural Boycott and the Anti-Apartheid Movement…………………………25 ‘The Times They Are A Changing’………………………………………………..34 ‘Culture is a weapon of struggle’………………………………………………….47 Rock Against Racism……………………………………………………………...54 ‘We need less airy fairy freedom music and more action.’………………………..72 2) ‘The Myth -
Rolling Stone Magazine's Top 500 Songs
Rolling Stone Magazine's Top 500 Songs No. Interpret Title Year of release 1. Bob Dylan Like a Rolling Stone 1961 2. The Rolling Stones Satisfaction 1965 3. John Lennon Imagine 1971 4. Marvin Gaye What’s Going on 1971 5. Aretha Franklin Respect 1967 6. The Beach Boys Good Vibrations 1966 7. Chuck Berry Johnny B. Goode 1958 8. The Beatles Hey Jude 1968 9. Nirvana Smells Like Teen Spirit 1991 10. Ray Charles What'd I Say (part 1&2) 1959 11. The Who My Generation 1965 12. Sam Cooke A Change is Gonna Come 1964 13. The Beatles Yesterday 1965 14. Bob Dylan Blowin' in the Wind 1963 15. The Clash London Calling 1980 16. The Beatles I Want zo Hold Your Hand 1963 17. Jimmy Hendrix Purple Haze 1967 18. Chuck Berry Maybellene 1955 19. Elvis Presley Hound Dog 1956 20. The Beatles Let It Be 1970 21. Bruce Springsteen Born to Run 1975 22. The Ronettes Be My Baby 1963 23. The Beatles In my Life 1965 24. The Impressions People Get Ready 1965 25. The Beach Boys God Only Knows 1966 26. The Beatles A day in a life 1967 27. Derek and the Dominos Layla 1970 28. Otis Redding Sitting on the Dock of the Bay 1968 29. The Beatles Help 1965 30. Johnny Cash I Walk the Line 1956 31. Led Zeppelin Stairway to Heaven 1971 32. The Rolling Stones Sympathy for the Devil 1968 33. Tina Turner River Deep - Mountain High 1966 34. The Righteous Brothers You've Lost that Lovin' Feelin' 1964 35. -
A Shabby London Suburb?
fr-. Am Qifi a walk round the working class and 0 0- Q l radlcal history of Hammersmzth 1 revolting peasants... heretics... civil war agitators... chartists... sujffragettes... socialists... i irish republicans... anarchists... suffocated tory rnps with satsurnas in their mouths... A ~ Harnrnersrnith has seen it all. with "the aid of this pamphlet you can wander the streets of one of west london’s finest neighbourhoods, delving into its proud and rebellious history... - g%|Qggg||.%' ' ' ' " IF“ "‘*“‘IiflHlli -, I ':-.}_5;- __-{'3 i ; 4; ._: -' _- E _ i if.) vi’ ‘ r "' -“' ' "'7' \'- 7-"L -'-*-'-' c-‘+:: ".3'.-11-.-.--2'-.-. ;--.-.+'~o'q-... .-1.. % i . p, '. :t ..' . - ~r“ a‘Z, ' his. '1‘ H:-'__§"€:5' ‘f.-_ I .. ---:=;>.-.-..<;.-.--- ' - .-14.-.-.,I,-. _‘__ H _,f_ __ if l i Ir?-‘_: F‘ I; I ‘L. IL I -gé- I in ' -1 1.5 #_>_5_.- i' . E " in' . _-..;;_‘D I". -" - I J .24‘__;- -'_ -Q ll; ~:>Ei 1'. -1 A .. - __- _; __ :._ atJ II: M“_,.._.-5. lgufr . l Y i-iii. .- _ . 5%-i ._l_;__ ._ 1-. - 'i_.\_ |__ 1-._. **r'i‘7i=~*}.-' 1: __ __ __ ....:..................._.._*s . 3 . ' .-all ' 'I ' ' ....... “'-~‘ "'1' (',7r;>:'1l'e:1"2por'a1‘_v cre2g'r;z=.'1'z1g'.' the ;.n'<)c‘e.s.sirj.>11 for Quecrcrl C7';11"ol1'r1e’s func1'a1_., 1821. - past tense - a wander round the working class and radical history of harnmersrnith This walk was originally researched and drawn up by members of the West Lortdon Arrarch.ists & Radicals group (since defunct), who guided about 30 people around the walk on Friday 3 May 2001. -
Report Evaluates Gov. Engler
\!Glc nn Report Evaluates Gov. Engler by Adam DeVore Engl er' s 1992 record specifically Michigan's first brush with widespread principle to which more elected officials University of Michigan students are earned the Center's praise in over a dozen school choice, but educational choice re- ought to pay heed: it urges "an enlight- not the only ones who just received their tains important support ened perspective across state government, grades in the mail. The Mackinac Center within the State Depart- one that seeks to eradicate anything that for Public Policy, a non-partisan research ment of Education and suffocates peaceful, productive activity." A and educational organization based in the Michigan Board of careful review of "needless or overly bur- Midland, this Monday released The Engler Education, as well as the densome licenSing requirements," dam- Administration: A Mid-term Review, a criti legislature and, increas- aging zoning laws, and related ills is cal yet positive and optimistic evaluation ingly,amongst public consequently in order. of Michigan's current state government. school teachers them- One area the report refrains from Wherea'l Governor John Engler's perfor selves. addressing is the likely effect of the mance in 1991 earned him but a "B" from The Mackinac Cen- Clinton administration on Engler's re-, the Center, his second effort deserves an ter also criticized form efforts. Lawrence W. Reed, presi- "A-," the report maintains. Engler's mental health dent of the Mackinac Center and the Unlike President George Bush, care reforms, which have primary author of the report, wished to whom millions of Americans have"come "not been put forth in a withhold definitive judgment until to view .. -
Andy Higgins, BA
Andy Higgins, B.A. (Hons), M.A. (Hons) Music, Politics and Liquid Modernity How Rock-Stars became politicians and why Politicians became Rock-Stars Thesis submitted for the degree of Ph.D. in Politics and International Relations The Department of Politics, Philosophy and Religion University of Lancaster September 2010 Declaration I certify that this thesis is my own work and has not been submitted in substantially the same form for the award of a higher degree elsewhere 1 ProQuest Number: 11003507 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a com plete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. uest ProQuest 11003507 Published by ProQuest LLC(2018). Copyright of the Dissertation is held by the Author. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States C ode Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. ProQuest LLC. 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106- 1346 Abstract As popular music eclipsed Hollywood as the most powerful mode of seduction of Western youth, rock-stars erupted through the counter-culture as potent political figures. Following its sensational arrival, the politics of popular musical culture has however moved from the shared experience of protest movements and picket lines and to an individualised and celebrified consumerist experience. As a consequence what emerged, as a controversial and subversive phenomenon, has been de-fanged and transformed into a mechanism of establishment support. -
Precious but Not Precious UP-RE-CYCLING
The sounds of ideas forming , Volume 3 Alan Dunn, 22 July 2020 presents precious but not precious UP-RE-CYCLING This is the recycle tip at Clatterbridge. In February 2020, we’re dropping off some stuff when Brigitte shouts “if you get to the plastic section sharpish, someone’s throwing out a pile of records.” I leg it round and within seconds, eyes and brain honed from years in dank backrooms and charity shops, I smell good stuff. I lean inside, grabbing a pile of vinyl and sticking it up my top. There’s compilations with Blondie, Boomtown Rats and Devo and a couple of odd 2001: A Space Odyssey and Close Encounters soundtracks. COVER (VERSIONS) www.alandunn67.co.uk/coverversions.html For those that read the last text, you’ll enjoy the irony in this introduction. This story is about vinyl but not as a precious and passive hands-off medium but about using it to generate and form ideas, abusing it to paginate a digital sketchbook and continuing to be astonished by its magic. We re-enter the story, the story of the sounds of ideas forming, after the COVER (VERSIONS) exhibition in collaboration with Aidan Winterburn that brings together the ideas from July 2018 – December 2019. Staged at Leeds Beckett University, it presents the greatest hits of the first 18 months and some extracts from that first text that Aidan responds to (https://tinyurl.com/y4tza6jq), with me in turn responding back, via some ‘OUR PRICE’ style stickers with quotes/stats. For the exhibition, the mock-up sleeves fabricated by Tom Rodgers look stunning, turning the digital detournements into believable double-sided artefacts. -
Keeping the Tradition by Marilyn Lester © 2 0 1 J a C K V
AUGUST 2018—ISSUE 196 YOUR FREE GUIDE TO THE NYC JAZZ SCENE NYCJAZZRECORD.COM P EE ING TK THE R N ADITIO DARCY ROBERTA JAMES RICKY JOE GAMBARINI ARGUE FORD SHEPLEY Managing Editor: Laurence Donohue-Greene Editorial Director & Production Manager: Andrey Henkin To Contact: The New York City Jazz Record 66 Mt. Airy Road East AUGUST 2018—ISSUE 196 Croton-on-Hudson, NY 10520 United States Phone/Fax: 212-568-9628 NEw York@Night 4 Laurence Donohue-Greene: Interview : ROBERTA GAMBARINI 6 by ori dagan [email protected] Andrey Henkin: [email protected] Artist Feature : darcy james argue 7 by george grella General Inquiries: [email protected] ON The COver : preservation hall jazz band 8 by marilyn lester Advertising: [email protected] Encore : ricky ford by russ musto Calendar: 10 [email protected] VOXNews: Lest We Forget : joe shepley 10 by anders griffen [email protected] LAbel Spotlight : weekertoft by stuart broomer US Subscription rates: 12 issues, $40 11 Canada Subscription rates: 12 issues, $45 International Subscription rates: 12 issues, $50 For subscription assistance, send check, cash or vOXNEwS 11 by suzanne lorge money order to the address above or email [email protected] obituaries by andrey henkin Staff Writers 12 David R. Adler, Clifford Allen, Duck Baker, Stuart Broomer, FESTIvAL REPORT Robert Bush, Thomas Conrad, 13 Ken Dryden, Donald Elfman, Phil Freeman, Kurt Gottschalk, Tom Greenland, Anders Griffen, CD REviewS 14 Tyran Grillo, Alex Henderson, Robert Iannapollo, Matthew Kassel, Mark Keresman, Marilyn Lester, Miscellany 31 Suzanne Lorge, Marc Medwin, Jim Motavalli, Russ Musto, John Pietaro, Joel Roberts, Event Calendar 32 John Sharpe, Elliott Simon, Andrew Vélez, Scott Yanow Contributing Writers Mathieu Bélanger, Marco Cangiano, Ori Dagan, George Grella, George Kanzler, Annie Murnighan Contributing Photographers “Tradition!” bellowed Chaim Topol as Tevye the milkman in Fiddler on the Roof. -
Dekalog Magdy R
Batorak Numer 10 (43) ISSN 2081-6863 czerwIec 2011 DEKALOG MAGDY R. DO YOU KNOW POLSKA? DZIENNIKARSKA ELITA DRUGA SIEĆ METRA... ISTNIEJE?! NIEDOCENIANY BAŁTYK SpTisy ttrueł ści Drodzy Czytelnicy To już ostatni numer „Batoraka” w tym roku szkolnym. W środę wszyscy się pożegnamy i zobaczymy do - piero za dwa miesiące, we wrześniu. Ten rok jest wyjątkowy dla naszej redakcji, gdyż pierwszy raz w naszej historii, wydaliśmy 10 numerów. W czerwcowej gazecie przeczytacie podsumowania minionych miesięcy. Na stronie 14 komentarz Bartło - mieja Pogranicznego dotyczący pracy prezydium SU, a na stronie 3 o tegorocznej działalności redakcji. Znaj - dziecie też artykuły z propozycjami wakacyjnych wyjazdów – Może Berlin? – pyta Justyna Żarkowska na stro - nie 12. A na 28 Olaf Koprowicz relacjonuje finał Batory Cup. W imieniu całej redakcji życzę wszystkim udanych wakacji. Miłej lektury, Melisa Gül Zastępca Redaktora Naczelnego SPIS TREŚCI DZIENNIKARSKA ELITA 3 WŁADZA NAD ŚWIATEM 17 tegoroczna działalność redakcji II część historii Henryka IV CIEKAWE, CO JESZCZE ODDALIĆ WYROK, ODMIENIĆ LOS 21 Z TEGO WYJDZIE 5 recenzja książki „Nie opuszczaj mnie” Scena Batory ZAKOŃCZ SZKOŁĘ ZE ZŁOTĄ PALMĄ 21 PREZENTACJE GIMNAZJALNE 6 zapowiedzi filmowe na czym to polega POSZUKIWANA HANNA 22 43 ZWYCIĘZCÓW 7 recenzja filmu laureaci i finaliści LETNIA SCENA TEATRALNA TERAZ POLSKA 8 W WARSZAWIE 23 prezydencja w UE zapowiedzi teatralne KORKI, ZAMKNIĘTE ULICE, ROMEO, ACH ROMEO! 23 SPÓŹNIENIA DO PRACY 8 recenzja opery Barack Obama w Polsce KOMEDIA? DO KWADRATU! 24 DO YOU KNOW POLSKA? 9 co grają w teatrze „Kwadrat” nowy serwis KONCERTOWE KALENDARIUM 26 MODA MAŁO POLSKA 10 wydarzenia muzyczne w wakacje co jest w naszych szafach WAKACJE NA SPORTOWO 26 DRUGA SIEĆ METRA… ISTNIEJE?! 11 imprezy sportowe dowiedz się gdzie SENSACJA O WŁOS 27 MOŻE BERLIN? 12 Finał Batory Cup wycieczka do stolicy Niemiec NIEDOCENIANY BAŁTYK 13 FOTO NA OKŁADCE: nad polskim morzem też można się świetnie bawić DEKALOG MAGDY R. -
DOROTTYA JÁSZAY, ANDREA VELICH Eötvös Loránd University
Film & Culture edited by: DOROTTYA JÁSZAY, ANDREA VELICH Eötvös Loránd University | Faculty of Humanities | School of English and American Studies 2016 Film & Culture Edited by: DOROTTYA JÁSZAY, ANDREA VELICH Layout design by: BENCE LEVENTE BODÓ Proofreader: ANDREA THURMER © AUTHORS 2016, © EDITORS 2016 ISBN 978-963-284-757-3 EÖTVÖS LORÁND TUDOMÁNYEGYETEM Supported by the Higher Education Restructuring Fund | Allocated to ELTE by the Hungarian Government 2016 FILM & CULTURE Marcell Gellért | Shakespeare on Film: Romeo and Table of Juliet Revisioned 75 Márta Hargitai | Hitchcock’s Macbeth 87 Contents Dorottya Holló | Culture(s) Through Films: Learning Opportunities 110 Géza Kállay | Introduction: Being Film 5 János Kenyeres | Multiculturalism, History and Identity in Canadian Film: Atom Egoyan’s Vera Benczik & Natália Pikli | James Bond in the Ararat 124 Classroom 19 Zsolt Komáromy | The Miraculous Life of Henry Zsolt Czigányik | Utopia and Dystopia Purcell: On the Cultural Historical Contexts of on the Screen 30 the Film England, my England 143 Ákos Farkas | Henry James in the Cinema: When Miklós Lojkó | The British Documentary Film the Adapters Turn the Screw 44 Movement from the mid-1920s to the mid-1940s: Its Social, Political, and Aesthetic Context 155 Cecilia Gall | Representation of Australian Aborigines in Australian film 62 Éva Péteri | John Huston’s Adaptation of James Joyce’s “The Dead”: A Literary Approach 186 FILM & CULTURE Eglantina Remport & Janina Vesztergom | Romantic Ireland and the Hollywood Film Industry: The Colleen -
Diplomarbeit
DIPLOMARBEIT Titel der Diplomarbeit Lage, Analyse und Perspektive österreichischer Musiker im Forschungsfeld der FM4 Charts 2011 unter Berücksichtigung deutscher und/oder englischer Texte. Verfasser Roland Maurer angestrebter akademischer Grad Magister der Philosophie (Mag.phil.) Wien, 2012 Studienkennzahl lt. Studienblatt: A 316 Studienrichtung lt. Studienblatt: Musikwissenschaft Betreuerin: Univ.-Prof. Mag. Dr. Regine Allgayer-Kaufmann 1 Inhaltsverzeichnis 1. Einleitung ……………………........…...……………………………...... 4 2. Problemstellung und Erkenntnisinteresse …....…………………….... 7 2.1. Forschungsfragen ….......…………………………………………...... 9 2.2. Forschungshypothesen …………………………………………….... 9 2.3. Erhebungsgegenstand ……………………………………….………. 10 2.4. Stand der Forschung …………………………………………………. 11 THEORETISCHE VERANKERUNG 3. IFPI Austria Musikbericht 2011 …............................……………….... 13 4. Forschungsfeld Radio FM4 ………………………………………….... 17 4.1 Musikauswahl, Marktsituation, FM4 Charts ………………………... 19 4.2. Position, Sprache, Formate …………………………………............. 21 4.3. Auftrag, HörerInnen, Radio FM4 Off Air ………………................... 22 4.4. FM4 Radio Sessions, FM4 Überraschungskonzerte, FM4 Soundpark 23 Exkurs 1: Jugendkultur ……………………………………………………....... 25 Exkurs 2: Independent vs. Popularmusik ………………………………........ 26 5. Sprache in der Musik ………………………………………………...... 33 6. Bandscout ……………………………………………………................ 35 6.1. Rahmenbedingungen, die sich von Bandscout ableiten …........... 36 6.1.1. Anzahl der Live-Konzerte ! Booking ……………………… 36 6.1.2. Größe -
Music 10378 Songs, 32.6 Days, 109.89 GB
Page 1 of 297 Music 10378 songs, 32.6 days, 109.89 GB Name Time Album Artist 1 Ma voie lactée 3:12 À ta merci Fishbach 2 Y crois-tu 3:59 À ta merci Fishbach 3 Éternité 3:01 À ta merci Fishbach 4 Un beau langage 3:45 À ta merci Fishbach 5 Un autre que moi 3:04 À ta merci Fishbach 6 Feu 3:36 À ta merci Fishbach 7 On me dit tu 3:40 À ta merci Fishbach 8 Invisible désintégration de l'univers 3:50 À ta merci Fishbach 9 Le château 3:48 À ta merci Fishbach 10 Mortel 3:57 À ta merci Fishbach 11 Le meilleur de la fête 3:33 À ta merci Fishbach 12 À ta merci 2:48 À ta merci Fishbach 13 ’¡¡ÒàËÇèÒ 3:33 à≤ŧ¡ÅèÍÁÅÙ¡ªÒÇÊÂÒÁ ʶҺђÇÔ·ÂÒÈÒʵÃì¡ÒÃàÃÕÂ’… 14 ’¡¢ÁÔé’ 2:29 à≤ŧ¡ÅèÍÁÅÙ¡ªÒÇÊÂÒÁ ʶҺђÇÔ·ÂÒÈÒʵÃì¡ÒÃàÃÕÂ’… 15 ’¡à¢Ò 1:33 à≤ŧ¡ÅèÍÁÅÙ¡ªÒÇÊÂÒÁ ʶҺђÇÔ·ÂÒÈÒʵÃì¡ÒÃàÃÕÂ’… 16 ¢’ÁàªÕ§ÁÒ 1:36 à≤ŧ¡ÅèÍÁÅÙ¡ªÒÇÊÂÒÁ ʶҺђÇÔ·ÂÒÈÒʵÃì¡ÒÃàÃÕÂ’… 17 à¨éÒ’¡¢Ø’·Í§ 2:07 à≤ŧ¡ÅèÍÁÅÙ¡ªÒÇÊÂÒÁ ʶҺђÇÔ·ÂÒÈÒʵÃì¡ÒÃàÃÕÂ’… 18 ’¡àÍÕé§ 2:23 à≤ŧ¡ÅèÍÁÅÙ¡ªÒÇÊÂÒÁ ʶҺђÇÔ·ÂÒÈÒʵÃì¡ÒÃàÃÕÂ’… 19 ’¡¡ÒàËÇèÒ 4:00 à≤ŧ¡ÅèÍÁÅÙ¡ªÒÇÊÂÒÁ ʶҺђÇÔ·ÂÒÈÒʵÃì¡ÒÃàÃÕÂ’… 20 áÁèËÁéÒ¡ÅèÍÁÅÙ¡ 6:49 à≤ŧ¡ÅèÍÁÅÙ¡ªÒÇÊÂÒÁ ʶҺђÇÔ·ÂÒÈÒʵÃì¡ÒÃàÃÕÂ’… 21 áÁèËÁéÒ¡ÅèÍÁÅÙ¡ 6:23 à≤ŧ¡ÅèÍÁÅÙ¡ªÒÇÊÂÒÁ ʶҺђÇÔ·ÂÒÈÒʵÃì¡ÒÃàÃÕÂ’… 22 ¡ÅèÍÁÅÙ¡â€ÃÒª 1:58 à≤ŧ¡ÅèÍÁÅÙ¡ªÒÇÊÂÒÁ ʶҺђÇÔ·ÂÒÈÒʵÃì¡ÒÃàÃÕÂ’… 23 ¡ÅèÍÁÅÙ¡ÅéÒ’’Ò 2:55 à≤ŧ¡ÅèÍÁÅÙ¡ªÒÇÊÂÒÁ ʶҺђÇÔ·ÂÒÈÒʵÃì¡ÒÃàÃÕÂ’… 24 Ë’èÍäÁé 3:21 à≤ŧ¡ÅèÍÁÅÙ¡ªÒÇÊÂÒÁ ʶҺђÇÔ·ÂÒÈÒʵÃì¡ÒÃàÃÕÂ’… 25 ÅÙ¡’éÍÂã’ÍÙè 3:55 à≤ŧ¡ÅèÍÁÅÙ¡ªÒÇÊÂÒÁ ʶҺђÇÔ·ÂÒÈÒʵÃì¡ÒÃàÃÕÂ’… 26 ’¡¡ÒàËÇèÒ 2:10 à≤ŧ¡ÅèÍÁÅÙ¡ªÒÇÊÂÒÁ ʶҺђÇÔ·ÂÒÈÒʵÃì¡ÒÃàÃÕÂ’… 27 ÃÒËÙ≤˨ђ·Ãì 5:24 à≤ŧ¡ÅèÍÁÅÙ¡ªÒÇÊÂÒÁ ʶҺђÇÔ·ÂÒÈÒʵÃì¡ÒÃàÃÕÂ’… -
November '92 Sound
mb Nove er ’92 . 2 , NoSS UUNN DD HHHH, YOU DON’T know the shape I’m “O in,” Levon Helm was wailing plaintively over the P.A. as the lights came up at Off Broad- way, a St. Louis nightclub. The DJ’s choice of that particular Band normally prohibits). Brian McTavish of the number couldn’t have been more Star’s “Nighthawk” column was on assign- relevant. Four days on the road ment, so no luck there. A television spot with the Tom Russell Band were wasn't in the budget, so we'd have to rely coming to a close, leaving me primarily on word of mouth for ticket sales. fatigued and exhilarated at the same time. Day 1 – Kansas City The show had run late, and The Tom Russell Band, standin’ on the corner: Barry the management was doing its Ramus (bass), Fats Kaplin (accordion, pedal steel, Waiting at the Comfort Inn for the band harmonica, and more), Tom Russell (guitar, vocals), to roll in to town provided a chance to see a best to herd patrons out the Mike Warner (drums, backing vocals), Andrew Hardin door. As the crowd congratulat- (guitar, harmony vocals). prima donna in action. A member of Lash ing the band dispersed, S LaRue’sband was pressuring the desk clerk staff cartoonist Dug joined me in ap- to change his room assignment, first to down the hall, then, deciding that wasn’t proaching Tom, and in our best Wayne and up a request for an interview left on his toll good enough, to a different floor.