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Dilemma In Spirit (Techno mix) for Leyland Kirby in London

Just sent a message to James Leyland as he is playing a live show at the Barbican very soon. Link here for more. It's a rare show for James as The Caretaker. I want him to know that I will be with him in spirit. So, here it is....

Klubzuba 1947

Mitch Miller - Happy Days are Here Again

Businessman Animation Final

Johnny Moore's Three Blazers w/ Charles Brown Groovy (PHILO 112) (1945)

Charles Brown - Trouble Blues

Ray Charles - Hit the Road Jack on Saturday Live 1996

ERUPTION - I Can't Stand The Rain (1978)

The Good, The Bad & The Ugly SoundTrack - The Trio

This is exactly the kind of track I want to use in my TV programs.

Rosemary Clooney - This Ole House

McGuire Sisters- Open Up Your Heart And Let The Sun Shine In

CHRIS KENNER - GRANDMA'S HOUSE - BATON

The origin of the '80s aesthetic

Tony Bennett - Mood Indigo

VAN LIFE: Epic Montana Fly Fishing Adventure "Journey On"

This gets a glorious posting here on my blog as the spirit within is what life is about.

Benjamin Clementine - God Save the Jungle @ Cruïlla 2017

What a great track title, God save the jungle. As I write an article about the loss of water and poor water management in Spain, I can sing God save the rivers, just as much as I can sing "God Save the Jungle", Save it all, as it's all going.....going,gone....

one night of sin Barbara Lynn

Nights of sin, and love sick souls.

Mélanie de Biasio - No Deal (2013)

Fats Domino The Fat Man

Fats Domino passed away this week, it's one of those things where you think, wow, was he still with us. As you always thin of Fats as a man from another time. Fats Domino sold a greater number of records than anyone except Elvis Presley. He was a star, hailed far and wide. However, he felt like a very normal kid. . Right when Domino grew up in New Orleans.  His father began from a sugarcane home upriver. By 1960 the range was stacked with modest, single-family houses. Domino moved into a front line split-level home. He wasn't there to make a joke of his old friends, be that as it may. He was giving them a place to hang out and drink ale while he invited them to lunch. After a short time, Domino was in J&M Studio on Rampart Street, recording "The Fat Man." He thought of it as a standard musicality and blues song—he just made up new verses to "Junker Blues," an old tune recorded by another New Orleans piano man, Champion Jack Dupree. Regardless, Do