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Marriages all over the United States are suffering great attacks. These attacks are from the enemy who is a great deceiver....Editorial blog--> Click here

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I'm interested in All Things Great and Small,New and Old,Right and Wrong, Global,Political, National and Environmental.

The Husband Store!
The Husband Store! magnify

The Husband Store!

A store that sells husbands has just opened in New York City, where a woman
may go to choose a husband. Among the instructions at the entrance is a
description of how the store operates. You may visit the store ONLY ONCE !

There are six floors and the attributes of the men increase as the shopper
ascends the flights. There is, however, a catch . . .. you may choose any
man from a particular floor, or you may choose to go up a floor, but you
cannot go back down except to exit the building!

So, a woman goes to the Husband Store to find a husband .

On the first floor the sign on the door reads:
Floor 1 - These men have jobs and love the Lord.

The second floor sign reads:
Floor 2 - These men have jobs, love the Lord, and love kids.

The third floor sign reads:
Floor 3 - These men have jobs, love the Lord, love kids, and are extremely
good looking.

"Wow," she thinks, but feels compelled t o keep going.
She goes to the fourth floor and the sign reads:

Floor 4 - These men have jobs, love the Lord, love kids, are drop-dead good
looking and help with the housework. "Oh, mercy me!" she exclaims, "I can
hardly stand it!"
Still, she goes to the fifth floor and sign reads:

Floor 5 - These men have jobs, love the Lord, love kids, are drop-dead
gorgeous, help with the housework, and have a strong romantic streak.
She is so tempted to stay, but she goes to the sixth floor and the sign
reads:

Floor 6 - You are visitor 4,363,012 to this floor. There are no men on this
floor. This floor exists solely as proof that women are impossible to
please. Thank you for shopping at the Husband Store. Watch your step as you
exit the building, and have a nice day!

Please this is for all the real men to enjoy and laugh and to all the women who can
handle the truth!

Marriages all over the United States are suffering great attacks. These attacks are from the enemy who is a great deceiver and once this great deceiver has you deceiving yourself…on to the next one.

Be Wise and Have Strength and be Encourage to Do what is Right in the Creators Sight so you see things in the Right Light.

Dray The Doctor

Tags: thefemalelogic, relationship, marraige,
Wednesday February 25, 2009 - 08:28am (EST) Permanent Link | 6 Comments
TRIBAL LOVE October 18, 2007
TRIBAL LOVE  October 18, 2007 magnify

TRIBAL LOVE

The Love Needed

To Bring Forth The Life Of Princes And Kings

Princesses And Queens

TRIBAL LOVE

The Blessings From Above

The Start Of A Natural High

To Watch It Grow Until We Die

The Passion The Heated Love

The Important Ingredients Of

The Mixture Of TRIBAL LOVE

TRIBAL LOVE

The Natural Chemistry Of Connection

And The Feelings That Are Now Called Romantic Love

But

Don’t Justify The Meaning Of

TRIBAL LOVE

The Heritage Of My Life

That Flows Thru My Veins And Speaks

In My Brain

TRIBAL LOVE

It Will Not Hide

What Is Know As Divine

TRIBAL LOVE

Akili Nyawi Nazeer

Copyright ©1993

Published by The N.O.T.I.C.E. NewsLetter

A Division of T.E.A.B.A.G. Enterprises Incorporated

Tags: poetry, blackness, love, peace, joy, pain
Thursday October 18, 2007 - 08:58pm (EDT) Permanent Link | 9 Comments
175 Miles City to Shore Bike Tour For Multiple Sclerosis
175 Miles City to Shore Bike Tour For Multiple Sclerosis magnify

The MS150

City to Shore Bike Tour

For Multiple Sclerosis

It Was A Chilly Morning Saturday But Quickly

Warmed-Up To A Beautiful Day.

There Had to Be At Least 9,000 Cyclist Riding, It Was Like Being In The Tour De France.

It Was A Bit Scary With Riders On Both Sides Of You, Many Of Them Riding The MS Bike Tour For The First Time.

The Volunteers & Police Officers Were Great In Supporting This Event.

I Thanked Them At Every Intersection, Stop Sign And Traffic Light.

I Did The Extra 25 Miles For The Century

(100 miles) On Saturday & 75 Miles On Sunday.

The Rest Stops Were Well Stocked With Food, Water, Medicine & Bike Mechanics.

Sunday Morning The Temperature Was 55 Degrees And Again Turned Out To Be A Beautiful Day.

I Registered For Next Years MS150 Bike Tour.

My 13th Bike-A-Thon

1st. Day Started At 7:45AM-Finished The Century At 4:15PM

2nd. Day Started At 6:30AM-Finisihed 75 Miles At 3:30

Dray The Doctor The Herald Of the MS 150 Bike Tour

Visit My Official MS Sponsorship WebSite And Give LOVE

Or the Team List Associated Builders and Contractors Team

www.nationalmssociety.org/site/TR?px=1728919&pg=personal&fr_id=2750

Sunday August 5, 2007 - 12:41pm (EDT) Permanent Link | 33 Comments
Rahsaan Roland Kirk: Improvisation Personified
Rahsaan Roland Kirk: Improvisation Personified magnify

Rahsaan Roland Kirk was a musician that I listened to in my Early Teenage year. It was said that I lived here on Earth before I was born. My senses, my appreciation of the finer things in life, My thought process, the fact that, I could relate on a much high Level than the youth at the time was evidence. At Age 13, I was considered a Man. I drove my father home from the neighborhood Speak-Easy. I was able to Cook and Clean house, I also made my own money as I sold My Sketch Artwork and helped seniors in the neighborhood.

In High School I smoked a Pipe, played Electric Bass in a Funk Band, Played Baritone Horn in the High School Marching Band and String Bass in the High School String Ensemble. This was the Year I got into Rahsaan Roland Kirk. He is a Major influence in my Life for more reason than I know. We were Born on the Same Day, what does that say? AnyWay, this talented, unique man is a part of who I am.

Biography by Chris Kelsey

Arguably the most exciting saxophone soloist in jazz history, Kirk was a post-modernist before that term even existed. Kirk played the continuum of jazz tradition as an instrument unto itself; he felt little compunction about mixing and matching elements from the music's history, and his concoctions usually seemed natural, if not inevitable. When discussing Kirk, a great deal of attention is always paid to his eccentricities — playing several horns at once, making his own instruments, clowning on stage. However, Kirk was an immensely creative artist; perhaps no improvising saxophonist has ever possessed a more comprehensive technique — one that covered every aspect of jazz, from Dixieland to free — and perhaps no other jazz musician has ever been more spontaneously inventive. His skills in constructing a solo are of particular note. Kirk had the ability to pace, shape, and elevate his improvisations to an extraordinary degree. During any given Kirk solo, just at the point in the course of his performance when it appeared he could not raise the intensity level any higher, he always seemed able to turn it up yet another notch.

Kirk was born with sight, but became blind at the age of two. He started playing the bugle and trumpet, then learned the clarinet and C-melody sax. Kirk began playing tenor sax professionally in R&B bands at the age of 15. While a teenager, he discovered the "manzello" and "stritch" — the former, a modified version of the saxello, which was itself a slightly curved variant of the B flat soprano sax; the latter, a modified straight E flat alto. To these and other instruments, Kirk began making his own improvements. He reshaped all three of his saxes so that they could be played simultaneously; he'd play tenor with his left hand, finger the manzello with his right, and sound a drone on the stritch, for instance. Kirk's self-invented technique was in evidence from his first recording, a 1956 R&B record called Triple Threat. By 1960 he had begun to incorporate a siren whistle into his solos, and by '63 he had mastered circular breathing, a technique that enabled him to play without pause for breath.

In his early 20s, Kirk worked in
Louisville before moving to Chicago in 1960. That year he made his second album, Introducing Roland Kirk, which featured saxophonist/trumpeter Ira Sullivan. In 1961, Kirk toured Germany and spent three months with Charles Mingus. From that point onward, Kirk mostly led his own group, the Vibration Society, recording prolifically with a range of sidemen. In the early '70s, Kirk became something of an activist; he led the "Jazz and People's Movement," a group devoted to opening up new opportunities for jazz musicians. The group adopted the tactic of interrupting tapings and broadcasts of television and radio programs in protest of the small number of African-American musicians employed by the networks and recording studios. In the course of his career, Kirk brought many hitherto unused instruments to jazz. In addition to the saxes, Kirk played the nose whistle, the piccolo, and the harmonica; instruments of his own design included the "trumpophone" (a trumpet with a soprano sax mouthpiece), and the "slidesophone" (a small trombone or slide trumpet, also with a sax mouthpiece). Kirk suffered a paralyzing stroke in 1975, losing movement on one side of his body, but his homemade saxophone technique allowed him to continue to play; beginning in 1976 and lasting until his death a year later, Kirk played one-handed.

www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:aifoxqt5ldfe~T1
Nina Simone: The Soul Of Supreme Love
Nina Simone: The Soul Of Supreme Love magnify

This Woman is Near and Dear to me, Like No Other when it comes to How she makes me feel. It’s important to me That You all know and Understand. The only Way to feel what I feel is to Listen to her music. She has made major Accomplishment in her life and Should be named one of the Greatest in a field where She stands alone. Because of her Greatest she has forever touched my life.

Read about her and find her recordings and take a Glorious trip into the Soul of Supreme Love in musical expression.

Find her music and buy it, Sit with a glass of RED Wine and fall in love with her energy, joy and pain.

I Love her and You Will Too.

Dray The Doctor

Biography by Richie Unterberger

Of all the major singers of the late 20th century, Nina Simone was one of the hardest to classify. She recorded extensively in the soul, jazz, and pop idioms, often over the course of the same album; she was also comfortable with blues, gospel, and Broadway. It's perhaps most accurate to label her as a "soul" singer in terms of emotion, rather than form. Like, say, Aretha Franklin, or Dusty Springfield, Simone was an eclectic who brought soulful qualities to whatever material she interpreted. These qualities were among her strongest virtues; paradoxically, they also may have kept her from attaining a truly mass audience. The same could be said of her stage persona; admired for her forthright honesty and individualism, she was also known for feisty feuding with audiences and promoters alike.

If Simone had a chip on her shoulder, it probably arose from the formidable obstacles she had to overcome to establish herself as a popular singer. Raised in a family of eight children, she originally harbored hopes of becoming a classical pianist, studying at New York's prestigious Juilliard School of Music — a rare position for an African-American woman in the 1950s. Needing to support herself while she studied, she generated income by working as an accompanist and giving piano lessons. Auditioning for a job as a pianist in an Atlantic City nightclub, she was told she had the spot if she would sing as well as play. Almost by accident, she began to carve a reputation as a singer of secular material, though her skills at the piano would serve her well throughout her career.

In the late '50s, Simone began recording for the small Bethlehem label (a subsidiary of the vastly important early R&B/rock & roll King label). In 1959, her version of George Gershwin's "I Loves You Porgy" gave her a Top 20 hit — which would, amazingly, prove to be the only Top 40 entry of her career. Nina wouldn't need hit singles for survival, however, establishing herself not with the rock & roll/R&B crowd, but with the adult/nightclub/album market. In the early '60s, she recorded no less than nine albums for the Candix label, about half of them live. These unveiled her as a performer of nearly unsurpassed eclecticism, encompassing everything from Ellingtonian jazz and Israeli folk songs to spirituals and movie themes.

Simone's best recorded work was issued on Philips during the mid-'60s. Here, as on Candix, she was arguably over-exposed, issuing seven albums within a three-year period. These records can be breathtakingly erratic, moving from warm ballad interpretations of Jacques Brel and Billie Holiday and instrumental piano workouts to brassy pop and angry political statements in a heartbeat. There's a great deal of fine music to be found on these, however. Simone's moody-yet-elegant vocals were like no one else's, presenting a fiercely independent soul who harbored enormous (if somewhat hard-bitten) tenderness.

Like many African-American entertainers of the mid-'60s, Simone was deeply affected by the Civil Rights Movement and burgeoning Black Pride. Some (though by no means most) of her best material from this time addressed these concerns in a fashion more forthright than almost any other singer. "Old Jim Crow" and, more particularly, the classic "Mississippi Goddam" were especially notable self-penned efforts in this vein, making one wish that Nina had written more of her own material instead of turning to outside sources for most of her repertoire.

Not that this repertoire wasn't well-chosen. Several of her covers from the mid-'60s, indeed, were classics: her revision of Weill-Brecht's "Pirate Jenny" to reflect the bitter elements of African-American experience, for instance, or her mournful interpretation of Brel's "Ne Me Quitte Pas." Other highlights were her versions of "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood," covered by

the Animals for a rock hit; "I Put a Spell on You," which influenced the vocal line on the Beatles' "Michelle"; and the buzzing, jazzy "See Line Woman."
Simone was not as well-served by her tenure with RCA in the late '60s and early '70s, another prolific period which saw the release of nine albums. These explored a less eclectic range, with a considerably heavier pop-soul base to both the material and arrangements. One bona fide classic did come out of this period: "Young, Gifted & Black," written by Simone and Weldon Irvine, Jr., would be successfully covered by both Aretha Franklin and Donny Hathaway. She did have a couple of Top Five British hits in the late '60s with "Ain't Got No" (from the musical Hair) and a cover of the Bee Gees' "To Love Somebody," neither of which rank among her career highlights.

Simone fell on turbulent times in the 1970s, divorcing her husband/manager Andy Stroud, encountering serious financial problems, and becoming something of a nomad, settling at various points in Switzerland, Liberia, Barbados, France, and Britain. After leaving RCA, she recorded rarely, although she did make the critically well-received Baltimore in 1978 for the small CTI label. She had an unpredictable resurgence in 1987, when an early track, "My Baby Just Cares for Me," became a big British hit after being used in a Chanel perfume television commercial. In 1993, her record A Single Woman marked her return to an American major label, and her profile was also boosted when several of her songs were featured in the film Point of No Return. She published her biography, I Put a Spell on You, in 1991, but grew increasingly frail throughout the late '90s and had to be helped on to the stage during a 2001 Carnegie Hall performance. Nina Simone died on April 21, 2003 at her home in Carry-le-Rouet, France, where she had been spending much of her retirement.

www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:wifrxqw5ldhe~T0

Tags: african, african-american, blackness, , americanhistory, music, jazz, beauty, love
Wednesday July 18, 2007 - 07:00pm (EDT) Permanent Link | 27 Comments

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