Tue, 29 May 2007
Goodies I unearthed this week in Uncle Warren's Attic:
"The Mining Ship the Red Dwarf," by Marc Gunn & The Dubliners Comments[0] |
Sun, 20 May 2007 Can you identify the voice in the Peter Pan commercials? No big prize awarded, just the satisfaction of knowing his name before I tell you at the end. Speaking of peanut butter, much tasty stuff in this edition, along with a semi-promise to drop by more often again! The musical numbers: "Glow Worm" by Homer and Jethro ... "Ghost Riders in the Sky" by the Sons of the Pioneers and by Scat Man Crothers ... "Listening House" by Lazarus and the announcement of Ikthuscast ... "It's a Bloody War" by Homer & Jethro and "28th of January" by the Piney Creek Weasels ... "Pull the String" by Jonathan Coulton ... and "Bye Bye Blackbird" by Gene Austin. Comments[0] |
Fri, 18 May 2007 It's been a busy couple of months, but I expect to be back more frequently again soon. I apologize to the ever-shrinking but supportive bunch of you who keep checking back and stay subscribed. Coming soon, the long-awaited Aileen Stanley story, a look at the work of Scotty MacGregor, and a dramatic reading of an important 1957 essay about why the United States should claim the moon as its sovereign territory. What fun! I also plan to debut a new project very soon, which I'll tell you about in Uncle Warren's Attic #31. Watch for UWA 31 sometime next week. Have fun in the meantime! Category: general -- posted at: 8:44 AM Comments[0] |
Sun, 6 May 2007 A half-dozen gems uncovered during a trip to the antique store last week.
"Behind the Clouds (There's Crowds and Crowds of Sunbeams), Gene Austin Make sure you check the links this week ... lots of fun info! *Couldn't find a link for these guys - best I found was a phorum entry where someone asked (at the bottom, "Anyone know anything about this group? They recorded a dozen or so discs for Bluebird around 1940. Can't decide whether they're a country band, a jazz band, or a polka band. Features accordion and vibraphone leads with guitar, bass, washboard and drum rhythm. Kind of addictive." Comments[0] |





