Gloucester’s Man at the Wheel watching the snow start

january-7-2016-man-at-the-wheel-watching-the-snow-develop

4 thoughts on “Gloucester’s Man at the Wheel watching the snow start

  1. In it for the long haul imagine how storms he and the waiting wives memorials they have been in and through front row view here! 🙂 Dave & Kim 🙂

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  2. Thanks Donna doing good trying to dodge the folks hacking and coughing spreading the wealth of the season :-O Dave

    Lee Oskar – Feeling Happy (1978

    Uploaded on Nov 22, 2010

    All Music Guide: Here’s why all serious music lovers still need a turntable: there are so many worthwhile LPs from the ’60s and ’70s that will probably never be reissued on CD. Before Avenue Records came into the picture, it seemed unlikely that Lee Oskar’s solo albums of 1976-1980 would ever be reissued on CD — labels usually reissue titles they think there is a heavy demand for, and Oskar’s solo efforts weren’t the mega-blockbusters that War’s albums were. But Avenue pleasantly surprised listeners in the ’90s by making Oskar’s solo output available on CD, including 1978’s Before the Rain. Did this album outsell War classics like Why Can’t We Be Friends? and All Day Music? Hardly. Reissued in 1995, this mostly instrumental album deserved to come back into print simply because it is good. From a commercial standpoint, the problem with Before the Rain is that it’s difficult to categorize — is it funk, pop-jazz, quiet storm, or fusion? Arguably, Before the Rain is all of those things, and Oskar’s harmonica playing is expressive whether he is getting mildly funky on “Steppin'” or being mellow and laid-back on “More Than Words Can Say” and the title track. “Steppin'” certainly isn’t typical of funk instrumentals; the tune opens with bagpipes — not exactly an instrument that one ordinarily associates with funk. But then, Oskar is no stranger to multiculturalism; how many harmonica players who were born in Copenhagen, Denmark, went on to play with one of the top soul/funk bands of the ’70s? Before the Rain may not have set the world on fire when it was first released in 1978, but it was certainly nice to see the album making its CD debut in 1995

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