Posts Tagged ‘Work’

Christmas in the Aire | Christmas

Monday, January 7th, 2008

Christmas in the Aire was the third Christmas album released by new age musical group Mannheim Steamroller. The album was originally released in 1995.


Track listing

  1. “Joy to the World” – 3:36
  2. “Joseph Dear, Oh Joseph Mine” – 3:08
  3. “Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer” – 3:11
  4. “Herbei, oh ihr Gläubigen (Oh Come All Ye Faithful)” – 3:30
  5. “Pat-A-Pan” – 4:48
  6. “O Little Town of Bethlehem” 3:55
  7. “Angels We Have Heard on High” – 3:53
  8. “Gagliarda” – 3:00
  9. “Los Peces en el Rio” – 3:50
  10. “Christmas Lullaby” – 4:06
  11. “Kling, Glöckchen” – 1:46
  12. “Jingle Bells” – 4:28

Links

Bedroom Acoustics | with the B-Side

Sunday, December 30th, 2007

Bedroom Acoustics is a song by the British rock band Muse. It appeared as a B-side on the popular single Plug In Baby, found on their second album Origin of Symmetry. It is an instrumental song featuring just an acoustic guitar.

The song was written and performed by Matthew Bellamy.

Links

List of parks in Markham, Ontario | Park Map

Thursday, December 13th, 2007

Parks in the Town of Markham, Ontario are maintained by the Parks Department. Some parks require fees, but most are free.

  • Armadale Park
  • Armstrong Park
  • Austin Drive Park
  • Bayview Reservoir
  • Bishop’s Cross Park
  • Cakebread Park
  • Carlton Park
  • Cedar Valley
  • Centennial Park
  • Clark Young Woods
  • Coledale Park
  • Crosby Park
  • Denison Park
  • Elson Park
  • Featherstone park
  • German Mills Settlers Park
  • Grandview Park
  • Highgate Park
  • Huntington Park
  • Leighland Park
  • James Edward Park
  • John Button Waterway
  • Markham Civic Centre
  • Milliken Mills Park
  • Milne Dam Conservation Park
  • Mintleaf Park
  • Monarch Park
  • Morgan Park
  • Mount Joy Park
  • Paddock Park
  • Paramount Park
  • Pioneer Park
  • Pomona Mills Park
  • Quantztown Park
  • Raybeck Park
  • Raymerville Woodlot
  • Reesor Park
  • Riseborough Park
  • Royal Orchard Park
  • Simonston Park
  • Springdale Park
  • Thornlea East Park
  • Toogood Park
  • Victoria Square


External links

  • Parklands

Links

Symphony Hour | Mickey reading

Wednesday, December 12th, 2007

Symphony Hour was a cartoon made by Walt Disney starring Mickey Mouse in 1942.

Mickey leads a radio orchestra who performs the overture to Light Cavalry (by Franz von Suppé). The sponsor (Pegleg Pete as Mr. Sylvester Macaroni) loves the rehearsal, but come the actual performance, Goofy drops all the instruments under an elevator, and they sound like toys. Sylvester Macaroni hates it, but the audience loves it anyway.

Clara Cluck is in the orchestra in the beginning “rehearsal” sequences but not in the actual performance at the end. Other characters appearing in this short are Donald Duck, Clarabelle Cow and Horace Horsecollar.

In some versions of this short, the scene in which Mickey points a gun at the head of Donald to get him back to playing after the elevator incident is missing.

Mickey would go into a 5-year retirement from animation after this short, not having another starring role until 1947’s Mickey’s Delayed Date (although he does appear in two Pluto cartoons released between these years). This was also the last appearance of Clarabelle Cow, Horace Horsecollar and Clara Cluck in animation for decades. They were not seen again until 1983 in Mickey’s Christmas Carol.

Leonard Maltin has called this short a “Spike Jones version of The Band Concert”.

Links

Bullshit | for the ‘Bollocks

Sunday, December 9th, 2007

Bullshit (often bowdlerized to BS), also Bullcrap, is a common English expletive. It can also be shortened to just “Bull”.

Most commonly, it describes incorrect, misleading, false language and statements. Literally, it describes the feces of a bull. As with many expletives, it can be used as an interjection (or in many other parts of speech) and can carry a wide variety of meanings.

Bullshitting is usually when one makes statements that are false, or made-up. Usually people describe other people’s action of making a lot of statements as bullshitting in arguments, when one is making up rules or making examples that are not anything to do with what they are discussing or when one is making statements by using examples that need different rules to be applied, so this person is bullshitting

As it contains the word “shit”, the term is sometimes considered foul language, hence the use of the euphemistic abbreviations “bull” and “BS”. Nonetheless, the term is prevalent in American English and, as with many words, the term is used in a variety of countries, some dating back to approximately the same era World War I. In British English, bollocks is a comparable expletive, although bullshit is now a commonly used expletive in British English also.

While bullshitting and bullshit can be used in a deprecating sense, the term ‘bullshit artist’ may imply a measure of respect for the skill required to “bullshit” effectively.

In philosophy, the word bullshit is used to denote utterances and speech acts which does not add to the meaning of the set of sentences uttered, but which is added purely to persuade interlocutors of the validity or importance of other utterances. The accuracy of the information is irrelevant whilst “bullshitting”; whether true or false, “bullshit” is the intention to distort the information or to otherwise achieve a desirable outcome, making “bullshit” a close cousin to rhetoric as Plato conceived it. The philosophical use of the term was first systematically described by Harry Frankfurt (see below), but has been used longer than that, for instance by proponents of Analytical Marxism. Because of the offensive nature of the word in some contexts, some have used the Latin equivalent stercore tauri to denote bullshit.

Contents


Etymology

“Bull”, meaning nonsense, dates from the 17th century (Concise Oxford Dictionary), whereas the term “bullshit” is popularly considered to have been first used in 1915, in American slang, and to have come into popular usage only during World War II. The word “bull” itself may have derived from the Old French boul meaning “fraud, deceit” (Oxford English Dictionary). The term “bullshit” is a near synonym.

The earliest attestation mentioned by the Concise Oxford Dictionary is in fact T. S. Eliot, who between 1910 and 1916 wrote an early poem to which he gave the title The Triumph of Bullshit, written in the form of a ballade. The first stanza goes:

Ladies, on whom my attentions have waited
If you consider my merits are small
Etiolated, alembicated,
Orotund, tasteless, fantastical,
Monotonous, crotchety, constipated,
Impotent galamatias
Affected, possibly imitated,
For Christ’s sake stick it up your ass.

The word bullshit does not appear in the text of the poem, though in keeping with the ballade form, the refrain “For Christ’s sake stick it up your ass” appears in each following verse and concludes the envoi. Eliot did not publish this poem during his lifetime. <ref>Eliot, T. S. Inventions of the March Hare: Poems 1909-1917 (Harcourt, 1997) ISBN 0-151002-74-6</ref>

As to earlier etymology the OED cites bull with the meaning “trivial, insincere, untruthful talk or writing, nonsense”. It describes this usage as being of unknown origin, but notes the following: “OF boul, boule, bole fraud, deceit, trickery; mod. Icel bull ‘nonsense’; also ME bull BUL ‘falsehood’, and BULL verb, to befool, mock, cheat.” <ref name=”penn”>Penn.edu</ref>

Although as the above makes clear there is no confirmed etymological connection it might be noted that these older meanings are synonymous with the modern expression “Bull” otherwise generally considered (and intentionally used as) a contraction of “Bullshit”.
Bullshit is often considered a vulgar word.


Uses of “bullshit”

The word “bullshit” is most often applied adjectivally to deprecate a statement or an action.

Bullshit (as a culturally based activity) commonly occurs in situations where truth and accuracy are far less important than the ability to achieve a suitable response in the audience. In many cases, such a response helps to gain popularity or favor (often needed in politics, religion or advertising).
More mundane examples of bullshit often involve the lives of ordinary people. For example, it is not at all uncommon to hear of people “bullshitting” a job interview, or attributing their performance in an examination to their ability to bullshit. In this sense, bullshitting walks the line between extemporaneous speaking and lying outright. It is also common for people to bullshit friends or acquaintances, by spinning an elaborate tall tale. The object here is to make the bullshittees look foolish by dint of their gullibility in accepting the bullshit as fact. Bullshit does not necessarily have to be a complete fabrication; with only basic knowledge about a topic, bullshit is often used to make the audience believe that one knows far more about the topic by feigning total certainty or making probable predictions. It may also merely be “filler” or nonsense that, by virtue of its style or wording, gives the impression that it actually means something. In his essay on the subject (see Further reading), William G. Perry called bull[shit] “relevancies, however relevant, without data” and gave a definition of the verb “to bull[shit]” as follows:

To discourse upon the contexts, frames of reference and points of observation which would determine the origin, nature, and meaning of data if one had any. To present evidence of an understanding of form in the hope that the reader may be deceived into supposing a familiarity with content.

The “bullshitter” generally either knows the statements are false or has no interest in their factual accuracy one way or the other. “Talking bullshit” is thus a lesser form of lying, and is likely to elicit a correspondingly weaker emotional response: whereas an obvious liar may be greeted with derision, outrage, or anger, an exponent of bullshit tends to be dismissed with an indifferent sneer.

Sometimes called “shooting the shit”, bullshit can also be the act of having a very casual conversation with little value. A lot of times, people will say “that’s bullshit” when something bad or unexpected happens.

Bullshit is also used in the popular saying “money talks, bullshit walks” meaning that people who “do something” such as “put their money on the table” will get more results than people who merely talk. Making this statement indicates that the talking up to this time has been bullshit and that it is now time to do something or the speaker will walk away from the proposed deal.

Bullshit can also refer to excessively complex, unreasonable, or burdensome requirements demanded of an individual or organization by another, especially by government agencies or other bureaucracies. For example, a contractor wishing to bid on a government job may refer to the paperwork required to do so as “government bullshit.”

The word “horseshit” is often used in vulgar slang as a synonym for “bullshit” to refer to nonsense. The usage of “horseshit” (a less common term) differs slightly from “bullshit”. People may refer to their own statements and presentations as “bullshit”, as in the traditional folk saying, “If you can’t dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with bullshit”. “Horseshit” is more often used as a reactive exclamation or profoundly distrustful assessment.

“Bullshit” implies dubious credibility with an understood lack of true malevolence, whereas “horseshit” suggests uncompromised ignorance or deception. “Horseshit” carries with it a certain connotation of indignation; stating that something is a “load of horseshit” usually implies that the speaker feels somehow cheated or wronged by the current situation, whereas calling something “bullshit” can imply anything from indignation to a joking and good-natured intent.

Furthermore, Bullshit can also be used to express surprise, shock and/or humour at a truthful tale - often because the end result of the story or incident is of such fortune that if you didn’t know any better you’d instantly assume the tale to be fictional. The statement of “Bullshit!” in this context is more likely followed up by a question (such as “Are you serious?”), or combined in a question (eg. “No way! Are you bullshitting me?”), which serves the purpose of asking the person telling the story to reconfirm the truthfulness of the tale.


Acronym usage

Same as the S.H.I.T. joke as in Special High Intensity Training, the acronym B.U.L.L.S.H.I.T. means Basic Understanding Lecture List for Special High Intensity Training.


“Bullshit” in philosophy

In his 1986 essay On Bullshit, philosopher Harry Frankfurt of Princeton University characterizes bullshit as a form of falsehood distinct from lying. The liar, Frankfurt holds, knows and cares about the truth, but deliberately sets out to mislead instead of telling the truth. The bullshitter, on the other hand, does not care about the truth and is only seeking to impress:

It is impossible for someone to lie unless he thinks he knows the truth. Producing bullshit requires no such conviction. A person who lies is thereby responding to the truth, and he is to that extent respectful of it. When an honest man speaks, he says only what he believes to be true; and for the liar, it is correspondingly indispensable that he considers his statements to be false. For the bullshitter, however, all these bets are off: he is neither on the side of the true nor on the side of the false. His eye is not on the facts at all, as the eyes of the honest man and of the liar are, except insofar as they may be pertinent to his interest in getting away with what he says. He does not care whether the things he says describe reality correctly. He just picks them out, or makes them up, to suit his purpose. [1] [2]

Frankfurt connects this analysis of bullshit with Ludwig Wittgenstein’s disdain of “non-sense” talk, and with the popular concept of a “bull session” in which speakers may try out unusual views without commitment. He fixes the blame for the prevalence of bullshit in modern society upon anti-realism and upon the growing frequency of situations in which people are expected to speak or have opinions without knowing what they’re talking about.

Gerald Cohen, in “Deeper into Bullshit”, contrasted the kind of bullshit Frankfurt describes with a different sort: nonsense discourse presented as sense. Cohen points out that this sort of bullshit can be produced either accidentally or deliberately. While some writers do deliberately produce bullshit, a person can also aim at sense and produce nonsense by mistake; or a person deceived by a piece of bullshit can repeat it innocently, without intent to deceive others.
<ref>Cohen, G. A., “Deeper into Bullshit”. Originally appeared in Buss and Overton, eds., Contours of Agency: Themes from the Philosophy of Harry Frankfurt (Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press, 2002). Reprinted in Hardcastle and Reich, Bullshit and Philosophy (Chicago: Open Court, 2006), ISBN 0-8126-9611-5.
</ref>

Cohen gives the example of Alan Sokal’s “Transgressing the Boundaries” as a piece of deliberate bullshit. Sokal’s aim in creating it, however, was to point out that the “postmodernist” editors who accepted his paper for publication could not distinguish bullshit from sense, and thereby by implication that their field was bullshit.


Further reading

  • — Halifax academic Laura Penny’s study of the phenomenon of bullshit and its impact on modern society.
  • — Harry Frankfurt’s detailed analysis of the concept of bullshit.
  • Perry, William G. (1967). Examsmanship and the Liberal Arts. Originally published in Harvard College: A Collection of Essays by Members of the Harvard Faculty.
  • Holt, Jim, Say Anything, one of his Critic At Large essays from The New Yorker, (August 22, 2005)
  • Eliot, T. S. Inventions of the March Hare: Poems 1909-1917 (Harcourt, 1997) ISBN 0-151002-74-6


See also

  • Cow dung
  • Bollocks
  • Gobbledygook
  • Gibberish
  • Humbug
  • Nonsense
  • Tall tale
  • Bullshit bingo
  • Bullshit (game)
  • Bullshit (drinking game)
  • Pseudointellectualism
  • Propaganda
  • Fiction
  • Lie
  • Perverb
  • Bunkum
  • Spin (public relations)
  • Truthiness
  • Tim Shadbolt - New Zealand politician arrested for using the word, later wrote an autobiography titled “Bullshit and Jellybeans”
  • Penn & Teller: Bullshit! - Emmy-nominated documentary television series hosted by professional magicians/comedians Penn & Teller


External links

  • Ten minute video interview with Harry Frankfurt

Notes: <references/>

Links

Mitchell U-2 Superwing | down main

Tuesday, December 4th, 2007

The Mitchell U-2 Superwing features a Mitchell wing design. The first variation of this popular ultralight aircraft flew in 1977.


Specifications (typical U-2)


External links

  • Mitchell Wing Owners Resource
  • US Pacific; Current manufacturer of Mitchell Wing kits
  • AmeriPlane; Current manufacturer of Mitchell Wing kits


Related content

Links

Crimbo | Christmas

Sunday, December 2nd, 2007

Crimbo is a slang term for Christmas, originating in urban slang before becoming more widely used.

The OED cites the first printed usage to 1928 (see [1]). They credit John Lennon’s 1963 usage in a Beatles’ Fan Club Christmas single as the first recorded use of the variant form Crimble (see [2]).

The word also appeared in the title of a 2004 UK hit single, Proper Crimbo, performed by Leigh Francis with guest celebrities, in the guise of various Bo Selecta! characters.

Crimbo is also the name of the MMORPG Kingdom of Loathing’s version of Christmas.

Links

Katharine Merry | Merry

Sunday, December 2nd, 2007

Katharine Merry (born September 21, 1974 at Dunchurch, Rugby), is a former English female sprinter.

Contents


Biography

A member of the Birchfield Harriers athletics team, Merry won a bronze medal for the 400 metre sprint at the 2000 Summer Olympics at Sydney, Australia.

Merry had a unique career that spanned 20 years. She was the fastest girl in the world aged 14 years old, and started her international GB career aged just 13. She transferred into a successful senior athlete with her Olympic medal in Sydney.

After suffering from a bone spur growth on to her right heel bone, in July 2005 Merry announced her official retirement from athletics.<ref>http://observer.guardian.co.uk/osm/story/0,,1580102,00.html</ref> She had been suffering from the injury since 2001 and was struggling to get it healed fully. It had prevented her from getting back into proper training meaning she could not get back to her 2000 form. Despite this, she still ended the 2001 season as the world’s fastest female 400m runner.

Merry now has a career still in athletics and mentors British Junior athletes,<ref>http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/athletics/4910440.stm</ref> and also works in the media where she presented for the BBC around the 2006 Commonwealth Games.<ref>http://www.nuff-respect.co.uk/clients_katharine.htm</ref> She also continues to do work for BBC Radio and does corporate speaking engagements, whilst running a sports mentoring website (www.elitementor.com) with good friends and fellow Olympic medalists Linford Christie (who was Merry’s coach) and training partner Darren Campbell.

Merry now lives in Bristol.


Achievements

Year Tournament Venue Result Event
1990 IAAF World Junior Championships Plovdiv, Bulgaria 2nd 4×100m Relay
1992 IAAF World Junior Championships Seoul, Korea 6th 100m
1993 European Junior Championships San Sebastian, Spain 2nd 100m
1993 European Junior Championships San Sebastian, Spain 1st 200m
1993 European Junior Championships San Sebastian, Spain 1st 4×100m Relay
1994 European Cup Birmingham, Great Britain 2nd 100m
1994 European Cup Birmingham, Great Britain 2nd 200m
1996 1996 Summer Olympics Atlanta, United States 8th 4×100m Relay
1998 European Championships Budapest, Hungary 3rd 4×400m Relay
1999 IAAF World Championships Seville, Spain 5th 400m
2000 2000 Summer Olympics Sydney, Australia 3rd 400m


Personal Bests

Date Event Venue Time
200m 22.76
400m 49.59

50.53 (indoors)


References


External links

  • Merry at Nuff Respect, Linford Christie’s agency

Links

Christmas Turkey | Christmas

Saturday, December 1st, 2007

Christmas Turkey is a Christmas-themed album released in 1997 by the Canadian Comedy Music group The Arrogant Worms.
It includes a re-recorded version of “The Christmas Song” (which appeared on their debut album).


Track listing

  1. “Santa’s Gonna Kick Your Ass”
  2. “The Christmas Song”
  3. “Santa Got Arrested”
  4. “Christmas Sucks”
  5. “Things Are Looking Bad For Santa”
  6. “Christmas Turkey Blues”
  7. “Oh God, I’m Santa Claus!”
  8. “Christmas Is Almost Here”
  9. “Dad Threw Up On Christmas Day”
  10. “The Same Christmas Cake”
  11. “Christmastime”
  12. “Christmas Blues”
  13. “Christmas Hangover”
  14. “Vincent The Christmas Virus”
  15. “Christmas In Ignace”

Links

One (album) | album

Friday, November 30th, 2007

One may refer to a number of albums:

  • One (Neal Morse album), Neal Morse’s second solo album after his departure from Spock’s Beard and from Transatlantic
  • One (Dirty Vegas album), the second album by British house music trio Dirty Vegas
  • One (Hillsong album), Hillsong’s worship music album.
  • One (Bee Gees album), a Bee Gees album.
  • One (Final album), an album from Final.
  • One (Crown City Rockers album), the debut album from Crown City Rockers.
  • The One (album), an album by Elton John
  • 1 (album), a compilation of hit songs by The Beatles.
  • One, a project by Israeli composer Yuval Ron.

Also see One for semantic meanings of the word One.

Links

Shin-Hanamaki Station | ticket

Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

Shin-Hanamaki Station(新花巻駅 -eki) is a railway station located in Hanamaki, Iwate Prefecture, Japan.

Contents


Line

  • JR East

    • Tōhoku Shinkansen
    • Kamaishi Line


Summary

Two separate station buildings contain the Tōhoku Shinkansen and Kamaishi Line platforms. The station for the shinkansen is always manned; however, at times the Kamaishi Line station is unmanned.


Surrounding area


Adjacent stations

Links

Christmas is all in the Heart | Christmas

Sunday, November 25th, 2007

Christmas is all in the Heart is a 2003 album by Steven Curtis Chapman.


Tracks

  1. Silver Bells
  2. Winter Wonderland
  3. I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day
  4. Go Tell it on the Mountain
  5. It Came Upon a Midnight Clear
  6. O Little Town of Bethlehem
  7. O Come All Ye Faithful
  8. This Baby
  9. O Come O Come Emmanuel
  10. Home for Christmas
  11. Silent Night Medley

Links

Robert Park | Park Map

Sunday, November 25th, 2007

There are several influential persons named Robert Park:

  • Robert L. Park (aka “Bob” Park), professor of physics.
  • Robert E. Park, sociologist.
  • Robert B. Park, photographer.

Links

  • Golden Gate Park Map File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTML14. Boathouse / Boat Rentals. 15. Stow Lake. 16. Strawberry Hill. 17. Playground. 18. Strybing Arboretum. 19. Japanese Tea Garden. Golden Gate Park.
  • Maine Wildlife Park File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTMLIn an emergency, contact any park personnel or go to the Office, Gate Volunteer positions available at the Park include gatekeepers,
  • New York City Department of Parks & Recreation Image of New Map Search. Additional Resources. Photographs · Upcoming Events · Historical Sign · Capital Projects Your Park > Parks Locator
  • Grand Canyon National Park Map Page Grand Canyon National Park Map Page. Grand Canyon National Park Location Map. To see a Large Scale Map of Grand Canyon National Park - Click Here 869k
  • Six Flags Over Georgia Park Map. Special Offers. email it. download it. Make your Fun Plan a reality. Email your musts to your crew. Then download and print your Fun Plan to bring
  • Welcome to Wannado City Privacy Policy · Terms & Conditions · Grown-Up Employment · About Us · Educators · Contact Us. © 2004 Wannado Entertainment, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
  • Yosemite National Park Map Page Welcome to the Yosemite National Park Map Page. Here you will find out where and in which state the park is located as well as which highways pass by the
  • Palo Duro Canyon State Park Facility Map File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTMLValid permit is required on windshield of each vehicle in park. All vehicles are to remain 11450 Park Road 5. Canyon, TX 79015. Hackberry Camp Area
  • Central Park Map - Navigate Central Park Navigate Central Park with the on-line interactive Central Park Map featuring sites to see along the way. This map is the most accurate map of Central Park
  • Yellowstone Park Map Yellowstone map for visitors shows campsites,old faithful,mammoth,geyser basins,camping,entrances.
  • INDIANA DUNES STATE PARK File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTMLDunes Highway. 12. Chicago Southshore & South Bend Railroad. T. o Mt. Bald. y. Michigan City. INDIANA DUNES. STATE PARK. Indianapolis. LOCATION MAP
  • Main Park Map Click on a park or zipcode to view maps Print Map Print Map.
  • New York City Central Park Map This map of Manhattans Central Park features streets and major landmarks and has a printable version of the Central Park map available.
  • Central Park Conservancy : Central Park Website: Virtual Park At right is a map of Central Park. Simply click on one of the four Would you like your own copy of the Central Park map, complete with details?
  • C O A S T R A N G E File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTMLCounty Park. Lake Earl State. Wildlife Area. Headquarters. Park Headquarters. Information and County Park. Stone Lagoon. Boat-in Camp. Gold Bluffs Beach
  • P O T O M A C R I V E R File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTMLZoological Park and. Rock Creek Park. To National. Zoological. Park. To African American National Park Service Visitor Services. Tourmobile stop
  • Acadia Map - Mount Desert Island Maine Acadia Map: Explore Acadia National Park, Bar Harbor, Maine, and surrounding communities. Includes lodging, dining, activity, and info combined with
  • Yosemite National Park - Maps Park Map 2mb PDF file Official park map (large). Yosemite Valley 196kb PDF file Official park map showing detail of eastern Yosemite Valley.
  • Burr Oak State Park File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - View as HTMLNelsonville. Logan. Glouster. Burr Oak. State Park. Athens. McConnelsville. SR 37. SR 93. SR 33. SR 78. SR 13. SR 13. SR 93. SR 13. LOCATION MAP

Autobiography (album) | album

Saturday, November 24th, 2007

Several music albums exist with the title Autobiography:

  • Autobiography (Nat Adderley album)
  • Autobiography (Abdullah Ibrahim album)
  • Autobiography (David Amram album)
  • Auto-biography (Le Car album)
  • Autobiography (Ashlee Simpson album)
  • Autobiography (Peter Leitch album)
  • Autobiography (T-Luni album)

Links

Uprising | Album In The

Thursday, November 22nd, 2007

Uprising is a synonym for rebellion, and may also refer to:


In music

  • Uprising (album), an album by Bob Marley
  • Uprising (Concord Dawn album), an album by Concord Dawn
  • Uprising (Entombed album), an album by Entombed
  • Uprising Records, a record label


Others

  • Uprising (film), a film about the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
  • Uprising (Nitro Microphone Underground album), an album by Nitro Microphone Underground
  • Uprising is a level in Halo 2 campaign
  • , an ebook novel written by Micky Neilson and published by Simon and Schuster

Links

Merry Christmas, Baby | Christmas

Wednesday, November 21st, 2007

“Merry Christmas, Baby” is a Christmas song written by Brian Wilson for the American pop band The Beach Boys. It was released on their 1964 album The Beach Boys’ Christmas Album.


Details

  • Written by: Brian Wilson
  • Album: The Beach Boys’ Christmas Album
  • Time: 2 min 20 sec
  • Produced by: Brian Wilson


Performers

  • Mike Love: Lead Vocals
  • Hanson: Vocals, music


See also

  • List of songs by The Beach Boys

Links