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Here's a statement of the obvious: The opinions expressed here are those of the participants, not those of the Mutual Fund Observer. We cannot vouch for the accuracy or appropriateness of any of it, though we do encourage civility and good humor.

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  • The joy and enthusiasm in their performance just draws me in
    Africa - Angel City Chorale. (there is nothing wrong with your sound for the first 45sec)

  • Great one to post. I watched that, too. And the amazing Paul. He was such a wonderful part of the Letterman show.
  • Yeah, gotta love Paul!
    And Africa is such a great song. Many covers out there.
  • Here is something a bit different. Really good brass work. And vocals. Always makes me smile to watch it.

  • edited December 19
    LOL - Was having all sorts of trouble playing these videos directly, when I remembered that I had my VPN activated on my laptop.
  • edited December 19
    One of my favorite Skynyrd tunes that never got much airplay.
    Live from 1976. I saw them that year in Chicago, August 1976 @ Comisky Park.
    This is practically garage rock.


  • @DrVenture - gotta say that rendition of Sweet Child was unexpected but good
  • Did someone mention Steppenwolf?
  • edited December 19
    The Greystones. A band of young'uns. They have a fairly long play list of various rock songs. Good for them. They're pretty dang good with songs that are not implanted in their memory.

    I 'heart' music.....

  • Thanks @Catch22 , will definitely check it out.
  • Warren Haynes and Roberto Luti - Playing For Change

  • edited December 19
    I bought a Sony 9 transistor am radio in 1963; being the small handheld model. A most decent radio, of course.

    My youth was in the countryside (dirt roads) vs being a city kid; small or large city. A small city was 4 miles away, a large metro city was 20 miles away and Detroit was about 70 miles away.
    My neighbor buds were within 1 mile (a short bicycle ride for us). Four of us would 'camp out' in the summer at one another's yards. Sometimes we had small tents, but many times we placed our sleeping bags on pieces of cardboard in the lawn, weather permitting. At a few of the houses, we had access to small, AC powered radios that we took to the sleep area. We always discovered how many AM radio stations we could tune with decent quality. At the time, FCC rules generally dictated rules for after 6pm broadcast power, so that smaller stations weren't overrun with other signals from larger output stations.
    Aside from local stations and Detroit for music, the standouts for music were (in the wee hours),
    WSM (We Shield Members), Nashville; and WLS (Worlds Largest Store), Chicago. Nashville was BlueGrass/(Grand Old Opry) and WLS was Rock. The Nashville station was owned by an insurance company and WLS was owned by Sears/Roebuck. Chicago (rock and roll) was always my choice.

    The Sony radio: The radio would tune the decent signal from WLS, Chicago out in the sticks of Canada, during a fishing trip in 1963.

    Anyone listen to Dick Biondi at WLS? A really fun, crazy and whacky DJ. I'm sure he was listened to from many parts of the country.

    I was able to absorb a lot of radio music in my youth.
  • edited December 19
    Of course. Dick Biondi is Chicago legend. We were absolutely listening to the exact same broadcasts around that time frame. I would have been listening starting around 1965/1966 and beyond, until FM got a foothold in the 1970's. I was 6 or 7 then, but had older sisters. What was strange was leaving the Chicago area, and discovering that almost nothing else compared. Like a vast wasteland, on a long road trip.

    I feel blessed to have grown up in the Great Midwest, in the 1960s and 1970s. Only 35 to 50 miles from Chicago's Loop. Great memory, and memories, that you have. And thanks for sharing.
  • Also, I have to laugh at "9-transistor", knowing what we know now.
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