#Paul Dickson
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govikingsblog · 1 year ago
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Paul Dickson, Jim Marshall, Gary Larson, Carl Eller, and Ed Sharockman waiting to go back in the game. The boys look hot...especially Carl. If I could guess, this is a game in 1967 or 1968.
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lascitasdelashoras · 2 months ago
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Paul Weller and Jam por Ian Dickson
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kiki-de-la-petite-flaque · 1 year ago
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Paul Simonon, The Clash by Ian Dickson, 1977
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rwpohl · 2 months ago
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sins, douglas hickox 1986
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ginge1962 · 8 months ago
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The Lovecraft Anthology Volume 2 from Self Made Hero published in 2012.
Cover by Francesco Francavilla and edited by Dan Lockwood.
Stories include:
Pickman's Model by Jamie Delano + Steve Pugh.
The Temple by Chris Lackey + Adrian Salmon.
From Beyond by David Camus + Nicholas Fructus.
He by Dwight.L.Macpherson + Paul Peart-Smith.
The Hound by Chad Fifer + Brian Baugh.
The Nameless City by Pat Mills + Attila Futaki.
The Picture in the House by Benjamin Dickson + Mick McMahon.
The Festival by Simon Suppier + Matt Timson.
The Statement of Randolph Carter by Dan Lockwood + Warwick Johnson Caldwell.
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blackpoolhistory · 1 year ago
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Stunning views from the same location of St. Paul's Church at the junction of Dickson Road and Carshalton Road, North Shore.
Much has been changed throughout the years and very little of the original building survives to this day apart from the main tower that still stands, albeit with a little bit of renovation.
Today it functions as part of a modern medical centre.
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nethervoice · 2 years ago
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ONE VOICE AWARD FOR BEST NON-BINARY VOICE
Hugh Edwards The One Voice Awards is doing what no VO award show has ever done before. As of this year there is a category for the best non-binary voice. The One Voice Awards are part of the One Voice Conference UK edition that takes place in London from May 10 – 14. A One Voice USA conference has yet to be announced. I asked one of the conference organizers, Hugh Edwards, to give me some…
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menlove · 6 months ago
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I dont even go to mclenon but i hope they let paul mescal lick cum off of harris Dicksons chest like he did to andrew scott in all of us strangers
if they don't include this shot in the john and/or paul film it's literally just inaccurate and homophobic is the thing
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xoxoproject21 · 6 months ago
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TDA Las Vegas Predictions
Mini Female
Winner: Lucia Piedrahita (Club)
Top 3/4: Savannah Jackson (Larkin), Belle Marie Arauz (Dancetown), Stella Brinkerhoff (CSPAS)
Top 10:
Tatum Self (Club)
Kennedy Marble (Club)
Alivia Hughes (DC2)
Amanda Carpenter (Dancetown)
Madisyn Rose Amos (Elite Dance Pro)
Jessica Sutton (K2)
Neala Murphy (Larkin)
Giuliana Shea (Larkin)
Melina Biltz (The rock)
Top 20:
Naomi Harper (CSPAS)
Penelope Jenson (CSPAS)
Penelope Pranger (CSPAS)
Mikayla Isler (Club)
Kinley Harper (Club)
Abbey Scott (Club)
Nixie Vance (Club)
Penelope Akey (DC2)
Soleil Lynch (Danceology)
Maylin Munos (Larkin)
Lexie Charnstrom (Larkin)
Junior Female
Winner: Aria Du (Yoko's)
Top 3/4: Kelsie Jacobson (Larkin), Skylar Wong (Woodbury), Lilly Anderson (Larkin)
Top 10:
Anistyn Larsen (CSPAS)
Violet Schwarz (CSPAS)
Isla Gardner (Club)
Brooklyn Besch (Club)
Emery Duffin (DC2)
Finley Ashfield (Larkin)
Mika Takase (Nor Cal)
Roxie Onellion (The base)
Annabella Atkinson (The rock)
Emily Polis (Vision)
Kennedy Anderson (Vision)
Top 20:
Brooklyn Ward (CSPAS)
Kylie Lawrence (CSPAS)
Kate Baker (CSPAS)
Rory Frye (CSPAS)
Ella-Nani Knight (Danceology)
Brynn Jones (Expresenz)
Bella Charnstrom (Larkin)
Mila Ayshford (Larkin)
Tayah Klimuck (Pave)
Addyson Paul (Pave)
Francesca Jen (The Academy at The Brea Space)
Teen Female
Winner: Savannah Manzel (Larkin)
Top 3/4: Taylor Morrison (DC2), Kira Chan (Elements), Kylie Kaminsky (Danceology)
Top 10:
Kamri Peterson (CSPAS)
Stella Condie (CSPAS)
Vivienne Mitchell (CSPAS)
Alexis Alvarez (Club)
Makaia Roux (Danceology)
Keelyn Jones (Danceology)
Mariandrea Villegas (Epic Motion)
Lilly allen (Kim massay)
Claire Monge (Larkin)
Katie Shinn (Next step)
Top 20:
Blakely Bell (CSPAS)
Halle Hunt (CSPAS)
Mya Tuaileva (CSPAS)
Ellie Duffin (DC2)
Haley Bertino (Danceology)
Laci Bloss (Larkin)
Channing Embry (Next step)
Madison Ronquillo (Nor Cal)
Kinsley Oykhman (The Academy at The Brea Space)
Carissa Hsu (Premier Youth Dance Company)
Faílenn Daley (the colony)
Senior Female
Winner: Izzy Howard (Westside)
Top 3/4: Keira Redpath (Larkin), Isabella Lynch ( Danceology), Hailey Bills (CSPAS)
Top 10:
Addison Middleton (Academy of Nevada Ballet Theatre)
Ayla Rodriguez (Artistic Fusion)
Zoe Ridge (CSPAS)
Emma Donnelly (Danceology)
Caroline Skrable (Danceology)
Isabella Jarvis (Larkin)
Maliah Howard (Michelle L)
Lola Iglesias (Michelle L)
Beth Anne McGowan (Next step)
Kaitlyn Tom (Nor Cal)
Top 20:
Emersyn Dickson (CSPAS)
Brightyn Rines (DC2)
Addison Jones (DC2)
Brooklyn Jones (DC2)
Sami Sonder (Danceology)
Brielle McCoy (Kim massay)
Gianna Mojonnier (Danceology)
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nonhumanresources · 11 months ago
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A List Of Books/Stories About Transformation
You ever seen those titles of extremely specific essays? If this was one of those I'd call it "A List Of Books That Contain In Whole Or In Part Some Amount Of Transformation, Or The Changing Of Oneself To Another That Has In Some Manner Been Fundamentally Altered From The Self You Used To Be." That was the original title but I didn't want to be mean.
I was rambling far too long about post TF on one of warmer-hotcakes's posts and they mentioned not being able to find stories with a positive relationship to transformation (as well as transformations that are permanent) so I wanted to put a few down in a list!
Granted, these are incredibly inconsistent in pretty much every way other than being SFF but hey, we take what we can get here. Plus they weren't wrong it is VERY hard to find these kinds of stories, half of the list at this point is self published novels on Amazon written by people I've met by chance in TF circles, to give you an idea. So, to pad it out I will add more tangentially related TF stories.
If anyone happens to have more stories feel free to comment them and I'll add them on! I will also add to the list sporadically if I feel like it.
Anyway, without further ado:
Wolven by Di Toft is about a kid finding a werewolf out in the woods. It's been years since I read it but it's got a fun dichotomy between a villain and a protagonist both suffering from partial werewolfication and the ways they deal with it.
Thousand Tales by Kris Schnee is a self published series of books set in the near future where an AI runs a video game that allows people to be "uploaded" into it. There's a lot of books that don't need to be read in any specific order focusing on different characters and is generally a more lighthearted approach to the topic than most, and also it has furries in it. There are books about people who upload immediately, people who do eventually, and people who never do. Not quite the same as adjusting to changes IRL but this is my list and I get to shill whatever I want. Also, it's some of the highest quality writing/editing I have seen in a self-published novel (especially TF novel).
How To Be A Hero: (And Part Time Dragon) by S. Blakeway is a book about a hero who gets defeated and turned into a wyvern by the Dark Lord. Her eternal torment is interrupted, though, by said Dark Lord sending her out on a quest, during which she has to navigate turning back into a wyvern every few days. It's fun and silly and has lots of TF and the author is a very nice and cool person. Go buy this one and the sequel and help me bother her into finishing the trilogy please.
Perspective Flip also by Kris Schnee and Shifting Tails by Paul Lotor are a pair of short story collections. These are more of a soft recommend; both include cases of protags adapting to transformations, and generally involve positive stories, but not all of them are great. Perspective Flip is generally good but Shifting Tails especially has stories that lean very far into the horny side of things as well as topics I was very much not into, but some of them were admittedly very enjoyable. Being horny isn't bad, of course; it's moreso that there is less "story" and more "hey wouldn't this TF be hot." To be fair, sometimes they are, but sometimes they stray far away from my interests, so take that how you will.
Wereworld by Curtis Jobling is something I read as a kid but I'm gonna be honest I remember almost nothing about it. However it is about therianthropes of all types and I like that so it's going on here. They even have sharks!
The Dragon and the George by Gordon R. Dickson. Full disclosure, I have not finished reading this one, and I do not believe it has permanent TF, but it does feature a dude who astral projects into a dragon and is generally a fine book.
The Dangers Of Wearable Technology by Serathin Sabertooth (gods I hope that isn't a pen name, that would be so cool). This is one that I don't really recommend? Which is odd, you might say, for a list of recommendations. Correct! I just have a complex relationship with it, which I will include in a post here so that I don't flood this list with unnecessary words.
That's all I can think of at the moment, but like I said, feel free to send suggestions my way and I'd be happy to read em/add em to the list! Obviously it's pretty short right now and I'd love to bulk it up as much as possible for all us COOL NERDS
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renthony · 2 years ago
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Anyway here's my reading list for my big film censorship project in case anyone's been wondering what I've been up to when I'm not being a stupid idiot cringey fandom blogger or whatever the jackasses think I am:
Vaudeville, Old and New: An Encyclopedia of Variety Performers in America, by Frank Cullen
Vaudeville and the Making of Modern Entertainment, 1890-1925, by David Monod
From Traveling Show to Vaudeville: Theatrical Spectacle in America, 1830-1910, edited by Robert M. Lewis
American Vaudeville as Ritual, by Albert F. McLean Jr.
American Vaudeville As Seen by its Contemporaries, edited by Charles W. Stein
Rank Ladies: Gender and Cultural Hierarchy in American Vaudeville, by M. Alison Kibler
The New Humor in the Progressive Era: Americanization and the Vaudeville Comedian, by Rick DesRochers
Humor and Ethnic Stereotypes in Vaudeville and Burlesque, by Lawrence E. Mintz
"Vaudeville Indians" on Global Circuits, 1880s-1930s, by Christine Bold
The Original Blues: The Emergence of the blues in African American Vaudeville, by Lynn Abbott and Doug Seroff
Waltzing in the Dark: African American Vaudeville and Race Politics in the Swing Era, by Brenda Dixon Gottschild
The Wizard of Menlo Park: How Thomas Alva Edison Invented the Modern World, by Randall Stross
Edison, by Edmund Morris
The Rise and Place of the Motion Picture, by Terry Ramsaye
The Romantic History of the Motion Picture: A Story of Facts More Fascinating than Fiction, by Terry Ramsaye (Photoplay Magazine)
Before the Nickelodeon: Edwin S. Porter and the Edison Manufacturing Company, by Charles Musser
The Kinetoscope: A British History, by Richard Brown, Barry Anthony, and Michael Harvey
The Man Who Made Movies: W.K.L. Dickson, by Paul Spehr
A Million and One Nights: A History of the Motion Picture, by Terry Ramsaye
Emergence of Cinema: The American Screen to 1907, by Charles Musser
Dancing for the Kinetograph: The Lakota Ghost Dance and the Silence of Early Cinema, by Michael Gaudio
The First Screen Kiss and "The Cry of Censorship," by Ralph S.J. Dengler
Archival Rediscovery and the Production of History: Solving the Mystery of Something Good - Negro Kiss (1898), by Allyson Nadia Field
Prizefighting and the Birth of Movie Censorship, by Barak Y. Orbach
A History of Sports Highlights: Replayed Plays from Edison to ESPN, by Raymond Gamache
A History of the Boxing Film, 1894-1915: Social Control and Social Reform in the Progressive Era, by Dan Streible
Fight Pictures: A History of Boxing and Early Cinema, by Dan Streible
The Boxing Film: A Cultural and Transmedia History, by Travis Vogan
Policing Sexuality: the Mann Act and the Making of the FBI, by Jessica R. Pliley
Screened Out: Playing Gay in Hollywood, from Edison to Stonewall, by Richard Barrios
The Ashgate Research Companion to Moral Panics, edited by Charles Krinsky
A Companion to Early Cinema, edited by Andre Gaudreault, Nicolas Dulac, and Santiago Hidalgo
The Silent Cinema Reader, edited by Lee Grieveson and Peter Kramer
The Harlot's Progress: Myth and Reality in European and American Film, 1900-1934, by Leslie Fishbein
Oscar Micheaux and His Circle: African-American Filmmaking and Race Cinema of the Silent Era, by Pearl Bowser, Jane Gaines, and Charles Musser
Banned in Kansas: Motion Picture Censorship, 1915-1966, by Gerald R. Butters, Jr.
Black and White and Blue: Adult Cinema From the Victorian Age to the VCR
Complicated Women: Sex and Power in Pre-Code Hollywood, by Mick Lasalle
Dangerous Men: Pre-Code Hollywood and the Birth of the Modern Man, by Mick Lasalle
Pre-Code Hollywood: Sex, Immorality, and Insurrection in American Cinema, 1930-1934, by Thomas Doherty
Forbidden Hollywood: The Pre-Code Era (1930-1934), When Sin Ruled the Movies, by Mark A. Vieira
Sin in Soft Focus: Pre-Code Hollywood, by Mark A. Vieira
Hollywood's Censor: Joseph I. Breen & the Production Code Administration, by Thomas Doherty
The Dame in the Kimono: Hollywood, Censorship, and the Production Code, by Leonard J. Leff and Jerold L. Simmons
Moral House-Cleaning in Hollywood: What's it All About? An Open Letter to Mr. Will Hays, by James R. Quirk (Photoplay Magazine)
Will H. Hays - A Real Leader: A Word Portrait of the Man Selected to Head the Motion Picture Industry, by Meredith Nicholson (Photoplay Magazine)
Ignorance: An Obnoxiously Moral morality Play, Suggested by "Experience," by Agnes Smith (Photoplay Magazine)
Close-Ups: Editorial Expression and Timely Comment (Photoplay Magazine)
Children, Cinema & Censorship: From Dracula to the Dead End Kids, by Sarah J. Smith
Freedom of the Screen: Legal Challenges to State Film Censorship, 1915-1981, by Laura Wittern-Keller
Picturing Indians: Native Americans in Film, 1941-1960, by Liza Black
America on Film: Representing Race, Class, Gender and Sexuality at the Movies, by Harry M. Benshoff and Sean Griffin
White: Essays on Race and culture, by Richard Dyer
Black American Cinema, edited by Manthia Diawara
Colorization: One Hundred Years of Black Films in a White World, by Wil Haygood
Hollywood's Indian: the Portrayal of the Native American in Film, edited by Peter C. Rollins and John E. O'Connor
Wiping the War Paint Off the Lens: Native American Film and Video, by Beverly R. Singer
Celluloid Indians: Native Americans and Film, by Jacquelyn Kilpatrick
Native Americans on Film: Conversations, Teaching, and Theory, edited by M. Elise Marubbio and Eric L. Buffalohead
Framing Blackness: The African American Image in Film, by Ed Guerrero
Toms, Coons, Mulattoes, Mammies, & Bucks: An Interpretive History of Blacks in American Films, by Donald Bogle
Hollywood Black: the Stars, the Films, the Filmmakers, by Donald Bogle
White Screens, Black Images: Hollywood From the Dark Side, by James Snead
Latino Images in Film: Stereotypes, Subversion, and Resistance, by Charles Ramirez Berg
Reel Inequality: Hollywood Actors and Racism, by Nancy Wang Yuen
Visions of the East: Orientalism in Film, edited by Matthew Bernstein and Gaylyn Studlar
The Hollywood Jim Crow: the Racial Politics of the Movie Industry, by Maryann Erigha
America's Film Legacy: The Authoritative Guide to the Landmark Movies in the National Film Registry, by Daniel Eagan
Movie-Made America: A Cultural History of American Movies, by Robert Sklar
Of Kisses and Ellipses: The Long Adolescence of American Movies, by Linda Williams
Banned in the Media: A Reference Guide to Censorship in the Press, Motion Pictures, Broadcasting, and the Internet, by Herbert N. Foerstel
Censoring Hollywood: Sex and Violence in Film and on the Cutting Room Floor, by Aubrey Malone
Hollywood v. Hard Core: How the Struggle Over Censorship Saved the Modern Film Industry, by Jon Lewis
Not in Front of the Children: "Indecency," Censorship, and the Innocence of Youth, by Marjorie Heins
Degradation: What the History of Obscenity Tells Us About Hate Speech, by Kevin W. Saunders
Censoring Sex: A Historical Journey Through American Media, by John E. Semonche
Dirty Words & Filthy Pictures: Film and the First Amendment, by Jeremy Geltzer
Flaming Classics: Queering the Film Canon, by Alexander Doty
Masculine Interests: Homoerotics in Hollywood Film, by Robert Lang
Monsters in the Closet: Homosexuality and the Horror Film, by Harry M. Benshoff
New Queer Cinema: A Critical Reader, edited by Michele Aaron
New Queer Cinema: The Director's Cut, by B. Ruby Rich
Now You See It: Studies on Lesbian and Gay Film, by Richard Dyer
Gays & Film, edited by Richard Dyer
Screening the Sexes: Homosexuality in the Movies, by Parker Tyler
Out in Culture: Gay, Lesbian, and Queer Essays on Popular Culture, edited by Corey K. Creekmur and Alexander Doty
Out Takes: Essays on Queer Theory and Film, edited by Ellis Hanson
Queer Images: a History of Gay and Lesbian Film in America, by Harry M. Benshoff and Sean Griffin
The Lavender Screen: the Gay and Lesbian Films, Their Stars, Makers, Characters, & Critics, by Boze Hadleigh
The Celluloid Closet: Homosexuality in the Movies, by Vito Russo
Tinker Belles and Evil Queens: the Walt Disney Company From the Inside Out, by Sean Griffin
The Encyclopedia of Censorship, by Jonathon Green
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mbta-unofficial · 10 months ago
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US people who care about railroads should definitely read the Corridor ID Selections. While it was published a little over a year ago, the program is designed to fund shovel-ready programs and dedicate money to assessing the viability of corridors which would be either new or upgraded, and they just posted a massive update to the map including new HSR viability studies.
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A partial list of served cities:
High speed rail candidates
San Francisco, Anaheim, LA, Vancouver, Portland, Seattle, Eugene, Charlotte NC, Atlanta, Dallas, Fort Worth, Houston, Las Vegas, Palmdale
New Conventional rail candidates
Asheville NC, Salisbury NC, Savannah GA, Chattenooga TN, Nashville, Memphis, Baton Rouge, New Orleans, Boston, Albany, San Jose, San Luis Obispo, King's Mountain NC, Moline IL, Naperville IL, Wyanet IL, Chicago, Fort Wayne IN, Columbus OH, Pittsburgh PA, Cleveland OH, Cincinnati OH, Dayton OH, Toledo OH, Detroit MI, Coachella CA, Fullerton CA, Indio CA, Riverside CA, Palm Springs CA, Fort Collins CO, Pueblo CO, Denver CO, Boulder CO, Colorado Springs CO, Newport News VA, Charlottesville VA, Roanoke VA, Richmond VA, Dover DE, Wilmington DE, Berlin MD, St Paul-Minneapolis MN, Eau Claire WI, Fayetteville NC, Raleigh NC, Lillington NC, Fuquay-Varina NC, Mobile AL, Bay St. Louis, Gulfport, Biloxi, Pascagoula MS, Houston, San Antonio, Rosenburg TX, Flatonia TX, Seguin TX, Meridian MS, Mineola TX, Longview TX, Marshall TX, Shreveport LA, Ruston LA, Monroe LA, Vicksburg MS, Jackson MS, Jacksonville FL, Miami FL, Orlando Fl, Tampa FL, Indianapolis IN, Louisville KY, Milwaukee, WI; La Crosse, WI; Eau Claire, WI; St. Paul, MN; Fargo, ND; Bismarck, ND; Dickson, ND; Glendive, MT; Billings, MT; Bozeman, MT; Butte, MT; Helena, MT; Missoula, MT; St. Regis, MT; Sandpoint, ID; Spokane, WA; and Pasco, WA, Duluth WA, Peoria IL, Phoenix, Tuscon, Maricopa, Reading PA, Scranton
These are most of the cities with new service
If you are between two of these cities, there is a serious chance you will have a train coming to you soon. Check the Doc for more as well as service upgrades on existing services
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scotianostra · 2 months ago
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Happy Birthday Barbara Dickson, born September 27th 1947 in the Kingdom of Fife.
Dunfermline lass Dickson’s dad was a cook on a tugboat at Rosyth and Barbara says her mother, a housewife “ was a very good singer, although she didn’t work professionally.”
From an early age she admits she knew she could sing better than most people, but that didn’t have the confidence to do anything about it. Barbara learned the piano at five n then “slowly but surely how to play guitar. “Playing the pop hits of the time like Everly Brothers songs and Shadows hits.
Barbara loved The Beatles when they came along, and then, when she was 17 and started going to the local folk club, discovering the music of Bob Dylan as well as the traditional folk music.
In 1969, Dickson recorded an album, The Fate O’ Charlie, with Scottish folk singer Archie Fisher, her first solo album, Do Right Woman, came out in 1970. Her career changed course after she met playwright Willy Russell who invited her to Liverpool to sing Beatles songs in his musical John, Paul, George, Ringo… and Bert. Robert Stigwood produced the show and signed her to his RSO record label.
In 1976 her single Answer Me went Top 10, this led to her being resident guest singer on the BBC Comedy show The Two Ronnies.
In 1977 Barbara released Another Suitcase In Another Hall, which Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice they had asked her to sing for Evita but wasn’t in the show, just on the cast album. Next came a children’s album with Ringo Starr called Scouse The Mouse and her hit January February in 1980 became one of her biggest hits around the world.
Dickson appeared in the musical Blood Brothers in 1982, when she acted for the first time. In 1984 she hit the top of the charts in a duet with Elaine Paige, I Know Him So Well, written by Benny Andersson of Abba. It was very much of its time; a 1980s power ballad, slightly overblown, she had the hair and the big shoulders which makes me think that the version of The Skye Boat Song was around the same time.
Dickson is married to Oliver Cookson who works as an Assistant Director in television for the BBC, and has three sons. She and her family live in Edinburgh.
It’s always tough when I get to this part of posts regarding singers as I have to choose what song to post, that’s not to say I don’t enjoy reacquainting myself with some cracking songs and with Barbara being in the business for over 50 years there is no shortage to pick from.
In 2022 our songstress toured with pianist Nick Holland they will perform a wonderful range of material drawing on Barbara’s folk roots, contemporary greats and some of her classic hits.
Now in her 77th year Barbara is still working hard and tiouring the UK agai. As well as dates down south you can catch her in Dundee, Greenock, Crieff, Edinburgh and Livingston next month, a live album was also released two weeks ago.
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brookstonalmanac · 18 days ago
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Birthdays 11.7
Beer Birthdays
Gary Fish (1956)
Steve Altimari (1960)
Jason Petros (1977)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Albert Camus; French writer (1913)
Marie Curie; French chemist, physicist (1867)
Al Hirt; trumpet player (1922)
Joni Mitchell; Canadian singer, songwriter (1943)
Morgan Spurlock; documentarian (1970)
Famous Birthdays
Ignaz Brüll; Austrian pianist and composer (1842)
Nellie Campobello; Mexican writer (1900)
James Cook; English explorer, naval officer (1728)
Gédéon Tallemant des Réaux; French author and poet (1619)
Francisco de Zurbarán; painter (1598)
Ed Dodd; cartoonist (1902)
Poppin’ Fresh; Pillsbury Doughboy character (1965)
Madeline Gins; poet and architect (1941)
Billy Graham; television evangelist (1918)
Ibn Hazm; Arab philosopher (994 C.E.)
Dean Jagger; actor (1903)
Norman Krasna; film director, screenwriter & playwright (1909)
R. A. Lafferty; author (1914)
Lorde; New Zealand singer-songwriter (1996)
Konrad Lorenz; Austrian zoologist (1903)
Herman J. Mankiewicz; film director & screenwriter (1897)
Kitty Margolis; jazz singer (1955)
Jan Matulka; Czech-American painter (1890)
Norah McGuinness; Irish painter (1901)
Lise Meitner; physicist, mathematician (1878)
Philip Morrison; astrophysicist (1915)
Lucas Neff; actor (1985)
Lawrence O'Donnell; journalist and talk show host (1951)
Paul Peel; Canadian painter (1860)
Dana Plato; actor (1964)
C.V. Raman; Indian physicist (1888)
Charles Ranhofer; Delmonico’s Restaurant chef, author of “The Epicurean” (1836)
Johnny Rivers; rock singer (1942)
Jean Shrimpton; English model (1942)
Antonio Skármeta; Chilean author (1940)
Ellen Stewart; film director (1919)
Joan Sutherland; Australian opera singer (1926)
Judy Tenuta; comedian (1949)
Leon Trotsk;, Russian theorist and politician (1879)
Lesser Ury; German painter (1861)
Andrew Dickson White; historian (1832)
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myvinylplaylist · 7 months ago
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Bruce Dickinson: Anthology (2006)
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Disc 1
Features two live performances
Dive! Dive! Live!
The first of which is from the Tattooed Millionaire tour, Dickinson's first as a solo artist. The video was originally released in 1991 under the title Dive! Dive! Live! and was recorded on 14 August 1990 at the Town and Country Club, Los Angeles, California. The band included future Iron Maiden member Janick Gers on guitar as well as Andy Carr on bass and Dickie Fliszar on drums. The show was directed by Jim Yukich and produced by Paul Flattery.
Skunkworks Live
The second live performance is from the Skunkworks tour and was originally released in 1997 as Skunkworks Live. The footage is composed of two concerts, filmed in Pamplona and Girona, Spain on 31 May 1996 and 1 June 1996 respectively, originally recorded for a four track EP released only in Japan, also named Skunkworks Live. The band includes Alex Dickson on guitars, Chris Dale on bass and Alessandro Elena on drums. The video was directed by Julian Doyle and produced by Jeremy Azis.
Disc 2
Scream for Me Brazil
Features a live performance from The Chemical Wedding tour. The show is entitled Scream for Me Brazil and was filmed in São Paulo, Brazil in 1999. The footage is not an official recording, but is actually taken from the feed that supplied the screen inside the venue and so is not of the usual quality expected of a live DVD. The band for this show includes Dickinson's songwriting partner Roy Z on guitar, fellow Iron Maiden member Adrian Smith also on guitar, Eddie Casillas on bass and Dave Ingraham on the drums. This was Dickinson's last solo tour before he and Adrian Smith rejoined Iron Maiden.
Disc 3
Includes every promotional video made during Dickinson's solo career, these include;
From Tattooed Millionaire
Tattooed Millionaire (directed by Storm Thorgerson)
All the Young Dudes (directed by Storm Thorgerson)
Dive! Dive! Dive! (directed by Jim Yukich)
Born in '58 (directed by Jim Yukich)
From Balls to Picasso
Tears of the Dragon (directed by Howard Greenhalgh)
Shoot All the Clowns (directed by Howard Greenhalgh)
From Skunkworks
Back from the Edge (directed by Bruce Dickinson)
Inertia (directed by Bruce Dickinson)
From Accident of Birth
Accident of Birth (directed by Bruce Dickinson)
Road To Hell (directed by Bruce Dickinson)
Man of Sorrows (directed by Bruce Dickinson)
From The Chemical Wedding
Killing Floor (directed by Julian Doyle)
The Tower (directed by Julian Doyle)
From Tyranny of Souls
Abduction (directed by Julian Doyle)
The disc also includes two more features, the first being Tyranny of Souls EPK, a track by track breakdown of Dickinson's album Tyranny of Souls, explaining its concept and providing a look at the writing methods used by Dickinson and Roy Z in its creation. The second feature, entitled Biceps of Steel, is an adaptation of the Samson and Delilah Bible story filmed with Dickinson in the band Samson at the Rainbow Theatre in London. It was filmed and directed by Julien Temple who also filmed the Sex Pistols' movie; The Great Rock and Roll Swindle. The feature lasts approximately 15 minutes and was shown in cinemas prior to Hazel O'Connor's Breaking Glass in 1980.
Total Running Time: 6 Hours Approx.
Aspect Ratio 4:3
Format NTSC
Sanctuary Visual Entertainment
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jedivoodoochile · 1 year ago
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Paul Simonon.
The Clash.
1977
📸 Ian Dickson.
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