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ultraliberal uploaded a new video
(4 months ago)

On August 4, 2009, I returned for the first time in 40 years to the site of the 1969 Woodstock festival in Bethel, NY, which I had attended. I was ...
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On August 4, 2009, I returned for the first time in 40 years to the site of the 1969 Woodstock festival in Bethel, NY, which I had attended. I was accompanied by Marc Mahuzier, a reporter at large for the French daily Ouest-France, which circulates in the Brittany-Normany region. Mahuzier interviewed me about my experience at the Woodstock festival for a story which ran in the paper's August 15th edition, took pictures, and filmed me standing on the gravel patch where the stage had been playing Jimi Hendrix's Red House on acoustic guitar (too bad I played to an empty house, but hey, that's show biz). It felt strange being there-the former cow pasture where the largest concert audience ever assembled in one place once sat is now a kept lawn, looking more like a golf course than the place where the 1960s counterculture crested. But as I lingered, people came in a steady trickle to the Woodstock monument that sits on the northwest corner of the grounds to gaze upon the place where history was made and pay homage to the hippy ideals of peace and love. - Glenn Weiser
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ultraliberal uploaded a new video
(9 months ago)

Repost of the Texas country blues classic, "Kentucky Blues." All credit goes to the original poster, who is unknown. Saguin, Texas, is a...
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Repost of the Texas country blues classic, "Kentucky Blues." All credit goes to the original poster, who is unknown. Saguin, Texas, is about 38 miles northeast of San Antonio.
Lyrics- Well whiles we here tryin' to have our fun 'Spose the law jumped up and said, 'Nobody run!' Well, you know I'm long gone, from Kentucky Long gone, an' I got away lucky 'Cause I'm gonna leave Saguin, I'll be just like a submarine
Well, my woman poked her head out from the window a bit Said, 'Please don't let them kill Mister Little Hat dead' I said, 'No use worryin', sweet mama, I ain't gonna be here long' Tell her I love to sing this worryin' song 'Cause I'm gonna leave Saguin, I'm gonna be just like a submarine
Well an officer, you know the man, they call him Austin Jack Stopped and put the bloodhounds right on my track 'Cause the bloodhounds just could not catch my scent You know, they couldn't tell where Little Hat went 'Cause I left Saguin, People, I was just like a submarine
Well here comes the Santa Fe just puffin' and flyin' Oughta seen me when I reached up and really caught them blinds They said, 'There's another long gone - from Kentucky Long gone - an' he got away lucky 'Cause he left Saguin, He's just like a submarine'
I want to sing this song, ain't gonna sing no more.... 'Cause I'm leavin' San Antonio, I declare I ain't coming here no more
Well, I don't play the dozen and neither the ten 'Cause you keep on talkin', I leads you in Well you keep on talkin' till it makes me mad Well I'll tell you 'bout the money that your father had 'Cause I don't play the dozen, I declare man, and neither the ten
Biographical note from "The Handbook of Texas Online"- JONES, GEORGE [LITTLE HAT] (1899-1981). Blues musician George (Little Hat) Jones was born on a farm near the Sulphur River in Bowie County, Texas, on October 5, 1899, the only child of Felix Jones and his wife. The family farm was purchased by Jones' grandfather, a former slave.
Jones was a talented, though little known, blues musician. He quit school at the age of thirteen, after his father became ill and several crops were destroyed, in order to help out on the farm. During this period his mother bought him his first guitar. Between 1916 and 1929 he probably worked as a menial laborer. He acquired his nickname at a construction job in Garland. Because Jones came to work with a hat from which half the brim had been cut off, his boss called him "Little Hat" Jones and even made out his paychecks this way.
In 1929 Jones was in San Antonio. He first recorded, for Okeh Records, on June 15 of that year, when he cut two records of his own, "New Two Sixteen Blues" and "Two String Blues," and played backup for Texas Alexander. Jones then made a contract with Okeh for three years and recorded "Rolled from Side to Side Blues," "Hurry Blues," "Little Hat Blues," "Corpus Blues," "Kentucky Blues," "Bye Bye Baby Blues," "Cross the Water Blues," and "Cherry Street Blues." He also played in such cities as New Orleans, Galveston, and Austin, and occasionally ventured into Mexico. He was influenced in his guitar playing by Blind Lemon Jefferson and played with T. Texas Tyler and Jimmie Rodgers.qv
In 1937 Jones settled in Naples, Texas, with his second wife, Janie Traylor, and worked at odd jobs. In the years before his death he was employed at the Red River Army Depot. He died on March 7, 1981, and is buried in the Morning Star cemetery in Naples.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Colin Larkin, ed., Encyclopedia of Popular Music (London: Guinness, 1992; 3d ed., New York: Muze, 1998). "George 'Little Hat' Jones," Notables website (http://www.angelfire.com/tx3/nostalgia/Notables.html), accessed January 15, 2003.
Jenny Odintz
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I like your fingerpicking !