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Kokomo Arnold

February 15, 2025

JamesKokomoArnold (February 15, 1896 or 1901 – November 8, 1968 Lovejoys Station, GA) was an American blues musician. A left-handed slide guitarist, his intense style of playing and rapid-fire vocal delivery set him apart from his contemporaries. He got his nickname in 1934 after releasing “Old Original Kokomo Blues” for Decca Records, a cover version of Scrapper Blackwell‘s blues song about the city of Kokomo, Indiana.

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Little Shop of Horrors

February 15, 2025
Little Shop of Horrors
Friday February 15th 2025 7pm. The fourth in a series of performances of the Little Shop of Horrors by Theatre 55 at the Gremlin Theater in St Paul. Music by Shirley Mier, Lyra Olson, Jamie Carter and mick laBriola. Featuring vocalists Patty Lacy and Van Nixon.
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Cosmo NGC 1097

February 15, 2025

NGC 1097 (also known as Caldwell 67) is a barred spiral galaxy about 45 million light years away in the constellation Fornax. It was discovered by William Herschel on 9 October 1790. It is a severely interacting galaxy with obvious tidal debris and distortions caused by interaction with the companion galaxy NGC 1097A. 45mly

 

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Ali Campbell

February 15, 2025

Alistair Ian Campbell (born 15 February 1959) is an English singer and songwriter who was lead singer and co-founder of the British reggae band UB40.

UB40 sold more than 70 million records worldwide and toured for 30 years with the original line-up of the band. In 2008 Campbell and keyboard-player Mickey Virtue left UB40 due to a dispute with band management and teamed up in a new band. In August 2014, Campbell announced he had reunited with former UB40 bandmate Astro, who also left due to management disputes and the musical direction of the band. Campbell then formed a new UB40 featuring the three bandmates.

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Brian Holland

February 15, 2025

Brian Holland (born February 15, 1941 Detroit, MI) is an American songwriter and record producer, best known as a member of Holland–Dozier–Holland, the songwriting and production team that was responsible for much of the Motown sound, and numerous hit records by artists such as Martha and the Vandellas, The Supremes, The Four Tops, and The Isley Brothers. Holland, along with Lamont Dozier, served as the team’s musical arranger and producer. He has written or co-written 145 hits in US and 78 in the UK.

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Herlin Riley

February 15, 2025

Herlin Riley (born February 15, 1957) is an American jazz drummer and a member of the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra led by Wynton Marsalis.

A native of New Orleans, Riley started on the drums when he was three. He played trumpet through high school, but he went back to drums in college. After graduating, he spent three years as a member of a band led by Ahmad Jamal. He has worked often with Wynton Marsalis as a member of the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra and of Marsalis’s small groups. He has also worked with George Benson, Harry Connick, Jr., and Marcus Roberts.

Riley played a large part in developing the drum parts for Wynton Marsalis’s Pulitzer Prize-winning album, Blood on the Fields.

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Nathan Davis

February 15, 2025

Nathan Tate Davis (February 15, 1937 – April 8, 2018 Kansas City, KS) was an American jazz multi-instrumentalist who played the tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, bass clarinet, and flute. He is known for his work with Eric Dolphy, Kenny Clarke, Ray Charles, Slide Hampton and Art Blakey.

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World Music Tinariwen

February 15, 2025

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Daily Roots Junior Marvin

February 15, 2025

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Echos of Freedom by Rabindranath Tagore

February 14, 2025
Echos of Freedom by Rabindranath Tagore
“Love does not claim possession, but gives Freedom” -Rabindranath Tagore
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Happy Valentines Day 2025

February 14, 2025

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Little Shop of Horrors

February 14, 2025

Friday February 14th 2025 7pm. The fourth in a series of performances of the Little Shop of Horrors by Theatre 55 at the Gremlin Theater in St Paul. Music by Shirley Mier, Lyra Olson, Jamie Carter and mick laBriola. Featuring vocalists Patty Lacy and Van Nixon.

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Cosmo NGC 2237

February 14, 2025

The Rosette Nebula, NGC 2237, is not the only cosmic cloud of gas and dust to evoke the imagery of flowers, but it is probably the most famous. At the edge of a large molecular cloud in Monoceros some 5,000 light years away, the petals of this cosmic rose are actually a stellar nursery. The lovely, symmetric shape is sculpted by the winds and radiation from its central cluster of hot young, O-type stars. Stars in the energetic cluster, cataloged as NGC 2244, are only a few million years young, while the central cavity in the Rosette Nebula, is about 50 light-years in diameter. The nebula can be seen with a small telescope toward the constellation of Monoceros, the Unicorn. This natural appearing telescopic portrait of the Rosette Nebula was made using broadband color filters, but sometimes roses aren’t red.

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Merl Saunders

February 14, 2025

Merl Saunders (February 14, 1934 – October 24, 2008) was an American multi-genre musician who played piano and keyboards, favoring the Hammond B-3 console organ. Born in San Mateo, California, United States, Saunders attended Polytechnic High School in San Francisco. In his first band in high school was singer Johnny Mathis.He served in the U.S. Air Force from 1953 to 1957. He worked as musical director of the Billy Williams Revue and served in a similar capacity in Oscar Brown Jr.‘s off-Broadway show, Big Time Buck White.

He gained notice in the 1970s when he began collaborating with Jerry Garcia, with whom he had begun playing in 1971 at a small Fillmore Street nightclub called The Matrix. He sat in with the Grateful Dead, and co-founded the Saunders/Garcia Bandwhich produced three albums, and which became the Legion of Mary, with the addition of Martin Fierro (sax) in 1974. It disbanded the following year, but he and Garcia continued to collaborate in the band Reconstruction during 1979, collaborating with Ed Neumeister (trombone), Gaylord Birch (drums) and John Kahn (bass).

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Tim Buckley

February 14, 2025

Timothy Charles Buckley III (February 14, 1947 – June 29, 1975) was an American musician. He began his career based in folk rock, but subsequently experimented with genres such as psychedelia, jazz, the avant-garde, and funk paired with his unique five-octave vocal range.

His commercial peak came with the 1969 album Happy Sad, reaching No. 81 on the charts, while his experimental 1970 album Starsailor went on to become a cult classic. The latter contained his best known song, “Song to the Siren.”

Buckley died at the age of 28 from a heroin and morphine overdose. He left behind one biological son, Jeff, who himself was a highly regarded singer who died young, as well as an adopted son, Taylor. On the evening of June 29, he accompanied longtime friend Richard Keeling to his house. At some point, Keeling produced a bag of heroin, some of which Buckley snorted.

Attempts by friends and paramedics to revive him were unsuccessful, and he was pronounced dead on arrival.

The coroner‘s report stated that Buckley died at 9:42 p.m. on June 29, 1975, from “acute heroin/morphine and ethanol intoxication due to inhalation and ingestion of overdose”.

 

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Magic Sam

February 14, 2025

Samuel Gene Maghett (February 14, 1937 – December 1, 1969), known as Magic Sam, was an American Chicago blues musician. He was born in Grenada County, Mississippi, and learned to play the blues from listening to records by Muddy Watersand Little Walter. After moving to Chicago at the age of 19, he was signed by Cobra Records and became well known as a bluesman after the release of his first record, “All Your Love”, in 1957. He was known for his distinctive tremolo guitar playing.

The stage name Magic Sam was devised by Sam’s bass player and childhood friend Mack Thompson at Sam’s first recording session for Cobra, as an approximation of “Maghett Sam”. The name Sam was using at the time, Good Rocking Sam, was already being used by another artist. His career was cut short when he suddenly died of a heart attack in December 1969. He was 32 years old.

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Flamenco Fridays Gipsy Kings

February 14, 2025

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Daily Roots Playing for Change

February 14, 2025

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Echoes of Freedom James Baldwin

February 13, 2025

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SORRY FOR YOUR LOSS IS NOT HELPFUL

February 13, 2025
SORRY FOR YOUR LOSS not helpful!
Sorry to mention this (and I state this with alot of love) but some of us who have been confronted with Death find this statement offensive!
SORRY FOR YOUR LOSS!
If a friend of yours experiences this please be cautious about how you confront them! No need for apologies!
This term was created by Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, a Swiss psychiatrist who did amazing work with death and dying, and helped to revolutionize the Hospice movement.
However those of us who have moved through the horrific experience of a very traumatic death find certain statements offensive.
This is my personal top 10!
1) SORRY FOR YOUR LOSS (I didn’t lose my wallet lol)
2) Oh That’s the worse thing that can happen!
3) Haven’t you gotten over it yet?
4) Why didn’t you do something?
5) Oh I can’t imagine that!
6) What if it happens to me?
7) I couldn’t live anymore!
8) I would kill myself if it happened to me!
9) How can you live now?
10) That’s what God wanted or it was their destiny!
Sorry but the statements are not comforting or helpful in the process of grieving!

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