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 PROOF--HAPPY RHODES-this collective heart

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T O P I C    R E V I E W
lemonade kid Posted - 14/04/2013 : 16:51:36
Happy Rhodes...remarkable.

Proof in all she does....listen to her studio version PROOF in several posts down...dark heavy rock Live version here...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KHaUqUtC4xs


Happy trained her teenaged voice to sing her four octave voice's high range while singing along to Kate Bush albums.

When The Rain Came Down...features Happy at her highest and lowest octave range-
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1zzcMmfGBjY



Happy Rhodes (born Kimberley Tyler Rhodes; August 9, 1965) is an American singer, songwriter, instrumentalist and electronic musician with a four-octave vocal range.[1] She has released 11 albums since 1986.

Born Kimberley Tyler Rhodes but called "Happy" since infancy, she legally changed her name to Happy Tyler Rhodes at age 16. Through her father, Vernon H. Rhodes Jr., Rhodes is a distant relative of Cecil Rhodes and her first name "Kimberley" is after the Kimberley diamond mines. Her middle name "Tyler" is after the American actress Mary Tyler Moore, who was a friend of Rhodes' mother, Susan D. Stamper, while both took dance classes at the New York City Ballet. Rhodes' maternal grandfather Dave Stamper [2] wrote songs for the Ziegfeld Follies of 1913 through 1931 and composed the music for several other Broadway shows. A family legend claims that Stamper wrote the well-known song "Shine On, Harvest Moon" in 1903 for Nora Bayes when he was working as her Vaudeville piano accompanist, but sold the rights and credit to Bayes and her husband Jack Norworth. Rhodes' parents divorced when she was young. Rhodes has two brothers who are twins.[3]

Rhodes received her first musical instrument, an acoustic guitar, as a gift from her mother, at age 11. At 14 she was performing original songs in school shows. She left school early at age 16, choosing to obtain a GED. From age 16 to 18, Rhodes began performing in "Open Mic Nights" at Caffè Lena in Saratoga, New York. During this period, Rhodes met Pat Tessitore, the owner of a recording studio, Cathedral Sound Studios in Rensselaer, and became a studio intern to learn recording techniques. Tessitore was impressed with Rhodes' voice and songwriting, and volunteered to record all of the songs she had written to that point.

Tessitore introduced Rhodes to Kevin Bartlett, a musician who had his own record label, Aural Gratification, and he urged her to gather up all the songs that she had recorded, to be released on cassette. She had enough songs to release three cassettes at the same time in 1986, Rhodes Vol. I, Rhodes Vol. II, and Rearmament. In 1987, she released the cassette of Ecto. Her first CD release was Warpaint, in 1991. The first four albums were only available on hand-dubbed cassettes until they were re-released on CD in 1992. For the CD releases, Rhodes Vol. I was renamed Rhodes I, and Rhodes Vol. II was renamed Rhodes II. Each of the CD re-releases contained bonus tracks not on the original cassettes. Aural Gratification released nine Happy Rhodes albums between 1986 and 1995, including Equipoise and RhodeSongs in 1993, Building The Colossus in 1994 and The Keep in 1995. Rhodes left Aural Gratification in 1998.

Rhodes' 10th album, Many Worlds Are Born Tonight, was released in August 1998 by Samson Music, a label founded by Norm Waitt Jr., brother of Ted Waitt, co-founder of the Gateway Computer company. Rhodes was dropped from Samson when the label decided to concentrate on other genres of music and Samson transferred rights to the material back to Rhodes, as well as unsold product.

In 2001 Rhodes recorded an 11th album, called Find Me, which was released October 19, 2007.

Rhodes married musician Bob Muller in 2006 and they currently live on a farm in central upstate New York.


Rhodes has cited Wendy Carlos, Kate Bush, Queen, Yes, David Bowie, Bach and Peter Gabriel as primary influences. Her father owned a large record collection which included Bagpipe music and Switched-On Bach, by the then-Walter Carlos. By age nine, Rhodes could sing along with every note from that album. As a teenager she discovered the music of Queen and was impressed by their harmonies, which she later emulated on her first few albums. When Rhodes was introduced at age 16 to Kate Bush's music by an English pen pal, she was impressed by Bush's original writing style, vocal abilities and independence as a female artist.

Rhodes has cited Bach's Air on a G String as her favorite piece of music.

Many younger artists have cited Rhodes as an influence on their own music and/or outlook, including Noe Venable, Robert German, and Lisse Kathe.



VOCAL RANGE

Rhodes is a natural contralto, but self-trained her voice to reach the mezzo-soprano[5] range singing along with Kate Bush's album "The Kick Inside" and Wendy Carlos' album "Switched-On Bach".


Her high voice can sound very similar to Kate Bush, and her highest recorded sung vocal phrase is D5, one octave above middle C (C4) in a live performance of the Queen song "Lily of the Valley".[6]

She has sung higher notes as background vocals, singing nonsense syllables like "ah" and "la". Her highest example of this type of singing is in her song "Runners" from her album Equipoise, where she hits G-Sharp6, two octaves above middle C (C4).[7]
Measurement of Rhodes' A2 from "Charlie"

Her low voice can sound similar to Annie Lennox, and her lowest recorded note is A2, one octave below middle C, in her song "Charlie" on her album Find Me.

Her songs "When the Rain Came Down" on the album Ecto, and "Winter" on Many Worlds Are Born Tonight exhibit this range.

A2 to G-Sharp6 (aka A-Flat6) gives Rhodes a total range of 4 octaves.

LIVE

Since 1992 Rhodes has only played live 50 times as a headliner. Rhodes has never undertaken a major tour of the United States, and has never played live anywhere outside of the United States. Most of her live shows have been in the northeast of America, primarily Philadelphia, the only city in the United States where she has a following, and New York City. Rhodes has sold out every show she's performed in Philadelphia when she was the headliner. She has performed several times at the Tin Angel, where she always plays two shows in an evening. Rhodes has also played The Middle East Club in 1995, the Mann Theater (opening for 10,000 Maniacs)[11] and the University Museum Auditorium, both in 1992. In New York City Rhodes has played the Bottom Line several times. In 1994 Rhodes performed at YesFest, a convention for fans of the band Yes. She has also performed at the Knitting Factory in New York City as a guest of the band Project Lo.


As a solo artist Rhodes has performed in Philadelphia, New York City, Cambridge, MA, Troy, NY, Albany, NY, Saratoga, NY, Woodstock, NY, Bearsville, NY, New Haven, CT, Danbury, CT, Maple Shade, NJ, Denville, NJ, Bryn Mawr, PA, Mechanicsburg, PA, Cleveland, OH, Toledo, OH, Kenosha, WI, Chicago, IL and Santa Cruz, CA.

Her last major tour was in support of her album Many Worlds are Born Tonight in 1998, playing the El Flamingo Club in New York City, the Troy Savings Bank Music Hall in Troy, New York, the Painted Bride Arts Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and the Bearsville Theater in Bearsville, New York. Though the tour received positive reviews,[12] it was not an economic success due to the ambitious multimedia presentation of the material.

In 1999 Meredith Tarr of New Haven and Chuck Stipak of Danbury, Connecticut organized a one-day music festival in Danbury to honor Rhodes and the mailing list Ecto, with all proceeds going to charity. The lineup for "Ectofest 1999," held on September 4, 1999, consisted of Rhodes, Rachael Sage, Sloan Wainwright, Susan McKeown and the Mila Drumke Band. Tarr and Stipak repeated the festival the next year and on September 2, 2000 "Ectofest 2000" featured Rhodes, Jessica Weiser, Anne Heaton, Amy Fairchild, Sloan Wainwright, Merrie Amsterburg and Susan McKeown.

ECTOFEST

In 2001, West Coast fans (Shelly Deforte, Phil Hudson and Bill Mazur), who were encouraged by other members of the Ecto music discussion group to host a West coast version of the event, organized "Ectofest West" in Santa Cruz, California, held on June 9, 2001, at the Kuumbwa Jazz Center. Rhodes flew to California to perform but on the day of the concert she accidentally cut the ring finger on her fret hand while using a Leatherman tool, and severed the deep flexor tendon, as well as causing nerve damage. She was taken to the hospital where the hand was temporarily treated and bandaged. Rhodes performed 12 songs that evening sans guitar, relying on bandmates Eric Nicholas, Carl Adami and Bob Muller to fill in her parts. Rhodes had surgery on the finger when she returned from California and underwent physical therapy so she could play the guitar again. Ectofest West is the only time Rhodes has performed in front of an audience west of Chicago. Other performers at the festival were Cyoakha Grace, Jill Tracy and Veda Hille. Two Loons for Tea was scheduled to play but the band was stranded in Houston during a hurricane, and was not able to get to Santa Cruz in time. Rhodes was scheduled to play Ectofest 2001 on August 25, 2001, in Danbury, CT but had to bow out because of her injury. Performers at that show were Edie Carey, Mila Drumke, Trina Hamlin, Jargon Society, Rachael Sage and Molly Zenobia. 2001's show was the last Ectofest until the 2007 Ectofest with Happy Rhodes, Noe Venable and Casey Desmond on September 8, 2007, at the Lily Pad in Cambridge, MA. The show sold out 3 weeks in advance, with fans traveling from all over the United States and also Scotland and Germany.

Fans

In 1991, Rhodes developed a following in Philadelphia through airplay on WXPN-FM. Her song "Feed The Fire" (from her album Warpaint) was said to be one of the station's most requested songs of 1991. Rhodes has received airplay and has been interviewed on radio shows such as the syndicated programs Echoes, and The World Cafe. She has received airplay on Morning Becomes Eclectic from KCRW in Santa Monica, CA, and WDST in Woodstock, NY, where Rhodes lived for a time, appearing on the compilation Alternative Woodstock.[14]

Much of the attention Rhodes has received has been via less traditional routes:

* In 1987 Aural Gratification released a sampler tape of Rhodes' music from the album Ecto. In late summer 1988 one of these cassettes was obtained by a programmer for an all-female-artists radio show called Suspended In Gaffa (named after a Kate Bush song) on KKFI-FM in Kansas City, MO. The programmer's discussion of Rhodes' music during 1989-1991 on the Kate Bush Usenet newsgroup rec.music.gaffa led to the formation in 1991 of the "Ecto" mailing list, named after Rhodes' 4th album and the song by the same name on the album.

* In 2000, an unknown person mislabeled one of Rhodes' non-album tracks, "When The Rain Came Down" (a bonus track on the CD re-release of Ecto), as being a duet between Kate Bush and Annie Lennox (who have never worked together), and shared it on the original Napster file-sharing network.

Ecto (the mailing list)

* Ecto the Internet mailing list was created on June 13, 1991, by Jessica Koeppel Dembski out of Rutgers University. Originally called "Ectoplasm," the mailing list name was changed within a few days. It has operated continuously since its inception, and has from the beginning encouraged discussion of other musicians besides Happy Rhodes, especially female artists. The mailing list changed hands in the mid-1990s to Greg Bossert, then shortly thereafter to Rob Woiccak, who continues to administer the list. Jeff Wasilko hosts the mailing list at his smoe domain, which hosts several other music mailing lists. Among fans, the term "Ecto," used as a genre name, has grown to encompass a number of musicians who do not fit comfortably in other musical genres, such as Kate Bush, Peter Gabriel and Jane Siberry. Rhodes' fans have called themselves "Ectophiles" since almost the beginning of the mailing list, and the name was the inspiration for Tori Amos fans calling themselves "Toriphiles." Ecto remains a busy discussion list, with members discussing Happy Rhodes and much other "Ecto"-philic music.[15]

* Rhodes thanks the "Ectophiles" in the liner notes of the CD re-releases of Rhodes I, Rhodes II, Rearmament, Ecto, Many Worlds Are Born Tonight and Find Me.

* Rhodes and the mailing list Ecto were the inspiration for the creation of The Ectophiles' Guide to Good Music, a collection of music reviews by Ectophiles created in 1998 by poet and author Neile Graham.

* A fan magazine, Terra Incognita (aka Rhodeways), was published by Sharon Nichols from 1994 to 2000. Copies are still available from her web site.


Dark Lyrics

Listeners[who?] who delve into Rhodes' lyrics are often surprised to realize how dark they are, especially in her earlier albums. Rhodes often wrote songs about depression, suicide, death, ghosts, monsters and aliens because they are subjects that interested her. Rhodes has never spoken in-depth about her childhood, but several interviews have indicated that it was unhappy. School was especially difficult and she has talked about being tormented and abused by her peers.[citation needed] Painting and writing music were escapes for her and negative feelings were often translated into lyrics. Rhodes has said in interviews that she suffered from depression at various times in her life, and many fans feel that she is particularly talented in putting her feelings while depressed into words via her lyrics, often identifying closely with them.

Discography

* Rhodes Volume I (1986)
* Rhodes Volume II (1986)
* Rearmament (1986)
* Ecto (1987)
* Warpaint (1991)
* Equipoise (1993)
* RhodeSongs (1993)
* Building the Colossus (1994)
* The Keep (1995)
* Many Worlds Are Born Tonight (1998)
* Find Me (2007)




________________________________________________

Old hippies never die, they just ramble on.
-lk
14   L A T E S T    R E P L I E S    (Newest First)
lemonade kid Posted - 11/08/2013 : 16:54:46
the COLLECTIVE HEART...acoustic version form the acoustic album The Keep
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qzvV1aEtvEk



________________________________________________

Old hippies never die, they just ramble on.
-lk
lemonade kid Posted - 11/08/2013 : 15:07:06
PROOF
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3k3mxF64m7k

Play it LOUD!



Proof in all she does, again, every time...PROOF...dark heavy rock Live version here...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KHaUqUtC4xs
_________________

________________________________________________

Old hippies never die, they just ramble on.
-lk
lemonade kid Posted - 09/08/2013 : 17:18:30
Music's the way, the only way I know
It's time to let the brooding heart
Choose the way to go


Happy Rhodes has released 11 albums in her 25+ year career (her 11th, Find Me, was released in late 2007). Happy lives on a beautiful farm in upstate New York with her husband, musician and businessman Bob Muller. She has a day job building pro audio equipment for Dangerous Music, cares for stray, sick and unwanted cats, and lives her life, content. She appreciates people who listen to her music, and thanks all her fans for supporting her over the years.

Don't try to tell me there's no
Reason for any moment in time
Every memory of mine
Those years are lines of
Color on my face
My past is warpaint
The past is warpaint


http://happyrhodes.org/

for song plays...a fan site



COLLECTIVE HEART from The Keep (acoustic collection of previously released songs with out the synth...)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qzvV1aEtvEk



THE KEEP


Happy Rhodes' studio albums are typically synth-heavy, ambient, and spacy, enhancing the mysterious qualities of her unique voice. In the process of compiling an album of mostly "unplugged" rarities and live performances, however, Rhodes and her longtime producer Kevin Bartlett reveal a whole new level in her work. Say hello to Happy Rhodes, the folk singer. These arrangements strip away the ethereal strangeness and expose the underlying strength of her songwriting. Songs like "Temporary and Eternal," "Life on Mars," and "Save Our Souls" that once distanced the listener acquire a new immediacy. They also shed a different light on the remarkable dichotomy of her vocals, which alternate between a deeply sonorous baritone and a trillingly bright soprano. Bartlett divulges in the liner notes that fans hearing Rhodes for the first time have sometimes asked "who is that man singing with Kate Bush?" But the acoustic performances on The Keep sound less like Rhodes is singing a duet with herself and more like a single singer with a staggering range. As good as these reworkings of album tracks are, many of the best moments on The Keep are previously unreleased songs (e.g., the quiet fingerpicking and beautiful harmonies of "Bye Moon," the cutting social commentary of "Flash Me Up," and a lilting rendition of "Oh Holy Night.") Songs like these have the potential to attract a whole new audience to Happy's music. The Keep is that rarest of things: a novelty compilation that surpasses the major studio releases.

-allmusic guide

Look For The Child (acoustic)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uGMswIzGCQE








________________________________________________

Old hippies never die, they just ramble on.
-lk
lemonade kid Posted - 09/08/2013 : 16:13:34
On Happy's first four cassette releases now on CD.

Her first four albums were not conceived and recorded as album releases, but were a gathering together of songs recorded at Cathedral Sound Studios from 1984 to 1986. When fellow musician Kevin Bartlett offered to release Rhodes' songs on his cassette-only personal label Aural Gratification, Rhodes culled through the songs she had recorded and ordered them to her satisfaction.

Rhodes I and Rhodes II are often considered to be a double album by fans because the songs are similar in musical style and lyrical subject matter. The songs on both albums are very acoustically orientated, with most songs consisting of Rhodes playing a guitar and singing. This is opposed to Rhodes' later albums, which rely more on her electronic talents.

Originally released as a cassette tape, each copy sold was a 1 to 1 real-time dub. Rhodes I was released on CD in 1992 with additional tracks.

# Rhodes Volume I (1986)
# Rhodes Volume II (1986)
# Rearmament (1986)
# Ecto (1987)



The Chase (8 minutes--this is the longer cassette mix--the CD mix was reduced to 4 minutes)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=57JbC_We9TA








________________________________________________

Old hippies never die, they just ramble on.
-lk
lemonade kid Posted - 08/08/2013 : 20:00:52
HOLD ME
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LcXOiiyHE_c

Feed The Fire
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9VYE8NwANc0

Temporary & Eternal...Living Room Concert sereies
http://www.youtube.com/watch?annotation_id=annotation_740133&feature=iv&src_vid=5XVVkbUwprc&v=YiIqnvFAoHs





________________________________________________

Old hippies never die, they just ramble on.
-lk
lemonade kid Posted - 24/05/2013 : 15:03:02
RAINKEEPER from Rhodes I.
A beautiful melodic melancholy masterpiece.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yaFnRI1CzHA&list=PL5D959A44FD08B047

Leave here to stream the whole album...sail away with the VOICE & song.

Oh The Drears...what a voice!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rSlE5Qb2zI0&list=PL5D1E53CE09C9B8C6





________________________________________________

Old hippies never die, they just ramble on.
-lk
lemonade kid Posted - 02/05/2013 : 21:55:50
THE REVELATION...from Rhodesongs
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p4htgNueB1Y

Because I learn...in case you missed it first time around..just perfect
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9zOKwjk_OOc



________________________________________________

Old hippies never die, they just ramble on.
-lk
lemonade kid Posted - 02/05/2013 : 15:06:00
Rhodes Volume I...brilliant - mostly acoustic works with just Happy on guitar. So damn good.






Given In
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p22FFGCUKv0

Oh child be strong in all you do,
Know your heart through and through.



Happy's first four albums were not conceived and recorded as album releases, but were a gathering together of songs recorded at Cathedral Sound Studios from 1984 to 1986. When fellow musician Kevin Bartlett offered to release Rhodes' songs on his cassette-only personal label Aural Gratification, Rhodes culled through the songs she had recorded and ordered them to her satisfaction.

Rhodes I and Rhodes II are often considered to be a double album by fans because the songs are similar in musical style and lyrical subject matter. The songs on both albums are very acoustically orientated, with most songs consisting of Rhodes playing a guitar and singing. This is opposed to Rhodes' later albums, which rely more on her electronic talents.

Originally released as a cassette tape, each copy sold was a 1 to 1 real-time dub. Rhodes I was released on CD in 1992 with additional tracks.

All music, lyrics, voices, instruments and arrangements by Happy Rhodes, except "Possessed" music by Happy Rhodes, lyrics by Dave Snyder

1. "Rainkeeper" – 2:24
2. "Oh The Drears" – 3:17
3. "Given In" – 4:14
4. "He's Alive" – 4:22
5. "Possessed" – 2:55
6. "I'll Let You Go" – 3:59
7. "Number One" – 2:49
8. "Case of Glass" – 3:39
9. "Moonbeam Friends" – 2:49
10. "I'm Not Awake, I'm Not Asleep" – 3:23
11. "The First to Cry" – 3:00
12. "Step Inside" – 3:46
13. "The Wretches Gone Awry" – 2:36
14. "The Flaming Threshold" – 4:39 (CD bonus track, previously unreleased)
15. "Suicide Song" – 2:24 (CD bonus track, previously unreleased)

4 1/2 stars out of 5--allmusicguide

....................


Rhodes Volume II

All music, lyrics, voices, instruments and arrangements by Happy Rhodes.

1. "Come Here" – 3:55
2. "The Revelation" – 3:01
3. "Many Nights" – 2:50
4. "Under And Over The Brink" – 2:36
5. "Let Me Know, Love" – 3:23
6. "Where Do I Go?" – 3:25
7. "Not For Me" – 2:49
8. "One Alien" – 3:26
9. "No One Here" – 4:13
10. "To The Funny Farm" – 2:10
11. "Asylum Master" – 3:18
12. "Beat it Out" – 3:33
13. "The Chase" – 4:19
14. "Take Me With You" – 5:45 (CD bonus track, previously unreleased)
15. "Under And Over The Brink" – 2:32 ("barely salvaged from the vault") (CD bonus track, previously unreleased)

4 1/2 out of 5 stars
-allmusicgude

Rainkeeper
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yaFnRI1CzHA



I'll Let you Go

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U0KDt3y72RQ







________________________________________________

Old hippies never die, they just ramble on.
-lk
lemonade kid Posted - 20/04/2013 : 17:53:51
Live-Tin Angel April 9, 1996-full concert

BRILLIANT-her guitar work is fantastic
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uWgGAiPJ0fc&feature=youtu.be

S.O.S. is around ten minutes in..beautiful




________________________________________________

Old hippies never die, they just ramble on.
-lk
lemonade kid Posted - 15/04/2013 : 20:30:34
Rearmament 1986...several tracks coud have fooled some into thinking this was a new Kate Bush album--in a good way. Quite amazing vocal work. Happy's later work combine her four octaves to separate her more from Bush influence.

nonetheless, I love this album. Recordings of a late teens early 20 year old with a very mature voice, literally & figurative;y.

1) Perfect Irony
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Pnu17TBfu8&playnext=1&list=PLF875584E5F67A590&feature=results_main

2) For We Believe
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rXlx4gBK0CE&list=PLF875584E5F67A590

3) I Am A Legend
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=taXAzt6fofU&list=PLF875584E5F67A590

4) Til The Dawn
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=REjeEiTDi1A&list=PLF875584E5F67A590

5) The Issue Is
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VHE68pWrfGw&list=PLF875584E5F67A590

6) Friend you'll Be
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zoN_eSB2j28&list=PLF875584E5F67A590

7) Dreams Are
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_F9mg0wmBUk&list=PLF875584E5F67A590

8) Box H.A.P.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a86k3PMbj1U&list=PLF875584E5F67A590

9) I Have A Heart
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pq68vkHuhfg&list=PLF875584E5F67A590

10) Crystal Orbs
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FYiay0DCgqY&list=PLF875584E5F67A590

11) Baby Don't Go
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FYiay0DCgqY&list=PLF875584E5F67A590

.......

15) Be Careful What You Say
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NvCsis1IcfE&list=PLF875584E5F67A590















________________________________________________

Old hippies never die, they just ramble on.
-lk
lemonade kid Posted - 14/04/2013 : 21:36:26
Feed The Fire (Live recording for World Cafe)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5kiKS02w3_o






________________________________________________

Old hippies never die, they just ramble on.
-lk
lemonade kid Posted - 14/04/2013 : 19:09:19
Save our souls
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aPJ2HRgtquo

Brilliant



________________________________________________

Old hippies never die, they just ramble on.
-lk
lemonade kid Posted - 14/04/2013 : 19:02:21
Is this insanely amazing?!!

Space Oddity
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xSCf15tBGqE



________________________________________________

Old hippies never die, they just ramble on.
-lk
lemonade kid Posted - 14/04/2013 : 16:54:15
Live toledo, OH (full house concert)

Full concert film...so good
https://www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&v=tOla7gaHc_Q&feature=endscreen




________________________________________________

Old hippies never die, they just ramble on.
-lk

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