Music Books
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Book in excellent conditionReview Date: 2007-01-03
Touching StoriesReview Date: 2006-10-10
In Skingle Creek, Kentucky, hope feels nonexistent for residents of this typical 1892 coal mining town. Gifted teacher, Jonathan Stuart, brings unexpected beauty to their coal-dust covered lives with his storytelling and music. Then, someone steals Jonathan's flute and with it the ailing teacher's will to keep going. Most of his students come from mining families who barely eke out a living, yet, surely none of them would take his music from him. The possibility of someone he knows being involved in the theft adds to his grief.
Twelve-year-old Maggie MacAuley notices the frailness and sadness of her teacher and wonders how she can help. She collaborates with her best friend, Summer, and enlists the aid of her fellow students to raise the money to replace Mr. Stuart's flute. But in a town where survival has become the main focus, the girls experience difficulty motivating the town's people to pull together. Kindness and concern for others matter to them, but those emotions lie buried under their struggle just to survive.
Maggie hates to see her neighbors suffer and she wrestles with her own troubles. The hardships Maggie faces--Summer's illness, the teacher's weakness, two malicious bullies, and a needy family--drain her hope and her faith. Maggie puzzles on how God can know the needs of these people and seem to do nothing about healing or providing for His children. She tries to comfort Summer, but her friend often encourages Maggie instead. Then God uses Maggie, Summer, and the other children of Skingle Creek to impart a miracle. He touches the hearts of a few good men, including Maggie's father. Through the children's efforts, God reminds these men that loving and caring for others is part of His greatest commandment.
Hoff's touching story in "The Mountain Song Legacy" series will appeal to teens and adults. Although the tale in "A Distant Music" takes place more than a hundred years ago, readers will relate to the power of friendship and goodness when life beats you down. Reading about Maggie and her family reminded me that God often works in unexpected ways. Faith, hope and love really do overcome difficulties and even tragedy.
A Distant Music Pulls at Your Heart StringsReview Date: 2006-06-01
silver flute. That was the day the music stopped in
Skingle Creek. Mr. Johnathan Stuart, the teacher
changed that day. Maggie MacAuley, and her friend
Summer Rankin want to give Mr. Stuart back his music.
They encourage others in the poverty-stricken
community to give to their music fund. But how can
they ever collect enough to buy a flute? Maggie and
her friend Kenny Tallman face two bullies. They need
to tell someone what is happening, but fear holds them
back.
B.J. Hoff, the writer of A DISTANT MUSIC is the
author of twenty novels. She wrote the American Anthem
trilogy and the Emerald Ballad series. She writes of
early America and the people who helped built the
country. She and her husband James live in Ohio. You
can find more information about Hoff and her books by
visiting her website www.bjhoff.com.
B. J. Hoff took the characters from a novella she
wrote called THE PENNY WHISTLE and expanded the story
to write A DISTANT MUSIC. Every chapter begins with a
quote. The quote at the top of chapter one sets the
tone for this novel. It is taken from the teacher's
diary, "Even the children are old in such a place."
The poverty and suffering of the children and their
parents is almost overwhelming.
Reviewed by Dell Klein Smith for AT HOME WITH CHRISTIAN FICTION
http://www.athomewithchristianfiction.com
BeautifulReview Date: 2006-04-29
A captivating, compelling readReview Date: 2006-03-19

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Marvelous bookReview Date: 2008-05-29
Eensy-Weensy Spider in the Middle of the Night!Review Date: 2008-05-03
Such a cute book!Review Date: 2007-10-11
The adventures of a little spider come to life!Review Date: 2006-12-15
This one will be a classic in your child's library.Review Date: 2005-09-13

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Made a great gift...Review Date: 2007-02-10
Good for a deadheadReview Date: 2006-01-07
THIS BOOK made me a deadhead!Review Date: 2005-06-20
Coffee Table DeadReview Date: 2007-12-10
Based on a Timeline that begins in 1940 and ends in 2003, this is Quite a Feast for the eyes. If you are New to the Music of The Grateful Dead and have never seen one of the other Hundreds of Books about The Band, this will fill you in on THOUSANDS of Details. If this Book was used as a Guide to bring you into the World that is The Grateful Dead, well... just be prepared to be Busy for a While.
For the Seasoned Head, lot's of this Information has been Covered elsewhere in the Past. But at the Same Time, here is just about everything there is all in One Place. The Visuals herein are Quite a Trip for your Head, and they are as much the Stars of this Massive Volume as the Twenty Tons of Dead Story contained within 480 Pages.
To sum it up...When they begin teaching: "Grateful Dead 101" at UC Berkeley, this will be the Textbook!
FIVE STARS !!!
The Dead Live OnReview Date: 2004-06-04
The Dead live on through this book - the latest addition to the tomes that are out there on these fellows - go and get it!
Keep on Truckin'!

GreatReview Date: 2008-06-20
The Green Book of Songs by SubjectReview Date: 2006-07-01
Great ReferenceReview Date: 2008-05-22
Valuable for teachers and othersReview Date: 2006-07-31
Excellent book for tracking down obscure songsReview Date: 2002-07-08

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Great BookReview Date: 2008-01-06
Great book.Review Date: 2007-03-08
Riffer's MadnessReview Date: 2007-02-12
Everything is transcribed perfectly.
My only beef with this book is that Darrell doesn't play on the CD.
Good contentReview Date: 2007-01-12
Hell, yeah!Review Date: 2006-09-27


A good example of what NOT to do in live performancesReview Date: 2007-02-08
His voice was good and on key through the songs, and he gave us some good demonstrations of his ability to add filler chords and notes. If he'd sung the vocal lines as they were recorded and added a few filler chords and notes, that may have made for a good live performance. But the combination of that *plus* the altered melody lines was just overpowering.
Perhaps this CD will get better over successive listenings, but as of now, I can't see it being worth more than $5.
Soul of a Man Who sang like an Angel....Review Date: 2005-11-12
I cannot believe no one mentions the track 'NU-PO,' the only instrumental cut on the album. This is one of the most flowing and smooth pieces of music. A latin groove that just builds with the dissolving and watery Rhodes, Not to mention the sublime Bass of Willy Weeks and the Guitar of Phil Uphcurch (Anyone for Darkness Darkness?).
I hear that there's a version of this Album with more Tracks, including a bass solo by Willy on 'Voices Inside.' Re-issue!
The Renditions on this CD are Worth the PurchaseReview Date: 2007-07-10
Powerful PerformanceReview Date: 2007-01-17
The best tracks are To Be Young, Gifted & Black, A Song For You, I Love You More Than You'll Ever Know & his self-penned We Need You Right Now. Listen for earnest audience partcipation & frenzied enthusiasm from the crowd. On this recording, it really works and is not in the way. Magical night!! A must have. I would give this ten stars if I could!!
Superbly well-rounded album displaying a little bit of everything that made/makes DonnyReview Date: 2006-09-09

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Great Source of InformationReview Date: 2008-05-09
Advanced conceptsReview Date: 2007-12-11
though it gets into some advanced concepts. Riley always keeps your mind on the important issues about being a good musician and makes you never lose sight of the point of the excercises.
This swings hard and grooves deep!Review Date: 2007-11-26
ComplementaryReview Date: 2007-06-17
Interesting topics & exercises for every jazz drummerReview Date: 2007-05-08
Franc auf dem Brinke-Drummers Initiative Amsterdam- [...]

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Judy Garland, Feminism, HollywoodReview Date: 2007-07-02
Judy was a passionate person, and Gerold Frank captures her spirit, her sense of humor, her highs, her dark-side and the range of her anger and inspirations. "If you ever want to know who I was, listen to my songs," she said. What does one do with all that talent and energy? Frank gets into it. I think Gerold Frank does a fabulous job of filling-out the life of a human being. We sometimes forget that Judy was more than a performer. It is stunning to watch her films, knowing what was going on behind the scenes, how she was consistently exploited. She was young. People never had psychological terms for boundaries in those days, so she continued to remain a somewhat open and exploited person, "performing" right up to her death. And she was damn-angry in the end.
Judy had no outlet for her anger, except to strike out at things, objects and people. She was at a loss to know how to care, because she was never taught or given models of respect. So she stopped caring and began to take advantage of situations and people as a method of personal survival. This was the thing that alienated her from her children. Deep down, she didn't want to be this. So she let them go, and consequentially, a little bit of her self, as well. Bipolar disease is very difficult to manage without these psychological skills.
Judy never really had much of a chance to be anything than what she was. This happens to actors and people who need to showcase themselves in public: they get stuck. She learned how to play the victim. She just reached a point where she quit defending herself about it, that's all. Was Judy a bitch and a diva? Those were roles she took on, in the victim-mode. Women in those days were acculturated to be subservient, and therefore victims and blamers. If one is physically and mentally challenged, one needs help. Judy never got the right help and couldn't find it. Yet she always reserved a soft spot in her heart. She held on to her theme song, Over the Rainbow, and cherished it. So we have to look to someone like Gerold Frank, who is able to dig down under all this, and finds her; a woman who had a heart, and who was aching to share it with us, in spite of everything.
Leaves out some stuff and plays it "safe" but still excellent - long, but excellentReview Date: 2007-07-22
Garland Under The MicroscopeReview Date: 2001-11-29
My single greatest complaint about the book is that Frank often seems to include detail for the sake of detail, and at times these details don't seem to make any cohesive statement. That aside, while Frank places Garland under a microscope, he never really quite delivers any sense of the world in which she moved; consequently, we never really have any background against which we may judge her. There is no context.
These are serious flaws, and while the book is certainly readable and enjoyable, I do not think it is one to which the average reader would return, nor would I particularly recommend it to any but the toughest of hard-core Garland fans.
BEST JUDY GARLAND BIOGRAPHY WRITTEN!!!!Review Date: 2002-02-18
IT REVEALS JUDY THE HUMAN BEING!Review Date: 2005-04-04
THIS IS IT! This is the definitive biography. The detail is amazing and Gerald Frank is by far the only one who has captured Judy the woman and not ONLY the star. John Fricke`s "The World`s Greatest Entertainer" is good, but a tribute to a star, up there somewhere..... It`s written by a fan and good as it is, it sadly looks perspective.
This must NEVER be out of print and belongs to every library in the world. Indeed, I thought I knew evrything about Judy(I`ve been a fan since 1977), but THIS book is filling in holes I NEVER KNEW EXCISTED!
Thanks a LOT, Gerald Frank:-) This book i s of Pulitzer Prize calibre, although I realise a biography will never be given that honour...

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Important New Book About Kay FrancisReview Date: 2006-05-15
The book left me wanting to know more about Kay Francis and the movies she starred in. I highly recommend this book.
Finally a book on Kay Francis that answers ALL the questions!Review Date: 2006-05-14
This book is the definitive reference to Kay's life, both on and off the screen. Her exciting career, her steamy sex life and the best part...much of this book is based on Kay's own personal diary entries. You can't get better than that!
If you know nothing about Kay and you're intrigued with her life, the way I was, you'll learn everything you want and need to know by reading "Kay Francis: A Passionate Life and Career." If you know everything about Kay Francis, you're wrong. You only THINK you do! Without a doubt you'll learn something new here with the turn of every page!
Great book!
What a hottie!Review Date: 2006-05-17
Kay is Back!Review Date: 2006-05-03
An uneven start, but a page-turning finishReview Date: 2007-07-08

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I love this book!Review Date: 2006-08-04
The best Blues book aroundReview Date: 2007-01-15
Yes!!! Perfect Book!Review Date: 2006-07-30
It's this type of work that will make sure the Blues and Blues history lives on!
comprehensive, entertaining blues music referenceReview Date: 2006-04-02
A work in progress that needs to be more scholarlyReview Date: 2006-07-27
Much is made of the fact she interviewed a number of blues performers and included the material with various entries. However much if not most of the interview material is irrelevant to understanding the language of the blues, or the entry. For example she briefly discusses crossroads focusing on the African conception which leads to a discussion of the Robert Johnson meeting the devil at the crossroad myth and notes that some believe it. Then she included a discussion of Robert Lockwood, Johnson's stepson which bears very little relationship to the discussion of the term. This would have been better included in a sidebar about Johnson and Lockwood. It would have also been instructive to include lyrics of several songs for specific terms to show contrasting meanings. As an example, Elmore James' 'Standing at the Crossroads,' clearly does not have the connotation that some impute to Johnson.
Also some of her sources are not exactly scholarly. In an entry on the Delta, she discussed Charlie Patton working for Will Dockery. She provides as her reference correspondence with Stephen Lavere. There are lengthy published biographies on Patton by John Fahey, and Stephen Calt and Gayle Dean Wardlow that should have been cited. There is no excuse to not citing these sources while citing private correspondence. Then there is this statement "In '34 Blues', Patton nails the desperation and anxiety of unemployment, but something good came out of leaving the plantation this time-Patton went to New York and recorded twenty-nine songs for the American Record Company. When these recordings were reissued in the mid-1960s, they sparked great interest in this Delta cropper who came to be known as the father of the blues." On the same page there is Patton's picture which noted he recorded for Paramount and became that label's biggest selling artist. It was the reissue of Patton's recordings by Yazoo, which presented mostly the Paramount recordings that led to this recognition of Patton's music.
Discussing Canned Heat which some strained to drink the alcohol from, DeSalvo notes that Canned Heat adopted their name from the Tommy Johnson recording and that the members of Canned Heat used their fame to help their blues heroes citing their collaboration in John Lee Hooker's "The Healer." Hmm, I would think that it was the classic double album, "Hooker and Heat," recorded when Alan Wilson, the Blind Owl, was still alive that not only was the recording that led to Hooker's crossover but it stands up with the best recordings Hooker ever made. It was an album the ghost band that is Canned Heat is today would be incapable of producing. Sorry for perhaps going off topic, but so many entries here go off topic. (Again sidebars would have been useful). However the fact she is so imprecise with this, makes me suspect the accuracy of some other entries.
She does include some suggested recordings, but more lyric quotes for the entries
would have been very helpful. Also there should have been more cross entries, such as in her discussion of policy numbers, cross references back to that entry should have been provided for some of the policy combinations. And there are numerous terms that are not discussed here. This is a really rough first effort and this work needs some serious reworking if it is going to be a useful tool, which probably also means she should find herself a collaborator and take into account the serious criticisms if she wants to put together a work that will stand up as scholarly and a reference.
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