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Albo on the Front Bench
07 Wednesday Dec 2011
Posted in Emmjay, Politics in the Pig's Arms
07 Wednesday Dec 2011
Posted in Emmjay, Politics in the Pig's Arms
Tags
05 Monday Dec 2011
Posted in Uncategorized
02 Friday Dec 2011
Posted in Algernon, Entertainment Upstairs
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Brian Adams, Connie Francis, Don Henley, Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong, Eric Burdon and War, Jimi Hendrix, Loving Spoonful, Midnight Oil, Mungo Jerry, music, Safaris, Sand, Seals and Crofts, Sly and the family stone, Sun, Surf, The Drifters, The Kinks, Vivaldi Frank Sinatra, War, youtube
Playlist by Algernon
First days of Summer are upon us. All these tunes have Summer, surf or sand in the lyrics somewhere.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IQSWwfYRmfE
Summer – War
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7F_opWg9_qI
Up on the Roof – The Drifters
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z-_9z641CDk
Summer in the City – Loving Spoonful
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3ahhmiuyko0
Hot fun in the summertime – Sly and the family stone
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zc9wIzi96_E
In the summertime – Mungo Jerry
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9f06QZCVUHg
Summer of 69 – Brian Adams
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1h1oRP7FfBw
Sunny Afternoon – Kinks
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gG2naf70MbY&feature=fvst
Wipeout – Safaris
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j3FQwovIJw0
Wedding Cake Island – Midnight oil
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9u_CttIV7VY
Bombora – The Atlantics
Live for the Sun –The Sunrays
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TCeD_6Y3GQc
Good Vibrations – The Beach boys
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w6qcafgLHe4
Spill the Wine – Eric Burdon and War
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-5usbS-EHjo
The Boys of Summer –Don Henley
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8BsBbtp4gW4
Antonio Vivaldi –Summer
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z9wNfAheqnA
Summer Wind – Frank Sinatra
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=onKb2DETmhQ
Vacation – Connie Francis
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MIDOEsQL7lA
Summertime – Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EPEqRMVnZNU
Under the Boardwalk – The Drifters
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=its0qifGDxU
Summer Breeze – Seals and Crofts
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w9aX56j9oZg
Long hot Summer Night – Jimi Hendrix
Keywords: War, The Drifters, Loving Spoonful,Sly and the family stone, Mungo Jerry, Brian Adams, The Kinks, Safaris, Midnight Oil, Eric Burdon and War, Don Henley, Vivaldi Frank Sinatra, Connie Francis, Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong, The Drifters, Seals and Crofts, Jimi Hendrix
30 Wednesday Nov 2011
Posted in Emmjay
Well, the 2011 Sydney Motorcycle (and Scooter) Show was an interesting affair – not merely because Ducati unveilled their new – soon to be world conquering superbike …. the 195 horsepower (145 kilowatts) Panigale 1198. Nor was it that BMW showed their new 1,300 cc six cylinder monster (which, let’s be clear about this, is roughly the size of a four seater lounge …. but not as easy to move through Sydney traffic).
There were two highlights of the show – the first is this lovely hand made carbon fibre miracle – the Spartan V. Why the Spartan ? Because the designers and builders (aircraft engineers) Dad comes from Sparta.
This one above is truly an amazing car. It’s a prototype, fully compliant with Australian automotive race car design – and when it goes into production it will cost about $90k.
Considering that the Spartan can thrash a Ferrari with less than half of the prancing horse’s power and just two cylinders – compared with the Ferrari’s big V8 – and with the Ferrari costing about five times as much, that’s not a mean feat. The reason it can perform this racing miracle is straightforward – power to weight ratio.
The Spartan’s engine is a Ducati twin 1198 cc – a relatively simple but awesome donk with massive grunt – well-used by Ducati to win numerous Superbike World Championships. But here’s the trick … (note ellipsis, grammar police). The Spartan weighs just 300 kilograms (not counting a fat arsed geriatric driver). Now considering that the bike from which the engine comes weighs 173 kilos, and the roll-cage in the car must meet minimum crash strength standards, it’s amazing how the engineers can add a body, two extra wheels and race tires, steering gear and massive brakes for so little weight gain.
The Spartan can go from rest to 100 kph in under three seconds and pull up well before the driver’s lunch.
This machine is put together with such care and precision that it’s a joy to look at. The design and craftsmanship is sublime. I wish the men from Sparta all success for their baby rocketship.
But wait… there’s more.
Many modern bikes are huge capacity massive monsters that seem to be more like furniture or motor homes to me. I’m a simple(ton) guy with simple tastes and I am attracted to the industry trend to what is referred to as “naked bikes” – stripped of all that fibreglass gee-gaw and gimmickry like bluetooth communications and heated handlebars – down to the basics – engine, wheels, tank, seat, brakes, lights – all one needs to belt around and have a good time.
There were some pleasant naked offerings from Triumph and Moto Guzzi – as well as a thin slice of the massive baby-boomer brand reminiscent of chrome plated aircraft carriers – Harley Davidsons.
But best of all was a bike – near and dear to my own heart – from the days when the Beatles were still in short pants in primary school. It was a display bike to attract attention to a book-selling fundraising lady (Alana) who was raising money in support of research into the rare genetic condition called Batten’s disease. Batten’s disease is a heart-breaking motor-neurone degenerative condition that claims the lives of children sufferers usually before they are ten.
The bike was … a 1954 BMW 250 single – beautifully restored. And it caught my eye because I have one too… not restored and not running since about 1970. I bought it in that condition in 1980 from a chap who lived a couple of doors up the road from my place (at the time) in Wagga. Here’s the real deal:
Astute observers will notice that this bike lacks a chain – and as far as I’m aware distinguishes itself by being the smallest shaft-drive motorcycle. More than that, the wild, post-war austerity Germans added knobs to the frame for the attachment of a sidecar.
This one has the sidecar knobs on the right – suggesting that it is an import from America.
Alana quietly let me in on a secret that I already knew “The owner says it’s a bit of a pig – he’s inclined to get off and walk it up hills”. The bike came about when BMW (who had been making superb 500cc flat twin bikes went for parsimony and basically rooted a beautiful engine design by chopping the flat twin in half, stuffed the natural engine harmonics of the flat twin and turned the surviving cylinder into the vertical plane – also not helping the air cooling much).
Such is life. But since this little BM was made for my first birthday, it’s a nostalgic favourite – and the only other one I’ve seen in the flesh in over 30 years of being interested in bikes.
30 Wednesday Nov 2011
Posted in Lehan Winifred Ramsay
Hello patrons de la salle de porc.
I know that many of us are facing that peripatetic perennial question of what to buy loved ones at the yuletide time of yulishness. The good news is that the Pig’s Arms resident T-shirt recycler and painting painter of the sharp eye and steady handliness has brought forth her bountiful talent and we are now able to avail ourselves of a Lehan Winifred Ramsay had-painted recycled T in an extensive range of colours and sizes (WYSIWYG).
Competition for these shirts will be ferocious, so you need to get in early and offer Lehan a competitive price for an original LWR T so your Christmas stocking will be well and truly stuffed.
Please note that these Ts are works of art and are not guaranteed to be any kind of fast. They should be washed only by virgins using triple-distilled oxygen. They must be dried flat in the shade by punkah wallahs and stored respectfully.
25 Friday Nov 2011
Posted in Algernon, Entertainment Upstairs
Tags
Playlist by Algernon
Continuing on with last weeks theme I’ve found some more tunes which spent time in the top 100 in their respective years. The television programs were seen as confronting at the time. “Are you being serve” was a master of the double entendre though no pussy jokes in this one. The advertisement here is not meant to be political statement. I can’t recall any election advert in the past 40 odd years but I remember this one.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XtJq56cp_dk
Most people I know think that I’m crazy – Billy Thorpe and the Aztecs
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lu7hxguhFfI
American Pie – Don McLean
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6A2QkgMvTtM
Papa was a rolling stone- The Temptations
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HagzTRmUBIE
I can see clearly now – Johnny Nash
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xgcxd9wtXUE
Children of the Revolution – T-Rex
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IlFNA4EfexQ
Heart of gold – Neil Young
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hOFrGbuUqnQ
The first time ever I saw your face – Roberta Flack
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-LX7WrHCaUA
Rocket Man – Elton John
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S9Nj5xLuT6c
Mother and child reunion – Pauls Simon
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qga5eONXU_4
Schools Out – Alice Cooper
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vqMCZBjvmD4
Its time – ALP Campaign ad 1972
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xs9ma5oHVbE
The Aunty Jack Show – Theme song
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GKLaMYj4yBU
The Aunty Jack Show – So You want to be a bus driver
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mwu2pqb56NQ
Number 96
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KZQOLv85C68
Are you being served
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b6UAYGxiRwU
You’re so vain – Carly Simon
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3j3okb3kuts
Lets get it on – Marvin Gaye
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QvwDohEEQ1E
Bad bad Leroy Brown – Jim Croce
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qfr6jmJOGA8
Me and Mrs Jones – Billy Paul
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BE2K7SOgbWA
The Jean Genie – David Bowie
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7SXWgC0SLCA
Can the Can – Suzie Quatro
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2WX_4FNoto4
Smoke on the water- Deep Purple
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2dTnvhGHDGA
Rubber bullets – 10CC
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cpbbuaIA3Ds
Money – Pink Floyd
21 Monday Nov 2011
Posted in Cricics, Critics, Everyone's a Critic, Emmjay
Tags
The Pig’s Arms’ resident art critic, Phil O’Stein was an early visitor to the NSW Gallery Members’ free squiz at the new blockbuster Picasso exhibition. Here’s his take.
Ah, yeah, hi. Well the missus and I (and I use the term loosely, if you catch my drift, Tarquin) were amongst the three or four hundred thousand NSW Art Gallery members to line up for an hour and a half in the stinking heat of a Sydney November Sunday afternoon to run our beady peepers across the latest imported nonsense from the National Picasso Museum of Paris.
The NSW Gallery lucked out and scored third pick of the Museum’s collection – in fact Picasso’s own collection at the time of his death (read …. unsold stuff he had in the back shed). First and Second picks went to Seattle and somewhere in Asia.
This is not to suggest that the 150 or so works on display were to an individual tripe of the first order, but I could see from the look on the missus’ dial that she was not going to contemplate a major redecoration of the rumpus room on the strength of the works the NSW Gallery flung up on the walls of most of its ground floor display spaces.
It was in fact a trans-historical pastiche of the various periods identified in Mr P’s long and illustrationist life. There were bronzes as well as flat-pack art, and my personal favourite sculpture of a bull’s head – made from the careful juxtaposition of a bicycle seat with handlebars was slung way up on one wall – obviously reflecting the unsafeness of such an object amongst the seat-sniffers represented in impressive numbers amongst the members.
Now call me Phil O’Stein, if you like, but I have seen quite a lot of this art and a superset in the actual Museum villa in Paris, and I have to say that something seems to have been lost in the translation.
I’m betting that the loss is something to do with below-par curation of the overall exhibition. There was virtually no explanatory material. The curator(s) had boldly gone for letting the works speak for themselves – which led to some intriguing dialogues amongst the arterartie having a butchers at the works. “Look, there’s the woman’s head over there”. “That’s not the head”. “Is that really a guitar”? “I’m buggered if I can see the saxophone”. Clearly the troops were not always up to re-assembling Mr P’s disassemblages.
Let me draw a contrast.
The missus and I (nudge, nudge) went to the Dali exhibition at the NGV sur Yarra a while back. Like the NSW G Picasso exhibition, this was intended to be a blockbuster – and it certainly was. Over half a million people flocked to Paris sur Yarra to have a squiz. And magnificent it was too. There were all kinds of interesting objects, movies from the period, light, colour and excitement.
That was what was missing from the Picasso Exhibition. The excitement.
It could be that in sending off the great man Ed Capon – after his magnificent 30 years steerage of the NSW G – they had expected that the mass of Picasso works would be exciting enough on their own, and that the target to hit was the logistics – namely getting the masses through the exhibition quickly and tidily – hence the booked timeslots for ticket-holders only.
Maybe it really is that the NSW G – is showing us that it is a tired old flog of a building and that it is incapable of really doing the blockbuster exhibition with the same flair and panache as either the National Gallery in Canberra or the NGV in Paris sur Yarra.
What concerns me is not just that the Picasso exhibition left the missus and I a bit flat. I’m worried that this is the second in a trend of “should be great but look a bit ordinary” exhibitions – following the “Mad Square” show.
If the arterartie members were having a struggle extracting delight from the Picasso show (as seemed to be the case for people dotted through the inner circle throng – more interested in dinner to come or what they were doing about their own personal global financial meltdowns…. readily apparent in their attire), what might one of the hoi polloi – expected to show up in their thousands make of Picasso ?
Geeze, he can draw, but why does he make the hands and feet so big ?
For THE artist of the 20th Century, the curators could well have worked up a tiny tiny bit of sweat and led the punters through with a modicum of context. It’s the least they could have done.
So, the missus and I are scouting around to see whether there will be at any stage the odd guided tour where a well-informed artertainer can supply the context and inject the excitement that Patrons de la Salle de Porc have come to expect – ever since the Mondrian Brothers (Abstract Plumbers to the Drinking Classes) retiled the loos at the Pig’s Arms.
19 Saturday Nov 2011
Posted in Emmjay
By our Medical Interpreter in the Sports Bar
I read a piece over at the ABC the other day by a reporter I usually trust – Sophie Scott.
The report was that some research dudes have discovered two genes that predispose people to melanoma – as we know – a fairly dangerous and hard to treat if it gets away – kind of cancer.
These genes increase a person’s risk of death from melanoma before age 85 by a whopping 250 percent. Jesus – we’re all goners – rush right out and get your DNA screened – and bloody stay indoors until you get the all clear. This means all the Pig’s Arms patrons who live north of Mawson’s Base.
But then I started to wonder what percentage of people in Australia actually get melanoma. Answer: Men – 1:15. Women – 1:24.
Since men live on average now to just 79, I reckon I’d be pleased to fall off the perch from melanoma when I was 85 – man, that’s 6 years over the odds. Women who live – on average until the age of 84, don’t get such a good deal, obviously.
But the reality is that something else is more than likely going to get you before the big M (sorry, Big M).
Another way to play with the stats is to suggest that amongst the dudes who have these dodgy genes, (and we don’t know who you are – so please drop by the Pig’s Arms and we’ll give you a protective Trotter’s Ale (this protects you by keeping you indoors indefinitely)). (Voice – notice the perfectly balanced parentheses !) The risk of you getting the Big M (not OUR Big M – the other Big M), rises from 7% to 17% for blokes . Have another Trotter’s Ale.
And for the ladies your insignificant risk of 4% rises to 10% – so if I was you, I’d definitely have another Pink Drink. Slip slap and slop – but not so much that you don’t have enough Vitamin D – and get ricketts or osteo or whatever bone things that a lack of Vit D causes.
While we’re talking about drinking, there are heaps of other risks that impact the likelihood that you’ll be pushing up parrots due to melanoma – apart from two dodgy genes that you may or may not have. These include things like whether you have red hair and that kind of Celtic skin that freckles up and burns rather than tans, whether you have more moles than Wind in the Willows, whether you smoke (in which case you shouldn’t waste time reading this article) and whether you drink inferior beverages to excess.
It really matters whether your melanoma (in the event that you do get one) is diagnosed and removed while it is a stage 1 codger. If the hackers dismiss it before it spreads to the nearest lymph node, you’re in comparatively good shape. If it’s in the first node and they remove that too, your odds don’t look so flash. but are still worth a decent punt. Beyond that it’s pretty touch and go.
So if you see anything suss, – or more likely, your partner – who is very used to giving you one of those rather extensive all over caresses, spots something untoward, it’s far better to risk being accused by your GP of being a big wuss, than it is to tough it out and ignore it.
There is no evidence of a causative link between melanoma and wedges – with or without sour cream and sweet chilli sauce.
Oh dear, I’ve come over all thirsty again.
19 Saturday Nov 2011
Posted in Cricics, Critics, Everyone's a Critic, Emmjay
This morning I opened the door to the SMH’s screaming headline “Owners have record of failure” – by renown journos Linton Besser and Saffron Howden.
It was all downhill from there.
The front-page story was about the terrible nursing home fire in Sydney’s West – now said to have more than a dozen old people in serious condition in hospital and five deaths. The story is at once awfully sad and also a tale of heroism and bravery that ensured that the casualty list was not longer.
However the tone of Besser and Howden’s piece is unrelentingly accusative –pointing the finger at the Quaker’s Hill nursing home – and its parent organisation Domain Principal Group – owned by, AMP Capital Investors.
Amazing, it was that within 20 hours of the blaze being reported, the police arrested a male staff member and charged him with four, then five counts of murder. They had some fairly solid clues – that the fire broke out in two places – suggesting that this was no accident. And second that it happened just before five am – calling into question who would be up around in a secure facility at that time.
My criticism of Besser and Howden’s article is that they seek to hang the nursing home and it’s parent organisation for many trivial reasons as well as because of a previous problem three years ago when ten old people died from gastroenteritis in another Domain Principal nursing home.
I need to put my credentials on the table here. My 87 year old mum has been in care in a nursing home for nearly six years – first with dementia, then latterly also with frailty – she can no longer walk, stand or sit up un aided and she has to be fed, bathed, cared for medically, dressed, toileted, undressed and helped into bed every day. FM’s dad is 85, is in another nursing home and has much the same care needs. We visit every fortnight. So I have some experience in the field.
When old people can no longer feed themselves, perhaps cannot chew or swallow reliably and are incontinent – as well as having unreliable immune systems, they are always at high risk of gastroenteritis, no matter how strict the nursing home’s hygiene protocols. More often than not, infections are brought into nursing homes by visiting relatives who do not use the handwash provided, do bring in food treats and certainly do not wear sterile gloves as the staff do. In our folks’ time as residents, we have seen three outbreaks of gastro in the two locations – providing care for about 250 people. There were thankfully no deaths as a result of these outbreaks, probably due to strict quarantine – no visits unless these were absolutely necessary – and mandatory disinfection of visitors’ hands.
This is impressive care – particularly when you realise that demented people with incontinence can act in ways that are highly counterproductive to safe hygiene.
But returning to the SMH article. Besser and Howden cast aspersions on the Quaker’s Hill nursing home and the parent organisation for various failures in government inspections including not having background checks on prospective staff that were valid – and revalidated every three years including proof that staff had no convictions for murder or any form of assault.
There are two things that need to be said about this. First, it is incredibly challenging for nursing homes to recruit carers – first, nurse-qualified carers (who can earn a lot more money working through agencies temping in hospitals) are always in very short supply and less qualified people who are amongst the lowest paid individuals in the workforce – who have to work shifts and do personal hygiene tasks for old people that would turn most relative’s stomachs are not exactly beating the doors down demanding jobs. The people who work there are in my estimation and experience, mostly saints.
Second, a police check that an individual has a “clean” record can take an eternity – especially when you realise that many of the carers come from overseas and take these jobs because they do not have a huge amount of choice. If I was a nursing home manager, with a desperate need for staff now – because I have patients who need care now – and not in six months, I’d take new people on, train them and manage them carefully and let the police do what the police do – in their own time. They have no choice.
Moreover, a police check that says a person has a clean record – so far – does not predict that a person will never go bananas tomorrow or the next day – which could well be the case with the alleged killer in custody for the Quaker’s Hill fire. Arsonists are usually not the outgoing socially aggressive violent types.
These kinds of regulatory inspections are risk minimisation exercises – and nothing more. They are not in any way iron-clad guarantees that will always prevent bad things from happening.
The last bit of ridiculous trash reporting was, in my opinion, the assertion that in the previous case of deaths from this unrelated, three year old gastroenteritis outbreak, the cause was unproven, but there was a suggestion that there might have been a strong association with eating pureed food (what like a huge proportion of old people with dementia who can no longer chew ?) …. and – and get this, that the residents who died from gastroenteritis “were already deteriorating from their underlying health conditions” – like the ones that landed them in the nursing home in the first place ? Give me strength !
Besser and Howden finished by saying that the management of the nursing home and the parent organisation had cancelled the planned meeting with the SMH and were refusing to comment. Surprising ? Not when the police and coroner are involved – or when the reporters churn out such unhelpful rubbish.
I’m not suggesting that the nursing home is definitely blameless. I just don’t know. Neither would I seek to be unsympathetic to those who lost their lives, their loved ones or those who suffered terrible injuries. I do think that tremendous praise should go to the fire-fighters, police, staff and neighbours who saved so many lives. These folk did a magnificent job. The same cannot be said about the SMH reporters.
18 Friday Nov 2011
Posted in Algernon, Bands at the Pig's Arms, Entertainment Upstairs
Tags
1971, Cher, Daddy Cool, Dave Edmunds, Elton John, George Harrison, Isaac Hayes, Janis Joplin, John Lennon, Marvin Gaye, Matlock Police, Monty Python, music, playlist, The Doors, The Mixtures, The Rolling Stones, The Two Ronnies, The Who, Tom Jones, youtibe
Playlist by Algernon !
I heard this week that Waz will be away for a little while, so I thought I might put a little collection. Now I’m not trying to usurp the wonderful job that Waz does here most weeks, I just though a Summer edition might be the way to go. This lot is slightly different all the songs charted in 1971 and were top 100 for that year. Enjoy.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oQfAZVsz6KM
Eagle Rock – Daddy Cool
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wynYMJwEPH8
My Sweet Lord – George Harrison
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CCWAGpChSRI
The Pushbike Song – The Mixtures
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xYFhWV8–io
Me and Bobby McGee – Janis Joplin
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ry2td7q5ZMc
I hear you knocking – Dave Edmunds
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oIfxBthfFkg
She’s a Lady – Tom Jones
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IqhlQfXUk7w
The ministry of silly walks – Monty Python
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8H49avae6gg
The Two Ronnies
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gdsTTsZVORE&feature=results_video&playnext=1&list=PL54C0C7440842EAA7
The Two Ronnies – slightly later than 1971
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EHl5hNgsjZ0
Matlock Police – Episode 1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3B0Y3LUqr1Q
Brown Sugar – The Rolling Stones
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DKbPUzhWeeI
Riders on the Storm – The Doors
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=13GD78Bmo8s
Your Song – Elton John
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fETIjVvv1Ds
What’s going on – Marvin Gaye
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TOSZwEwl_1Q
Gypsies Tramps & Thieves – Cher
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SHhrZgojY1Q
Won’t get fooled again – The Who
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CHbYLjWEEQA
The theme from shaft – Isaac Hayes
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-b7qaSxuZUg
Imagine – John Lennon
Keywords: Daddy Cool, George Harrison, The Mixtures, Janis Joplin, Dave Edmunds, Tom Jones, Monty Python, The Two Ronnies, Matlock Police, The Rolling Stones, The Doors, Elton John, Marvin Gaye, Cher, The Who, Isaac Hayes, John Lennon