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A former name of Dave Emory's talk radio show; A right-wing political radio show hosted by Tom Valentine in the late 1980s and 1990s, heard originally on the Sun Radio Network but later only on shortwave-station WWCR. A fictional radio station featured in the 1984 film Red Dawn and its remake; A fictional radio station mentioned in The Handmaid ...
Rockin' Radio is a 1983 album by Jazz trumpeter Tom Browne, released on Arista Records. [1] It is his fifth album. His prior album, Yours Truly had success on the charts, but no charting single. [ 2 ]
Blue Valentine is the sixth studio album by singer and songwriter Tom Waits, released on September 5, 1978, on Asylum Records. [1] It was recorded over the course of six sessions from July to August 1978 with producer Bones Howe. Rickie Lee Jones is pictured with Waits on the back cover. [2]
Diana Ross and Lionel Richie croon their hearts out in this 1981 duet from the movie by the same name. The ballad tops Billboard’s list of the top 50 love songs of all time. ‘Make You Feel My ...
[4] It ranked fourth on The Guardian's list of the top ten Tom Waits songs: "This hooker with a heart of gold narrative is certainly less patronising than most, a darkly funny scenario that also stirs in us a sense of pity. There’s a twist in the tale, naturally, from one of music’s great raconteurs."
An unmastered seven-track version of the scrapped second album, titled Zurich and omitting "Roman Road" and "Valentine", had been leaked within a couple of years of the split. Titled . A later nine-track version of the album appeared on SoundCloud described as "[the] Unreleased 2nd album from Dark Star", [17] which included the previously ...
It has only been found in bootlegs, in MP3 form at some P2P sites, and also on some streaming services, particularly Rdio. Within both mediums, the song was given either the title "Prologue" or "Once Long Ago". This music can be heard in the intro to the American film release and is also heard in one of the early scenes between Jack and Lilly.
Mark Gregory Koernke (/ ˈ k ɔːr ŋ k i /; born 1957), known as "Mark from Michigan," is an American militia activist and shortwave radio broadcaster. [1] As an early proponent of the black helicopters conspiracy theory, he was largely responsible for popularizing it [2] in appearances on Tom Valentine's radio show and in speeches which were widely circulated on videocassette.