Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy Name. Thy kingdom come. THY WILL BE DONE, on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us. And lead us not into temptation, but DELIVER US FROM EVIL.
For Thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory, forever and ever. Amen †
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“For His anger is fleeting, but His favor lasts a lifetime. Weeping may stay the night, but joy comes in the morning.” – Psalm 30:5
The Weekend Reflection:
“Ain’t No Need To Worry”
“Joy”
“Biggest Part Of Me”
J
✝️ Posting for WP

27 June 2024 Martin Mull, American comic singer-songwriter and character actor (Fernwood 2-Night; Roseanne; Clue), dies at 80
Martin Mull featuring Glen Campbell – Licks Off Of Records (1980)
Also appearing:
Glen Campbell
(1936-2017)
American Grammy Award-winning country-pop singer (“By The Time I Get to Phoenix”; “Wichita Lineman”; “Rhinestone Cowboy”), session guitarist (The Beach Boys; Elvis Presley; The Monkees; Phil Specter), television personality (The Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour), and actor (True Grit), dies at 81
27 June 2023 Bobby Osborne, American bluegrass mandolin player (The Osborne Brothers – “Rocky Top”), dies at 91
Rocky Top
27 June 2020 Johnny Mandel, American composer, arranger and musician (M*A*S*H theme), dies at 94
Mash, Suicide Is Painless
Somehow I guess this version somehow violated Utool standards. /s
https://youtu.be/ODV6mxVVRZk27 June 2020 (Lionel) Frederick “Freddy” Cole, American jazz singer and pianist, dies at 88.
This Time I’m Gone for Good
27 June 2020 (Jesse) “Pete” Carr, American session guitarist (Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section), dies at 70
Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door
27 June 2017 Geri Allen, American jazz pianist, bandleader, composer, and educator, dies of cancer at 60
1,2, Goodbye
27 June 2016 Mack Rice, American musician and songwriter (“Mustang Sally”; “Respect Yourself”), dies at 82.
Sir Mack Rice – Mustang Sally (single version) (HQ)
27 June 2015 Denis Vigay, British cellist (BBC Symphony; Academy of St Martin in the Fields; Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band), dies at 89
Sgt Pepper’s (unable to coroborate / uncredited in Wikipedia anyway)
27 June 2015 Chris Squire, British progressive rock bassist, founding and longest serving member of Yes, 1969-2014 (“The Fish (Schindleria Praematurus)”), dies of acute erythroid leukemia at 67
Owner of a Lonely Heart
27 June 2014 Bobby Womack, American R&B singer, guitarist, songwriter, and producer (“It’s All Over Now”; “Woman’s Got to Have It”; “Across 110th Street”), dies at 70
If You Think You’re Lonely Now
Bobby Womack – I Wish He Didn’t Trust Me So Much
27 June 2009 Gale Storm [Josephine Owaissa Cottle], American singer (“I Hear You Knockin'”), and actress (My Little Margie; The Gale Storm Show), dies at 87
I Hear You Knockin’
27 June 2009 Fayette Pinkney, American pop and disco singer (The Three Degrees, 1963-76 – “TSOP (The Sound of Philadelphia)”; “When Will I See You Again?”), and psychologist, dies of acute respiratory failure at 61
Medley
27 June 2006 Eileen Barton, American singer (Broadway Open House; “If I Knew You Were Comin’ I’d’ve Baked a Cake”), dies of ovarian cancer at 81
Baked Cake
27 June 2005 Frank Harte, traditional Irish singer and song collector, dies of a heart attack at 72
The Spanish Lady
27 June 2002 Russ Freeman, American classically trained bebop and cool jazz pianist and composer (Art Pepper; Charlie Parker; Chet Baker; Clifford Brown; Shelly Manne), dies at 76
Unknown
27 June 2002 John Entwistle, English rock bassist (The Who – “Boris The Spider”), dies in his sleep of a cocaine fueled heart attack in his Las Vegas hotel room at 57
Bass Solo
27 June 1995 Prez “Kidd” Kenneth, American blues singer and guitarist, dies at 61
http://www.wirz.mobi/music/kenneth/grafik/kenneth14.jpg
I Am The Man Downstairs
27 June 1992 Stefanie Ann Sargent, American guitarist (7 Year Bitch), dies of alcohol and heroin overdose at 24
In Lust You Trust
27 June 1992 Allan Jones, American actor and singer (A Day at the Races; Showboat), dies at 84
Donkey Serenade
27 June 1986 (Otis W.) “Joe” Maphis, American session and country music guitarist (“Dim Lights”), dies of lung cancer at 75
King of the strings
27 June 1980 Albany “Barney” Bigard, Creole-American jazz clarinetist (Duke Ellington Orchestra, 1927-42 – “Mood Indigo”), dies at 74
Concert 07/15/1977
27 June 1974 Cliff Friend, American pianist and songwriter, dies at 80
Lonesome Hours
The Entwistle song you wanna hear is ‘My Wife’, off Who’s Next
He’s gone on a bit of a weekend bender and is afraid to go home because his wife’s on the rampage as a result
Great horns on that one
Ah, here we go
Happy Caturday, y’all
He played the horns too.
yep, likely French horn and flugelhorn
While I do not usually post sports related stuff, my grandmother… mom too, used the phrase I thought they were saying Lottie Dah, but having seen this it gives new meaning to what they meant.
27 June
Lottie Dod
(1871-1960)
British all-round athlete (Wimbledon 1887-88, 1891-93), dies at 88
Other utubes but … too woke for me, this one is factual at least.
✝️

Good CATURDAY morn, Garrison and Tink 😘☕😽 Fitful sleep, so in need of your music, tea, and the company of my herded moggies old which there are (as usual) many…
Nah…😼
Yes.
New partner in crime training session 💕
Live, learn, don’t do it again.
This is the best video I have found about what the World Cup Europeans think about what they have found here.
A commenter of this video brought up a great point! Wait until they see our 4th of July celebrations, parades, fireworks, etc…
One other important point here that should not be lost. Their being here is as good for us as it is for them! What I mean is that so many Americans don’t realize how good they’ve got it here and think the grass is greener on the other side because they’ve never been anywhere else. These reactions from the Europeans have to be breaking the convictions of Americans that are willing to listen and have a couple of functioning brain cells.
Now for a little musical interlude. This song performed well, never fails to make my eyes sweat.
“Blow, Charley!” — helluva alto sax solo at 8:50
My favorite big-band revue, Kid Creole and the Coconuts … this lineup featuring choreographer, stylist, and Mama Coconut, Adriana Kaegi … she’s Swiss I believe
Had their albums but never got to see them, lived in an out-of-the way place
My favorite song from this set is “Annie, I’m Not Your Daddy”, with the classic Coconuts refrain:
“Mama’s baby, Papa’s … Maybe”
— please excuse the unfortunate hairstyles on the Coconuts
The fashion wheel turns with the times, and the fashion wheel can be cruel
Hey, it was the Eighties … the closest you could come to a show like this now would be Prince
No, wait …
The Ox wrote this song for the Who Are You album. He was not happy on the final arrangement they did.
Here he is with his band playing that song as he meant it to be played. Watch his fingers.
The Who were a unique band in that everyone played lead. When they lost Keith Moon they never fully recovered but with Zak Starkey joining in he became the heir apparent as he was as close and faithful to the music as Moon was.
When John Entwistle died it changed the band for good. They played on but even with great bass players that unique sound was lost.
One aspect of Entwistle was that he and Moon played off each other. When Starkey joined up that same kind of energy came out again. It was great to see and hear while it lasted.
Whatever happened to cataday? Where are all the great cat pictures???
here’s one, but it’s a bit unconventional
Ordinary Time: June 27th
Optional Memorial of St. Cyril of Alexandria, Bishop and Doctor of the Church
Today is the Optional Memorial of St. Cyril, Patriarch of Alexandria (376-444). Cyril was one of the metropolitan sees of the Christian Church in the east, was one of the great defenders of the faith against the heresy of Nestorius who denied the oneness of person in Jesus Christ. At the Council of Ephesus in 431, over which he presided in the pope’s name, and at his instigation, it was defined that Christ, the Son of God, is at the same time God and man, and the Blessed Virgin Mary, His mother, is truly Theotokos, the Mother of God. St. Cyril died in 444. The Church venerates him as one of her great doctors. His commentary on the Gospel of St. John is one of the richest doctrinally of those left us by the Fathers of the Church.
Our Lady of Perpetual Help also is traditionally commemorated today.
St. Cyril of Alexandria
St. Cyril is one of the great Greek Fathers of the Church. He was chosen by Divine Providence to be the shield and champion of the Church against Nestorius, who denied the unity of persons in Christ. If this heresy had succeeded, Mary would not be called the Mother of God.
Excepting Sts. Athanasius and Augustine, his equal as a defender of orthodoxy can hardly be found in the Church’s history. His greatest achievement was the successful direction of the ecumenical council at Ephesus (431), of which he was the soul (Pope Celestine had appointed him papal legate). In this council two important dogmas were defined—that there is but one person in Christ, and that Mary (in the literal sense of the word) can be called the Mother of God (Theotokos). His successful defense of the latter doctrine is his greatest title to honor.
His writings show such depth and clarity that the Greeks called him the “seal of the fathers.” He died in 444 A.D., after having been bishop for thirty-two years. In Rome, the basilica of St. Mary Major stands as a most venerable monument to the honor paid Mary at the Council of Ephesus. On the arch leading into the sanctuary important incidents in the lives of Jesus and Mary are depicted in mosaic.
In 1881, he was declared a Doctor of the Church by Pope Leo XIII, and in 1944, on the fifteenth centenary of Cyril’s death, Pope Pius XII issued his encyclical Orientalis Ecclesiae, commemorating Cyril’s place in the history of the Church.