“Load up!” yells my dad, Kelly.
My family and I are headed down to Nashville, Tennessee for a long weekend; we are actually getting ready to get on the road now! My mom, sister, and myself all pile into the car, but not before I tripped over my own two feet; I have always been the clumsy one of the bunch! Finally, after the delay, we take off towards our destination!
While driving through Louisville, Kentucky I spot a billboard for a circus that is coming to town. If only I could go to the big top, where all the amazing, unimaginable acts will be…. “Now for the moment you’ve all been waiting for, Halle The Acrobatic Mastermind Minton!”
I walk out to the center of the stadium ready to nail my routine. “Hello ladies and gents, tonight I will
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My mother, father, sister, and I are in our favorite restaurant around, Rooster’s Red Party Barn and Bar. Despite the name, it is actually a very family friendly place, it is, I suppose, a party of all ages. The restaurant would not be true to its name if it were not in a big red barn, now would it? Rooster is the owner/announcer, and basically your right hand man around the joint if you need anything. RRPB & B is the local place to be on the weekends. They have live music every night on a classic wooden stage with white Christmas lights hanging from the edge; and of course the ceiling and loft too. “Hey y’all,” says Rooster up on the stage, “tonight we have a great show for ya! People have been asking all week who the musician of the night was, and I am here to finally tell and introduce you to..Drum roll please. Dolly Parton!”
“Why thank you Rooster, I appreciate such a kind hearted welcome!” Rooster smiles and nods ask he begins to walk off the stage. “How y’all doin’ tonight?” asks Dolly. The whole restaurant cheered back. “Usually I don’t play restaurant gigs,” starts Dolly, “but I heard my good friend Miss Halle was a local here, and I just couldn’t miss her!” I stand up and wave, shocked to see my friend I had not seen for several months. “Speaking of Halle, why don’t you just come up here and help me with a song!” I have sung with Dolly before, but never in front of a crowd. I am nervous, but I walk up on stage anyways, and start by giving
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“9 to 5, hit it boys!” shouts Dolly to the band. As the song begins something comes over me, and it did not feel like their was a crowd, just Dolly and I in the living room like old times. Singing, Dolly and I are dancing on the stage, in between tables, and even on the tables! It is pure bliss!
“9 to 5, working 9 to 5,” Dolly and I sing together as we finish up our duet.
“Give it up for Halle everyone!” shouts Dolly to the packed restaurant. We take each others hand and bow to the audience. The whole place is roaring, especially the bar upstairs.
“Thanks everyone! And thanks Dolly for letting me crash your performance for a little reminiscing!” I say to both the crowd and Dolly.
“No problem sweetheart, you go enjoy your family now!” Dolly says with a grin.
As I walk down from the stage back to my family's table, I am getting high-fives and “Good job!”s galore! Once I sit back down, Dolly begins her next song, and everyone starts clapping along….Clap-clap-clap-clap, I hear as my family is getting very into the current song on the local country station. I look surprisingly to my sister, as she is the most into it out of the three, which is very unusual for her. They are clapping along to the Carrie Underwood song, All-American Girl. Zoe and I have grown up listening to this song, making it one of our favorites by
As Ruby attempts to answer them, Clemmy Sue and Estelle Louise sashay into the empty Diner making a beeline to their favorite booth and sit down. Whereupon, Estelle Louis promptly excuses herself, then scurry to the restroom. In a carefree manner, Ruby ambles over to the table and says in a cheerful voice, “Clemmy Sue, you’re a breath of pure sunshine on this dark and gloomy night. However, I’m a little curious about what brings you and Estelle Louise here in the middle of this outrages storm, besides my culinary skills and entertaining personality.”
When Mom told Ed, Jefra and I the plan, Jefra clapped her hands together and said, “Isn’t that fancy?” “Boxer,” barks the first guest, not waiting for me to check off her name, but marching up the chapel stairs so fast that I have to sprint past her to whisper, “Last name’s Boxer,” to Jefra who nods. I pull up my skirt some, then I sprint back to the front step where a large group is waiting for me. A couple of seconds
Though she did not win, she thought it was a very interesting experience. Paula also enjoyed singing from the time she was a little girl. She said, her first solo was in junior high for a Christmas performance. Her teacher had her wear pigtails and sing the song “All I Want for Christmas”.
The concert was held in an exceedingly luxurious environment which put everyone in the audience in a jubilant mood. The audience would tap their feet along to the catchy rhythm, then would cheer with an electrifying applause after each piece was performed. The band continued to draw the crowd’s attention by having every musician on the stage play their own solo in each song. When Byron Stripling and the Jazz St. Louis Big Band performed the last piece in their set of the night they ended it with every musician on stage shouting “Clark Terry” to end the exquisite
Not only is this musical a history lesson to many of us, it brought us into the story, making us feel as though we were part of this performance, and in turn the making of history. The fourth wall, a term used to describe the imagery boundary between the actors on stage and the audience, is broken on multiple occasions. Most predominately, when Diana Ross performs “Reach Out and Touch” at the Frontier Hotel, performing as if the current audience was the audience for her Las Vegas show. We were immediately drawn in, becoming a part of her first performance in Vegas and her debut solo single. The Princess of Wales Theatre was quickly transformed into the Frontier Hotel seamlessly.
Her reaction to the services startled him. “The raw hillbilly music had been imprinted on her genes, like something deep within her she was remembering” (Covington,
Yvonne Mcbarnett was born and raised in London, England. She immigrated to the United States at the age of thirteen. She grew up a “PK” or pastor’s kid in Boston and can remember hard days and many struggles attributed to being not only a woman, but a woman of color. She was able to complete her middle and high school education in the States, but bypassed a four-year college to earn an Associate’s degree while working full time as a singer. Yvonne sang at various churches and venues with a group of her friends before starting a career in the corporate world.
" The artistry, heart, and soul that Dolly brings to everything she does are on full display in her many accomplishments, including her contributions to crossover music, her ability to give voice to women's issues, and her preservation of her early Appalachian roots. Kennedy Center Honors
Grace Schuller, Breanna Klocke, and Emily Klocke taught the girls Knock Em Down, L-E-T-S-G-O, and Don’t Wait Don’t Hesitate this week. Grace Schuller said “Knock Em Down was her favorite cheer to teach, because it was cute when the little girls tried it.” Schuller also stated that she enjoyed watching all the
Its 11 pm and the sky has darkened but the fascinating town of New Orleans is always awake at dawn. Walking down the streets are Lucy with her friends by her side. Looking for the closest restaurant to sit down and dance a little with this new kind of music called jazz. They enter a white tall building that had the bold letters ‘New&Old’.
Amy Winehouse is a legend and the music she created was incredible. She sung in the styles of Jazz, Soul, Blues and reggae which made her popular to many audiences and instantly she was different from the rest. In this essay I intend to give you a brief overview on Amy’s background and then I will explore Amy Winehouse’s Vocal and musical influences such as Sarah Vaughan who was an American Jazz singer and many more. Once I’ve covered that topic I will go on to discuss her appeal to a contemporary audience. The resources I will be using are Websites based on Amy Winehouse’s musical influences, Her documentary and books such as ‘’Amy Amy Amy the Amy Winehouse story by Nick Johnstone’’ Amy was a Jewish girl who was born in England.
Marian was a world-class singer who faced racism and segregation, despite her fame. She received an invitation to a concert but was denied, and had to sit outside the theater. Marian couldn't believe the audacity to refuse her entrance because of the color of her skin (Sudipta Bardhan-Quallen). This outrage led to Marian work harder and harder, and even in the face of risk and racism, she persevered. When she sang, she started with “My country, ’tis of thee, sweet land of liberty, of thee I sing.
It captures beautiful preparations for the party, it is tiring, but the end of the result gives all delights. These are beautiful feelings and expectations of the final outcome of major planning.’ [..] she loved having to arrange things; she always felt she could do it so much better than anybody else.’ (Clay, 1984: 246) Laura is the one who likes to take all the responsibility.
The listener can hear the compassion and soul in her voice. She is strong and bold, even expressing some amount of desperation to cling on to her love. Whitney poured out her heart in the song and expressed extreme emotions. It is no surprise that Whitney’s rendition evoked more emotions than Dolly, even causing the listeners to shed some tears. Dolly’s song does not tug at your heart like it does when Whitney sings it.
Most everyone loves pizza! The Little Red Hen (Makes a Pizza), retold by Philemon Sturges and illustrated by Amy Walrod, is a book that creates humor and whimsical features to tell a story about a food that majority of people like. This book would be a great addition to a unit talking about consumers and producers to a third-grade classroom. It has both textual evidence and illustrations that would help teach the unit on consumers and producers. The text in this book supports this idea of consumers and producers.