Pictures have surfaced following last night's adult themed problems, due to the content of the two pornographic posts put up last night, Sir Miles evoked hard porn protocol 351 so Sir M, Barbs and Syco dealt with offending articles in the safest manner
Though due to dodgy zip on one of the suits effective deletion was somewhat delayed
Can I please have a Ginger Beer, TP.
Anyone celebrate Halloween where they are from?
or hear about the big Spectre-inspired day of the dead festival in Mexico?
“The scent and smoke and sweat of a casino are nauseating at three in the morning. "
-Casino Royale, Ian Fleming
I always thought Barry would have done a fantastic Moore-era Bond song.
Easily hear "First, last, everything' in a title sequence, and featuring in a John Barry score.
“The scent and smoke and sweat of a casino are nauseating at three in the morning. "
-Casino Royale, Ian Fleming
Love that song- I've sung it live a couple of times though I did have to raise the key a couple of notches! )
(I'm a bass-baritone and can go quite low, but not as low as Bazza!)
That's so cool! My father got me in to Barry White, it was one of his guilty pleasures but I honestly have no shame in pumping his music from my stereo. There is a story about how when he was a young lad he had quite a high voice and then his Mum got an awful shock one day after it dropped into the caramel it is today.
“The scent and smoke and sweat of a casino are nauseating at three in the morning. "
-Casino Royale, Ian Fleming
Barry was a true bass, and I think he sang that song in the key of E or F making his bottom notes somewhere below very low C*. Most singers sound like water going down a plughole when they try to get that low, but with him it came out smooth as caramel, as you say. I do it in G, making the lowest note a D (which is still pretty low but doesn't compare).
Add to his voice the fact that he could write great melodies and produce & arrange them and you get one remarkable talent.
* For non-musos, I mean the C which lies two octaves below middle C. Any fool can hit middle C, most can do one octave below. Tenors aim for high C, one octave higher than middle C (think Pavarotti & co, or Roy Orbison). Very low C is the benchmark for bass singers and Mr White went below that regularly.
The best a Pirate party has ever done in the world
They might grant Edward Snowden political asylum. That's quite a personal journey - from Hawaii to Iceland!
Barry was a true bass, and I think he sang that song in the key of E or F making his bottom notes somewhere below very low C*. Most singers sound like water going down a plughole when they try to get that low, but with him it came out smooth as caramel, as you say. I do it in G, making the lowest note a D (which is still pretty low but doesn't compare).
Add to his voice the fact that he could write great melodies and produce & arrange them and you get one remarkable talent.
* For non-musos, I mean the C which lies two octaves below middle C. Any fool can hit middle C, most can do one octave below. Tenors aim for high C, one octave higher than middle C (think Pavarotti & co, or Roy Orbison). Very low C is the benchmark for bass singers and Mr White went below that regularly.
Hey, thanks! That was really interesting. Just adds more of pre-existing admiration towards the great man.
“The scent and smoke and sweat of a casino are nauseating at three in the morning. "
-Casino Royale, Ian Fleming
Comments
Though due to dodgy zip on one of the suits effective deletion was somewhat delayed
Not quite..... I drive an alfa
Florence of England as one taxi driver told me.
Anyone celebrate Halloween where they are from?
or hear about the big Spectre-inspired day of the dead festival in Mexico?
-Casino Royale, Ian Fleming
Our Halloween Bond. For me it's a night of keeping the dog in )
I feel like LALD is our Halloween movie as well.
-Casino Royale, Ian Fleming
-Casino Royale, Ian Fleming
Easily hear "First, last, everything' in a title sequence, and featuring in a John Barry score.
-Casino Royale, Ian Fleming
https://youtu.be/fHCcM_uV-r8
(I'm a bass-baritone and can go quite low, but not as low as Bazza!)
-Casino Royale, Ian Fleming
Add to his voice the fact that he could write great melodies and produce & arrange them and you get one remarkable talent.
* For non-musos, I mean the C which lies two octaves below middle C. Any fool can hit middle C, most can do one octave below. Tenors aim for high C, one octave higher than middle C (think Pavarotti & co, or Roy Orbison). Very low C is the benchmark for bass singers and Mr White went below that regularly.
...... on Iceland? )
They might grant Edward Snowden political asylum. That's quite a personal journey - from Hawaii to Iceland!
Hey, thanks! That was really interesting. Just adds more of pre-existing admiration towards the great man.
-Casino Royale, Ian Fleming