Aiyiyi. Even the youtube orgler sometimes finds an acorn.
"Masquerade", penned and performed pretty damned well by Leon Russell, here is performed by George Benson.
Benson is one of the great figures of 20th century music. The dude's a stunning guitarist, *anointed* by the jazz community. But with the release of his album "Breezin'", he reframed himself, as an advocate of lyricism and accessibility. Critics shat their pants.
You can not readily imagine the vitriol. I am not kidding, if you're a musicologist go read it. It was grim beyond any ready take.
But, in the end, this is George Benson. He got crazy-mad player chops. He pretty as a muh-fucker. He sing like a doll.
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The Pieces Premise says, "To get the whole thing to do what you want, start by getting each piece of it to do what you want. It's one of the basic underpinning of microtest TDD.
It's a hard time out there for those working on social change. I want you to know how much what you're doing means to me. Geekery is respite for me. But I see you, and I see how hard you're trying.
Stay safe, stay strong, stay angry, stay kind.
I am proud of you.
The idea behind the pieces premise is actually pretty straightforward. All programs are divided into pieces, separate parts, each of which performs some behavior the program needs.
I grew up on stage. My first theatrical performance was at age six. My last was at age 20. I did all the things, onstage and off, all the roles from sound to lights to props to stage manager. At 19, my beloved mentor Tony forced the community theatre to let me direct.
When I was about 15 or so, we did an adaptation of Spoon River Anthology. And it wasn't scripted, it was based in the book itself. I was young, so I didn't know how shocking and radical the original book was, or how bold it was to stage it, in small-town Kansas in '73.