We LOVE The Ethiopians don’t we?

The Ethiopians - No Baptism (1970)
Roots reggae from one of my faves
To know is to know
We LOVE The Ethiopians don’t we?

The Ethiopians - No Baptism (1970)
Roots reggae from one of my faves
To know is to know

The Adverts was an English punk rock band who formed in 1976 and broke up in 1979. They were one of the very best acts to come out of the first wave of English punk, with a stellar debut single, "One Chord Wonders" and "Gary Gilmore's Eyes". "Gary Gilmore's Eyes" reached the UK top 20 in August 1977. The Virgin Encyclopedia of 70s Music described bassist and founding member Gaye Advert as the "first female punk star". The band was formed in 1976 by T. V. Smith (Tim Smith) and Gaye Advert (Gaye Black). Smith was from the town of Okehampton in mid-Devon, and Advert was from Bideford, a small coastal town in North Devon. After relocating to London, the two young punks recruited guitarist Howard Pickup (Boak) and drummer Laurie Driver (Muscat), and the Adverts were born.
Duane Michals appears on several episodes of this Yale sponsored art podcast. And they mention that Michals had a series of PDFs he made to send to friends starting in 2020 during the pandemic, where he takes items from his archive, new drawings, etc. And the archive (with the short emails he attached them to) has 87 PDFs linked. They also link to his Vimeo account, with dozens of shorts. One of the PDFs, called Phartography, has an overpainted Cartier-Bresson photo.
Source: museumofnonvisibleart.com
now we have featured Todd Snider before and he makes me laugh but this is precess . . . . . Louie Louie!
Wow someone posted this on Flackennabok . . . . . . .
What goes around . . . . . .

David Hockney was a friend and an incredible painter. I knew him during the 1960s and kept a friendship going till he died on Thursday, the 11th of June. He was very clever witty and fun to be with.His paintings often gave off a feeling of great joy. Nancy and I enjoyed visiting his studios in California where we took a drive along Mulholland Drive which he made famous all over again in his sensational paintings.Or in his London studio. The rooms were filled with paintings. Often some of the most recent pictures that he had done. He would talk about them and his very particular views on art. He felt that it was important to see correctly. He wasn’t a great fan of perspective and was always involved in inventing new ways to view the world. His many paintings, drawings, films and other media like iPad drawing he took readily to and mastered.He was a serious Chain Smoker and believed it was everyone’s right to smoke like the days when he and I had been brought up in smoke filled rooms. We visited him once in Bridlington, Yorkshire. He met us at the train station and drove us to his house in a smoke filled car.We will miss his fabulous personality, his laconic wit and his erudite views on how to look at the world.Rest in peace, David. We love you.Paul
Aaah technology mixed with Bluegrass roots!