Music Of The Sixties

Remembers classic songs from the late 1950s and 1960s
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winston
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Post by winston »

Dusty Springfield was another great singer from the sixties. I heard she passed away a while back.
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brammy
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Post by brammy »

Yea... Dusty Springfield died of breast cancer at age 59 in 1999.

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winston
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Post by winston »

Kent don't you think that she looks like Ann Margret in that Pic?

That's a rellay good photo of her. Too bad. As Harrison wrote "All Things Must Pass"
“We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.” - Albert Einstein

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winston
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Post by winston »

rellay????????? S/B really Duh!!!!!!!!!!!
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royclough
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Post by royclough »

Yes Brian she does look like Ann Margret, interesting here in UK we spell Margret as Margaret.

Not the most flattering pic of her, in her heyday she was some looker but rumoured to be gay, but as Rod Steiger said in No Way To Treat A Lady "That Doesn't Make Me A Bad Person" a true sentiment.
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winston
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Post by winston »

I spell it the same way as you do. For obvious reasons. Anyway before I posted that message, something told me to look her name up to make sure I was spelling it correctly . Didnt want to get told off by some of our American friends.

Too funny.
“We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.” - Albert Einstein

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royclough
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Post by royclough »

Yep Americans never learnt to spell some English words correctly. What is a faucet anyway, Tap is far better. Why are toliets called washrooms
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Post by randyz »

Roy: At the risk of going 'off topic', let me clear it up for you. A toilet is still a toilet, but over here it is found in a public restroom or private bathroom. We don't use the terms 'washroom', 'water closet' or 'WC'. More importantly, American plumbing almost always works better than most plumbing found in Britain or the European mainland. I might be from Texas, but during my travels to England I'm often mistaken as being Canadian. Rather than be offended, I simply chalk it up to being raised by strict parents who insisted that I speak clearly and use proper grammar at all times.
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Post by royclough »

Randy

My comments were tonque in check no offence was intended believe me, just my sense of humour, sure though when in Canada my brother who lives there now kept refering to washroom, when in my book he meant toilet.
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Post by jingle_jangle »

Ann-Margret was Swedish-American, gentlemen, and her parents chose to use the Sewdish spelling.
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Post by jingle_jangle »

Sewdish, get it?
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Post by randyz »

Roy: No offense was taken (but notice how I spell the word correctly). Ha ha!
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winston
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Post by winston »

Hey Roy aren't typos great. "Tongue in check" Thats brilliant almost biblical in nature.
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"You do not really understand something unless you can explain it to your grandmother" - Albert Einstein
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winston
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Post by winston »

Paul Sewdish sounds like something Lennon would write. She was a Sewdish Lirg who lived in Helstinki. Now you've got me doing it.
“We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.” - Albert Einstein

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Post by jingle_jangle »

I sat belonely by a tree

Humbled fat and small

A little lady sing at me

I couldn't see at all...

(memorized at age 15 from the LIFE magazine article entitled "Beatalic Graphospasms", on Lennon's first book.)
“I say in speeches that a plausible mission of artists is to make people appreciate being alive at least a little bit. I am then asked if I know of any artists who pulled that off. I reply, 'The Beatles did.”
― Kurt Vonnegut
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