TRIPPP Performs Tennessee Whiskey at the Rector Labor Day Picnic - Rector, AR - 9-2-19
Thanks to the folks in Rector, Arkansas for inviting us to play at the Rector Labor Day Picnic. Great crowd and great night!
ABOUT TRIPPP:
TRIPPP is a band of 18-year-old triplet brothers from Jonesboro, Arkansas. The band includes JD Stafford (lead vocals, drums), Treyson Stafford (bass guitar, stand up bass, vocals), and Chaz Stafford (guitar, fiddle, vocals). TRIPPP plays a mix of country, Southern rock, classic rock, blues, and bluegrass cover songs and originals. They have just finished their first professionally recorded EP, which includes four original songs. It’s produced by Jon Conley, long-time guitar player for Kenny Chesney, and was recorded at Sonic Eden Studios in Nashville.
Their awards include: Finalists for “Young Artist of the Year” at the 2019 Arkansas Country Music Awards; “Best Band/Musician” in the 2019 Jonesboro Occasions Magazine Readers’ Choice Awards; “Best Local Band” in the 2019 Jonesboro Radio Group Best of Northeast Arkansas Awards; Finalists in the 2017 Mid-South Fair Youth Talent Show in Memphis; and the 2018 “Fulton’s Got Talent” champions in Fulton, Kentucky, winning the opportunity to open for the Grammy Award winning Kentucky Headhunters.
In addition to their busy TRIPPP schedule these high school seniors can be found playing various sports, participating in their school choir and school musicals, and serving as part of the praise band for their church youth group. JD and Chaz were members of the 2018 State Champion Jonesboro High School basketball team, Chaz and Treyson run for the JHS cross country team, and Treyson is a letterman on the JHS swim team and is overcoming autism. They’ve been playing music together since they were six years old when they began studying fiddle at Jonesboro Suzuki Institute. They began vocal training at Jonesboro Public Schools at age seven and moved on to learn other instruments at Back Beat Music in Jonesboro at age eight.
They have performed at nearly 100 festivals, fairs, restaurants, and other venues in the past two years. Recent appearances include The Bluebird Café, Douglas Corner, and Songwriters Night at the Commodore Grille in Nashville, Tennessee; The Johnny Cash Heritage Festival in Dyess, AR; Jonesboro BBQ and Music Festival and the Northeast Arkansas District Fair in Jonesboro, AR; and Lafayette’s Music Room in Memphis, TN. Some of their biggest musical influences include Chris Stapleton, The Eagles, Johnny Cash, and Tyler Childers. They have been an opening act for artists such as The Kentucky Headhunters, Matt Stell, Adam Wakefield (“The Voice” Runner-up), Morris Day and the Time, and Smash Mouth.
TRIPPP has helped raise more than $6,000 for Make-A-Wish in the last three years with various fundraisers and musical events. The money was used to help grant the wishes of two teenagers with critical illnesses. They have also donated their time to raise money for March of Dimes, Race for the Cure, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, The Delta Symphony Orchestra, and The Humane Society.
Website: TheBandTRIPPP.com
Music: YouTube.com/c/TheBandTRIPPP
Facebook: facebook.com/TheBandTrippp/
Instagram/Twitter: @TheBandTRIPPP
Booking: TRIPPP@suddenlink.net 870-761-8737
RAVENDEN
raving in ravenden
2016-05-28 Rex McGee and John Garris @ Rooster Walk Music & Arts Festival
Rex McGee is known by 3-finger style banjo players all over the world as a leading innovator for a humble instrument. His respected reputation amongst his musical peers extends to other instruments including fiddle and guitar. His performing acclaim is perhaps surpassed by his creative composing and sought after teaching skills. His non-musical career as a pharmacist spans back to 1993 and has contributed to concealing his public profile by limiting his touring and recorded output.
Rex’s release in 2000, 24 Creations for Solo Banjo, showcased bluegrass, baroque, atonal, jazz, Irish, rock and other less easily labeled styles and won the affection of adventurous banjo music fans worldwide. His playing and composing were featured on mandolinist Tony Williamson’s grammy nominated Sessions At McBane Mill and also the award-winning World Music release by Footloose, Trip to the Moon in 2005. His travels of the US and Canada with flatpicking guitar legend Larry Keel and renowned newgrass vocalist John Cowan produced collaborations with Vassar Clements, Tony Rice, Pat Flynn and many other acoustic musical greats.
* * *
In a day of digital trickery in the music world, it may be tempting to think the impossible guitar sounds credited to John Garris are merely a product of the latest simulating software. His craft is one that must be seen to be believed, and as his travels have rarely taken him outside of his native North Carolina the man and is music has a mythical element about it.
A multiple contest winner as a youth, he began playing in a family band as a three-finger style banjo player early in the 1980’s and was well on his way to developing into the enigmatic guitar rumor he is today when he met Rex McGee in 1987.
His playing pushes multiple technical boundaries of the possible on acoustic steel string guitar with regards to volume, speed, tone and abundance of creativity. His stylistic versatility makes Kripplekrunk possible as many guitar players may be able to excel at a couple of genres, but his mastery of bluegrass, jazz, swing, Irish, rock, funk, and multiple ethnic musics normally would require 3 or 4 players.
Utility Bill at Neives in Winfield, Ks.
From the Beginning, Emerson Lake & Palmer
Driving Rock N Roll HWY, Beatles, 10,000lb Meteor & More
MORE DETAILS (Click “Show More”)
Join Me On Patreon:
Support Channel:
My name is Eric and I travel with my 26lb cat, “Jax” in a 2012 Coachmen Mirada 32BH Class A Motorhome on a Ford Super Duty truck chassis. (V10 Triton) We travel about 35 miles a day chasing 70 degrees year-round. I travel with a 2009 Honda CMX 250 on the back of my RV on a Titan Ramp 600lb carrier. Bike goes 78mph and gets 70mpg. Here is my gear & some popular questions answered:
Gear: (UPDATED 2019)*
*Video: Canon M50 Mirrorless
*Main Vlog Lens: Rokinon 12mm 2.0F EF-M
*Stabilizer: Zhiyun Crane 2
*Additional Lenses: Canon 11-22mm ef-m, 15-45mm ef-m, 50mm ef-s, 75-300mm ef-s & 10-18mm ef-s
*Audio: (On Camera) Rode VideoMic Pro+ With Rycote VMP+ Deadcat
*GoPro 7 Black for water/action shots
*GoPro Hero 6 Silver with Purple Panda Lavalier Lapel mic for Driving Narration
*GoPro Hero 4 Black for Timelapses
*SJ4000 for driving shots out the front window.
*iPhone 11 Pro for discreet filming
Time Lapses: Gopro Hero 4: 2 second intervals. Sped up 1200x, cropped 4K down to 1080 for panning
Night Lapses: Gopro Hero 4 Black manual settings: 800 ISO, 30 second Shutter, 3000K WB, Protune On
Slow Motion: Shot 1080p 240fps. Reduced to 8% in Post Production
Additional Audio: Sony ICD-PX333
Editing Laptop: 2019 MacBook Pro 2.3 GHz Intel 8-Core i9, 32gb Ram, Radeon Pro Vega 16 (4gb) Graphics, 2TB SSD.
Editing Software: Adobe Premiere Pro CC
Editing Encoder: Adobe Encoder - Presets: MP4 VBR H.264 16mbps
Aerial Drone Shots: DJI Mavic Air 2.7K Downscaled to 1080p
RV MPG: 7-8mpg depending on generator use.
Solar: 1280 Watts (320x4)
Charge Controller: Victron MPPT 150/85-TR
Inverter/Charger: Victron 3000 watt MultiPlus
Batteries: Battle Born Lithium 100ah x 5 = 500 amp hours.
Mobile Wifi: AT&T Unlimited & Verizon Unlimited
Music: youtube.com/audiolibrary
Jax is a MaineCoon/Ragdoll Tabby mix. He weighs 26lbs. Born April 21st 2010.
Motorcycle: 2009 Honda CMX 250 (Rebel)
Tennessee Hayride by Audionautix is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
Artist:
Flatpick on a fiddle tune
Flat pick , Winfield Kansas Bluegrass Festival 2012, Kite Camp
Out of the Woods, melodic banjo.
Jammin' little Irish reel, learned at the behest of the Walnut Valley Festival's celebrated Carp Camp. They publish a list of homework beforehand which I think is a wonderful idea.
RDMVTL 7470 ~ 3/20/2005 ROAD DOG [13] EST/CST] TENNESSEE /MISSISSIPPI/ALABAMA
MITCHELL , TENNESSEE ~ ENTER CENTRAL TIME ZONE ~
ON RT 65
8:17 AM (EST) BECOMES 7:17 AM (CST)
My Father~In~Law is on his cell phone arguing with his wife in Beaver Park , NY. All the while flying down the mountain with one hand on the wheel & a blazing cigarette in the other.
#############################################
CAMERA CLOCK IS RESET TO REFLECT CENTRAL TIME
#############################################
Orson continues to have a heated discussion with his wife who happens to be at the house in NY. Approaching
EAST RT 24 & SOUTH 65 TO NASHVILLE AND RT 24 WEST TO CLARKSVILLE
EXIT 86 TO EAST 24 & EAST 40
CHATTANOOGA / KNOXVILLE
ROUTE 65 SOUTH TO RT 40 WEST HUNTSVILLE / MEMPHIS
1 MILE
VIEWS OF NASHVILLE , TN
ON RT 40 WEST = MEMPHIS
PASSING THE GREYHOUND BUS GOING TO NEW ORLEANS
RAILROAD
194 MILES TO MEMPHIS
8:07 AM (CST)
HARPETH RIVER
8:17 AM (CST)
DICKSON , TN ~ Orson & I pulled into the Pilot to weigh the truck , get some fuel & grab some soda.
On The Move = An old Dodge being hauled on a flatbed.
8:42 PM (CST)
HURRICANE MILLS , TN ~ ROUTE 13 EXIT 143 LINDEN & WAVERLY
ON RT 40 W...
BUFFALO RIVER @ STERLING HOLLOW , TN
(MISSED THE TENNESSEE RIVER ! )
9:32 AM (CST) WESTPORT , TN
EXIT 116 NATCHEZ TRACE STATE PARK 1 MILE SIGN
MILE 100 @ JACKSON 19 MILES
MEMPHIS 97 MILES
9:55 AM (CST)
JUNCTION = EXIT 82 B RT 45 NORTH TO MILAN &
EXIT 82 A RT 45 SOUTH TO JACKSON
CONTINUING ON RT 40 WEST
JACKSON , TN ZONE ...
EXIT 80A RT 45 SOUTH BYPASS JACKSON NEXT RIGHT
EXIT 80B RT 45 NORTH BYPASS HUMBOLDT
CD RT 40 WEST
CASEY JONES HOME & RAILROAD MUSEUM
MEMPHIS GIBSON GUITAR BILLBOARD
COVINGTON , TN NEXT RIGHT (RT 40 BELLS , TN)
10:30 AM (CST) TENNESSEE HIGHWAY PATROL SCALES / WEIGH STATION @ STANTON , TN
10:44 AM (CST) EXIT 35 ROUTE 59 COVINGTON SOMERVILLE 1 MI
MASON , TN ZONE
11:01:01 AM (CST) MEMPHIS ZONE
GERMANTOWN EXIT 16B
ON RT 40 W...THEN ONTO EXIT 16A
NOW @ CORDOVA , TN
LOOKING FOR CHIMNEY ROCK BLVD
WALKING INTO AMERICA ~ TENNESSEE
1:30 PM (CST) MY EVERY STATE ROCK COLLECTION
1:41 PM (CST) ON THE MOVE AGAIN W/ RAILROAD & CORDOVA STATION MTM ~ RT 193
1:49 PM (CST) WALNUT GROVE ROAD TO RT 240 @ MEMPHIS , TN.
JUMPING ONTO ROUTE 240 WEST FROM ROUTE 177 S GERMANTOWN ROAD
ONTO WEST 240 TO INTERSTATE 55
TRAIN ON BNSF OVERPASS & HUMP YARD / TOWER @ MEMPHIS INTERMODAL FACILITY
OLIVE BRANCH , TN ONTO ROUTE 78 FUTURE I~22
2:18 PM (CST) MISSISSIPPI STATE SIGN
3:07 PM (CST) POT HOLES & CRACKS ON ROADWAY
SMOOTH HIGHWAY
RAILROAD OX
LAKE CENTER 6 MILES
NEW ALBANY 32 MILES
TUPELO 55 MILES
FUTURE I~ 22 CORRIDOR SIGN
EXIT 37 LAKE CENTER 1 MILE SIGN
RAILROAD
3:41 PM (CST) BUS
END ROUTE 78
TUPELO REGIONAL AIRPORT & BUFFALO PARK SIGN
RT 22 / 78 EAST
ELVIS PRESLEY BIRTHPLACE & MUSEUM SIGN
EXIT 86 A RT 45 SOUTH TUPELO 1/2 MILE SIGN
EXIT 86 B RT 45 NORTH CORINTH 1/2 MILE & TUPELO 86 A ...
RAILROAD
ELVIS PRESLEY LANDMARKS / TOMBIGBEE STATE PARK EXIT 87
4:01 PM (EST)
TENN ~ TOM WATERWAY
RAILROAD
4:40 PM (CST) RT 25 JCT 1 MILE
REED'S CREEK , MS
EXIT 113 RT 23 TREMONT / SMITHVILLE , MS
TREMONT = BIRTHPLACE OF TAMMY WYNETTE
RT 22/78 EAST...
ALABAMA STATE SIGN = 4:49 PM (CST)
EAST RT 78 & RT 4
ROAD MAP
(ONTO RT 118 @ ELDRIDGE , AL)
ON ROUTE 118
5:34 PM (CST) RAILROAD @ CARBON HILL , AL
PARALLEL THE RAILROAD ...
ON INTERSTATE
LADY GIVING A HAND JOB TO SWERVING DRIVER
BUS
EXIT 61 ROUTE 69 JASPER / TUSCALOOSA SIGN
RAILROAD
NIGHT TIME ~ ALABAMA POLICE
6:35 PM (CST) BIRMINGHAM , ALABAMA
INTERMODAL / AUTO RACK FACILITY
JUNCTION ROUTE 65 NORTH / SOUTH TO ROUTE 59
HUNTSVILLE / MONTGOMERY SIGN
EXIT 261 A RT 20 EAST/RT 59 NORTH / GADSDEN / ATLANTA EXIT ONLY
RT 65 SOUTH MONTGOMERY
EXIT 261 B RT 20 WEST / RT 59 SOUTH
TUSCALOOSA
ONTO ROUTE 65 SOUTH TO MONTGOMERY
END SECOND DAY OF DELIVERY DRIVING
MOTEL
(G)
Theresa Vaughn, Buckbee banjos, Rogers & Hammerstein's Broadway music.
Here I'm playing our first 1880 Buckbee banjo replica before it was polished ( was testing it for sound).
The sound, look and feel of these replicas is very identical to the original 1880 Buckbee it was copied it from. Five more replicas are being built now. Some will be all silver- plated brass , others will have polished brass rims with silver- plated hardware. For more details and information please visit my
page:
If you like above link please pass it along to friends who might like it.
This test video shows the close relationship and tight evolution from pre-civil music to our present Rogers and Hammerstein's Broadway music. I begin with Johnny Booker by Joel Walker Sweeney ...very early banjo developer, Oh Susanna by Stephen Foster, Turkey in the Straw ( traditional ), Little Annie Rooney by Michael Nolan ( from England ). Theresa performed Little Annie Rooney many times on Broadway in the mid 1890's. It was a very big hit for her. Little Annie Rooney opened the door to a more modern music. Then I play a few Rogers and Hammerstein Cinderella tunes to show the connectivity and entanglement of it all.
I may have a job for a young singer who can sing these tunes.
... The tunes in above video are in B except one is in F
My email address: len777@roadrunner.com
10 Creepy Mysterious Trips Into The Wilderness That Went Horribly Wrong
10 Creepy Mysterious Trips Into The Wilderness That Went Horribly Wrong.
For many people, the wilderness represents paradise since it provides an opportunity to get away from the rigors of everyday life and experience nature. This is why millions of people take trips into the wilderness every year in order to participate in activities such as hiking, hunting, and camping.
However, the wilderness can also be a very creepy and ominous place. If something goes horribly wrong, you are a long way from civilization and it may be impossible to seek help. It’s very easy for a person to disappear into the wilderness and never be seen again. In most cases, the likely explanation is that they simply got lost and succumbed to the elements, but some trips into the wilderness are shrouded in mystery.
???? Thank for watching! If You enjoy it, please Like, Share and Subscribe this Chanel. Everyday we just publish one or two videos????
Subscribe Now:
Music: Kevin Macleod
Artist:
Clarksville, TN - State of Tennessee Old Time Banjo Championship
Suggested reading - Music from the South is special and comes from many cultures blended together. Thank you for listening. State of Tennessee
Old Time Banjo Championship
Daniel Rothwell
Smyth County Jam 2013-11-11 Unedited
The Smyth County Jam is held every Monday night starting around 6:45 pm at the Lions Club Building in Chilhowie, VA. There is no admission charge for attending the jam, but donations are welcome. All donations go to the Chilhowie Lions Club to help pay for the use of the building. You can find more detailed information at scjam.com or smythcountyjam.com
Our goal is to provide a musical event that will showcase the various musicians and singers in the surrounding area while teaching the aspects of musicianship as well as encouraging the development of new talents while at the same time providing entertainment as a service to the community and the county.
The Smyth County Jam is a music event, so bring your instruments and join the fun or just come to listen to some of the best Bluegrass, Old Time, and Acoustic music the area has to offer.
The jam is made up of an ever increasing group of pickers, singers, and listeners. On an average night, we may have in excess of 50 musicians show up. We have seasoned pros as well as beginning artists attend our jams. These are not free-for-all jams, so try to learn and follow our jamming etiquette.
The stage show is made up of various groups that are most of the time put together only minutes before in the back rooms. This really lends to the excitement as you never know what will happen on stage. We have entire bands show up from time to time and they are always welcome to participate in this open mic section of the jam.
We would like to thank everyone that has helped to make the Smyth County Jam what it is today.
This video was recorded for the sole purpose of documenting the Smyth County Jam for historical purposes only.
Auburn Coach Wife Kristi Malzahn Agrees with Match & eHarmony: Men are Jerks
My advice is this: Settle! That's right. Don't worry about passion or intense connection. Don't nix a guy based on his annoying habit of yelling Bravo! in movie theaters. Overlook his halitosis or abysmal sense of aesthetics. Because if you want to have the infrastructure in place to have a family, settling is the way to go. Based on my observations, in fact, settling will probably make you happier in the long run, since many of those who marry with great expectations become more disillusioned with each passing year. (It's hard to maintain that level of zing when the conversation morphs into discussions about who's changing the diapers or balancing the checkbook.)
Obviously, I wasn't always an advocate of settling. In fact, it took not settling to make me realize that settling is the better option, and even though settling is a rampant phenomenon, talking about it in a positive light makes people profoundly uncomfortable. Whenever I make the case for settling, people look at me with creased brows of disapproval or frowns of disappointment, the way a child might look at an older sibling who just informed her that Jerry's Kids aren't going to walk, even if you send them money. It's not only politically incorrect to get behind settling, it's downright un-American. Our culture tells us to keep our eyes on the prize (while our mothers, who know better, tell us not to be so picky), and the theme of holding out for true love (whatever that is—look at the divorce rate) permeates our collective mentality.
Even situation comedies, starting in the 1970s with The Mary Tyler Moore Show and going all the way to Friends, feature endearing single women in the dating trenches, and there's supposed to be something romantic and even heroic about their search for true love. Of course, the crucial difference is that, whereas the earlier series begins after Mary has been jilted by her fiancé, the more modern-day Friends opens as Rachel Green leaves her nice-guy orthodontist fiancé at the altar simply because she isn't feeling it. But either way, in episode after episode, as both women continue to be unlucky in love, settling starts to look pretty darn appealing. Mary is supposed to be contentedly independent and fulfilled by her newsroom family, but in fact her life seems lonely. Are we to assume that at the end of the series, Mary, by then in her late 30s, found her soul mate after the lights in the newsroom went out and her work family was disbanded? If her experience was anything like mine or that of my single friends, it's unlikely.
And while Rachel and her supposed soul mate, Ross, finally get together (for the umpteenth time) in the finale of Friends, do we feel confident that she'll be happier with Ross than she would have been had she settled down with Barry, the orthodontist, 10 years earlier? She and Ross have passion but have never had long-term stability, and the fireworks she experiences with him but not with Barry might actually turn out to be a liability, given how many times their relationship has already gone up in flames. It's equally questionable whether Sex and the City's Carrie Bradshaw, who cheated on her kindhearted and generous boyfriend, Aidan, only to end up with the more exciting but self-absorbed Mr. Big, will be better off in the framework of marriage and family. (Some time after the breakup, when Carrie ran into Aidan on the street, he was carrying his infant in a Baby Björn. Can anyone imagine Mr. Big walking around with a Björn?)