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Before Things End, They Must Begin

This is not Facebook.

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Surprise! No ads on the side. No tracking of your likes and dislikes. No spam posts. Of course, nobody knows nor cares about this site, so I'm not tempted to have any of these things. Which brings up an interesting question: What does Facebook have that I don't? Well, I don't know anything about you at all. That's a start.
 
 

Scribo, Ergo Sum.

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Since when are millions of blogs enough?

 

Okay.  I feel your pain.  But this is not a New York Times blog, not a Blogspot.com blog, not Facebook, not anything that's likely to steal your information.  And I don't even know what should be on a personal blog.  Anyway, feel free to register on this site and contribute.  Words, that is, not money.java

 

An assortment of typical tunes, 1925 - 1933

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Well, lucky you. You get to listen to randomly selected 78's: a representative sample of tunes from the end of the Roaring Twenties to the beginning of the Great Depression. Songs for Today, you might say.
Songs for Today from Yesterday
Spell of the Blues. The High Hatters, Dec. 1927
Wipin' the Pan. The High Hatters, Dec. 1927
Did you ever see a dream walking? Gene Kardos a.h. Orch., 1931
You're such a comfort to me. Gene Kardos a.h.Orch., 1931
Bidin' my time. The BlueJeans, 1929.
Gimme a Pigfoot. Bessie Smith, 1933.
Take Me for a Buggy Ride. Bessie Smith, 1933.
Home on the Range. Will Osborne, 1932.
Blue River. Jean Goldkette a.h.Orchestra, 1932.
When the Morning Glories Wake Up. Jean Goldkette, 1932.

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