39 Results for : deadhead
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Musical subcultures
Musical subcultures ab 26.49 € als Taschenbuch: Goth subculture Rave Emo Beatnik Freetekno Cassette culture Filk music Juggalo Punk subculture Rockabilly New Romanticism Riot grrrl Northern soul Deadhead Poseur Romo Straight edge Free party Universal Zulu Nation. Aus dem Bereich: Bücher, English, International, Englische Taschenbücher,- Shop: hugendubel
- Price: 26.49 EUR excl. shipping
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Distant Danger: The 1988 Mystery Writers of America Anthology , Hörbuch, Digital, ungekürzt, 298min
The stories for this annual collection of the Mystery Writers of America were selected for their strange and exotic locales. Breathtaking suspense, cold-blooded crime, and challenging twists - set in the four corners of the world - make this recording a chilling audio experience. We suggest you listen with the lights on! "Deadhead Coming Down" by Margaret Maron: There's nothing exotic about driving an 18-wheeler, but 20 minutes off the interstate breaks the monotony. "A Little Piece of Room" by Barbara Owens: In the Arizona desert, a suspicious, crippled hermit forges an unlikely bond with a mysterious young visitor. "The Matchstick Hut" by Jean Darling: Malloy has 10 hours of leave in Monrovia, Liberia. He can't find much as far as entertainment until he runs into an old friend living in strange circumstances. "Night Crawlers" by Joyce Harrington: Mirabelle MacMaster's life has been cramped and inhibited, restricted by her paralyzed, tyrannical father in their eerie, remote home. Then she finds an escape.... "The Smoke People" by Walter Satterthwait: A sudden death amidst the squalor of a Nigerian slum looks like cardiac arrest, but a persistent policeman from the same tribe as the dead man suspects otherwise. "The Treasure of Pachacamac" by James Holding: Felipe de la Vega, professor of archaeology at Lima's San Marcos University, knows that his only living relative, under the influence of an unsavory friend, means to use the professor's years of painstaking research to find a priceless treasure. "The Vultures of Malabar" by Edward D. Hoch: In Bombay, bodies are sometimes left in sacred "towers of silence" to be devoured by vultures, but someone has been entered the towers for some unauthorized purpose. "The Woman in the Shadows" by Stephanie Kay Bendel: Dr. Harwell's patients claim that a few weeks at his Puerto Rico convalescent hotel works wonders, bu ungekürzt. Language: English. Narrator: Roddy McDowall, Nancy Dussault, Arte Johnson, Peter Marshall, Andrew Stevens, Peter Marshall. Audio sample: https://samples.audible.de/bk/pnix/000696/bk_pnix_000696_sample.mp3. Digital audiobook in aax.- Shop: Audible
- Price: 9.95 EUR excl. shipping
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Murder in A Distant Land: Selections from the Mystery Writers of American Anthology, Hörbuch, Digital, 298min
Murder in a Distant Land the stories for this annual collection of the Mystery Writers of America were selected for their strange and exotic locales. Breathtaking suspense, cold-blooded crime, and challenging twists of plot - set in the four corner of the world - make this recording a chilling audio experience. We suggest you listen with the lights on! "Deadhead Coming Down" by Margaret Maron, read by Andrew Stevens: There's nothing exotic about driving an 18-wheeler, but 20 minutes off the interstate is a whole different country - and a little challenge to break the monotony. "A Little Piece of Room" by Barbara Owens, read by Peter Marshall: In the Arizona desert, a suspicious, crippled hermit forges an unlikely bond with a mysterious young visitor. "The Matchstick Hut" by Jean Darling, read by Andrew Stevens: Macker Malloy has 10 hours of leave in Monrovia, Liberia. He can't find much in the way of entertainment until he runs into an old friend living in strange circumstances. "Night Crawlers" By Joyce Harrington, read by Nancy Dussault: Mirabelle MacMaster's life has been cramped and inhibited, restricted by her paralyzed, tyrannical father to their eerie, romete home. What will she do when a means of escape presents itself? "The Smoke People" by Walter Satterthwait, read by Arte Johnson: A sudden death amidst the squalor of a Nigerian slum looks like simple cardiac arrest-but a persistent policeman, a member of the same tribe as the dead man, suspects otherwise. "The Treasure of Pachacamac" by James Holding, read by Peter Marshall: Felipe de la Vega, professor of archaeology at Lima's San Marcos. University, knows that his only living relative, under the influence of an unsavory friend, means to use the professor's years of painstaking research to find a priceless treasure. "The Vultures of Malabar" by Edward D. Hoch, read by Arte Johnson: In Bombay, bodies are sometimes left in sacred "towers o Language: English. Narrator: Nancy Dussault, Arte Johnson, Peter Marshall, Roddy McDowall, Andrew Stevens. Audio sample: https://samples.audible.de/bk/pnix/000223/bk_pnix_000223_sample.mp3. Digital audiobook in aax.- Shop: Audible
- Price: 9.95 EUR excl. shipping
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Deadhead
Deadhead - A Zombie Apocalypse LitRPG Novella: ab 2.9 €- Shop: ebook.de
- Price: 2.90 EUR excl. shipping
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Deadhead Social Science
Deadhead Social Science - 'You Ain't Gonna Learn What You Don't Want to Know': ab 27.49 €- Shop: ebook.de
- Price: 27.49 EUR excl. shipping
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New Sun Rising
Richard Leschen classifies himself as a songwriter/guitar player, with a background ranging from bluegrass and jazz to Turkish folk and Hindustani classical music. New Sun Rising is Leschen's latest release with his trademark cinematic lyrics and improvised guitar playing. Though the lyrics of New Sun Rising are not pop-oriented there are plenty of fills and rolls between syncopated rhythms and melody lines to entertain. The beautiful improvised section following All Saints Day is particularly moving. Leschen, a Grateful Deadhead, follows the Dead's principles and encourages careful listeners with a live recording reminiscent of a poetry reading. The album was superbly recorded by Robbie Duncan at Braeburn Studios (Wellington) and Leschen is joined by blueswoman Carol Bean on backup vocals while poet Chris Price adds percussion to Young Man Down. Torch of Freedom. Written just prior to the swearing in of US president Obama, this gospel addresses neo-conservatism and it's concomitant effects upon the workingclass and apathy for the environment. Scenes of torture precede love's rescue, endowing the narrator with the courage to remain solid as a "rock in an acid ocean." Episode of Susan: The Limit of Love. This reggae song describes the death of lead character, Susan, in an episode of a fictional TV soap. The audience observing the filming ("smoke the stage and focus tight") become more involved with the script to the point of shirking their obligations and "seat themselves" daily in front of a mind-numbing TV set. Finally, there is reality meltdown where the division between audience and actor is blurred. Bardoni's Picasso. An Italian streetartist residing in London is the subject of this ballad. Antonio frames his lover in a painting that is eventually "offered for sale and sold." The unusual time signature in the chorus under the line "angel of redemption" is the listener's clue that Bardoni's affair is a fantasy but serves a spiritual purpose. Auckland's famous busker Luke Hurley is cited in the last lines. Young Man Down. Written during a stint in South Africa, this rock song speaks to the angst of the downtrodden poor in that country. Chris Price's afrorhythm progressively builds while Bean and Leschen's voices unite in the forceful chorus lines. Eve of the Steel Blue Moon. A desert sunset is described by the narrator who gains renewal through the observed quietude. This is the first of a suite of four border songs. Aye General. This simple corrido is about a peasant uprising against a cruel Mexican chancellor. The guitar solos are clean and succinct. Parnassus. Shame, fear, and regret enter the minds of renegades in this surreal cowboy ballad. It was written from scribbled notes in North Canterbury near Parnassus and Homeview Cemetery. The narrative was completed in the Hokianga during a trip with American songwriter Peter Rowan, where Leschen incorporated Rowan's "walls" metaphor for nature, timelessness, and emotion (from his and Bill Monroe's Walls of Time) into the introspective and confused thoughts of the narrating desperado. All Souls Day. A Mexican farmer betters himself by arranging an illegal crossing into the United States. There is a lesson learnt when we discover that the Texas Ranger is in cahoots with the people smuggler. The four minute guitar solo following "a band of mariachis play" symbolizes the ascending soul of Jose-Luis to heaven. The Great Divide. This waltz is a kind of Deadheads lament: what it was to be on the road following the Dead, being at a show, the kindness one meets, the friends made, love affairs. Leschen used the "8th of July" as a throwaway line and it was months later when he realised that this date in 1995 was the penultimate Dead show, which was the last he attended. Mystical ain't it. New Sun Rising. This upbeat little tune is about the birth of a baby in Rarotonga. The muse for this song was a melody by Tarika Sammy from A World Out Of Time by Henry Kaiser and David Lindley in Madagascar. Robbie Duncan says, "great guitar in this one."- Shop: odax
- Price: 25.46 EUR excl. shipping
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