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Turn The Page

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Everything posted by Turn The Page

  1. As good as any they have ever put out. "Turn The Page" is my favorite RUSH song of all.
  2. We drove up from Columbia. The show was great. I was shocked at how friggin hard Neil is still pounding on the skins and cymbals. The kit looked incredible. "Moving Pictures" brought back so many memories. Came out my freshman year at USC. Still have my vinyl copy. Thanks again guys!
  3. No Charlotte date. Greensboro, NC and Greenville, SC.
  4. "Every day we're standing in a time capsule Racing down a river from the past Every day we're standing in a wind tunnel Facing down the future coming fast"
  5. "Lakeside Park Willows in the breeze Lakeside Park So many memories Laughing rides Midway lights Shining stars on summer nights."
  6. "Turn The Page" has some excellent drumming on it. Espically the bass drum part. Unreal.
  7. QUOTE (umoveme @ Jun 9 2008, 05:51 PM) Carrol Burnett What a show!
  8. Mash, Good Times, Sanford and Son & The Jeffersons.
  9. "Lakeside Park." 1978.
  10. Tom Petty w/ Steve Winwood at Verizon in Charlotte on July 11th. 9 dayes before Rush.
  11. QUOTE (gleamingalloyaircar81 @ Jun 5 2008, 10:40 PM) QUOTE (Turn The Page @ Jun 5 2008, 12:57 PM) My 7 year old loves em. Great atste in music at 7 years old!!! Awesome! Do you like them TTP? Yes I do.
  12. "Turn The Page" of course. This is a wonderful drumming album. It(Hold Your Fire) came out around the same time as Yes's "Big Generator". Two very powerful albums that I listen to often.
  13. I took my 7 year old to see it. We enjoyed it.
  14. The character was based in part around a former High School teacher of mine here in South Carolina. QUOTE McQueen's character Hilts was based on amalgamation of several characters, including Major Dave Jones, a flight commander during Doolittle's Raid who made it to Europe and was shot down and captured and Colonel Jerry Sage, who was an OSS agent in the North African desert when he was captured. Col. Sage was able to don a flight jacket and pass as a flier otherwise he would have been executed as a spy. Another inspiration was probably Sqn Ldr Eric Foster who escaped no less than seven times from German prisoner-of-war camps. QUOTE Sage spent more than 30 years in the Army before retiring in 1972. He taught in Columbia, S.C., and served as an assistant to the president of the U. of South Carolina.
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