Catch 22 Live

Live! is Catch 22's first full-length live release, although fan-recorded live tracks were bonus features on several previous albums. Roughly a third of the album is devoted to Keasbey Nights, another third to Alone in a Crowd, and the remainder to Dinosaur Sounds. A bonus DVD includes footage from the concert, as well as a variety of extras. However, former frontman Tomas Kalnoky is conspicuously absent from the footage of the band's early days.

Track listing

DVD Features

  • Footage of August 30, 2004 concert.
  • Embarrassing Photos (Photos of band members acting foolish)
  • On the Road (Home video footage from the band's tour bus)
  • At the Show (Footage from earlier concerts filmed by fans)
  • Humble Beginnings (Home videos and old photographs of band members)
  • Music Videos: Wine Stained Lips, Point the Blame, Hard to Impress
  • Personnel

  • Pat Kays - bass guitar
  • Ian McKenzie - trombone, vocals
  • Ryan Eldred - saxophone, vocals
  • Chris Greer - drum kit
  • Kevin Gunther - trumpet, vocals
  • Pat Calpin - guitar, vocals
  • Live (The Dubliners album)

    Live is an album by The Dubliners recorded live at the Fiesta Club,Sheffield and released on the Polydor label in 1974. This was to be Ronnie Drew's last recording with The Dubliners for five years as he left to pursue a solo career. Also following this album, Ciarán Bourke ceased to be a full-time member of the group when he suffered a brain hemorrhage. He sings "All for Me Grog" here. The reels that open this album (and which first were released on the group's 1967 studio album A Drop of the Hard Stuff) have become the opening instrumental medley at most of their concerts since.

    Track listing

    Side One:

  • "Fairmoyle Lasses and Sporting Paddy"
  • "Black Velvet Band"
  • "Whiskey in the Jar"
  • "All for the Grog"
  • "The Belfast Hornpipe/Tim Maloney"
  • "The Four Poster Bed/Colonel Rodney"
  • "Finnegan's Wake"
  • "McAlpine's Fusiliers"
  • Side Two:

  • "Seven Drunken Nights"
  • "Reels - Scholar/Teetotaller/The High Reel"
  • "Home Boys Home"
  • "Dirty Old Town"
  • "Blue Mountain Rag"
  • "The Wild Rover"
  • "Weile Waile"
  • Live (Jake Shimabukuro album)

    Live is Jake Shimabukuro's 2009 solo album. It was released in April 2009, and consists of live in-concert performances from various venues around the world, including New York, Chicago, Japan, and Hawaii.

    Live peaked at number 5 in Billboard's Top World Music Albums in 2009 and 2010. The album won the 2010 Na Hoku Hanohano Award for Instrumental Album of the Year, and also garnered Shimabukuro the award for Favorite Entertainer of the Year. In addition, it won the 2010 Hawaii Music Award for Best Ukulele Album.

    AllMusic noted that, "Shimabukuro is a monster musician and boldly takes the ukulele where no ukulele has ever gone before, dazzling listeners with his blinding speed, melodic invention, and open-ended improvisations of remarkable virtuosity. Before Shimabukuro, the idea of spending an evening listing to a solo ukulele player was probably most people's idea of hell, but the 17 solo efforts here never bore. They show Shimabukuro's range and his humor as well."

    Liar (Rollins Band song)

    "Liar" is a song by Rollins Band and the lead single from their fourth full-length album, Weight, released in 1994. It was the album's only charting single and one of the group's best known songs. "Liar" is something of a live favorite for Rollins Band, with its spoken verses usually improvised or changed somewhat from the studio take.

    Both a short edit (4:19) and a longer "video edit" (4:49) were distributed as CD singles in various territories, often with one or more unreleased tracks from the Weight sessions added; these and other outtakes were included in the 2004 release Weighting.

    The video edit of "Liar" was featured in the song's music video and features a different vocal track and slightly different lyrics in the opening section. Directed by Anton Corbijn, the video itself features alternating depictions of vocalist Henry Rollins: during the song's verses, he is dressed in a plain black T-shirt as he speaks in a calm, soothing tone about trust and friendship; during the chorus segments he is shirtless and painted red, wildly jumping and flailing about as he screams derisively at his audience. He is also seen dressed in a Superman parody costume, a police officer uniform and a nun's habit.

    Liar (disambiguation)

    A liar is a person who tells a lie.

    It can also refer to:

    Film and television

  • Liar (film), UK name for the 1997 film Deceiver, starring Chris Penn, Tim Roth, Ellen Burstyn, and Renée Zellweger
  • Liar, a 2002 UK quiz show hosted by Paul Kaye
  • The Liar (Valehtelija), a 1981 Finnish film directed by Mika Kaurismäki
  • Liar Liar, a 1997 American comedy film starring Jim Carrey
  • The Liar (1961 film), a West German film directed by Ladislao Vajda
  • The Liars (film), a 1996 French film
  • Literature

  • "Liar!" (short story), a short story by Isaac Asimov
  • "The Liar" (short story), a short story by Henry James
  • The Liar (novel), a 1991 novel by Stephen Fry
  • Liar (novel), a 2009 novel by Justine Larbalestier
  • Music

  • Liars (band), an American indie rock band
  • The Liar, an American video artist and member of Angelspit
  • Albums

  • Liar (Harisu album)
  • Liar (The Jesus Lizard album)
  • Liars (Liars album)
  • Liars (Todd Rundgren album)
  • Liar/Dead Is the New Alive, an EP by Emilie Autumn
  • Songs

  • "Liar" (Russ Ballard song), a 1971 hit for Three Dog Night
  • Lyre

    The lyre (Greek: λύρα, lýra) is a string instrument known for its use in Greek classical antiquity and later periods. The lyre is similar in appearance to a small harp but with distinct differences. The word comes via Latin from the Greek; the earliest reference to the word is the Mycenaean Greek ru-ra-ta-e, meaning "lyrists" and written in the Linear B script. The lyres of Ur, excavated in ancient Mesopotamia (modern Iraq), date to 2500 BC. The earliest picture of a lyre with seven strings appears in the famous sarcophagus of Hagia Triada (a Minoan settlement in Crete). The sarcophagus was used during the Mycenaean occupation of Crete (1400 BC). The recitations of the Ancient Greeks were accompanied by lyre playing.

    The lyre of classical antiquity was ordinarily played by being strummed with a plectrum (pick), like a guitar or a zither, rather than being plucked with the fingers as with a harp. The fingers of the free hand silenced the unwanted strings in the chord. However, later lyres were played with a bow, including in Europe and parts of the Middle East.

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    Liar (Live)

    by: Sex Pistols

    lie lie lie lie liar you lie lie lie lie lie
    tell me why tell me why why d'you have to lie
    should've realised that you should've
    told the truth should've realised you know what
    i'll do
    you're in suspension
    you're a liar
    now i wanna know know know know
    i wanna know why you never
    look me in the face
    broke a confidence just to please
    your ego shold've realised
    you know what i know
    you're in suspension
    you're a liar
    i know where you go every body you know
    i know everything that you do or say
    so when you tell lies i'll always be in your way
    i'm nobody's fool and i know all 'cos i know
    what i know
    you're in suspension you're a liar
    you're a liar you're liar
    lie lie lie lie lie lie lie lie
    lie lie lie lie liar you lie lie lie lie
    i think you're funny you're funny ha ha
    i don't need it don't need your blah blah
    should've realised i know what you are
    you're in suspension you're a liar
    you're a liar you're a liar
    lie lie




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