Thank You I heard Ted Nugent on Merv Griffin say 500k ppl YUP I was there,in Sedalia,MO at the Ozark Music Festival '74! $15.00 in advance for 3 days WOW 50frickin yrs! I was almost 17yoa I loved it It was a TRIP fo sho 105°The "Tunnels" Skynard,Tucker,Aerosmith,REO Wolfman jack Remember it well and am proud to have been an attendee to such an event Great shows ✌
@pianoredux751623 күн бұрын
I played this piano at the now defunct Steinway Piano Gallery in Westport Connecticut about 10 years ago. The Mohrs freely admitted that they reversed the special adjustments to its regulation and voicing that Horowitz had used, before Steinway sent it out on tour. It had only some similarity to the way it sounded when Horowitz was alive and playing it. It was a good promotional gimmick to send it across the country, but the restoration of the factory default settings for the action and the hammer felts made it a generic Steinway D rather than a signature Horowitz vehicle.
@FrancisAsin-Gioro25 күн бұрын
Elvis Presley is a lowlife shit. How compared. u imbecile lowlife shit
@jjwilk8738Ай бұрын
Liza Mechie was the victim in S1E3 of 'The First 48' and Golubski featured as a Captain in S2E4, when he gave the go ahead to a 'confidential informant' over the phone and also briefly appeared on camera. Unreal.
@teriw56Ай бұрын
Verna LaBoy does a wonderful portrayal of Annie Fisher we are fortunate to have her in Columbia.
@kayakdog121Ай бұрын
Miller was a tyrant and a bully. A stain on the reputation of Kansas.
@ChemResearchАй бұрын
🎉🎉
@ChemResearchАй бұрын
It's very interesting
@robertgunn10772 ай бұрын
There is no protection that's why a lot won't break the ladder down and tell all it would make the kick ug government crumble
@kellywhite27153 ай бұрын
Julia Lee was is an icon. This was really interesting and made me home sick for KC, too.
@mikemorgan50153 ай бұрын
Great story! I grew up in Lansing/Leavenworth. I'd heard of Vern, but was too young to remember most of this stuff. It's not popular to say these days, but you can't hold norms of the past to modern standards. I remember riding with my parents to Missouri to get liquor and beer on Sundays. There was a toll booth on the Centennial bridge at Leavenworth and I got in trouble for blabbing to the toll booth operator why we were going to Missouri after she innocently asked where we were going. She addressed the question to me, and I didn't hesitate. When my mother started to snap at me, the toll booth lady just laughed and asked them to get some for her too. haha! In those days, drinking and driving was the norm. Fights were common and usually no one got charged. If you go pulled over and were apparently drunk, the police would just follow you home. If you were speeding or ran a red light, they MIGHT make you pour out your drinks or confiscate your beer(I wonder where it ended up? Haha!), but that was usually as far as it went. But I remember actually being pissed off at the cops for taking our beer. Thankfully, I never got in an accident. I told my kids NOT to expect anything close to that when they were driving. Taxis and Ubers are cheap compared to a DUI and/or crashing. You could only get COLD beer at grocery stores. 5% beer was only sold at liquor stores but not cold. No beer on Sunday or after midnight. If stores sold liquor, they couldn't sell snacks or mixers. It was just ridiculous. Like everyone else in history, I look at my youth as "the good old days", but they weren't really. We were just young.
@mysummerlynn773 ай бұрын
I live here in Cole Camp. It really is magical and, I know I'm biased, but I think its the cutest town. My husband's family is one of the original German families so know he is immersed in this town and the German culture is fascinating.
@Reichstaubenminister3 ай бұрын
>skips in >bing bong theory reference >nope.png
@bennydubbz3 ай бұрын
First!!! My Quantum PC Rocks!!!
@bennydubbz3 ай бұрын
First!!! ❤ DON'T SWEAT THE SMALL STUFF!!!
@shanel83173 ай бұрын
I wonder if this could be applied to stealth and camouflage?
@DinsDalePeronah3 ай бұрын
Very Nice
@conejo1234able3 ай бұрын
MURALES DE: SAN ANTONIO, FOTOS DE: JOHN DE LA O. 7 CANCIONES DE: JOHN DE LA O. kzfaq.info/get/bejne/ZpuUga53v7DNkp8.htmlsi=hAw2DSree_0oMw-H
@spikenomoon Жыл бұрын
This man lived his whole life in the darkness. A truly evil man. Not much better than a pedo rapist. He is a serial killer along with his partners. B
@TheLeaderCinema Жыл бұрын
My wife, Dr. Alla Love (St. Petersburg Conservatory) performed on this glorious piano while it was touring in Vancouver Canada. Unfortunately, the action is not the same as the great Maestro performed on. The Horowitz action was extraordinarily unique. It had a relatively light touch with fast recovery. Special whippens and other secret sauce made it so special for the Horowitz touch. So...while the touch is different....so is the sound of course. I am a recording engineer, ex BBC London. It has a superb sound...but still different from anything I hear on recordings regardless of the space it is in or the microphones. Nonetheless, to at least be able to touch the case and the harp and to know the millions of miles this instrument has traveled along with the billions of notes and hammer strikes this music maker has created, this piano is still worthy of recognition. Bravo! Regards, Michael K. Leader
@tsahairicketts4519 Жыл бұрын
🇯🇲🇺🇸 can’t wait to experience and cook your cuisines 🙏🫶
@MilkSheikAlan Жыл бұрын
Makes me sick
@totalcardetail5035 Жыл бұрын
Then, what's the point of having someone take the stand under oath, If they can just hide behide the Fifth Amendment and not or refuse to answer any pointed question? To protect himself from self-incrimination? It makes no sense. The whole point of him being on the stand is to answer questions to get to the truth. Why is he not directed to answer questions in a court of law?
@rickyparrilla2426 Жыл бұрын
This former officer definitely had help. No way you can commit that much crime as a police officer in a uniform in that small town without help. So sad people died behind this evil racist man!!!
@eboyd2478 Жыл бұрын
Why is Ethel being Black relevant?
@lisastokes7816 Жыл бұрын
Makes u wonder how many active serial rapist/killers their is on the police force.
@onethousandtwonortheast8848 Жыл бұрын
The Steinway dealer made this video as a sales pitch.
@brittanyhunter3331 Жыл бұрын
What excellent coverage of this tragic event...I wish that there were more photos of the poor folks that lost their lives. Thank you so much for covering this uncomfortable topic. I know it's not easy!
@christopherheaton4774 Жыл бұрын
so sad!! Keep doing what you're doing in this investigation.
@christopherheaton4774 Жыл бұрын
so sad. What a psychopath.
@christopherheaton4774 Жыл бұрын
Keep doing what you're doing...
@dwanderful1 Жыл бұрын
Thank you
@Mileah2 жыл бұрын
Hello my name is Mileah and I participated in Alvin Ailey Camp and totally was the best memories of my childhood 💗glad I can look back at myself I’m the girl with the bun 😁
@carlos640302 жыл бұрын
Any chance you guys can upload this old-school version of the Up To Date theme song? I've never cared for the current version and was pretty upset when the switch was made. It's nice hearing this version again after looking for it for the past few years.
@falldog93 жыл бұрын
Such a wonderful generous artist.
@codaalive50763 жыл бұрын
First they botched it, then send "on tour" to private shops where owners seem to choose who can play it. Horowitz would probably want it in museum played by chosen musicians.
@789armstrong3 жыл бұрын
Does anyone know about what adjustments were made to the 'quiet' pedal?
@johnschlesinger20093 жыл бұрын
Franz Mohr looked after Horowitz's pianos after Bill Hupfer retired. In Mohr's book, he tells us that Horowitz used several Steinways, not only the one in his New York house, which was in fact a gift to the Master from Steinway.
@GGiblet3 жыл бұрын
🙌👏👏👏👏👏
@giacomotorre97553 жыл бұрын
Sas
@Rf_poppy3 жыл бұрын
This so funny XD
@freddymolina40793 жыл бұрын
Good scene
@pghagen3 жыл бұрын
When Horowitz passed away, his widow Wanda sent the piano around de world, and so it arrived in Amsterdam / the Netherlands in the early ninetees, and i got the opportunity to play on it. I played Chopin's study Op. 25 nbr. 1 and was amazed about the light touch of the keys. But indeed it was only Horowitz who could bring out the colors and the enormous sound from this piano. He was a genius on the piano.
@JGrimesLegit3 жыл бұрын
*im the only rapper actually making noise around these parts* 😎✌️👊🤙
@jfgahbro3 жыл бұрын
One of my old piano teachers who went to Juilliard in the 1950's played on Horowitz's piano. It was after one of Horowitz's recitals. During the after party, my teacher & his pianist friends were playing on it. While that was going on, Horowitz was in the other room and shouted out shamelessly in his thick accent, "STOP PLAYING MY PIANO!!!" True story.
@labienus99682 жыл бұрын
I don't understand "shamelessly" ?since he learned English later inlife after several other languages
@MrNikodemus24 жыл бұрын
why would they let anyone play it, especially inferior pianists, really Horowitz would not approve of that. very crass to let anyone sit down and play his piano.
@seanahmed90794 жыл бұрын
He also shot the cover of David Bowie's Let's Dance!!!!