Quadriga Consort – Pulling the sea-dulse
An evening pause:
A nightly pause from the news to give the reader/viewer a bit of classic entertainment.
An evening pause:
An evening pause: Performed on the Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour, 1970.
An evening pause: by John Rutter.
An evening pause:
An evening pause: What every home should have.
An evening pause: Some Ray Lynch to help relax us through these difficult times.
An evening pause: Danielle “Ate the Sandwich” Anderson.
An evening pause: performed live, December 1974.
An evening pause: As performed at Woodstock, 1969.
Go, and beat your crazy heads against the sky.
Try, and see beyond the houses in your eyes.
It’s okay to shoot the moon.
An evening pause: With a bit of Brooklyn at the start to set the tone!
An evening pause: Fifty years ago today Soviet cosmonaut Gherman Titov became the second Russian to fly in space, and the first to stay in orbit more than one day. During his seventeen orbit flight he also was the first human to experience space sickness and to sleep in space.
The newsreel below is somewhat comical, as the Soviets were not very forthcoming with information. To provide visuals the newsreel used film footage showing a V2 rocket from World War II, as well as a very unrealistic globe with an equally unrealistic spacecraft to “demonstrate the course of an orbit around the earth.”
Nonetheless, because the newsreel is of that time, it illustrates well the fear the west had of the Soviet’s success in space. For a communist nation to be so far ahead of the U.S., which so far had only flown two suborbital flights, was a challenge to the free world that could not stand.
An evening pause: From the 1969 mock documentary by John Cleese, How to Irritate People.