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Blame Them All
Since Congress, with exceptions, seems mired in stalemate, there is only one thing to do. Do not re-elect anyone. Bring in new people. Elect them instead. If they fail to act responsibly, don’t re-elect them either. No incumbencies. No incumbents. Congress appears unwilling to change, and so it must be us that does the changing. After two election cycles (four years), with incumbents being beaten throughout the country, I think we can presume that survival instincts might bring about bipartisan action from Congress.
A few statesmen and women will be sacrificed. We can only create change if we have patience and are willing to do this when it is required. Now is that time.
Bipartisanship is required for the good of the nation. Blame the Dems, Blame the Republicans. I have my opinion, you have yours. Let’s start this year. – Harry_________________________________________________
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ELEPHANT
It’s probably time for me to move on. The Boston Marathon is over. But as a Bostonian, I know that, at least for the moment, part of me is not going anywhere.Boston has picked itself up, dusted itself off.
We are more than grateful for amazing outpouring of concern and support.
To us, this is personal. And thank you for feeling exactly the same. We are all Bostonians.
We are all Marathon runners.
In the face of terrorism, it feels vulgar for me to devote my weekly scribble to the fine weather we’re enjoying. There is an elephant in the living room. There is a fucking elephant in here, and the weather is only the weather. – Harry Lipson – harryShots.com
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Blame Them All
Since Congress, with exceptions, seems mired in stalemate, there is only one thing to do. Do not re-elect anyone. Bring in new people. Elect them instead. If they fail to act responsibly, don’t re-elect them either. No incumbencies. No incumbents. Congress appears unwilling to change, and so it must be us that does the changing. After two election cycles (four years), with incumbents being beaten throughout the country, I think we can presume that survival instincts might bring about bipartisan action from Congress.
A few statesmen and women will be sacrificed. We can only create change if we have patience and are willing to do this when it is required. Now is that time.
Bipartisanship is required for the good of the nation. Blame the Dems, Blame the Republicans. I have my opinion, you have yours. Let’s start this year. – Harry_________________________________________________
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“The best way to cheer yourself up is to try to cheer somebody else up” – Mark Twain from the harryShots.com Good Quotations_________________________________________________
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“Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don’t matter, and those who matter don’t mind” – Dr. Seuss…from the harryShots.com “GoodQuotations”_________________________________________________
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“The Constitution only gives people the right to pursue happiness. You have to catch it yourself” - Benjamin Franklinfrom the harryShots.com Good Quotations_________________________________________________
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“An economist’s guess is liable to be as good as anybody else’s” – Will Rogersfrom the harryShots.com “Quotes of What”_________________________________________________
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“We cannot direct the wind, but we can adjust our sails“…from the harryShots.com Quotes of Whatever_________________________________________________
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“Don’t cry because its over. Smile because it happened.”
- Dr. Seuss
the harryShots.com “Quotes of Whatever”_________________________________________________
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recent bumper sticker:
“You should agree with me
It will save SO much time“
…the harryShots.com “Quotes O’ Whatever”_________________________________________________
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“An eye for an eye will only make the whole world blind” - Mahatma Gandhi…from the harryShots.com “Quotes of Whatever”_________________________________________________
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“The shortest way to do many things is to do only one thing at a time” – Richard Cech…from the harryShots.com “Quotes of Whatever”_________________________________________________
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“I knew when my career was over. In 1965 my baseball card came out with no picture” – Bob Uecker…from the harryshots.com “Quotes of Whatever”_________________________________________________
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“I laugh so hard ’til the tears run down my leg“ - a rare Delta Blues joke, from the seminal blues tune, “Silverado in My Pathway“…from the harryshots.com “Quotes of Whatever”_________________________________________________
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“Everywhere is within walking distance… if you have the time”from the HarryShots.com “Quotes of Whatever”_________________________________________________
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“May the blessings of each day be the blessings you need most“from the harryshots.com “Quotes of Whatever”_________________________________________________
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“Procrastination is the art of keeping up with yesterday“from the HarryShots.com Quotes of Whatever_________________________________________________
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“A candle loses nothing by lighting another candle” …from the HarryShots.com Quotes of Whatever_________________________________________________
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“I can only please one person per day. Today isn’t your day…and tomorrow don’t look good either” – anonymous
the HarryShots.com Quotes of Whatever_________________________________________________
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“Peace begins with a smile“ - Mother TeresaThe HarryShots.com “Quotes of Whatever”_________________________________________________
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“If you don’t know the blues… there’s no point in picking up the guitar and playing
rock and roll or any other form of popular music” —-
Keith Richards…from The HarryShots.com Quotes of Whatever
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“Every day is Earth Day“the HarryShots.com Quotes of Whatever_________________________________________________
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“I’ve chosen to treat my life more like a party than something to stress about” - Martin ShortThe HarryShots.com Quote of the Day_________________________________________________
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“Frisbeetarianism is the belief that when you die, your soul goes up on the roof and gets stuck” -
George CarlinThe HarryShots.com Quotes of Whatever_________________________________________________
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James Hood Was Here
It is reported that James Hood died today. from THE TUSCALOOSA NEWS 1-17-2013:-{ “James Hood, who faced down George Wallace’s stand in the schoolhouse door to help integrate the University of Alabama 50 years ago, died Thursday afternoon at the age of 70, in his hometown of Gadsden. James did a great thing for the University of Alabama,” said E. Culpepper Clark, former dean of UA’s College of Communication & Information Sciences, and author of “The Schoolhouse Door: Segregation’s Last Stand at the University of Alabama.”
“With Vivian Malone, he liberated the university to serve all the people of Alabama and thereby join the ranks of the nation’s flagship universities.”
Hood and Vivian Malone Jones, who died in 2005, attempted to register and pay fees June 11, 1963, at UA’s Foster Auditorium, accompanied by Deputy Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach. Gov. George Wallace, surrounded by a phalanx of state troopers, barred them, attempting to keep his infamous inaugural promise of “segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever.” Later that day, Wallace backed down after President John F. Kennedy federalized the National Guard. }
JAMES HOOD WAS HERE. Thank you Sir. Lord, may he rest in peace. – HL_________________________________________________
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“Life can only be understood backwards; but it must be lived forwards.” – Soren KierkegaardThe HarryShots.com Quotes o’ Whatevah_________________________________________________
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“How much easier it is to be critical than to be correct.” – Benjamin Disraeli_________________________________________________
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“Happiness depends more on how life strikes you than on what happens” – Andy RooneyThe HarryShots.com Quotes of Whatever_________________________________________________
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“I’m happy now!” - Nick Saban, 3-time National Champion Football Coach of The University of Alabama_________________________________________________
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“No coach has ever won a game by what he knows; it’s what his players know that counts” – Coach Paul “Bear” Bryant_________________________________________________
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May 2013 bring good health and happiness to all my friends; I wish you the very best.
Let us renew our faith in ourselves, and in each other, and let safety and well-being be a given for everyone, everywhere. Happy New Year. – Harry_________________________________________________ -
“My religion is very simple. My religion is kindness“. – Dalai Lamathe HarryShots.com Quotes of Wha
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“My books are like water; those of the great geniuses are wine. (Fortunately) everybody drinks water.” – Mark Twain…from The HarryShots.com “Quotes”_________________________________________________
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“No one has ever drowned themselves in sweat” – Coach Lou HoltzThe HarryShots.com Quotes_________________________________________________
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“Great minds discuss ideas; average minds discuss events; small minds discuss people” – Eleanor RooseveltThe HarryShots.com Quotes_________________________________________________
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“Most American children suffer too much mother and too little father” – Gloria SteinemThe HarryShots.com Quotes of Wha (whatever)_________________________________________________
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“Electricity is really just organized lightning” - George Carlinfrom the HarryShots.com Quotes of Wha_________________________________________________
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“Courtesy is as much a mark of a gentleman as courage” – President Teddy RooseveltThe HarryShots.com Quotes of Wha (Whatever)_________________________________________________
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“Think off-center” – George CarlinThe HarryShots.com Quotes of Wha_________________________________________________
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“Grown men can learn from very little children for the hearts of little children are pure. Therefore, the Great Spirit may show to them many things which older people miss“ - Black ElkThe HarryShots.com Quotes of Whatever_________________________________________________
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“Well done is better than well said” – Benjamin FranklinThe HarryShots Quotes of Whatever_________________________________________________
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“Happiness doesn’t depend on any external conditions, it is governed by our mental attitude” – Dale CarnegieThe HarryShots Quotes of Whatever
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“Be kind whenever possible. It is always possible” – The Dalai LamaThe HarryShots Quotes of WhAtEvEr_________________________________________________
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“Imagination rules the world” – Napoleon BonaparteThe HarryShots QuOtEs oF wHaTeVeR_________________________________________________
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“Motivation is simple. You eliminate those who are not motivated” - Coach Lou HoltzThe HarryShots qUoTeS oF WhAtEvEr_________________________________________________
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“When one door closes, another opens; but we often look so long and so regretfully upon the closed door that we do not see the one which has opened for us” – Alexander Graham Bell, inventor of the telephonethe HarryShots Quotes of Whatever_________________________________________________
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“I am easily satisfied with the very best” – Sir Winston Churchillthe HarryShots Quotes of Whatever_________________________________________________
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“Imagination will often carry us to worlds that never were. But without it we go nowhere“. – Carl Sagan, astronomerThe HarryShots Quotes of Whatever_________________________________________________
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“Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter“ - Martin Luther King, Jr.The HarryShots Quotes of Whatever_________________________________________________
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“The weak can never forgive. Forgiveness is the attribute of the strong” – Mohandas Gandhithe HarryShots.com quotes of Whatever_________________________________________________
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“My father gave me the greatest gift anyone could give another person, he believed in me” - Coach Jim ValvanoThe HarryShots Quotes of Whatever_________________________________________________
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“You don’t stop laughing because you grow old. You grow old because you stop laughing.” – Michael PritchardThe HarryShots Quotes of Whatever_________________________________________________

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“PAGE ONE:
INSIDE THE NEW YORK TIMES”
a documentary (premiered at Sundance – 2011)
A very interesting movie about a very interesting subject. The question posed was (paraphrased): “Do we need the Grey Lady in an age of internet news, instant information, tweeting, the blogisphere, round the clock cable news channels, among the myriad ways we find out about the news?” There are those who see the New York Times, always “the newspaper of record” as either anachronistic now or soon to be so. In this digital age where everybody is a reporter and we all have cellphones, cameras, and are “tapped in” to what is happening, how important and useful, relevant is the NYT and its worldwide bureaus, staff writers far flung around the globe, and the thousands more in New York City who shape and deliver a newspaper on a daily basis?
Michael Kingsley of the New York Times panned the movie saying it was “all over the place” and “it does little to illuminate that struggle, preferring instead a constant parade of people telling the camera how dreadful it would be if The Times did not survive.”
David Carr, the Times media and culture columnist, is the man who gets the lion’s share of the face time. Frankly, I don’t think the Times could find a better advocate, one who can relate to the question of “relevance.” David is a very interesting man, casually impressive in an offhand but on-point way. I found the movie engrossing and highly interesting.
So, I’ll disagree, rather strongly, with Michael Kingsley and say that this is well worth a couple of hours, if only to see behind the veil and watch decisions being made and the paper put together. I give it “five highfives” “and it goes well with popcorn.” HL_________________________________________________
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Ratatouille
Ratatouille (rat-a-too-ee) is just plain fun to watch. For adults and kids alike. From Disney/Pixar studios and the creative people behind Cars and The Incredibles. Paris never looked so beautiful at night. Voicing by Patton Oswalt, Brian Dennehy, Janeane Garofolo, Peter O’Toole, Brad Garrett, among a host of others. Light, friendly, and charming, although set in a Paris restaurant’s kitchen that is anything but. As improbable as a story can get, but it’s animation, so relax take off your critic’s hat, and let yourself be entertained.I give Ratatouille five highfives, and “and it goes well with popcorn.” HL_________________________________________________
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OH BROTHER, WHERE ART THOU?
stars George Clooney, John Goodman, John Tunturro, Tim Blake, Holly Hunter, Chris Thomas King and Charles DurningFrom the creative minds of Joel and Ethan Coen. Which means its both funny and good.
Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

We start out with a chain gang prison break at Mississippi’s Parchman Farm Penitentiary in Sunflower County in the Mississippi Delta. The year is 1937. The film is said to be loosely based on Homer’s Odyssey, but you sure don’t need to be a Greek scholar to enjoy the hell out of this great movie. The soundtrack won the Grammy award and is good to the very last “Amen.”
We’ve got buried treasure, wanted prisoners trying to stay wanted, a scene at the Mississippi “crossroads of musical fame”, the Ku Klux Klan, Mississippi state elections, and a great deal more to feast your tired eyes upon. John Goodman is extraordinary as always in his cream colored Southern business suit and suspenders. Oh Brother, Where Art Thou? is a great movie and I give it five highfives, “and it goes well with popcorn.” HL_________________________________________________
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OUT OF AFRICAstarring Robert Redford and Meryl Streep (1985)
About once every year when I am restless and looking for something good, really good, to watch, I reach for one of the all time great movies, Out of Africa with maybe the finest work ever done by both Meryl and Bob.
This is an epic movie. It won the big awards as it should have: Best Picture, Best Cinematography, Best Director, Best Set Decoration, Best Musical Score, Best Sound, and Best Screenwriting.
Further, Out of Africa was nominated for: Best Actress, Best Supporting Actor, Best Costume, and Best Film Editing
Suffice it to say that Out of Africa is a triumph of the human spirit. It is grand, it is large; a tour de force and very well worth your seeing, or seeing again. I love the scene where Meryl’s character, Baroness Von Blixen surprises a lion in the Kenyan brush. She implores Robert Redford to shoot the beast and the dialogue and tension are memorable. And that is just one of a great many rather extraordinary scenes we are part of, in this riveting and well told story. I give it five HighFives, “and it goes well with popcorn.” HL_________________________________________________
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MASKED AND ANONYMOUS
Want to see the coolest movie you never heard of? Want to see a movie with a cast that includes Jeff Bridges, John Goodman, Jessica Lange, Val Kilmer, Ed Harris, Mickey Rourke, Luke Wilson, Penelope Cruz, Bruce Dern, Christian Slater, Fred Ward, Angela Bassett, Cheech Marin, and stars Bob Dylan?

Then you want to seek out an amazing piece of cinema called “Masked and Anonymous” (2003). The soundtrack is sensational. John Goodman channels The Big Lebowski to a certain extent.
The dialogue is incredible. Val Kilmer is at his peak in his brief but unforgettable cameo.The poster at left is a Spanish language promotional poster.
I give this film five highfives, “and it goes well with popcorn“. HL_________________________________________________
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The Boys: The Sherman Brothers’ Story (2009)
Two brothers who hated one another and wrote the most wonderful songs. Songs you sing, songs you hum, songs your kids (grandkids) sing or will be singing a hundred years from now. The two brothers, Robert (Bob) and Richard (Dick) Sherman collaborated uneasily, but wrote songs such as:It’s A Small World * A Spoonful of Sugar * Chim Chim Cher-ee * Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious * Winnie The Pooh * Chitty Chitty Bang Bang * Tall Paul (a pop hit on the Billboard charts) * You’re Sixteen (You’re Beautiful and You’re Mine) (another Billboard chart topper). Their list of songs is as long as your arm. Walt Disney recognized their talents early on and they were integral parts of the Walt Disney empire. They won Academy Awards, Grammies, Presidential Medals of Freedom, and more.
The movie is a documentary about their careers and lives, as told by their adult children. This is a story of two families, fame, creative genius, rivalry, dysfunction on one level and acclaim on another. It is truly amazing, award-winning documentary and definitely worth seeing. The Boys: The Sherman Brothers Story is a HarryShots.com Ramble recommendation, I give it five highfives, “and it goes well with popcorn“. HL_________________________________________________
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Barney’s Version

I am a fan of Paul Giamatti so it was a treat to stumble on Barney’s Version (2010) not long ago. If there was press and media hyping this movie, I totally missed it. You probably did as well, ’cause I think it was minimal at best. So if you are looking for a something not too taxing or heavy handed, may I recommend Barney’s Version, with a nice role for Dustin Hoffman as icing on the cake.
Rosamund Pike is magnificent to watch. Bruce Greenwood, Minnie Driver are both in the cast. “Barney” time travels back and forth over a handful of decades, weaving a remarkable and quirky story but a cool one. I give it five highfives, “and it goes well with popcorn“. HL_________________________________________________
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SOUTHERN BELLESStars Anna Faris and Laura Breckenridge. Looking for a good movie to rent? I’m recommending Southern Belles (2005). Might be hard to find, but good stuff often is. It is a little Georgia small town slice of life picture. Numerous memorable scenes and dialogue. It’s a lot of fun. Rated H for happy. I rate it Five HighFives, “and it goes well with popcorn“. HL_________________________________________________

“And it Goes Well With Popcorn”
“PAGE ONE:
INSIDE THE NEW YORK TIMES”
a documentary (premiered at Sundance – 2011)
A very interesting movie about a very interesting subject. The question posed was (paraphrased): “Do we need the Grey Lady in an age of internet news, instant information, tweeting, the blogisphere, round the clock cable news channels, among the myriad ways we find out about the news?”
There are those who see the New York Times, always “the newspaper of record” as either anachronistic now or soon to be so. In this digital age where everybody is a reporter and we all have cellphones, cameras, and are “tapped in” to what is happening, how important and useful, relevant is the NYT and its worldwide bureaus, staff writers far flung around the globe, and the thousands more in New York City who shape and deliver a newspaper on a daily basis?
Michael Kingsley of the New York Times panned the movie saying it was “all over the place” and “it does little to illuminate that struggle, preferring instead a constant parade of people telling the camera how dreadful it would be if The Times did not survive.”
David Carr, the Times media and culture columnist, is the man who gets the lion’s share of the face time. Frankly, I don’t think the Times could find a better advocate, one who can relate to the question of “relevance.” David is a very interesting man, casually impressive in an offhand but on-point way. I found the movie engrossing and highly interesting.
So, I’ll disagree, rather strongly, with Michael Kingsley and say that this is well worth a couple of hours, if only to see behind the veil and watch decisions being made and the paper put together. I give it “five highfives” “and it goes well with popcorn.” HL
THE LAST PICTURE SHOW
Check out The Last Picture Show (1971). Starring a phenomenal all-star cast (many in their first significant roles) including Jeff Bridges, Cybill Shepherd, Timothy Bottoms, Clu Gulager, Ellen Burstyn, Cloris Leachman, Ben Johnson, Sam Bottoms, Eileen Brennan, and Randy Quaid. Leachman and Johnson both won Academy Awards. Bridges and Burstyn were
nominated. The Last Picture Show was also nominated for Best Picture and Peter Bogdanovich was nominated for Best Director (and should have won). The great Robert Surtees was the cinematographer (the film is in B&W) and Larry McMurtry wrote the screenplay. I rate it Five HighFives, and it goes well with popcorn. HL
OH BROTHER, WHERE ART THOU?
stars George Clooney, John Goodman, John Tunturro, Tim Blake, Holly Hunter, Chris Thomas King and Charles Durning
From the creative minds of Joel and Ethan Coen. Which means its both funny and good.

We start out with a chain gang prison break at Mississippi’s Parchman Farm Penitentiary in Sunflower County in the Mississippi Delta. The year is 1937. The film is said to be loosely based on Homer’s Odyssey, but you sure don’t need to be a Greek scholar to enjoy the hell out of this great movie. The soundtrack won the Grammy award and is good to the very last “Amen.”
We’ve got buried treasure, wanted prisoners trying to stay wanted, a scene at the Mississippi “crossroads of musical fame”, the Ku Klux Klan, Mississippi state elections, and a great deal more to feast your tired eyes upon. John Goodman is extraordinary as always in his cream colored Southern business suit and suspenders. Oh Brother, Where Art Thou? is a great movie and I give it five highfives, “and it goes well with popcorn.“ HL
MASKED AND ANONYMOUS
Want to see the coolest movie you never heard of? Want to see a movie with a cast that includes Jeff Bridges, John Goodman, Jessica Lange, Val Kilmer, Ed Harris, Mickey Rourke, Luke Wilson, Penelope Cruz, Bruce Dern, Christian Slater, Fred Ward, Angela Bassett, Cheech Marin, and stars Bob Dylan? 
Then you want to seek out an amazing piece of cinema called “Masked and Anonymous” (2003). The soundtrack is sensational. John Goodman channels The Big Lebowski to a certain extent.
The dialogue is incredible. Val Kilmer is at his peak in his brief but unforgettable cameo.
The poster at left is a Spanish language promotional poster.
I give this film five highfives, “and it goes well with popcorn“. HL
The Boys: The Sherman Brothers’ Story (2009)
Two brothers who hated one another and wrote the most wonderful songs. Songs you sing, songs you hum, songs your kids (grandkids) sing or will be singing a hundred years from now. The two brothers, Robert (Bob) and Richard (Dick) Sherman collaborated uneasily, but wrote songs such as:
It’s A Small World * A Spoonful of Sugar * Chim Chim Cher-ee * Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious * Winnie The Pooh * Chitty Chitty Bang Bang * Tall Paul (a pop hit on the Billboard charts) * You’re Sixteen (You’re Beautiful and You’re Mine) (another Billboard chart topper). Their list of songs is as long as your arm. Walt Disney recognized their talents early on and they were integral parts of the Walt Disney empire. They won Academy Awards, Grammies, Presidential Medals of Freedom, and more.
The movie is a documentary about their careers and lives, as told by their adult children. This is a story of two families, fame, creative genius, rivalry, dysfunction on one level and acclaim on another. It is truly amazing, award-winning documentary and definitely worth seeing. The Boys: The Sherman Brothers Story is a HarryShots.com Ramble recommendation, I give it five highfives, “and it goes well with popcorn“. HL
Barney’s Version
I am a fan of Paul Giamatti so it was a treat to stumble on Barney’s Version (2010) not long ago. If there was press and media hyping this movie, I totally missed it. You probably did as well, ’cause I think it was minimal at best. So if you are looking for a something not too taxing or heavy handed, may I recommend Barney’s Version, with a nice role for Dustin Hoffman as icing on the cake.
Rosamund Pike is magnificent to watch. Bruce Greenwood, Minnie Driver are both in the cast. “Barney” time travels back and forth over a handful of decades, weaving a remarkable and quirky story but a cool one. I give it five highfives, “and it goes well with popcorn“. HL
SOUTHERN BELLES
Stars Anna Faris and Laura Breckenridge. Looking for a good movie to rent? I’m recommending Southern Belles (2005). Might be hard to find, but good stuff often is. It is a little Georgia small town slice of life picture. Numerous memorable scenes and dialogue. It’s a lot of fun. Rated H for happy. I rate it Five HighFives, “and it goes well with popcorn“. HL
Click These Songs to Go to the Post
- “Homemade Boat” by Dry Land Fish
- “Feelin Alright (LIVE)” by The Black Crowes
- Sid Selvidge 1943-2013. An Appreciation
- “Graceland” (LIVE version) by Paul Simon
- “Dirty Water” (Boston, You’re My Home) by The Standells (1966)
- “Golden Slumbers” (The Beatles) by UAKTI
- “Here Comes The Sun” by UAKTI
- Annette Funicello – The Mickey Mouse Club – A Thank You
- “Four and Twenty” – Chris Hillman
- “Wenyukela” – by Ladysmith Black Mambazo
- “Calico Train (instrumental)” by Steve Martin
- “Treetop Flyer” by Stephen Stills
- “I Like It Like That” by Chris Kenner
- “Xiger Xiger” by Hanggai
- “Hill Country Girl” by Will Kimbrough
- “I’m Going Home” by the late, great Alvin Lee
- “This Morning I Am Born Again” – by Lucy Kaplansky
- “Hope of A Lifetime” by The Milk Carton Kids
- “Feelin’ Alright” by Joe Cocker
- “Carolina Traveler” by John McEuen and Earl Scruggs
- “Tumblin” by Arlen Roth with Sonny Landreth
- “The Tracks of My Tears” by Smokey Robinson and the Miracles
- “Far From Me” by Justin Townes Earle
- “Lost John Dean” by Kane, Welch, and Kaplan
- “Ripple” (live) by Jimmy Ibbotson
- “Daniel and The Sacred Harp” (alternate take) by The Band
- “Texas Style Zydeco” by Shelley King
- “Detroit Steel” by Otis Gibbs
- “Glory, Hallelujah” by The Deep Dark Woods
- “City of Immigrants” by Steve Earle
- “Yea Alabama” by The Alabama Million Dollar Band
- “Sweet Home Alabama” by Lynyrd Skynyrd
- “Mama’s Little Baby” by Delbert McClinton
- “Auld Lang Syne” by Dougie Maclean
- “Nothing But The Wheel” by Peter Wolf
- “The Happy Organ” by Dave “Baby” Cortez
- “What Are You Doing for the Rest of Your Life” by Maurice Larcange
- “Ave Maria” by Josh Groban
- “Away In A Manger” by Patty Loveless
- “We Three Kings (of Orient Are)” by Jimmy Smith
- “Ding! Dong! Merrily On High” by The Kings College Choir
- “For Unto Us A Child Is Born” by The Mormon Tabernacle Choir
- “Veni Emmanuel” by Stile Antico
- “White Christmas” by Bing Crosby
- “Midnight Clear” by The Trans Siberian Orchestra
- “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen” by the Ambrosian Singers and Leonard Raver, organist
- “Come On In My Kitchen” by Peter Green and Nigel Watson
- “Do Wah Diddy” by Manfred Mann
- “Mexican Home” by John Prine with Josh Ritter
- “Three Chords” by Dan Reeder
- “Am I Wrong?” by Al Kooper
- “White Cliffs of Dover” by Vera Lynn
- “Shenandoah Breakdown” by Jerry Douglas
- “This Flower” by Kasey Chambers
- “Over The River and Through The Woods”
- “Bama Bound” by Danny Brooks
- “If I Go, I’m Goin’ ” by Gregory Alan Isakov
- “The Path to Your Door” by Walt Wilkins
- “Drive” (For Daddy Gene) by Alan Jackson
- “Nancy Whiskey” by Gaelic Storm
- “Green Green” by The New Christy Minstrels
- “Move Up” by Patty Griffin & Friends
- “Through To Sunrise” by Girlyman
- GO VOTE FOR SOMEONE. YOUR CHOICE. TODAY. NOW.
- “Brand New Tennessee Waltz” by Jesse Winchester
- “Yea Alabama” by The University of Alabama Million Dollar Band
- “My Tennessee Mountain Home” by Dolly Parton
- “Amarillo Highway” by Terry Allen
- “Soul Man” by Sam & Dave
- “Give Me Time” by Dawes
- “Y’all Come Back Saloon” by The Oak Ridge Boys
- “Aberdeen” by Bukka White
- “Catfish John” by Joe Higgs with Toots and the Maytals
- “Blackwaterslide” by Bert Jansch
- “Homegrown Tomatoes” by Misty River
- “Jingle, Jangle, Jingle” by The Merry Macs
- “No Sugar Tonight / New Mother Nature” by The Guess Who
- “Angeline” by Blue Moon Rising
- “Last Letter Home” by Russell Smith and The Amazin’ Rhythm Aces
- “Fireball Mail” (1942) by Roy Acuff
- Blessissippi: a 14 minute MUST SEE film from “EXPLORE.ORG about The Blues and Missisissippi, and The South
- “New Railroad” by Crooked Still
- “Where The Blues Began” by Artie Traum
- “Orphan” by Sam Baker
- “Midnight On The Water” by Caroline Herring
- “Looking for The Heart of Saturday Night” by Tom Waits
- 3 Songs by JOHN STARLING: “Long Time Gone” – “Dark Hollow” – & “Jordan”
- “Sweet Soul Music” by Arthur Conley
- “Saints and Sinners” by David Francey
- “Souvenirs” (LIVE) by John Prine and Steve Goodman
- “Oh, Amarillo” by Emmylou Harris
- “Choctaw Bingo” by Ray Wylie Hubbard
- “Crossroads” by The Allman Joys (early version of Allman Brothers Band)
- “Outfit” by Drive By Truckers
- “Abraham, Martin, & John” by Andy Williams – R.I.P.
- “Twilight Time” by The Three Suns
- “Roll Um Easy” by Lowell George and Little Feat
- “Hard Being Right” by A.J. Roach
- “Church Street Blues” by Norman Blake
- “I’m Dreaming of A White President” by Randy Newman
- “Music You Mighta Made” by Gurf Morlix
- “Queen of the Silver Dollar” by Emmylou Harris
- “Wash And Fold” by Will Kimbrough with Tommy Womack (Daddy)
- “The Carnival Song” by Jeff Black
- “Green Eyed Girl” by Greg Trooper
- “Coming Home” by Delaney and Bonnie and Friends
- “CALLING TRAINS”
- “Jubilation T. Cornpone” from the Broadway musical L’il Abner
- “Annachie Gordon” by The Unthanks
- “Lodi” by Jeffrey Foucault
- “Wichita Falls” (live) by Houston Marchman
- “Wilson Pickett” by Tim Krekel Orchestra
- “Sweet Tequila Blues” by Chip Taylor and Carrie Rodriguez
- “Come Go With Me” by The Del Vikings
- “A Prayer For My Friends” by Terri Hendrix
- “Coahoma” by Corey Harris
- “Ford Econoline” by Nanci Griffith
- “A Lover’s Question” by Clyde McPhatter
- “Mohawk River” by Ramsay Midwood
- “Helplessly Hoping” by Crosby, Stills, & Nash
- “Rising of The Moon” – Riverdance
- “That’ll Be The Day” by Buddy Holly and The Crickets, with Wolfman Jack
- “Mean Old World” by Duane Allman and Eric Clapton
- “Handsome Molly” by Newfound Road
- “Jessica” by The Allman Brothers
- “Glory Bound” by The Wailin’ Jennys
- “Saved” by Bob Dylan
- “Feats Don’t Fail Me Now” by Little Feat
- “Ya Got Trouble” by Robert Preston in The Music Man
- “Uncle John’s Band” by The Grateful Dead
- “Alabama Pines” by Jason Isbell and The 400 Unit
- “Love Potion No. 9″ by The Clovers
- “Twist and Shout” by The Beatles
- “Farther Along” by The Grascals
- “Honky Tonk Women” by Humble Pie
- “A Night In Summer Long Ago” by Mark Knopfler
- The Ballad of Davy Crockett by Walt Disney Studios (The Wellingtons)
- “The Panama Limited” by Booker T. Washington White (Bukka)
- “How The West Was Won” by Eric Kunzel and the Cincinnati Pops
- “Faithless Love” by J.D. Souther
- “Long Time Gone” by Dickey Betts
- “Golfing Blues” by Loudon Wainwright III
- “People Got To Be Free” by The Rascals
- “Big Old Jet Airliner” by The Steve Miller Band
- “Mountain Greenery” by The Art Van Damme Quartet
- “Going Down The Road Feeling Bad” by Delaney and Bonnie and Friends
- “Hard Times” by Jacob Sweet
- “Country Roads” by Toots (Hibbert) & The Maytals
- “Magnificent Seven” by Elmer Bernstein
- “Going Back to Georgia” by Nanci Griffith with Adam Duritz
- “Que Sera Sera” by Maurice Larcange
- “Rovin’ Gambler” by Dierks Bentley and The Punch Brothers
- “If Heaven” by Gretchen Peters
- “All The Gold in California” by Larry Gatlin & the Gatlin Brothers…plus a personal rant about commercial country radio airplay
- “Dream Lover” by Bobby Darin
- “That’s The Way That The World Goes Round” (live) by John Prine
- The Andy Griffith Show Theme. R.I.P. Andy Griffith 1926-2012
- “Rock Me On The Water” by Jackson Browne
- “Up On Cripple Creek” by Gomez
- “Thirty Days In The Hole” by Humble Pie
- “Ripple” by Chris Hillman
- “Never Going Back Again” by The Vitamin String Quartet (VSQ)
- “Run To The Middle of the Morning” by Kendal Carson
- “Where The Soul Never Dies” by Cody Shuler and Pine Mountain Railroad
- “I Got The Sun In The Morning” by Harry “Bing” Crosby
- “Get Me Gone” by Walt Wilkins
- “John Peel” by Paul Burch
- “Vaseline Machine Gun” by Leo Kottke
- “Home to Houston” by Steve Earle
- “Tennessee Blues” by Steve Earle IT’S STEVE EARLE WEEK AT HS
- “Jerusalem” by Steve Earle
- “Texas Eagle” by Steve Earle
- STEVE EARLE WEEK at HarryShots we start with “Ft. Worth Blues” by Steve Earle
- “High On A Mountain Top” by Loretta Lynn
- “Mean Old World” by Duane Allman and Eric Clapton
- “Statistician’s Blues” by Todd Snider
- “Graceland” by Dan Bern
- “Come On Down to My Boat, Baby” by Every Mother’s Son
- “I’ll Be Seeing You” by the Tommy Dorsey Orchestra
- “The Ballad of Oregon” by River City Extension
- “Rule Britannia” by H.M. Royal Marine Band (hear, hear)
- “Candle In The Wind” by Elton John
- “You Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere” by The Byrds and The Flying Burrito Brothers (live)
- Arthel “Doc” Watson 1923-2012
- “Dueling Banjos” by The Dillards
- “This Land Is Your Land” by Little Feat
- “Rusty Old American Dream” by David Wilcox
- “The Car Song” by Woody Guthrie
- “When You and I Were Young, Maggie” by Peter Rowan and Jerry Douglas
- “Hammer and Nails” by Cindy Bullens
- “Toes” by The Zac Brown Band
- “Tico Tico” by Ethel Smith
- “Silver Threads and Golden Needles” by The Springfields
- “Stopping By” by Jason Isbell
- “Smokestack Lightnin” by Frankie Lee
- “Turn Your Radio On” by The Carter Family with Bonnie Owens
- “Queen of The Silver Dollar” by Sarah Jarosz and Black Prairie
- “Me and Julio Down By The Schoolyard” by Paul Simon
- “Goin Down The Road” by The Allman Brothers
- Meet In The Middle by Diamond Rio
- In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida by Iron Butterfly
- Domino by Van Morrison
- “The Guitar” by Ramblin’ Jack Elliott
- “True Love Ways” by My Morning Jacket
- “Round and Round” by Perry Como
- “Ye re Ddjate” by Idrissa Soumaoro
- “How Lucky” by Boundary Road
- “Cholene” by Kate Taylor
- “Do Wah Diddy Diddy” by Manfred Mann
- “Hand Me Down My Walking Cane” by Norman Blake
- “Mama, You’ve Been On My Mind” by We Are Augustines
- “Waitin’ For The Bus” / “Jesus Just Left Chicago” – Daughtry
- Aberdeen by Booker Bukka White
- Tossin’ and Turnin’ by Bobby Lewis (1961)
- Uncle John’s Band by Joe Higgs, The Godfather of Reggae
- “Heather Down the Moor” by June Tabor and Martin Simpson
- “Rocky Top” by The Flying Burrito Brothers
- “Ring Them Bells” by Sarah Jarosz
- “One Day I Will” by Nathan Salsburg
- “Didn’t It Rain” (outtake) by Levon Helm and The Band
- “Tennessee Blues” by Steve Earle
- “Move Up” by Patty Griffin and Friends
- “But It’s Allright” by J.J. Jackson
- “Preachin’ Blues” by Son House
- “Seven Bridges Road” by Steve Young
- “Gotta Serve Somebody” by Eric Burdon
- “You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go” by Miley Cyrus
- “Classical Gas” by Mason Williams
- “Jack and Lucy” by Delia Bell and Bill Grant
- “Don’t Try To Lay No Boogie Woogie On The King of Rock and Roll” by Long John Baldry
- “Louisiana Rain” by Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers
- “Drug Store Truck Driving Man” by The Byrds
- “Sugar Magnolia” by The Grateful Dead
- “Ain’t Got No Home” by Clarence “Frogman” Henry
- “Delaware Slide” by George Thorogood & The Destroyers
- “Snowin’ On Raton” by Gretchen Peters and Tom Russell
- “The Old Lamplighter” by The Kay Kyser Orchestra, with Mike Douglas
- In Memoriam: Earl Scruggs 1924-2012
- “Gettin’ By” by Jerry Jeff Walker
- “Rose of Cimarron” by Del Castillo with John Bohlinger and Megan Mullins
- “Burn Down the Trailer Park” by Paul Thorn
- “Big Green Car” by Jimmy Carroll
- “Wild Mountain Thyme” by Greg Joy
- “Return of The Grievous Angel” by Laughing Gravy
- “Stand By Me” by Ben E. King
- “Lone Star Blues” by Delbert McClinton
- “Iron Mike’s Main Man’s Last Request” by Todd Snider
- “Roll Um Easy” by J.D. Souther
- “The Parting Glass” by Cara Dillon
- “How Are Things in Glocca Morra” by Buddy Clark
- “Rad Gumbo” by Little Feat
- “Sixteenth Avenue” by Lacy J. Dalton
- “I Killed Walter Matthau” by Steve Poltz
- “Sing, Sing, Sing” (With A Swing) by Benny Goodman
- “I’m A Believer” by The Monkees
- “Guitar Town” by Steve Earle
- “Guitar Town” by Emmylou Harris
- “Colfax” by Kevin Gordon
- “Harlan County Line” by Dave Alvin
- “Little Martha” by Leo Kottke
- “Whipping Post” by Mountain Heart
- “One Hundred Million Years” by M. Ward
- “Steve Earle” by Lydia Loveless
- “I Gotta Go” by Robert Earl Keen
- “Galveston” by Jimmy Webb with Lucinda Williams
- “Long Line of Losers” by Kevin Fowler
- “It’s Hard to Kiss the Lips at Night That Chew Your Ass Out All Day Long” by The Notorious Cherry Bombs [Vince Gill on lead vocals]
- “I’ll Change Your Flat Tire, Merle” by Pure Prairie League
- “Beer Season” by Thom Shepherd
- “Beer, Bait, and Ammo” by Kevin Fowler
- “The Wedding Song” by Charlie Robison and Natalie Maines
- “Pony Boy” by The Allman Brothers
- “I’ll Never Find Another You” by The Seekers
- “Long Time Gone” by The Dixie Chicks
- “My Old Man” by Rosanna Goodman
- “Hey” by Karen Peck and New River
- “Catfish John” (studio outtake) by The Grateful Dead
- “Legend of the U.S.S. Titanic” by Jaime Brockett
- “Late In The Evening” by Paul Simon
- “It’s Late” by Ricky Nelson
- “Sheraton Gibson” by Pete Townshend
- “Bella Notte” from Lady and The Tramp (Disney)
- “Black Water” by The Doobie Brothers
- “Passing By” by Cary Hudson
- “Tennessee Waltz” by Hem
- “American Hearts” by A.A. Bondy
- “Hey Conductor” by Dave Carter and Tracy Grammer
- “Tuscaloosa Suntan” by Lipbone Redding
- “Show Me The Road” by Harvey Reid
- “Wide River to Cross” by Buddy Miller
- “Walking In Memphis” by Marc Cohn
- “Gentle Annie” by Kate and Anna McGarrigle (Transatlantic Sessions)
- “(Talk to Me of) Mendocino” by Kate and Anna McGarrigle
- “Come A Long Way” (remastered) by Kate and Anna McGarrigle
- “The Swimming Song” by Loudon Wainwright III
- “Swimming Song” by Kate and Anna McGarrigle
- “My Little Girl” by Pierce Pettis
- “Tour of Duty” by Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit
- “Your Long Journey” by Robert Plant and Alison Krauss
- Alabama Alma Mater by The University of Alabama Million Dollar Band
- “The Old Plank Road” by Robin and Linda Williams
- “I Remember You” by Frank Ifield
- “Courtin’ In The Kitchen” by Gaelic Storm
- “I Am The Light of This World” by Jorma Kaukonen
- “Unwed Fathers” by Ben Kyle and Carrie Rodriguez
- “Pied Piper” by Crispian St. Peters
- “Small Town Saturday Night” by Hal Ketchum
- “Sing Sing With A Swing” by Benny Goodman
- “Pachelbel Canon” by The Canadian Brass
- “Hark! The Herald Angels Sing” by The Mormon Tabernacle Choir
- “Suo Gan” by John Williams, from the movie soundtrack of Empire of the Sun
- Christmas Medley by Placido Domingo
- “Last Month of the Year” by the Tarbox Ramblers
- “Beautiful Star of Bethlehem” by John Starling
- “The Christmas Song” (Chestnuts Roasting by An Open Fire) by Mel Torme
- “Beautiful Star of Bethlehem by Faith, Family, and Friends
- “The Holly and The Ivy” by The New York Choral Artists
- “Silver Bells” by Margaret Whiting and Jimmy Wakely
- “Sleigh Ride” by Arthur Fiedler and the Boston Pops
- “Beautiful Star of Bethlehem” by Jerry Douglas
- “Go Tell It On the Mountain” by Eric Kunzel and the Cincinnati Pops
- “Love’s Old Sweet Song” by Thurl Ravencroft and The Mellomen
- “Stand By Me” by The Groovegrass Boyz
- “Too Sick to Pray” by Phosphorescent
- “Suo Gan” by Marge Butler
- “Statistician’s Blues” by Todd Snider
- “The Parting Glass” by The Wailin’ Jennys
- “Steam Powered Aereo Plane” by New Grass Revival
- “Macire” by Boubacar Traore
- “Crossroads” by Leslie West
- “Blooming Heather” by Kate Rusby
- “Long Black Veil” by Harry Manx
- “Sowin’ On the Mountain” by Marley’s Ghost
- “She Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere” by Guy Clark
- “Up Memphis Blues” by Tommy Womack
- “Sail Away Odyssey” by Erik Darling
- “Walking In Jerusalem” by Jason Eady
- “Con Te Partiro” by Andrea Bocelli
- “Coal War” by Joshua James
- “Choctaw Bingo” by James McMurtry
- “Juarez” by Brad Colerick
- “Calling Trains” by unknown train announcer

Tags
All Song Archives
- “Homemade Boat” by Dry Land Fish
- “Feelin Alright (LIVE)” by The Black Crowes
- Sid Selvidge 1943-2013. An Appreciation
- “Graceland” (LIVE version) by Paul Simon
- “Dirty Water” (Boston, You’re My Home) by The Standells (1966)
- “Golden Slumbers” (The Beatles) by UAKTI
- “Here Comes The Sun” by UAKTI
- Annette Funicello – The Mickey Mouse Club – A Thank You
- “Four and Twenty” – Chris Hillman
- “Wenyukela” – by Ladysmith Black Mambazo
- “Calico Train (instrumental)” by Steve Martin
- “Treetop Flyer” by Stephen Stills
- “I Like It Like That” by Chris Kenner
- “Xiger Xiger” by Hanggai
- “Hill Country Girl” by Will Kimbrough
- “I’m Going Home” by the late, great Alvin Lee
- “This Morning I Am Born Again” – by Lucy Kaplansky
- “Hope of A Lifetime” by The Milk Carton Kids
- “Feelin’ Alright” by Joe Cocker
- “Carolina Traveler” by John McEuen and Earl Scruggs
- “Tumblin” by Arlen Roth with Sonny Landreth
- “The Tracks of My Tears” by Smokey Robinson and the Miracles
- “Far From Me” by Justin Townes Earle
- “Lost John Dean” by Kane, Welch, and Kaplan
- “Ripple” (live) by Jimmy Ibbotson
- “Daniel and The Sacred Harp” (alternate take) by The Band
- “Texas Style Zydeco” by Shelley King
- “Detroit Steel” by Otis Gibbs
- “Glory, Hallelujah” by The Deep Dark Woods
- “City of Immigrants” by Steve Earle
- “Yea Alabama” by The Alabama Million Dollar Band
- “Sweet Home Alabama” by Lynyrd Skynyrd
- “Mama’s Little Baby” by Delbert McClinton
- “Auld Lang Syne” by Dougie Maclean
- “Nothing But The Wheel” by Peter Wolf
- “The Happy Organ” by Dave “Baby” Cortez
- “What Are You Doing for the Rest of Your Life” by Maurice Larcange
- “Ave Maria” by Josh Groban
- “Away In A Manger” by Patty Loveless
- “We Three Kings (of Orient Are)” by Jimmy Smith
- “Ding! Dong! Merrily On High” by The Kings College Choir
- “For Unto Us A Child Is Born” by The Mormon Tabernacle Choir
- “Veni Emmanuel” by Stile Antico
- “White Christmas” by Bing Crosby
- “Midnight Clear” by The Trans Siberian Orchestra
- “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen” by the Ambrosian Singers and Leonard Raver, organist
- “Come On In My Kitchen” by Peter Green and Nigel Watson
- “Do Wah Diddy” by Manfred Mann
- “Mexican Home” by John Prine with Josh Ritter
- “Three Chords” by Dan Reeder

