“And sitting in for Joe tonight, will be Miss Minnie Moline”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a1ThSi1wbqU
I understand John Deere can keep a good rhythm too.
“And sitting in for Joe tonight, will be Miss Minnie Moline”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a1ThSi1wbqU
I understand John Deere can keep a good rhythm too.
Left me in traction. ![]()
djm
That was pretty ruttin’ good!
Needs some cowbell though.
Works great!:
http://www.morecowbell.dj/listen?id=EQeNlA
More from the same guitarist and percussionist:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UwadWc-QeAg
A hoot. ![]()
I had a friend whose heart stopped while he was a patient in a hospital and his son was visiting so they asked and were given permission to put him on an artificial heart.
He was kept alive and waited for a human heart for well over month. During that time he had a lot of visitors from the press.
One journalist asked him how he dealt with the artificial heart emotionally.
His answer was 1) he was an engineer and was fascinated by the concept of being interfaced with a machine
and 2) he played drums and the sounds the machine made were a constant that he never grew tired of.
I am interested in audio tracks that may help induce meditative or trance-like states. I remember one tape in particular was the sound of a motor-driven water pump, with its repetitive series of squeaks. It is interesting how easily our brains can entrain to repetitive sounds, some beneficial (promoting relaxation, for example) and others potentially harmful. You don’t want any repetitive sounds in the 2 hertz range when you are trying to drive an automobile, as 2 hertz (delta) is the mind frequency of deep sleep.