First and foremost I would like to apologize for timing out again. I went on vacation/volunteering in a country with poor internet infrastructure and I tried my best to keep up. I will be leaving again soon as I just arrived back in the United States.
I would advice Jespher to shorten my time out clock to
8 hours. It will be best for all drafters avilable as the draft wont come to a halt for one person. I will try my best to do make up picks in a timely fashion if I do miss anymore.
Also, something terrifying happened to me when I was away.. I woke up one morning to a naked man covered in jello standing over my bed.. Im not sure what has happened to him he ran away, but he whispered something along the lines of.. "the man with the bat sends his regards"?
My make up picks.
Alabama Song - The Doors
"Alabama Song (Whisky Bar)"
Song by The Doors from the album The Doors
Released January 4, 1967
Recorded August 1966
Genre Psychedelic rock
Length 3:20
Label Elektra
Composer Bertolt Brecht
Kurt Weill
Producer Paul A. Rothchild
Alabama Song - Lotte Lenya
The "
Alabama Song" (also known as "
Whisky Bar," "
Moon over Alabama," or "
Moon of Alabama") was originally published as a poem in
Bertolt Brecht's
Hauspostille (1927). It was set to music by
Kurt Weill for the 1927 "Songspiel"
Mahagonny and used again in Weill's and Brecht's 1930
opera Aufstieg und Fall der Stadt Mahagonny (
Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny.) In the latter, it is performed by the character Jenny and her fellow prostitutes in the first act. The song was first performed and recorded by the Viennese actress and dancer
Lotte Lenya (Weill's wife). She first publicly sang the song as the character Jessie in the 1927 Baden-Baden Festival performance of
Mahagonny Songspiel. Lenya first recorded the song in 1930 for the Ultraphon record label. This recording was released to coincide with the Leipzig premiere of
Aufstieg und Fall der Stadt Mahagonny despite the fact that Lenya was not a member of the cast. Lenya continued to perform and record the song throughout her life. Later Lenya recordings include one made for the 1955 album, "Lotte Lenya singt Kurt Weill" (released in the United States as "Berlin Theater Songs")
Second Make Up Pick
Crossroads - Cream
Single by Cream
from the album Wheels of Fire
B-side "Passing the Time"
Released 1969
Format 7" 45 rpm record
Recorded Winterland Ballroom, San Francisco March 10, 1968 (1st show)
Genre Hard rock, blues rock
Length 4:16
Label Atco (no. 45-6646)
Writer(s) Robert Johnson
Producer(s) Felix Pappalardi
"
Cross Road Blues" (more commonly known as "
Crossroads") is a
blues song written and recorded by American blues artist
Robert Johnson in 1936. It is a solo performance in the
Delta blues-style with Johnson's vocal accompanied by his acoustic slide guitar. Although its lyrics do not contain any specific references, the song has become part of the Robert Johnson mythology as referring to the place where he supposedly sold his soul to the devil in exchange for his musical talents.
Cross Road Blues - Robert Johnson
Single by Robert Johnson
B-side "Ramblin' on My Mind"
Released May 1937
Format 10" 78 rpm record
Recorded Gunter Hotel, San Antonio, Texas November 27, 1936
Genre Blues
Length 2:39
Label Vocalion (cat. no. 03519)
Writer(s) Robert Johnson
Producer(s) Don Law
1986, Robert Johnson's "Cross Road Blues" was inducted into the
Blues Foundation Hall of Fame, noting that "regardless of mythology and rock 'n' roll renditions, Johnson's record was indeed a powerful one, a song that would stand the test of time on its own".In 1998, it received a
Grammy Hall of Fame Award, which "honors recordings of lasting qualitative or historical significance".In 1995, Cream's "Crossroads" was included on the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's list of the "500 Songs That Shaped Rock and Roll".
Rolling Stone magazine placed it at number three on its "Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time".