Ginger Versus Mary Ann: The Eternal Question
- Length: 9:58
- Rating Average: 4.55 from 163 people
- View Count: 89643' favoriteCount='242
- Author: holodeckwaitinglist
Tags: ann blonde brunette dawn gilligan's ginger island louise mary maryann redhead reruns television tina tv wells
An examination of the G vs MA question, including a scientific look at the basics behind the puzzle. Examine the evidence, make your decision, post and comment.
Marshall Crenshaw - Mary Anne
- Length: 3:13
- Rating Average: 4.39 from 23 people
- View Count: 13800' favoriteCount='51
- Author: jackynjimy
Tags: crenshaw marshall marshall.crenshaw Mary-Anne
Marshall Crenshaw Live
Josie Cotton "Jimmy Loves Maryann"
- Length: 3:40
- Rating Average: 4.88 from 25 people
- View Count: 9301' favoriteCount='75
- Author: RetroVault2
Tags: ann cotton jimmy josie loves marianne mary maryann retrovault
[1984]
Mary Anne
- Length: 4:7
- Rating Average: 4.63 from 8 people
- View Count: 4314' favoriteCount='11
- Author: rocktrotters
Tags: Anne Bolivia boliviano Mary Rock Rocktrotters
Music Video
MaryAnn Scandiffio Bang Gang Gordon G.G. Gebert G-4
- Length: 4:15
- Rating Average: 4.70 from 10 people
- View Count: 3800' favoriteCount='19
- Author: kissvideofan
Tags: Ace Angel Barry Billy Blacklace Brandt Criss Daniel DiMino ELP Emerson Eric Felix Frank Frehley G.G. Gebert Gene Giuffria Gordon Gregg Jones Keyboards KISS MaryAnn Meadows Mickey Paul Peter Punky Robinson Scandiffio Sheehan Simmons Singer Stanley Talas
Video of live performance - Sink Your Teeth (Talas / Billy Sheehan). Bang Gang band produced by Ace Frehley from KISS. MaryAnn Scandiffio / lead vocals, Gordon G.G. Gebert on Keyboards. Billy Sheehan (born on 1953 March 19 in Buffalo, NY) is an Irish American bassist known for his work with Talas, Steve Vai, David Lee Roth, Mr Big, and Niacin. Sheehan has won Guitar Player Magazine's "Best Rock Bass Player" readers' poll five times for his "lead bass" playing style. Guitar Player has likened his soloing on the four-string instrument to Eddie Van Halen's on the six-string guitar. Sheehan's repertoire includes the use of chording, two-handed tapping and controlled feedback. However, Sheehan is also noted as a steady "true" bassist, fulfilling the traditional supportive role of the electric bass in the rock idiom. However, Sheehan says that when he saw Tim Bogert of the band Vanilla Fudge using a Fender Precision bass with a maple fingerboard, he switched to the bass. Seeking to take Talas further than just regional success, Sheehan reformed Talas with another drummer (Mark Miller), guitarist (Mitch Perry, also later of Heaven), and a dedicated vocalist, Phil Naro, with whom in the late 1970s Sheehan had previously worked in his side project (the Billy Sheehan Band). Talas would release only one more album, Live Speed on Ice. After Mitch Perry left the band, he was replaced by Johnny Angel, who played guitar with them for their 1985/86 US tour opening for Yngwie Malmsteen's Rising Force. There was a fourth Talas record, tentatively titled "Lights, Camera, Action" to be issued on Gold Mountain/A&M, but it never got past the demo stage due to Sheehan leaving to join David Lee Roth's solo band. Talas did briefly continue on under Phil Naro sans Sheehan, enlisting Jimmy Degrasso on drums, Al Pitrelli on guitar and Bruno Ravel on bass, but by this time Talas was dead. Sheehan has recently reunited the original Talas trio for a few shows here and there as well as the live CD If We Only Knew Then, issued on Metal Blade. ("Sink Your Teeth Into That" and "Live Speed On Ice" were combined and re-released as the CD Billy Sheehan: The Talas Years on Relativity Records.) On 2006 December 23, Sheehan sat in with the Dave Constantino Band at Club Impact in Buffalo. Johnny Angel was the solo opening act for the evening. David Lee Roth tapped Sheehan, guitarist Steve Vai, and drummer Gregg Bissonette to be his band for the Eat 'Em and Smile album, Roth's second after leaving Van Halen. The recording yielded the hard rock classic "Yankee Rose" and showcased Sheehan's rhythmic sensibilities. After Roth's Skyscraper album was issued, Sheehan left the band to pursue other opportunities. Steve Vai followed after the tour ended. In 1988, Sheehan, along with singer Eric Martin, guitarist Paul Gilbert, and drummer Pat Torpey formed Mr Big. Mr Big had two American hits with "Addicted to That Rush" from their eponymous first album and the ballad, "To Be With You" (from their second album, Lean Into It,) but were unable to duplicate it with later releases. However, the band had a dedicated following in Japan. Internal tensions led to Gilbert quitting the band in 1997. Richie Kotzen replaced him, and was with Mr Big until the group's breakup in 2002. Sheehan has toured Poland with UFO. Sheehan has performed on many of Steve Vai's solo albums and was the bassist for Vai's touring band from 2001 until early 2007, an incarnation which Vai dubbed "The Breed". The Breed was noted by Vai as having "worked beyond his expectations" and has expressed that he hopes to will work with Sheehan and The Breed in the future as schedules permit. In 1999, he helped to record the widely acclaimed album "Brotherhood", with the multi-platinum Japanese band, B'z, and subsequently played with the band live for their 2002 "Green" Tour in front of total 750,000 audience. In 2001, Sheehan released a long-awaited solo album, Compression, and in 2005, he recorded his second solo effort, Cosmic Troubadour. Both feature Sheehan singing and playing guitar. In 2002, Sheehan guested on metal fusion band Planet X's MoonBabies, which led to his involvement on Planet X keyboardist Derek Sherinian's solo album Black Utopia 2003. Another of Sheehan's projects is the three-piece jazz-rock-fusion band, Niacin, which also features drummer Dennis Chambers and Hammond B3 player John Novello. Sheehan along with Mike Portnoy, Gary Cherone, and Paul Gilbert performed three concerts in the end of May 2006 as Amazing Journey: A Tribute to The Who.
Gore Gore Girls- Mary Ann
- Length: 2:30
- Rating Average: 4.36 from 14 people
- View Count: 13717' favoriteCount='12
- Author: NilezII
GGG play outside at a small bar. Sorry for lousy sound.
Mary Anne
- Length: 1:51
- Rating Average: 4.06 from 18 people
- View Count: 47883' favoriteCount='70
- Author: Praterfrank
Tags: amputee armamputee dae
congental double above ellbow amputee
Burl Ives - Mary Ann Regrets
- Length: 3:35
- Rating Average: 5.00 from 10 people
- View Count: 1926' favoriteCount='18
- Author: JBauder1948
Burl Icle Ivanhoe Ives (14 June 1909 -- 14 April 1995) was an Academy Award winning American actor and acclaimed folk music singer. He won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor for his role in the movie The Big Country and was the voice of Sam the Snowman in the 1964 animated film Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer; however, he is probably better remembered for his music. The prominent music critic John Rockwell has been quoted in the New York Times as saying that "Ives's voice... had the sheen and finesse of opera without its latter-day Puccinian vulgarities and without the pretensions of operatic ritual. It was genteel in expressive impact without being genteel in social conformity. And it moved people." Ives traveled about the U.S. as an itinerant singer during the early 1930s, earning his way by doing odd jobs and playing his banjo. He was jailed in Mona, Utah, for vagrancy and for singing "Foggy Foggy Dew," which the authorities decided was a bawdy song. In 1931 he landed on WBOW radio in Terre Haute, Indiana. In 1940 Ives began his own radio show, titled The Wayfaring Stranger after one of his ballads. The show was very popular. In the 1940s he popularized several traditional folk songs, such as "Lavender Blue" (his first hit, a folk song from the 17th century), "Foggy Foggy Dew" (an English/Irish folk song), "Blue Tail Fly" (an old Civil War tune) and "Big Rock Candy Mountain" (an old hobo ditty). In early 1942 Ives was drafted by the military and spent time first at Camp Dix, then at Camp Upton, where he joined the cast of Irving Berlin's This Is the Army. When the show went to Hollywood, he was transferred to the Army Air Force. He was discharged honorably, apparently for medical reasons, in September 1943. Between September and December 1943, Ives lived in California with actor Harry Morgan, who played Colonel Sherman T. Potter on M*A*S*H many years later. In December 1943, Ives returned to New York City and went to work again for CBS radio for $100 a week. On Dec. 6, 1945, Ives married 29-year-old script writer Helen Peck Ehrlich. The next year, Ives was cast as a singing cowboy in the film Smoky. Other movie credits include East of Eden (1955); Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958); The Big Country (1958), for which he won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor; and Our Man in Havana (1959), based on the Graham Greene novel; and many others. His autobiography, The Wayfaring Stranger, was published in 1948. He also wrote or compiled several other books, including Burl Ives Song Book (1953); Tales of America (1954); Sea Songs of Sailing, Whaling, and Fishing (1956); and The Wayfaring Stranger's Notebook (1962). In the 1960s Ives began singing country music with greater frequency. In 1962 he released three songs which became country music hits, "A Little Bitty Tear," "Call Me Mr In-Between," and "Funny Way of Laughing." All three songs also were big pop hits. In the 1960s and 1970s, Ives had a number of television roles ] Ives and Helen Peck Ehrlich were divorced in 1971. Ives then married Dorothy Koster Paul in London in that same year. In his later years, Ives and his wife, Dorothy, lived with their children in a home located alongside the water in Anacortes, in the Puget Sound area of Washington. He also had a home just south of Hope Town on Elbow Cay, a barrier island of the Abacos in the Bahamas. In 1995 Ives died of cancer of the mouth on April 14, 1995 at the age of 85, which was exactly two months before his 86th birthday, and he is interred in Mound Cemetery in Jasper County, Illinois.
Spacemen 3 -Live -Mary Anne -13.04.1989. Netherlands
- Length: 4:25
- Rating Average: 4.86 from 14 people
- View Count: 3097' favoriteCount='36
- Author: Propolizei
Tags: Boom Sonic Spacemen Spiritualized
Spacemen 3 in their peak. Psychedelic night at Willem I Arnhem, Netherlands, on 13. April, 1989. Enjoy.
Ray Charles - Mary Ann
- Length: 2:49
- Rating Average: 5.00 from 33 people
- View Count: 9366' favoriteCount='74
- Author: KiLLaLoThNL
Ray Charles Track List 01. Mess Around 02. I Got a Woman 03. Hallelujah, I Love Her So [Live] 04. Drown in My Own Tears 05. (Night Time Is) The Right Time 06. Mary Ann 07. Hard Times (No One Knows Better Than I) 08. What'd I Say [Live] 09. Georgia on My Mind 10. Hit the Road Jack 11. Unchain My Heart 12. I Can't Stop Loving You [Live] 13. Born to Lose 14. Bye Bye Love 15. You Don't Know Me [Live] 16. Let the Good Times Roll [Live] 17. Georgia on My Mind [Live] Original Soundtracks (From the movie Ray) Soon More
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