I'm very sorry to have to share this with you all, but I just received the
following message on Facebook:
Hello, my name is John Scott Cleveland. My heart is heavy to inform you that
our dear friend Rosalie Marley passed away yesterday at 2:40 p.m. after a long
struggle with cancer. I was one of her friends from the Baha’i Faith community.
We will be assisting with the arrangements for her funeral. If you would like
to know when and where to attend, please respond with your contact information.
My cell phone number is 301-512-0861.
I'm sure any dwers who were friends with Rosalie on FB have already received
this message. My assumption is that Rosalie provided her social media contact
information to someone in case the worst happened.
I am brokenhearted.
Beth
________________________________
From: daveworld-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <daveworld-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> on behalf
of Derek Seaton <seatons@xxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Monday, February 14, 2022 10:21 AM
To: daveworld@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <daveworld@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [daveworld] Re: A New Video
How Come You Don’t Call Me Anymore is a great track, definitely kicking around
on a few of my playlists. Excellent piano track.
:D
On Fri, Feb 11, 2022 at 9:46 AM <darius@xxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:darius@xxxxxxxxxxx>>
wrote:
Scott, are you the one who years ago told me that Prince’s “How Come You Don’t
Call Me Anymore” is fun to play?
I’m learning it. Slowly. It is so cool when I can string together even a short
segment of it.
;-)
Darius Christopher Dunlap
Half Moon Bay, CA, USA
darius@xxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:darius@xxxxxxxxxxx>
+1 (415) 828-2951
On Feb 11, 2022, 9:23 AM -0800, Mr. Ransom
<mr.ransom@xxxxxxxxx<mailto:mr.ransom@xxxxxxxxx>>, wrote:
99.99+% of western music uses four counts per measure. Some use two (marches),
some use three (waltz's), and most everything else uses four. Almost nothing
uses five. 7/8, where there's seven notes per measure, is far more common than
5/4. Pink Floyd's "Money" is in 7/8.
Really there's only two or three pieces that anyone has ever heard of that uses
five: the theme from "Mission: Impossible", and Dave Brubeck's "Take Five"
(which is obviously self-consciously 5/4). That's it. There are actually more
pieces in 5/4 than that, but not that many. Holtz's "Mars" is also in 5/4,
although if you listen to it it's hard to make out any time signature.
Anyway, you can add mine to the collection. There's more on the way.
1-2-3-4-5
Scott
On Fri, Feb 11, 2022 at 9:09 AM Steve Crane
<steve.crane@xxxxxxxxx<mailto:steve.crane@xxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
I won't pretend to know what 5/4 means but it sounds cool.
Steve Crane
about.me/stevecrane<http://about.me/stevecrane>
On Fri, 11 Feb 2022 at 19:00, Mr. Ransom
<mr.ransom@xxxxxxxxx<mailto:mr.ransom@xxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
https://youtu.be/sTm56F6I__0
I have made a new video. It is NOT a video game video. It's something much
more unusual.
Count to five.
Scott