Come Unity episode artwork

EPISODE · Jul 17, 2018 · 5 MIN

Come Unity

from Broadside Balladeer SoundCloud · host Vic Sadot

"Come Unity" is a recording of the Crazy Planet Band from a Newark, DE "Community Day" back in the time when there was a popular local movement to preserve some of the most beloved of Main Street places: The State Theater and The DeLuxe Luncheonette. The Copyright on my old paper copy of the lyrics says Sept 7, 1989. This was the only time this song was ever performed. I have fond memories of the State Theater from when I was a kid. But also from the era when Dave Bartholomew and Barry Solon introduced more international cinema offerings to the mix, which was fitting for a college town. The Laskaris brothers ran the Deluxe Luncheonette for 50 years. But they never owned the building next door to the State Theater! Many U of D alumni have precious memories of their “hang-out” where a number of them fell in love or met life-long friends. Many "Townie" folk remember the State Theater as the place where they saw their first movie when they were children. Both places are irreplaceable cultural and architectural losses to the town of Newark that will have to live on in our memories only. Whether you were a child growing up in Newark, DE or you were a college student hanging out at "The Greasy Spoon", that part of the landscape was wiped off the map by a man later convicted of defrauding the government and laudering the money into local real estate, and by the U of D planning department. Citizens made a valiant effort, but it was all in vain unless we learned something about our need for “unity” in future struggles for our “community”. These are the lyrics to "Come Unity". Vic You’ve lived and worked in this ol’ town so many years, it’s true But mean ol’ Mister Moneyman won’t even meet with you! You’re part of the community, but you’re not among the few Where property’s more precious than the whole communal view Come unity! (Come unity!) Come unity! (Come unity!) Come unity! Memories come flashing back from a little luncheonette Where we would sit in the booths and chat with everyone we met The brothers never owned the place, but they worked it fifty years! Along comes Mister Moneyman and the building disappears! Come unity! (Come unity!) Come unity! (Come unity!) Come unity! Once there was a theater from nineteen twenty-nine The stage and the acoustics there were truly something fine! But we live in the “New World” and it was old and in the way Besides, if you’ve got no money, then you ain’t got no say Come unity! (Come unity!) Come unity! (Come unity!) Come unity! So where’s he get so much money from? Can he buy up this whole town? And plan what he will do with it? And tear whatever down? Wherever there is character or culture to sustain, If he gets his greedy hands on it, what values will remain? Come unity! (Come unity!) Come unity! (Come unity!) Come unity! So celebrate community by speaking heart to heart And maybe we can learn from this and make another start! You’re part of the community, and it is part of you So concentrate on unity; You know it’s overdue! Come unity! (Come unity!) Come unity! (Come unity!) Come unity! Copyright Sept. 7, 1989 Victor Rene Sadot / BMI / Orbian Love Music

Episode metadata supplied by the publisher feed · Published Jul 17, 2018

"Come Unity" is a recording of the Crazy Planet Band from a Newark, DE "Community Day" back in the time when there was a popular local movement to preserve some of the most beloved of Main Street places: The State Theater and The DeLuxe Luncheonette. The Copyright on my old paper copy of the lyrics says Sept 7, 1989. This was the only time this song was ever performed. I have fond memories of the State Theater from when I was a kid. But also from the era when Dave Bartholomew and Barry Solon introduced more international cinema offerings to the mix, which was fitting for a college town. The Laskaris brothers ran the Deluxe Luncheonette for 50 years. But they never owned the building next door to the State Theater! Many U of D alumni have precious memories of their “hang-out” where a number of them fell in love or met life-long friends. Many "Townie" folk remember the State Theater as the place where they saw their first movie when they were children. Both places are irreplaceable cultural and architectural losses to the town of Newark that will have to live on in our memories only. Whether you were a child growing up in Newark, DE or you were a college student hanging out at "The Greasy Spoon", that part of the landscape was wiped off the map by a man later convicted of defrauding the government and laudering the money into local real estate, and by the U of D planning department. Citizens made a valiant effort, but it was all in vain unless we learned something about our need for “unity” in future struggles for our “community”. These are the lyrics to "Come Unity". Vic You’ve lived and worked in this ol’ town so many years, it’s true But mean ol’ Mister Moneyman won’t even meet with you! You’re part of the community, but you’re not among the few Where property’s more precious than the whole communal view Come unity! (Come unity!) Come unity! (Come unity!) Come unity! Memories come flashing back from a little luncheonette Where we would sit in the booths and chat with everyone we met The brothers never owned the place, but they worked it fifty years! Along comes Mister Moneyman and the building disappears! Come unity! (Come unity!) Come unity! (Come unity!) Come unity! Once there was a theater from nineteen twenty-nine The stage and the acoustics there were truly something fine! But we live in the “New World” and it was old and in the way Besides, if you’ve got no money, then you ain’t got no say Come unity! (Come unity!) Come unity! (Come unity!) Come unity! So where’s he get so much money from? Can he buy up this whole town? And plan what he will do with it? And tear whatever down? Wherever there is character or culture to sustain, If he gets his greedy hands on it, what values will remain? Come unity! (Come unity!) Come unity! (Come unity!) Come unity! So celebrate community by speaking heart to heart And maybe we can learn from this and make another start! You’re part of the community, and it is part of you So concentrate on unity; You know it’s overdue! Come unity! (Come unity!) Come unity! (Come unity!) Come unity! Copyright Sept. 7, 1989 Victor Rene Sadot / BMI / Orbian Love Music

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Felix Cartal - Weekend Workout Felix Cartal This is my podcast. Every month I do a new mix to soundtrack your workouts and weekend nights. Plus, I get friends to do takeover mixes. Tune in on Diplo's Revolution on SiriusXM, SoundCloud, Mixcloud, or iTunes Podcasts. TomCattt Thomas Patton From the beginning music has prowled with accordion lessons at a young age, followed by sax, blues harp and more recently piano, vocals, song writing and recording. Thomas Patton (AKA TomCattt) credits his mother for his stage name "TomCattt” as she was big on nick names for those she held close to her heart. TomCattt's music is best described as easy listening and sometimes retro, yet with a contemporary mix and feel. Accompanied by the creative tracks of a number of gifted musicians, his first album Hiiyaaaaaaaaaaa inspires imagination and finds a way to impress with a unique vocal sound, compelling harmony and gripping melody. The lyrical content is in fact a living reflection of this artists emotional journey that followed leaving love, finding a new love only to lose love once again. Hiiyaaaaaaaaaaa was released on June 1st, 2013 and all are invited to Soundcloud, Bandcamp, ReverbNation and Cdbaby where "A Question" is free download and to enjoy TomCattt's website tomcattt.com. Stay Well Absolut Absolem 🎧 Stay Well – your musical immune booster! Brass for your soul, drums for your feet 💥 🎺 + 🥁 = Dance attacks, no prescription needed.➡️ Take daily on YouTube & SoundCloud Immediate effect – side effect: joy.Stay healthy. Stay groovy. 🕺💃 I Truly Truly Believe Absolut Absolem 🔊 I Truly Truly Believe – OUT NOW 🔊 A Hip Hop piece for those who speak from the margins, who move forward even when the system won’t shift with them. This isn’t about winning — it’s about standing tall in your truth.🎙️ Boom-bap soul. Stubborn hope. Words that cut through silence. “I Truly Truly Believe” is for the ones who stay when others fold. For the artists, the outcasts, the quiet revolutionaries.🌪️ It may never be the loudest voice, but it’s the one worth listening to.📀 Now streaming on SoundCloud & YouTube 💭 Drop your thoughts if you've ever fought to be heard.

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This episode is 5 minutes long.

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This episode was published on July 17, 2018.

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"Come Unity" is a recording of the Crazy Planet Band from a Newark, DE "Community Day" back in the time when there was a popular local movement to preserve some of the most beloved of Main Street places: The State Theater and The DeLuxe...

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