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FSOC: March 27, 2011

The glorious return of The Far Side of Country! Enjoy, Let's Burn ol' Nashville Down: Jello Biafra and Mojo Nixon Break My Mind: The Flying Burrito Brothers Amazing Grace: Bela Fleck and the Flecktones (Victor Wooten) My Father's House: Ben Harper Dueling Banjos: Hayseed Dixie Methamphetamine: Old Crow Medicine Show Things You Didn't Know: The Bottle Rockets Drive South: John Hiatt Snake Oil: Steve Earle Honky Tonk Blues: Hank Williams Are You Sure Hank Done it This Way: Waylon Jennings Walk Like a Camel: Southern Culture on the Skids Crazy Mama: JJ Cale Friend of the Devil: Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers American Music: Violent Femmes 1979: Lucero Ziggy Stardust: The Gourds

An episode of the The Far Side of Country podcast, hosted by El Mofeto Pantano, titled "FSOC: March 27, 2011" was published on March 28, 2011.

March 28, 2011 · The Far Side of Country

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The glorious return of The Far Side of Country! Enjoy, Let's Burn ol' Nashville Down: Jello Biafra and Mojo Nixon Break My Mind: The Flying Burrito Brothers Amazing Grace: Bela Fleck and the Flecktones (Victor Wooten) My Father's House: Ben Harper Dueling Banjos: Hayseed Dixie Methamphetamine: Old Crow Medicine Show Things You Didn't Know: The Bottle Rockets Drive South: John Hiatt Snake Oil: Steve Earle Honky Tonk Blues: Hank Williams Are You Sure Hank Done it This Way: Waylon Jennings Walk Like a Camel: Southern Culture on the Skids Crazy Mama: JJ Cale Friend of the Devil: Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers American Music: Violent Femmes 1979: Lucero Ziggy Stardust: The Gourds

The glorious return of The Far Side of Country!

Enjoy,



Let's Burn ol' Nashville Down: Jello Biafra and Mojo Nixon
Break My Mind: The Flying Burrito Brothers
Amazing Grace: Bela Fleck and the Flecktones (Victor Wooten)
My Father's House: Ben Harper
Dueling Banjos: Hayseed Dixie
Methamphetamine: Old Crow Medicine Show
Things You Didn't Know: The Bottle Rockets
Drive South: John Hiatt
Snake Oil: Steve Earle
Honky Tonk Blues: Hank Williams
Are You Sure Hank Done it This Way: Waylon Jennings
Walk Like a Camel: Southern Culture on the Skids
Crazy Mama: JJ Cale
Friend of the Devil: Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
American Music: Violent Femmes
1979: Lucero
Ziggy Stardust: The Gourds
the Informed Simplicity podcast jocrharris “I wouldn’t give anything for the simplicity on this side of complexity. I’d give my life for the informed simplicity of the far side of complexity.” - Adam Robinson. Email me at [email protected] The We Know Show Rinat Strahlhofer Who can imagine getting through the day without our smart phone, laptop and Bluetooth? The We Know Show explores the darker side of the telco industry and the far-reaching impacts of our devices. Join We Are Not Sam’s Rinat Strahlhofer as she engages global visionaries in conversations that uncover inconvenient truths - but also shine a light on how to be healthy, safe and ”human” in a technology obsessed world. The GCSE History Revision Podcast Mr W Twitter: @GCSEHistoryPod Produced by History teachers working in the far North, these podcasts are designed to prepare you for your GCSE History exam, with a particular focus on the AQA Course.Most episodes are solo affairs by Mr W but watch out for the special essay argument episodes where you can hear grown men getting frankly just a but carried away arguing their version of events. Peacock Pie: A Book of Rhymes by Walter de la Mare (1873 - 1956) LibriVox These wonderful, whimsical poems from the incomparable Walter de la Mare describe the bliss of childhood, explore the marvel of a child's imagination and portray the intriguing landscapes of existences both lived and imagined by a young mind in a magical kingdom located somewhere between daydream and caprice. In these poems we experience aspects of a reality unencumbered by concern, unhindered by anxiety, and share an imagination free to wander, ponder, contemplate, envision and express itself in a marvelous mosaic of impression, inspiration and introspection. The wisdom and wonder of childhood is brought to life in these poems by an expert in the field of the fancy and fanciful. In the words of Walter de la Mare himself, these are poems that "echo the far-away calling of children, Magic hath stolen away." - Summary by Bruce Kachuk
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