Entrapping, calmly-incendiary, luring, provocative-these are only a few way… Read Full Bio ↴Entrapping, calmly-incendiary, luring, provocative-these are only a few ways to describe Daryl Johnson's boon to the jazz realm. His latest album release From The Inside is forty-six minutes of tranquil, yet massively intense jazz; this album is fulminating with artistic invention. All of the tunes on the album are originals of Johnson's except for the standard "You Don't Know What Love is." The album begins with a smooth, hip-hop groove. Throughout the tune, the texture and mood stay subdued. While the feel may be calm, johnson's lines are not; they have a relaxed fierceness. At the close, the tune segues to the second composition. Full of off-beat punches, "The Wizard" is spellbinding. The groove changes to funk and johnson lays it down. Often times 5/4 can sound contrived and uneasy, but with amazing skills the trio performs in this meter comfortably and naturally. A great credit to Johnson's compositional skills, the melody to "The Temple" is genuinely in 5/4, contributing to the ease the song portrays. The next tune is a laid back waltz (in 6); the feel is swing. After Johnsons solo, bassist Lonnie Plaxico delivers a stellar performance. The tune then ends as calmly as it began. Johnson's last original is for full ensemble. In 6/4, the tune features a persistent bassline. It is quite different than anything that has preceded it. The album's compositions seem to gradually build to this tunes intensity and ambience, before receding for the last piece: a solo-piano rendition of the standard "You Don't Know What Love Is." Upon recently having the opportunity to hear Kenny Barron speak, one of the key points he stressed was the importance of good rhythm. He recalled a story of a drummer who would only bring his ride cymbal to jam sessions! He stated that because the drummer had such a great feeling in his ride cymbal, that none of the other musicians ever missed the other drums and cymbals. This kind of devotion to feel can make or brake jazz musicians. The album From The Inside proves that Daryl Johnson certainly has impeccable feel. From top to bottom, From The Inside is unique and intriguing. Daryl Johnson is a force to be reckoned with. --Joshua Musselwhite, Jazz Improv magazine, Sept, 2004
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Hour of Gold
Daryl Johnson Lyrics
We have lyrics for 'Hour of Gold' by these artists:
Darryl Johnson I have seen your soul turn black And then retreat To that…
Darryl Johnson/Emmylou Harris/Ethan Johns/Malcolm Burn/Patty Griffin I have seen your soul turn black And then retreat To that…
Darryl Johnson; Emmylou Harris; Ethan Johns; Malcolm Burn; Patty Griffin I have seen your soul turn black And then retreat To that…
Emmylou Harris I have seen your soul turn black And then retreat To that…
We have lyrics for these tracks by Daryl Johnson:
The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
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@myman8336
@@jondoecan Homeless are druggies.. So many needles everywhere they go..
Cops are important..
One of the few social programs I actually agree with..
Some of the things they do is crazy tho.. They need more training and better/less lethal tools and tactics.. Like a gogo gadget net or something lol..
Just like with teachers we need to get rid of these social program that is unions.. Get rid of bad cops, get rid of bad teachers..
I'm sorry Mrs Wrinklebottom but you gotta go..
@theoverunderthinker
@@Fausto_4841 it's not about semantics. to die in the line of duty means that you have a job and the requirements of doing your job puts you in mortal danger (examples: soldier, cop, paramedic, war correspondent, firemen).
they were not killed because they were doing their job and their job was dangerous, they were killed while doing their job because their co-worker (former co-worker? It's been a while, so I might be misremembering that detail) was dangerous. they were not killed because they were reporting on the mob or police corruption or the Clintons, it was personal beef that blew up while they were on location.
it was not as a result of their job duties that they were killed, so not in the line of duty, but it was at work. they didn't knowingly put themselves in harm's way; they had no idea at all.
Otherwise you could say the victim of a school shooter died in the line of duty! Or someone dying in a transit bus accident on their way to work at a library died in the line of duty because they were on their way to work.
if you apply these terms to everybody because you feel sympathy for them, the words lose their meaning for everybody.
so I stand by my original comment, because it is not the same thing. It is still tragic though, just not in the line of duty.
@yeahyeah8522
-"Steve, you're well aware that you could be a target."
- ( long pause)
@codyposton1418
Part of that is at times due to a time lapse of audio and video feed
@jessvachon1043
To be fair , theres always a long pause lmao
@brittanybornnard6985
Hella funny
@sharyng261
Wait for it....
@rockmf
He said "๐งโโ๏ธ wait... what?.."
@jessvachon1043
The lady in the pink was way too animated talking about this wtf.
@t-man5196
Thatโs your takeaway from this? ๐คฆโโ๏ธ
@jessvachon1043
@@t-man5196 absolutely. It seemed to excite her. It was creepy. Although it's not my first time seeing the same report just different stations. But this lady , was just strange about it.
@auntjenifer7774
Fucking A she was super excited by it, and she's in tv TV so the time so it wasn't TV camera Jitters.