Having progressed from crawling to walking to being regally conveyed in a carriage to riding a tricycle to running, I began to have to address new and more relevant ways of personal transportation as I grew older. I was able to occasionally borrow, however briefly, a bicycle from an understanding friend. Late in August one year, I was riding on the sidewalk in front of Robertson’s house, when I lost my balance and fell to my right. I threw my right arm out to “break” my fall.
Archive for “Heavy Metal Baby”
Two Wheeler Peter
Posted in Family, life, music, Opinion with tags ""Bully Proof Vest", "Heavy Metal Baby", "My Little Town", "Take It All In Stride", "The Narrows", 4th Orillia Cub Pack, Bob Segarini, Brandon Gregory, CCM, David H Church School, Don't Believe a Word I Say, Drop Top Alibi, Franklin Street, Functional Check Flight, Harris Boat Livery, James Street, Jeff McCann, Jimi Hendrix, Main Street, Mark Twain, Matilda, Mushy Callahan, Orillia, Peter Montreuil, Puff the Magic Dragon, Simon and Garfunkel, Simpson's Bicycle Shop on February 27, 2020 by segariniPeter Picks a Peck of Players
Posted in Opinion, Review with tags "Heavy Metal Baby", "Karma Police", "Know Your Place", "Misery", "More Than Friends", "Noise", "Ride Over Run", "Toccata and Fugue in D Minor", "Traveling Son", "Turn Your Demons Into Diamonds", "Warpaint", Autism, Bob Segarini, Brad Cowan, Brandon Gregory, Brandon Scott, Canadian Music Week, Cherry Cola's, Crown Lands, David Finkelstein, Don't Believe a Word I Say, Drop Top Alibi, Eklectic, Frank Gutch Jr., Helene Sculthess, Ivory Hours, James Blonde, Johann Sebastian Bach, Key Machine, London, Orillia, Pat Blythe, Phil Taylor, PostModern Jukebox, Radiohead, Red Zeppelin, Secret Broadcast, Social Strife, The Bobcast, The Drake Underground, The Rockpile, Toronto Cat Rescue on May 10, 2018 by segariniOne of the things that most impressed me about Frank Gutch Jr’s “nose for noise” is that he started finding this great music before the Internet, almost before electricity, in fact 😉. The Internet has made such a difference in our lives, connecting us mostly for good, but sometimes for bad, sadly. In any case, it has certainly eased our access to music of all kinds, genres and eras.