Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Grumman F4F Wildcat and F6F Hellcat - Part 3

Part 3 of 5 The Grumman F4F Wildcat was an American carrier-based fighter aircraft that began service with both the United States Navy and the British Royal Navy (as the Martlet) in 1940. First used in combat by the British in Europe, the Wildcat was the only effective fighter available to the United States Navy and Marine Corps in the Pacific Theater during the early part of World War II in 1941 and 1942. (Although the Brewster Buffalo was the Navy's first monoplane fighter, it proved disappointing in combat. It was withdrawn very early in the war and replaced by Wildcats as they became available.) With a top speed of 318 mph (512 km/h), the Wildcat was outperformed by the faster and more nimble 331 mph (533 km/h) Mitsubishi Zero, but its ruggedness, coupled with tactics such as the Thach Weave, resulted in an air combat kill-to-loss ratio of 5.9:1 in 1942 and 6.9:1 for the entire war. - en.wikipedia.org The Grumman F6F Hellcat was a carrier-based fighter aircraft developed to replace the earlier F4F Wildcat in United States Navy (USN) service. Although the F6F resembled the Wildcat, it was a completely new design powered by a 2000 hp Pratt & Whitney R-2800. Some tagged it as the "Wildcat's big brother". The Hellcat and the Vought F4U Corsair were the primary USN fighters during the second half of World War II. - en.wikipedia.org

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Thursday, December 15, 2011

Grumman F3F-2 "Flying Barrel"

In 1935 the US Navy placed an order with the Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation, then of Farmingdale, for the design and construction of a new fighter, the F3F. Based on earlier Grumman biplane designs, the F3F was faster and more maneuverable than any Navy fighter to date. By 1937, due to the slow development of the early monoplane fighters, the Navy ordered more F3Fs, this time an improved model, the F3F-2. The F3F-2 was strong, fast, maneuverable, and was considered a wonderful aircraft to fly. Its pilots considered it the ultimate biplane fighter; in fact it was the last biplane fighter produced in the United States. With its silver fuselage, yellow wings, and red, white, and blue markings, it was among the most colorful military aircraft ever built, but it heralded the end of an era. By 1939 all US Navy and Marine fighter squadrons flew Grumman biplane fighters exclusively. Of the 164 F3Fs built, 140 were still in service, as trainers in United States, at the time of the US entry into World War II in December, 1941. Today the F3F is an extremely rare aircraft, with but two original surviving examples. General characteristics Crew: 1 pilot Length: 23 ft 2 in (7.06 m) Wingspan: 32 ft 0 in (9.75 m) Height: 9 ft 4 in (2.84 m) Wing area: 260 ft² (24.15 m²) Empty weight: 3285 lb (1490 kg) Max takeoff weight: 4795 lb (2175 kg) Powerplant: 1× Wright R-1820-22 "Cyclone" 9-cylinder radial engine, 950 hp (710 kW) Performance Maximum speed: 229 knots, 264 mph (425 km/h) at ...

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Sunday, December 11, 2011

The original, "Home on the Range" cabin

¤W0 54 ]] C2.5 G 0 [[ *cg a1001 Jared Cerullo Near Athol, KS ¤W1 24 ]] C2.5 G 14 [[ RUNS=14 5038 - You may not recognize this small one-room cabin in North central Kansas or even the name of the man who once lived here, but I'm almost certain you will recognize the name of the poem he wrote here 140 years ago. 5052 ¤W2 22 ]] C2.5 G 5 [[ RUNS=5 (Nats of home on the range chorus) ¤W3 22 ]] C2.5 G 5 [[ RUNS=5 3933 - When you've heard the phrase the latchstring is always out? You're welcome to enter the cabin. 3938 OH GIVE ME A HOME WHERE THE BUFFALO ROAM. THE WORDS FIRST PENNED BY BREWSTER HIGLEY IN 1871 AS THE PEOM 'MY WESTERN HOME.' A LOCAL BAND GAVE IT THE FAMOUS CHORUS AND THUS HISTORY WAS MADE. THIS WAS HIGLEY'S HOME... A SMALL DIRT-FLOOR CABIN NEAR ATHOL, KANSAS. ¤W4 61 ]] C2.5 G 0 [[ *cg a1001 Orin Friesen Prairie Rose Wranglers ¤W5 24 ]] C2.5 G 10 [[ RUNS=10 3638 - There's a lot of state songs out there, deep in the heart of texas and tennessee waltz and those things, but none of the state songs are as well known as home on the range. 3648 (Nats of singing) EL DEAN HOLTHUS IS PARTLY IN CHARGE OF THE TRUST LEFT BEHIND BY HIS AUNT AND UNCLE TO TAKE CARE OF THE CABIN. ¤W6 22 ]] C2.5 G 3 [[ RUNS=3 (Nats of singing.) ¤W7 22 ]] C2.5 G 8 [[ RUNS=8 3641 - This really is a 4-fold tribute to dr. Higley, to the song, to the cabin, but also to our aunt and uncle pete and ellen rust. 3649 THE RUSTS CAME TO OWN THE PROPERTY WHERE THE CABIN RESTS MANY YEARS AGO. THEY HAD ...

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Saturday, November 26, 2011

Live Jamnight featuring...... William and the Blues Jammers

www.clevelandblues.org FREE LIVE BAND SHOW EVERY WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY NIGHT. Jamnight Live, Rascal House, Agora, House of Blues, Stadium, Peppermill, Scoundrels, Harry Buffalo, Grillers, Smedleys, Parkview, Westpark, Cebars, 1969, 1971, 1970, 1967, 1966, 1968, Harland, the hive, Boneyard, Highlander, Sly Fox, Brothers Lounge, handlebar, irish german folk food jambouree festival sounds downtown avenue, kurts getaway bar, house of swing, penninsula art academy, at witz end, bullfrog's sports cafe, mad mike's bar and grille, beachland tavern, hooley house, handlebar ll, the pump sandusky, shots lounge, burntwood tavern, coach's, wing warehouse northfield, grayton road tavern, flyers, aces, sammy k's, the cove, brewsters, ape hangers, route 82 saloon, circle lounge, guzzlers cafe, main street saloon, maple grove, taverne of richfield, becky's, barking spider, shop 45 tavern, livewire, skellys, eastside saggy's, becky's bistro, prosperity social club, eastland inn, doc & louie's, purple shamrock, spectators chesterland, harpersfield winery, rick's cafe, stamper's, debonne winery, harpo's, stadium grille, greenville, pipers lll, legends medina, lone tree tavern, avenue tap house, the pour house amherst, far west inn, panini's twinsburg, north end hudson, kamm's farmer's market, chicken & things, lakewood public library, hollywood, festival, woodstock, monterey pop festival, savannah, thirsty cowboys medina, aces, the outpost kent, puckers canton, unioun house, train station ...

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Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Camp Fire Song Book Gems

!±8± Camp Fire Song Book Gems

As you can sing in my other articles on fire have read, I tend to support some fire songs over and over again. It 'true that there must be more standard campfire songs. In this article I will introduce some other camp fire song book gems. These songs focus are those that you know or not. They are excellent songs belong in the fire sing-alongs.

Home on the Range: Home on the Range is oftenas the anthem of the Old West. I imagine a group of pioneers and cowboys sitting around a campfire singing this song. It could have happened after 1870, because that's when it was written. A doctor who Brewster M. Higley wrote the words. It was originally a poem called "My Western Home." It was the first time in December 1873 in Kansas, under the title "Oh, give me a home where the buffalo pipes." Higley later had a friend named Dan Kelley to write music to go with the words. TheFolk song and has been cowboys, pioneers, and almost everyone knew the song. Sung In 1947 it became the official song of Kansas state visit. If you sing this song, which calls to mind a vision of what it must be like in the old west, the tall grass prairie, deer, antelope, buffalo and other animals migrate, starry nights, clear blue sky during the day. Can you imagine a peaceful scene? When life is hectic between work, family and other activities, this is a goodsimple song to sing to get away from it all, even if just for 30 seconds. O Susannah: I would consider this another traditional camp fire song. It was originally written by Stephen Foster. He wrote both the lyrics and the music in 1847. It became popular very fast. Just a couple of years later, when the Forty-Niners thronged to San Francisco, they picked it up and it became a kind of official song of the California gold rush. They sang the original lyrics, but they made up other verses of their own. One of the most popular alternate verses goes as follows: I soon shall be in Frisco and there I'll look around. And when I see the gold lumps there, I'll pick them off the ground. I'll scrape the mountains clean, my boys, I'll drain the rivers dry. A pocketful of rocks bring home, So, brothers don't you cry. This is a fun song to sing uptempo. It's an easy song for guitar as well as banjo. I personally like the banjo on this song. Maybe it's because it talks about the banjo in the song. Old Dan Tucker: This is an old minstrel song from the mid 1840s. Like most minstrel songs, it was originally supposed to be a boasting song about a rough and ready black man. It eventually was meant to portray a mythical wild frontiersman that tall tales could be told about. There are hundreds of verses about Old Dan Tucker; I have included just a couple in The Great American Camp Fire Song Book. Let the Sun Shine Forever: This song is not American at all, but Russian. It is very simple, with only 4 lines repeated over and over. When I have done it with children, I like to teach the Russian lyrics. The first 5 syllables of each line are exactly the same: Pust seg da bud yet, pronounced Poost seg dah bood yet. The last word of each line is as follows: 1)Son se, 2)Nye be, 3)Ma ma, 4) bood oh yah. On the fourth line replace bood yet with bood oh. I hope this makes sense to you. I have heard this song done both fast and slow. I have also heard the melody used in a beautiful choral piece by Z. Randall Stroope. The piece is called Inscription of Hope. It's about the hope that helped many survive during the holocaust. Around a campfire, I would do the upbeat, fast version. Shenandoah: This probably originated as a river shanty in the original 1800s. It was popular first among sailors, and then spread from there, up and down the Missouri and Mississippi Rivers. We don't know for sure what it's original meaning was. Some say it was about a traveling man in love with an Indian chiefs daughter, telling the chief he intends to take her with him to the west. Others interpret it as a pioneer's longing for his home in the Shenandoah River Valley of Virginia. Whatever it's original intent, it has a beautiful melody. Around a camp fire, it can be an effective song, if you want a subdued, soft mood. Otherwise, you probably should sing something else. Sippin' Cider Through a Straw: I could not find any background information about this song. We don't really know who wrote it or when. I have heard that the sipping straw was invented in 1813, so it was probably written after that. My guess is that it was written in 20th century. Two things make this a fun and easy song. First, it's fun to sing with a lisp. Second, it's an echo song, so whoever is leading the song needs to know the words pretty good. That makes it easy for everyone else; all they have to do is echo.

I hope you have fun with these six camp fire songs. You can find them all in The Great American Camp Fire Song Book.


Camp Fire Song Book Gems

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