here it is, what no one asked for: my ship bias list
under a read more cause oof it's long
main roster
disney
hans — anna, kristoff
dragon age
blackwall — josie, inquisitor
colum cousland — morrigan, anora, zevran
fenris — hawke, isabela, bethany
kaitlyn hawke — varric, fenris, cullen, alistair, loghain
roland gilmore — cousland, bethany
dragon ball z
android 18 — krillin
bulma briefs — vegeta, goku
cell — ....honestly just send me your ideas
dende — gohan
goku — chi-chi, bulma
piccolo — bulma
trunks briefs (future) — none yet
final fantasy
aerith — cloud, tifa, sephiroth
cid highwind — reeve, tifa
clive rosfield — jill, cid
cloud — aerith
yuna — tidus, baralai
fire emblem
citrinne — none yet
cyril — lysithea
eirika — seth, saleh, cormag
ephraim — forde, gerik, tethys, marisa, tana
frederick — olivia, sumia, cherche
gerome — cynthia, lucina, laurent
kagetsu — alear
nel — none yet
olivia — frederick, lon'qu, gregor
seteth — jeralt, hanneman
fma: brotherhood
ed — winry
ling yao — lan fan
riza — roy
harvest moon
chelsea — vaughn
kai — popuri, karen, leia
mark (awl) — muffy
molly (ap) — candace, phoebe, renee
popuri — gray, karen, kai
soseki — none yet
vaughn — chelsea
the last unicorn
amalthea — lir
legend of zelda
link — mipha, malon
malon — link
mipha — link, zelda, revali
zelda — ganondorf
marvel 616
adam warlock — gamora
drax — mantis
gamora — adam warlock, angela, tony stark
peter quill — none yet
rocket — lylla
mortal kombat
fujin — none yet
jax — sonja, vera
takeda — jacqui
my time
gwen/oc — logan, unsuur, owen, qi, heidi
logan — fang, grace, builder
persona
kotone — shinjiro, akihiko, ryoji
ren — yoshizawa, ann, futaba, shiho, ryuji
ryuji — joker, ann
shiho — ann, joker
shinjiro — kotone
resident evil
leon — claire
rebecca — none yet
star wars
briayla/oc — corso, darmas, theron, lana
doc — jedi knight
kihanda/oc — doc, obi-wan
stardew valley
abigail — sam, leah, penny, farmer
eris/oc — harvey
harvey — farmer
studio ghibli
arrietty — spiller
baron — baroness
kiki — none yet
pazu — sheeta
tales of
kratos — anna, raine
lailah — zaveid
threads of fate
rue — none yet
tomb raider
jonah — abigaile
lara — sam, jaocb
sam — lara
request roster
chrono trigger/cross
serge — leena
magus — none yet
cyberpunk 2077
takemura — none yet
v/oc — none yet
DC
lucifer — mazikeen
soarnik natu — none yet
disney
jack skellington — sally
jane porter — tarzan, belle
final fantasy
basch — none yet
fran — balthier
penelo — none yet
zidane — garnet/dagger
fire emblem
byleth — dimitri, claude, hanneman, shamir
deirdre — sigurd
franz — none yet
gregory — none yet
marianne — byleth, dimitri
mikoto — yukimura, gunter
quan — ethlyn
rhys — none yet
silas — corrin
harvest moon
calvin — farmer
lyla — basil, louis
muffy — farmer, griffin, nami
legend of dragoon
dart — shana
lavitz — rose
mass effect
garrus — shepard
jeff/joker — shepard
zaeed — shepard
metal gear solid
cécile — kaz
gray fox — none yet
quiet — venom snake
solid snake — hal, meryl
my hero academia
tenya iida — ochako
mina ashido — none yet
once upon a time
belle — emma, ruby, ariel, killian, neal
emma swan — neal, belle, ruby, graham
grace — henry
jefferson — belle, graham, robin, ruby
milah — graham, robin, killian
neal — emma, belle, robin, graham
rune factory
felicity — raguna
russell — none yet
tales of
zaveid — lailah
*note 1: for any oc type characters I have a preference for (inquisitor, hawke, builder, assorted farmers, shepard, etc.), shipping will depend on that muse's character and if it works with my muse.
**note 2: just because a ship isn't on here doesn't mean I wouldn't ship it at all, except in the rare case of a notp
***notps: aerith/zack, cloud/tifa. these are only in a romantic sense, platonic is fine. if you see me shipping these it's because I'm close with the other mun
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San Francisco Silent Film Festival 2017 - Day 4
The Doll (Die Puppe) (1919)
Master director Ernst Lubitsch sets out his intentions early as we see him construct a toylike world in which his fantastical characters soon come to life. Wealthy milquetoast Lancelot (Herman Thimig, resembling a more effete Willy Wonka), startled by the prospect of marriage, seeks refuge at a monastery full of some very fat and self-satisfied monks, who concoct a crazy solution to his problem. Why not buy a realistic talking doll and marry her instead? The one he selects happens to be a replica of the dollmaker’s daughter Ossi.
When the doll is broken, the real Ossi (the hilarious and exuberant Ossi Oswalda) steps in to replace her, and madcap hilarity - along with a generous dose of unapologetic sexual innuendo - ensues. As you might expect from Lubitsch, it’s a well-handled, inspired piece of entirely entertaining silliness, and one of the funniest films of the festival.
Silence (1926)
The productions of Cecil B. DeMille’s short-lived PDC Productions of the late 1920s can be quite uneven - on one hand, there’s the excellent Chicago (1927) and Eve’s Leaves (1926); on the other, there’s forgettable fare like Hold ‘Em Yale (1928) and Midnight Madness (1928). Happily, Silence, recently rediscovered at the Cinematheque Française, is one of the better productions, a well made and glossy melodrama from The Phantom of the Opera helmer Rupert Julian.
Though the storyline would win no awards, it’s lifted by the always likeable H.B. Warner as a man whose girlfriend (Vera Reynolds) adopts a more suitable candidate as the ‘father’ of her illegitimate daughter. When the ruse is uncovered by a slimy conman (Raymond Hatton), the now-grown daughter (also played by Reynolds) takes matters into her own hands, with potentially tragic consequences. The Mont Alto Picture Orchestra provided a particularly good and at times unusually percussive accompaniment that greatly contributed to the suspense of the early scenes. Given how many of these DeMille productions have been rediscovered in only the past decade, there may be plenty more treats lying in wait for us.
Image from Wikipedia
Terje Vigen (A Man There Was) (1917)
This Swedish film is a lyrical tone-poem of a feature, with a storyline just strong enough to move you but not so complex as to distract from its vivid imagery of the Scandinavian coastline. Based on a well-known poem by Henrik Ibsen, it tells of the tragic impact of the British blockade of Norway during the Napoleonic Wars upon a simple Norwegian sailor (Victor Sjöström, who also directs) and his impoverished family.
If you’ve seen Sjöström’s Hollywood classics such as He Who Gets Slapped (1924) and The Wind (1928), you won’t be surprised by his deft handling of such delicate material, but you will also find him a fine and subtle actor, conveying grief more eloquently with a single agonised glance than any amount of histrionics. To my mind, this was a far more successful experiment in capturing the rhythms of a piece of Scandinavian literature than Pan (1922), shown at the festival a few years ago. The Matti Bye Ensemble provided a suitably atmospheric accompaniment.
The Lost World (1925)
Most silent film fans would be familiar with this property, but who can say they’ve actually seen the film? Almost nobody living, thanks to the purchase and destruction of all available prints in the late 1920s. David Shepard and Serge Bromberg spent years examining surviving footage of variable quality and completeness to assemble this, the closest thing we may ever see to the original ten-reel version.
In this restoration, The Lost World finally reveals itself as a fully realised precursor to the action blockbusters of the current day. Jurassic Park (1992) is the obvious comparison, but there are also moments that evoke everything from the Indiana Jones series to the disaster pictures of the 1970s, to the current cycle of effects-driven superhero films.
Wallace Beery is perfectly cast as the eccentric Professor Challenger, who leads a ragtag expedition to prove the existence of dinosaurs on an isolated South American outcrop. The world of the movie, and especially the love affair between Bessie Love and Lloyd Hughes’ journalist character, are more satisfyingly fleshed out than in previous truncated versions. It’s absurd, it’s sometimes cheesy - but it’s a whole lot of fun. The Alloy Orchestra’s stark, unorthodox score was one of their best and a great match for the picture, with the dinosaur’s cries chillingly rendered.
Image from Internet Movie Database
Two Days (Dva Dni) (1927)
Any film that begins with the callous death of a puppy and only becomes more depressing thereafter is not going to be a laugh riot, but for those with sufficient intestinal fortitude, this bleak Ukranian film has much to recommend it.
After an aristocratic family flees the Bolsheviks, their faithful servant (Ivan Zamychkovskyi) remains to guard their valuables. He soon finds himself torn between his worship of his son (Sergey Minin) despite his allegiance to the boorish Bolsheviks who take command of the house, and that of the son of his employer (Valeriy Hakkebush) who, when the tables turn, reveals himself no less thuggish than the invading enemy.
There’s shades of Emil Jannings’ downtrodden doorman from The Last Laugh (1924) in Zamychkovskyi’s performance, and while the film’s brutal, uncompromising vision makes it hard to love, its central message - that extremist ideology of any stripe is capable of distorting minds and destroying families - is undoubtedly a timely one.
Image from Wikipedia
The Three Musketeers (1921)
Like The Mark of Zorro (1920) before it, Fred Niblo’s epic starring vehicle for Douglas Fairbanks is the origin story of a hero. The supreme egotist in real life, Doug’s artistic ego was sure enough to know that you don’t need to be on screen every moment to still be the star of the show. It is only after a good deal of set-up about palace intrigues involving France’s King Louis XIII (Adolphe Menjou), his Queen (Mary MacLaren) and the treacherous Cardinal Richelieu (Nigel de Brulier) that Fairbanks’ character of D’Artagnan even makes his first appearance, beginning the story as a rather crude country youth. It takes an allegiance with the legendary Three Musketeers (Leon Barry, George Siegemann and Eugene Pallette) and his involvement in a plot to clear the Queen’s name to earn his status as a national legend.
Doug is as effortlessly charismatic, athletic and humorous as always, and the multiple moving parts of a storyline that easily might have sprawled into confusion are deftly handled, painted with broad enough strokes to be easily understood, but containing enough detail to gain an immersive sense of the period, which is lavishly rendered. The image quality for this new restoration is top notch, derived from Fairbanks’ own print that was deposited at the Museum of Modern Art in New York in the 1930s.
Don’t let its lengthy two-hour running time act as a deterrent - it all passes in the blink of an eye, without a moment’s drag. What a rip-roaring way to end the festival!
As always, I had the opportunity to catch up with a number of friends and fellow film bloggers both new and old, including Pamela Hutchinson, whose excellent Silent London website is well worth your time; Thomas Gladysz, director and founder of the Louise Brooks Society, Mary Mallory of The Daily Mirror, the indefatigable Donna of Strictly Vintage Hollywood, Beth Anne Gallagher of Spellbound by Film, and FilmRadar’s Karie Bible - most of whom have penned their own recaps of the festival that I urge you to read.
The silent film community is full of passionate and wonderful people who are dedicated to keeping this art form alive, and I’m proud to be a part of it. Thank you to all who contributed to another wonderful weekend of silents!
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There are 329 records in my collection as of January 9, 2019. This list includes Alternative Rock, Christmas, Classical, Comedy, Country, Dance, Folk, German, Hip Hop, Jazz, Kids, Metal, Outlaw Country, Pop, Rock, Rockabilly, and Soundtrack.
To organize and keep track of all of these, I use an app on my iPad called MusicBuddy and it catalogs and organizes all of my records for me. So when I get more records, I’m going to continue to add to this blog. This collection is a conglomeration of records given to me by my mom, grandparents, friends, and records I’ve found at local thrift stores.
They’re organized first by genre, then by artist. If you see any that are in the wrong category, feel free to message me so I can fix it. Like I said, my app placed them into the genre Discogs placed them into.
KEY: Artist – Album Name 1, Album Name 2, Album Name 3, etc..
All records that are underlined are the ones that are photographed.
Alternative Rock: 7 records
Dance Gavin Dance – Artificial Selection, Instant Gratification (signed), Mothership, Summertime Gladness/Pussy Vultures (7″)
David Lee Roth – Just Like Paradise
Jefferson Airplane – The Worst of Jefferson Airplane
Pink Floyd – A Momentary Lapse of Reason
Christmas: 15 records
Andy Williams – Merry Christmas
Charles M. Shulz – A Charlie Brown Christmas
Elvis Presley – Elvis Sings the Wonderful World of Christmas, Christmas Album
Floyd Robinson – Charlie the Hamster Plays Christmas Songs With Floyd…
Jim Nabors – Jim Nabors’ Christmas Album
John Denver – A Christmas Together, Rocky Mountain Christmas
Johnny Cash – The Christmas Spirit
Luciano Pavarotti – O Holy Night
Richard P. Condie – Christmas Carols Around the World
Tennessee Ernie Ford – O Come All Ye Faithful, Sing We Now of Christmas
Classical/Easy Listening: 17 records
101 Strings – Henry Mancini, John Denver
2Cellos – Score
Arthur Fiedler – Arthur Fiedler Superstar
Boston Symphonic Orchestra – Appalachian Spring/The Tender Land – Suite
Clarinet Kings – The Best Polka
Copperas Cove Bands – The Proud New Generation Band ’74
Engelbert Humperdinck – King of Hearts
Ferrante & Teicher – Moonlight Melodies
Heintje – “Mama”
Hollyridge Strings – The Beatles Songbook
Jean-Pierre Rampal – Fascinatin’ Rampal
Mannheim Steamroller – Saving the Wildlife
Richard Clayderman – Love Songs of the World
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra – Hooked on Classics
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart – Die Zauberflaute, The Magic Flute (box set)
Comedy: 8 records
All in the Family Cast – All in the Family
Bill Cosby – 200 mph, Bill Cosby, Bill Cosby ‘Live’ Madison Square Garden, For Adults Only, When I Was a Kid, Wonderfulness
Various – The Watergate Comedy Hour
Country: 40 records
Alabama – Just Us, Mountain Music
Barbara Fairchild – Kid Stuff
Barbara Mandrell – He Set My Life to Music, Love is Fair, Meant for Each Other
Buck Owens and His Buckaroos – The Kansas City Song
Charley Pride – The Best of Charley Pride, The Best of Charley Pride Vol. III, From Me to You, Pride of Country Music
Conway Twitty – By Heart, I Love You More Today
Don Francisco – Forgiven, Got to Tell Somebody, Holiness, Traveler
Don Williams – Cafe Carolina, Greatest Hits
Freddie Hart and The Heartbeats – The Pleasure’s Been All Mine
Glen Campbell – Galveston, Glen Campbell’s Greatest Hits
Jean Shepard – A Real Good Woman
Kendalls – The Best of the Kendalls
Kenny Rogers – The Gambler
Loretta Lynn – Coal Miner’s Daughter, Entertainer of the Year – Loretta, Here I Am Again.., Just a Woman, You’re Lookin’ At Country
Moe Bandy – Rodeo Romeo
Skeeter Davis – A Place in the Country
Sonny James – The Sensational Sonny James
Statler Brother – Bed of Roses
T.G. Sheppard – Perfect Stranger
Tammy Wynette – The First Lady, Just Tammy, Tammy’s Greatest Hits
Various – America’s Greatest Country Stars Live and In Person, Country Girls
Dance/Electronic: 4 records
Crystal Fighters – Cave Rave
Devo – Oh, No! It’s Devo, Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo!
M|A|R|R|S – Pump Up the Volume (7″)
Folk: 29 records
Albert Hammond – The Free Electric Band
Andy Williams – Andy Williams’ Greatest Hits, Moon River and Other Great Movie Themes
Cat Stevens – Foreigner, The Very Best of Cat Stevens
Dale Evans – Heart of the Country
Jim Nabors – Everything is Beautiful
John Denver – John Denver’s Greatest Hits Vol. 2, Poems Prayers & Promises
Johnny Cash – America: A 200 Year Salute in Story and Song, Any Old Wind That Blows, At Folsom Prison, Believe in Him, The Gospel Road: A Story of Jesus, Heroes, I Walk the Line, Johnny Cash at San Quentin, Johnny Cash’s Greatest Hits Vol. 1, Look At Them Beans, Ragged Old Flag, Starportrait
Johnny Cash & June Carter Cash – Carryin’ On With, Johnny Cash and His Woman
Johnny Horton – Johnny Horton’s Greatest Hits
Marty Robbins – Greatest Hits Vol. IV
Peter, Paul & Mary – Album 1700, The Best Of…
Simon & Garfunkel – Parsley, Sage, Rosemary, and Thyme
Various – Zenith Presents Hootenanny Special
German: 20 records
Extrablatt – Vico Ganz Neu!
Flotte Franz Und Seine Bierbrummer – Ja Das Haben Di Madchen So Gerne
Gaudeamus Igitur – Romantic Old Heidelberg
Hoffbrau Singers – Ein Prosit! A Toast!
Ivan Rebroff – Kosaken Mussen Reiten
Johannes Heesters – Da, Geh’ich Ins Maxim
Lucie Baierl – Wine, Women and Schrammeln
Paul Horbiger – Servuswein
Peter Alexander – The Golden Album of Peter Alexander, Peter Alexander Prasentiert Walt Disney’s Welt
Robert Stolz – Ein Shoner Herbst
Serge Jaroff – The Best of Serge Jaroff and His Don Cossacks
Various – A Echte Gaudi, Ein Heurigenabend Bei Toni Karas, Music of the Austrian Alps, Musical Memories of Germany Vol. 2 “Auf Zum Oktoberfest”, Schenkt Man Sich Rosen In Tirol
Wiener Schrammelguartett – Erinnerung An Wein
Winer Terzett – Tanze Aus Dem Alten Wein
Hip Hop: 6 records
Boogie Boys – City Life
LL Cool J – Radio
New Kids On The Block – Hangin’ Tough, Hangin’ Tough (Calendar Pack 7″)
Snap! – The Power
Various – Electric Breakdance
Jazz: 12 records
Dean Martin – Dean Martin Hits Again, Gentle On My Mind, This is Dean Martin!
Frank Sinatra – I’m Glad There Is You/You Can Take My Word for It Baby (7″), Strangers in the Night, Ultimate Sinatra
Jack La Forge – Unchain My Heart
John Tropea – Short Trip to Space
Paul Winter – Common Ground
Various – Happiness Is (Box Set), Kings of Swing
Winter Consort – Road
Kids: 20 records
Al Smith – Happytime Songs for Children
Candle – The Music Machine
Carole and Jimmy Owens – Ants’hillvania
Children’s Television Workshop – Songs From Sesame Street 2
Disney Choir – It’s A Small World
Disney – Walt Disney Presents Mickey Mouse and His Friends
Ethel Barrett – Children’s Stories: The Mysterious White Envelope
Marcy Tigner – Sings Nursery Rhymes, Wear a Smile
Nancy F.A. Woolnough – The Adventures of Raindrop #3
Peter Pan – Popeye the Sailor Man 4 Exciting Stories
Richard Wolfe Children’s Songs – A Raggedy Ann Songbook
Sesame Street – Sesame Street Gold! The Best of Sesame Street, Sleepytime Bird, The Year of Roosevelt Franklin: Gordon’s Friend
Sharron Lucky – Follow the Clouds
Singspiration Trio – Songs for Children No. 2
Strawberry Shortcake – Strawberry Shortcake and Her Friends (photo disc)
Susie and Johnny – Sings Stories by Susie and Johnny and Their Singing Pals
Thomas Moore – Sleepy Time
Metal: 10 records
Bloodrock – Live
Jethro Tull – A Passion Play
Metallica – The Good The Bad & The Live: The 6 1/2 Year Anniversary Collection, Harvester of Sorrow, Jump in the Fire, Kill ‘Em All
Motley Crue – Girls, Girls, Girls
Slayer – Hell Awaits
Twisted Sister – Love is for Suckers, Under the Blade
Outlaw Country
Johnny Rodriguez – Foolin’ With Fire
Kris Kristofferson – Border Lord, Me and Bobby McGee, The Silver-Tongued Devil and I
Kris Kristofferson & Rita Coolidge – Full Moon
Merle Haggard – Amber Waves of Grain, The Best Of The Best Of Merle Haggard, It’s All in the Movies, Same Train Different Time
Tanya Tucker – What’s Your Mama’s Name
Waylon Jennings – Wanted! The Outlaws
Willie Nelson – Willie Nelson’s Greatest Hits
Willie Nelson & Family – Honeysuckle Rose
Pop: 38 records
Connie Francis – The Very Best of Connie Francis
Cyndi Lauper – True Colors
Debby Boone – Surrender
Eurythmics – Greatest Hits
Gene Pitney – The Many Sides of Gene Pitney
Go-Go’s – Beauty and The Beat
Halsey – Badlands
Helen Reddy – Long Hard Climb
Johnny Mathis – Close to You, More Johnny’s Greatest Hits
Maureen McGovern – The Morning After
Michael Jackson – Thriller
Neighborhood – I Love You.
Neil Diamond – Classics The Early Years, Gold, Hot August Night, Tap Root Manuscript
Oh Wonder – Ultralife
Olivia Newton-John – Olivia’s Greatest Hits Vol. 2, Physical
Panic! At The Disco – Death of a Bachelor, Pray for the Wicked
Paul Anka – 21 Greatest Hits
R.B. Greaves – R.B. Greaves
Ready for the World – Oh Sheila
Rick Springfield – Working Class Dog
Righteous Brothers – Back to Back
Sonny & Cher – All I Ever Need Is You
Sylvan Esso – Sylvan Esso
Toni Basil – Word of Mouth
Various – 24 Groovy Greats, From Broadway to Hollywood, Love is Blue (box set), Super Stars – Super Hits, They Come to America, Zenith Presents The Hit Makers
Wayne Newton – Summer Wind
Wham! – Make it Big
Rock: 54 records
4 Skins – A Few 4 Skins More Vol 2
AC/DC – Fly On the Wall
Adolescents – Brats in Batallion
Alice Cooper – Alice Cooper’s Greatest Hits
Animals – The Best of the Animals
Bad Religion – Against the Grain
Bauhaus – Mask
Beastie Boys – Licensed to Ill
Beatles – 1962-1966, Introducing… the Beatles
Billy Joel – An Innocent Man
Blood, Sweat, and Tears – Blood, Sweat, and Tears
Boatz – Boatz
Bob Seger – The Distance
Bobby Darin – It’s You Or No One
Camel – Breathless
Chuck Berry – Chuck Berry’s Greatest Hits
Circle Jerks – Group Sex
Cliff Richard – Two a Penny
Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young – Deja Vu
Cure – Boys Don’t Cry, Japanese Whispers
Dad Punchers – These Times Weren’t Made for You
Everly Brothers – Everly Brothers’ Original Greatest Hits, The Golden Hits of the Everly Brothers, Very Best of the Everly Brothers
Fleetwood Mac – Fleetwood Mac, Greatest Hits, Rumours, Tango In The Night, Tusk
Free Beer – Highway Robbery
Grateful Dead – Touch of Grey (7″)
Green Day – Dookie
Hard-Ons – Dickcheese, The Worst Of…
J Geils Band – Freeze-Frame
Jerry Lee Lewis – By Request: More of the Greatest Live Show On Earth
Jesse Colin Young – Love On The Wing
Journey – Escape
Kenny Loggins – Nightwatch
Kenny Loggins & Messina – The Best of Friends, Native Sons
Lee Michaels – 5th
Mike & The Mechanics – Mike + The Mechanics
Pat Benatar – Crimes of Passion, Get Nervous, Heartbreaker, Live From Earth
Stevie Nicks – Bella Donna, Rock a Little
Tom Jones – Live in Las Vegas, This Is Tom Jones, The Tom Jones Fever Zone, Tom Jones Live! At The Talk Of The Town
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Rockabilly: 12 records
Elvis Presley – Almost in Love, Aloha from Hawaii via Satellite, Elvis Now, Elvis’ Golden Records, G.I. Blues, How Great Thou Art, Let’s Be Friends, Pure Gold, Rock ‘N’ Roll, Welcome to My World, Worldwide Gold Award Hits
Ricky Nelson – Legendary Masters Series
Soundtrack: 24 records
Burt Bacharach – Lost Horizon
Dory Previn – Valley of the Dolls
Isaac Hayes – Shaft
Jack L. Warner – 1776
Leonard Bernstein – West Side Story
Mary Martin – Mary Martin Sings The Sound of Music
Mr. Pickwick – Mr. Pickwick Sings Songs from Mary Poppins
Neil Diamond – Jonathan Livingston Seagull
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky – Suite from “The Nutcracker”
Ray Parker Jr. – Ghostbusters
Rossini – The Barber of Seville (box set)
Simon & Garfunkel – The Graduate
Unknown – HearSeeDo: Hanna-Barbera Record of Safety, Superman
Various – 2001 A Space Odyssey, 50 Happy Years of Disney Favorites (1923-1973), Fantasia, The Fox and the Hound, Grease, Song of Norway, That’s Entertainment: Musical Highlights from Camelot! Sounds of Music! etc., Top Gun, Urban Cowboy
Vince Guaraldi – Selections from the Soundtrack ” A Boy Named Charlie Brown”
Record Collection There are 329 records in my collection as of January 9, 2019. This list includes Alternative Rock, Christmas, Classical, Comedy, Country, Dance, Folk, German, Hip Hop, Jazz, Kids, Metal, Outlaw Country, Pop, Rock, Rockabilly, and Soundtrack.
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