Let Me Make This Very Clear, The Trump Administration Does Not Give Two Shits About The Legacy Of JFK

Let me make this very clear, the Trump administration does not give two shits about the legacy of JFK or RFK. They release the files and then stomp on their legacies by implementing policies that are completely opposite of the Kennedy administration’s goals. They wish they will ever be held in the high regard that those two men are, they wish they will ever be revered in the way those men are.

More Posts from Bobbykennedyshusband and Others

2 months ago

bobby kennedy + father figure by george michael

2 months ago
JFK nicknamed His Sister-in-law, Joan Kennedy, ”The Dish” In 1960.
JFK nicknamed His Sister-in-law, Joan Kennedy, ”The Dish” In 1960.

JFK nicknamed his sister-in-law, Joan Kennedy, ”The Dish” in 1960.

“Most people don’t know it, but in 1960 that expression was quite a compliment … especially coming from Jack Kennedy.”

Who did he first say the nickname to, Ted?

“No, he said it to me! And then, later, to the Senator.”

I bet he was happy about that?

“Oh yes, quite proud.”

Did you have a favorite brother in law?

“If I did, I wouldn’t tell you. They were so different. There was something about Jack. Both were very nice to me. That’s the important thing, isn’t it?”

1 month ago
JFK's Campaign Advertisement With Look Magazine Outtake (1960)
JFK's Campaign Advertisement With Look Magazine Outtake (1960)
JFK's Campaign Advertisement With Look Magazine Outtake (1960)
JFK's Campaign Advertisement With Look Magazine Outtake (1960)
JFK's Campaign Advertisement With Look Magazine Outtake (1960)
JFK's Campaign Advertisement With Look Magazine Outtake (1960)
JFK's Campaign Advertisement With Look Magazine Outtake (1960)

JFK's campaign advertisement with look magazine outtake (1960)

4 months ago

I was always interested in finding out what have happens on the photo. What gave them the idea of depict Paul's funeral: why the funeral, why Paul? Well…I have an answer, I suppose

I Was Always Interested In Finding Out What Have Happens On The Photo. What Gave Them The Idea Of Depict

More legendary than most, however, were a band briefly signed to Brian, the Big Three. Other musicians on the scene seemed to regard this band with awe. They were the original power trio, real sonic bruisers who’d built themselves the biggest amplifiers - nicknamed Coffins - that anyone had ever seen.

(Liverpool - Wondrous Place by Paul Du Noyer, 2002)

Epstein made his way to the Cavern club to see the group perform at a lunchtime session on November 9th. He wrote later that he had never seen anything like The Beatles on any stage. <…> "I loved their ad libs and I was fascinated by this, to me, new music with its pounding bass beat and its vast, engulfing sound." <…> The "pounding" bass that Epstein described was due in part to a new addition to The Beatles' equipment line-up. In the early 1960s there was really no such thing as a proper bass amplifier. Most bass players would use the most powerful guitar amplifier that they could get their hands on. But these were not designed for bass guitar, and did not provide the deep, throbbing bass tones that bass guitarists wanted. As The Beatles evolved their sound and Best perfected his "atomic beat" the group were searching for a stronger and more solid bass sound.

The band considered by many to be the loudest and most aggressive in Liverpool was The Big Three. They bad started out as Cass & The Cassanovas, a four-piece until leader and frontman Brian Casser left during the beginning of 1961. The remaining members stayed together to form The Big Three: Johnny Gustafson on bass, guitarist Adrian Barber, and Liverpool's loudest drummer, Johnny Hutchinson, on the skins.

Barber says that when they became a trio there was an instant problem: he and Gustafson weren't loud enough to project over Hutchinson's drumming. Even the relatively punchy Selmer Truvoice amp was not enough. Barber, however, had an interest in electronics from his days in the merchant navy. <…> Barber went out and bought a book about loudspeakers produced by G A Briggs, who owned the British Wharfedale speaker company, and inside he found construction details for various sizes of cabinets. "I decided on one, and Denis Kealing said he could get me a 15-inch speaker," recalls Barber. "I built a set-up for the bass guitar and for the vocal, in a cabinet about five feet tall by about 18 inches square. <…> I used that and mounted it in a metal ammunitions case, so we could carry it around without killing it. Johnny Gustafson used it as his bass amp, and it was very successful. "When we carried it we bad to lower it on its side, because it was long and skinny. The first time we took it down to the Cavern, we struggled down the tiny stairs there. As we carried this black-painted thing across the room it looked just like a coffin - and that's how it got its name: the Coffin. Now, the Cavern was the underground basement of a warehouse, with three vaulted brick-built archways. Over the years water had seeped down and brought calcium deposits with it, which had settled in the ceiling bricks. So when Johnny plucked that first bass note it was like a shower of snow corning down. People went, 'Wow look at that … and listen to that.' So we were really impressed, and I got ambitious at that point." <…> Other bands began to notice the relative sophistication of The Big Three's amplification, especially the bass gear. "Liverpool wasn't a competitive scene, before it got commercial," explains Barber. '"All the bands co-operated with one another and backed each other up. It was a cool scene, and I started to build these things for other people. Paul McCartney asked me to make him a Coffin. It had a single 15-inch speaker in a reflex-ported cabinet, with two chrome handles and wheels on the side."

McCartney started to use a Barber Coffin speaker cabinet during the late part of 1961. <…> McCartney himself recalls, "Adrian made me a great bass amp that he called the Coffin. And, man! Suddenly that was a total other world. That was bass as we know it now. It was like reggae bass: it was just too right there. It was great live." Pete Best too remembers the Coffin. "Neil Aspinall and I used to carry it. Every couple of shows there'd be a flight of stairs which you had to carry this thing up, and it was then we'd wonder why he couldn't have got something smaller. We'd have sweat streaming off us. But the beauty of it was, with all the laughing and joking aside, it did produce a great sound. The first time Paul plugged it in and used it, we just said my god, this is incredible. It added to The Beatles sound."

(Beatles Gear: All the Fab Four's Instruments from Stage to Studio Hardcover by Andy Babiuk, 2010)

I Was Always Interested In Finding Out What Have Happens On The Photo. What Gave Them The Idea Of Depict

So, I guess, Paul is lying on his bass amp that they called the Coffin - and it's the reason of the pantomime on the photo.

  • pancake-0028
    pancake-0028 liked this · 1 month ago
  • jfkjrarchive
    jfkjrarchive liked this · 1 month ago
  • moderndayhistory
    moderndayhistory liked this · 1 month ago
  • teaceremonial
    teaceremonial liked this · 1 month ago
  • spartanmusclewifey
    spartanmusclewifey liked this · 1 month ago
  • chronicartifacts
    chronicartifacts liked this · 1 month ago
  • dinerdweller
    dinerdweller liked this · 1 month ago
  • chillspritecranberry
    chillspritecranberry liked this · 1 month ago
  • recentremreports
    recentremreports liked this · 1 month ago
  • rukia-deja-vu
    rukia-deja-vu liked this · 1 month ago
  • katerinasas
    katerinasas liked this · 1 month ago
  • strryhaze
    strryhaze liked this · 1 month ago
  • ironcowboycopnickel
    ironcowboycopnickel liked this · 1 month ago
  • ddlydevotion
    ddlydevotion liked this · 1 month ago
  • dailyydreamer
    dailyydreamer liked this · 1 month ago
  • xxdarkangelxx2931
    xxdarkangelxx2931 liked this · 1 month ago
  • lanaayla97
    lanaayla97 liked this · 1 month ago
  • darcyspirits
    darcyspirits liked this · 1 month ago
  • fortheloveofjos
    fortheloveofjos liked this · 1 month ago
  • sarahgoestoodles
    sarahgoestoodles reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • sarahgoestoodles
    sarahgoestoodles liked this · 1 month ago
  • h-l-vlovesvintage
    h-l-vlovesvintage liked this · 1 month ago
  • thxdegen
    thxdegen reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • motelhoneyy
    motelhoneyy reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • motelhoneyy
    motelhoneyy liked this · 1 month ago
  • hamilton1968
    hamilton1968 liked this · 1 month ago
  • lynnlennyleon
    lynnlennyleon liked this · 1 month ago
  • cardigan-jam
    cardigan-jam reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • lancer-andlace
    lancer-andlace reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • katetlol
    katetlol liked this · 1 month ago
  • melancholicstation
    melancholicstation liked this · 1 month ago
  • sweetheart-vintage
    sweetheart-vintage liked this · 1 month ago
  • bobbykennedyshusband
    bobbykennedyshusband reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • bobbykennedyshusband
    bobbykennedyshusband liked this · 1 month ago
  • idksammi
    idksammi liked this · 1 month ago
  • adriennejosephines
    adriennejosephines liked this · 1 month ago
  • lamperry4ever
    lamperry4ever liked this · 1 month ago
  • thxdegen
    thxdegen liked this · 1 month ago
  • dreamofstarlight
    dreamofstarlight reblogged this · 1 month ago
bobbykennedyshusband - i 💗 buddy holly
i 💗 buddy holly

he/him !!hi!!! :33 i love my girlfriend!! also i love vintage stuff!!! specifically buddy holly, frank sinatra, the kennedys, beatles, old hollywood, etc!!

231 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags