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| | Robert Christgau: Popular Music |
 | | In songs like Charles K. Harris's "After The Ball" and Harry Von Tilzer and Arthur Lamb's "Bird in a Gilded Cage," and most impressively in the somewhat later oeuvre of Irving Berlin, pop music hewed to a simple melodic formula emphasizing catchy choruses. |  | | Black artists such as Ray Charles, Aretha Franklin, Stevie Wonder, and James Brown cultivated not only roughly emotional soul singing and the percussive neo-African polyrhythms of funk, but also blander pop styles and the mechanical dance beat of disco. |  | | As rock 'n' roll and its many offshoots took over world pop music in the 1960's and 1970's, it reflected familiar tensions. |
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http://www.robertchristgau.com/xg/music/collier.php
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| | Charles Lamb |
 | | Charles Lamb was born in London in 1775. |  | | Lamb worked for the East India Company in London but managed to contribute articles to several journals and newspapers including |  | | Lamb became friends in London with a group of young writers who favoured political reform including |
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http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/Jlamb.htm
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| | Charles Lloyd (1775-1839) |
 | | In January 1797 Lloyd met and became friends with Charles Lamb and later that year both had some of their poems included in a volume by Coleridge. |  | | Charles Lloyd's literary connections with the region are picked up in the section of Birmingham on this website. |  | | Charles Lloyd was not a great poet, but he was certainly moved in fine literary circles. |
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http://www3.shropshire-cc.gov.uk/lloyd.htm
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| | Elia - the free encyclopedia |
 | | The English poet-essayist Charles Lamb's is AKA Elia. |  | | disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. |  | | Elia can be the old transliteration for the Greek prefecture of Ilia. |
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http://www.free-web-encyclopedia.com/?t=Elia
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| | Charles Lloyd |
 | | Lamb, with whom he published a volume of verse and prose. |  | | 1811 Lloyd began to show signs of mental instability. |  | | Lloyd was first a student, and later a friend and lodger, of |
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http://www.english.upenn.edu/Projects/knarf/People/lloyd.html
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| | Thomas Hood @ FootballLiving.com |
 | | ST Coleridge wrote to Charles Lamb averring that the book must be his work. |  | | Thomas Hood (May 23, 1799 - May 3, 1845) was a British humorist and poet. |  | | He had married in 1825, and Odes and Addresses--his first work--was written in conjunction with his brother-in-law J.H. Reynolds, a friend of John Keats. |
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http://www.footballliving.com/moreinfo/Thomas_Hood
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| | Gramophone, Phonograph, and Records - EnchantedLearning.com |
 | | Edison's first recording was of him saying, " Mary had a little lamb." The recording cylinders were improved by Charles Sumner Tainter (an associate of Alexander Graham Bell), who made them out of wax. |  | | The first flat, circular record was invented by Emile Berliner (1851-1929), a German-born American inventor, in 1887 (he also invented the gramophone, the machine that played his flat records). |  | | The sound could then be played back from the etched cylinder as a needle went along the groove and reversed the process, making the diaphragm vibrate, recreating the original sound. |
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http://www.enchantedlearning.com/inventors/page/r/records.shtml
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| | MUSIC |
 | | Charles Wood: Communion Service in the Phrygian Mode |  | | Charles Villiers Stanford: Pray that Jerusalem may have peace |  | | Charles Villiers Stanford: Communion Service in G (and B-flat), Op. |
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http://www.stpauls-kst.com/music.htm
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| | Thea Awards Main |
 | | Plastics Production: Fintan Burke, Kim Vrandenburg, Michael Adcock, Ruben Camarena, Michael Davis, Mike Kutcher, Christopher Mazzella, Darrell Payne, Uriel Sanchez, Jeffrey White Electrical Design and Production: Richard Dayer, Alex Gold, Barry Golding, Charles Reisinger, David Van Damm |  | | Estimating: Jeff Webb, Doug Harlow, David Harding, Craig Heller, John Adamczyk, Richard Berryman, Diane Bigler, Tom Fotie, Keith Goodrich, Douglas Lamb, Jack Lewis, Gary Smestad, Franklin Williams |
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http://www.themeit.com/themepark.htm
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| | Silent Era : PSFL : The Lamb (1915) |
 | | Silent Era Home Page > PSFL > The Lamb (1915) |  | | Silent Era Home Page > PSFL > The Lamb (1915) |  | | Cast: Douglas Fairbanks, Seena Owen, William E. Lowery (William Lowery), Lillian Langdon, Monroe Salisbury, Kate Toncray, Alfred Paget, Eagle Eye [?] (Charles Eagle Eye?) |
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http://www.silentera.com/PSFL/data/L/Lamb1915.html
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| | Articles - Norfolk |
 | | Richard Bacon, Henry Bellingham, Charles Clarke, Christopher Fraser, Ian Gibson, Norman Lamb, Keith Simpson, Anthony Wright |  | | Its northern and eastern boundaries are the North Sea coast, including The Wash. |  | | Rings - Engagement Rings, Wedding Rings, Promise Rings, and More! |
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http://www.lastring.com/articles/Norfolk
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| | Laf - Lan - New General Catalog of Old Books & Authors |
 | | (w Mary LAMB) [1808] Mrs Leicester's School (w Mary LAMB) [s1809] Poetry For Children (w Mary LAMB) [p1809] Prince Dorus [p1811] H& The Essays Of Elia (1st series) [e1823] Album Verses [p1830] Essays Of Elia (2nd series) [e1833] Complete Annotated Edition Of The Letters [2va1834] Letters Of Charles Lamb.. |  | | (w Charles LAMB) [1808] Mrs Leicester's School (w Charles LAMB) [s1809] Poetry For Children (w Charles LAMB) [p1809] 9365 The Works Of Charles And Mary Lamb (w C LAMB) (ed E V LUCAS) [6v?] Rev, Robert LAMB (M: ? |  | | If you have any corrections, additions or other suggestions, please send them to webmaster@kingkong.demon.co.uk. |
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http://www.kingkong.demon.co.uk/ngcoba/la2.htm
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| | Used Book Central Search / author: Lamb, Charles |
 | | Lamb, Charles, and Mary Lamb:: 94199 A reprint HB in VG condition, without dustwrapper. |  | | Lamb, Charles and Mary: Very Good Shakespeare The John C. Winston Co. (1924) HC SHelfwear, rubbing to spine and boards, slight spine lean, browning to page edges. |  | | Lamb, Charles: The Peter Pauper Press G- book with bumped and worn corners, wear to cloth at head and foot of spine, light soiling to exterior, crease in length of "Contents" page, and slightly yellowed pages; no DJ. |
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http://www.usedbookcentral.com/texis/ubc/searchbooks,author,Lamb_Charles,jump,380.html
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| | English Poetry, Second Edition Bibliography: L |
 | | Lamb, Charles, 1775-1834, Beauty and the Beast; or, The Enchanted Rose: A poetical version of an ancient tale. |  | | Lamb, Charles, 1775-1834, Poetry for Children: By Charles and Mary Lamb: To which are added Prince Dorus and some uncollected poems by Charles Lamb: Edited, prefaced and annotated by Richard Herne Shepherd |  | | Lamb, Charles, 1775-1834, The poetical recreations of The Champion, and his literary correspondents; With a selection of essays, literary and critical, which have appeared in The Champion newspaper |
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http://collections.chadwyck.com/html/ep2/bibliography/l.htm
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| | 7lmb510.txt |
 | | It is the only edition to contain all Mary Lamb's letters and also a reference to, or abstract of, every letter of Charles Lamb's that cannot, for reasons of copyright, be included. |  | | These letters, chiefly to Robert Lloyd, were first published in _Charles Lamb and the Lloyds_, under my editorship, in 1900, the right to make copies and publish them having been acquired by Messrs. |  | | As an example of other difficulties of editing, at any given time, the correspondence of Charles and Mary Lamb, I may say that while these volumes were going through the press, Messrs. |
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http://www.gutenberg.net/etext05/7lmb510.txt
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| | Mary and Charles Lamb - their web biographies |
 | | Charles Clarke, who knew Charles and Mary Lamb, taught Keats his letters and encouraged his love of poetry. |  | | Charles Lamb a fellow pupil of Samuel Taylor Coleridge at Christ's Hospital - known as the bluecoat school because of its uniform. |  | | Mr.Lamb was too far into his dementia to provide witness and only Mary and Charles were actually present, the aunt having "fainted away". |
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http://www.mdx.ac.uk/www/study/yLamb.htm
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| | Charles Lamb - A Memoir. By Bryan Waller Procter (Barry Cornwall) |
 | | Charles Lamb was about forty years of age when I first saw him; and I knew him intimately for the greater part of twenty years. |  | | Charles Lamb, however, always sincerely admired and loved his old schoolfellow, and grieved deeply when he died. |  | | At this time, reckoning up their several means of living, Charles Lamb and his father had together an income of one hundred and seventy or one hundred and eighty pounds; out of which, he says, "we can spare fifty or sixty pounds at least for Mary whilst she stays in an asylum. |
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http://www.mdx.ac.uk/www/study/xBWPLamb.htm
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| | Heritage Book Shop, Inc. at antiqbook.com |
 | | 49380: LAMB, CHARLES, BROCK, C.E. Essays of Elia With an Introduction by Augustine Birrell and Illustrations by Charles E. Brock. |  | | 55746: LAMB, CHARLES - Essays of Elia With Twenty-Four: Illustrations in Colour by Sybil Tawse. |  | | 46715: LAMB, CHARLES, SHAKESPEARE, WILLIAMJACKSON, A.E. Tales From Shakespeare By Charles and Mary Lamb. |
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http://www.antiqbook.com/boox/her/books5000.shtml
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| | RoN - Journals |
 | | The Charles Lamb Bulletin is published by The Charles Lamb Society. |  | | Leslie Moise: 'Witch-Ridden: The Nightmare Condition between Charles Lamb and Sara Coleridge' |  | | Mary Wedd: 'An After-Luncheon Birthday Speech for the Charles Lamb Society' |
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http://users.ox.ac.uk/~scat0385/clbulletin.html
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| | clsoc.htm |
 | | The Charles Lamb Society was founded in 1935 and registered as a charity in 1990. |  | | It exists to advance knowledge and publish studies of the life, works, and times of the writer Charles Lamb (1775-1834) and his circle, and to form and preserve for the public a collection of Eliana. |  | | Recent articles include 'Mary Lamb and Sarah Stoddart: An Unlikely Friendship', by Mary Blanchard Balle; 'Women and Children First: Charles Lamb, Lord Byron and the Nineteenth-Century Readership', by Jane Stabler; '"The Mermaid": A Newly Identified Lamb Essay', by Joseph Riehl; and '"We had classics of our own": Charles Lamb's Schoolboy Reading', by Reginald Watters. |
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http://users.ox.ac.uk/~scat1492/clsoc.htm
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| | Lamb, lamb of god guitar tab, lamb of jesus |
 | | Lamb skin Lamb picture Charles lamb Lamb to the slaughter Lamb and ivy Silence of the lamb Jesus lamb of god Lamb ivy bedding Lamb gabriel Lamb sheep |  | | The Lion and Lamb Project is engaged in the most basic type of prevention work: helping parents teach their young children that violence is not an... |  | | Horace Lamb's father, John Lamb, was the foreman of a cotton mill who had become well known for his improvements to... |
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http://www.bars2u.com/lamb.html
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| | Susan Tyler Hitchcock - Author |
 | | Charles Lamb lived until 1834, Mary Lamb until 1847, carrying for more than half a century memories of the deed she had committed at the age of thirty-one. |  | | If discussed at all by those who study English literature of the early nineteenth century, Mary Lamb plays the part of an albatross to her younger brother, Charles Lamb, who is considered one of the finest essayists in the English language. |  | | Mary Lamb was the daughter of servants in London, born in 1764 and died in 1847. |
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http://www.susantylerhitchcock.com/level2_madmary.htm
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| | Mary Lamb |
 | | Charles Lamb, in an adjoining room, hearing the commotion, entered quickly and taking the knife from his sister's hand, put his arm about her and tenderly led her away. |  | | "Charles, dear, you've been drinking again!" said Mary. |  | | Charles Lamb made no outcry, he shed no tears, he spoke no work of reproach. |
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http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Flats/4759/marylamb.html
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| | 8lmb510.txt |
 | | Hazlitt's text (Bohn) with alterations 180 Charles Lamb to Henry Crabb Robinson May From the original in Dr. Williams' Library 181 Mary Lamb to Sarah Hazlitt June 2 Mr. |  | | 172 Charles Lamb to Henry Crabb Robinson March 12 From the original in Dr. Williams' Library 173 Mary Lamb to Sarah Stoddart March 16 From the original. |  | | The dedication--to Master Samuel Irelaunde, meaning William Henry Ireland (who sometimes took his father's name Samuel), the forger of the pretended Shakespearian play "Vortigern," produced at Drury Lane earlier in the year--is quite in Lamb's manner. |
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http://www.gutenberg.net/etext05/8lmb510.txt
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