
Pat's Peeps Podcast
Join our Pat's Peeps family today and be a part of the exciting journey as renowned national talk show host Pat Walsh connects with Friends and Aquaintances. Together, they delve deeper into the captivating world of Pat Walsh's nightly national talk show, all while championing local businesses.
Whether you are a business owner, a devoted listener, or both, we extend a warm invitation for you to become a valued member of our ever-growing community. Don't miss out on this incredible opportunity to join us ASAP!
Pat Walsh
Pat's Peeps Podcast
Ep. 255 Today's Peep Happy Cinco de Mayo! Music Festival Memories, Peep Gathering WITH WINE Coming Soon! And "Booty Butt"
Pat shares his weekend adventure to Miner's Leap Winery while planning a gathering for Pat's Peeps businesses and announcing an upcoming Sicily trip with Conservative Tours this fall. He takes listeners on a nostalgic journey through the Strawberry Music Festival with clips from his 2012 documentary featuring interviews with musicians and memories of performances by legendary artists.
• Weekend visit to Miner's Leap Winery in Clarksburg with plans for a Pat's Peeps businesses gathering
• Upcoming Sicily trip October 25-November 5 with Conservative Tours
• Strawberry Music Festival memories from Camp Mather to its current location at Nevada County Fairgrounds
• The documentary featuring the "Fuse of Horns," Birch Lake stage, and interview with Robert Earl Keene
• Brief history of Cinco de Mayo and its cultural significance in the United States
• Exploring a rare Ray Charles 45 record on Tangerine Records from 1971
Please support our Pat's Peeps businesses - check them out at Pat's Peeps. That's what would help us more than anything. Go to our businesses, call them, support them, and get exclusive offers!
I met a little Spanish girl On the 5th of May, a pretty senorita que da. She live in East LA. Happy Cinco de Mayo to you, my friends. It's the Pat's Peeps podcast, thank you. Thank you, I appreciate that. May the 5th, monday, may the 5th, thank you, cinco de Mayo. Wherever you are, whatever you're doing, hoping you're having a wonderful Cinco de Mayo. The 5th of May. It's Pat's Peeps Podcast, number 255. I just, I love war. I mean the band, not actual war or anything. I'm trying to come off as a warmonger. May the 5th 2025. And as I peer out my studio window into the beautiful foothills of Northern California, right now it is sunny and gorgeous.
Speaker 1:The weekend was incredible. I hope you had a wonderful weekend. I certainly did. I drove to one of my favorite places, one of the Pat's Peeps. I drove to one of my favorite places, one of the Pat's Peeps Great time at Miner's Leap Winery in Clarksburg out in the Delta, one of the Pat's Peeps businesses.
Speaker 1:I went out there to pick up my two because I'm a wine club member out there, and so I went out there to pick up. I had two cases well, a case of wine, two pickups to pick up at one time. So it was essentially a case of wine. I love their wine at Miner's Leap and Loyal Miner is the owner over there. It's just like it is one of the most relaxing places that I can think of. When I need, I live in a nice, relaxing place, but when I need a little bit of a change, I like to go to Clarksburg, I like to go out to the Delta, I like to go to Miner's Leap. Yesterday they had great food. Maybe they were trying to beat, uh, maybe Cinco de Mayo, you know, with the Mexican food, because we had served up Mexican food out there yesterday and we had some great wine and it was just nice to visit with people. And one of the reasons for going out there, by the way, is because I want to have a gathering with all the Pats Peeps businesses. So we're planning a gathering and it's going to happen in the next month. So if you are a Pats Peeps business, we're going to invite you to Miner's Leap Winery so we can have a little get together, get to know one another and really sort of see the products that you guys are doing and talk about this business. So I can give everyone a clearer idea of what we're trying to do here at Pat's Peeps.
Speaker 1:It's morning. I don't do these in the morning. I notice in my voices it's still a little raspy. I've got the morning voice. Look at the morning voice going right now. Yesterday got in the convertible, drove to Clarksburg and that convertible was. So what a beautiful, beautiful day, oh my gosh, absolutely just an incredible weekend.
Speaker 1:Saturday, you know, by the way, we're going to Sicily, coming up this fall. We're going to go October 25th through November the 5th. Our Pats Peeps group is going to go with conservative tours. We already have a bunch of people signed up for the Sicily trip and yesterday we had a gathering. Well, not yesterday, but Saturday night we had a dinner together. We went to an Italian restaurant. I wore my brand new Italian handmade leather dress, shoes with my double breasted suit. I went all out and met with this wonderful group of people. There was probably I don't know maybe 15, 16, 20 of us, something like that, at this dinner at this Italian restaurant. And was it Matone's, something like that? I hope I got that right. I probably did not. But good service, good food and just good to be with people that I've got to know through going through these trips.
Speaker 1:And I'm just going to keep reminding you if you're going to buy a home and you're looking for a lender, if you look on my front page, if you just go to Pat's Peeps my brother, tim AI Lending if you use Tim for your lender, you'll get your entire appraisal fee back. By just saying that you know you're a Pats Peeps listener, that you will get your appraisal fee back and we're going to pull a ticket out of the hat, a name out of the hat. First 100 people that sign with Tim is going to. We're going to pull a ticket out of the hat and someone's going to win a trip with us to Europe somewhere, somewhere beautiful. I mean, that's pretty cool. So that's all about the Pat's Peep stuff. So it'll be great to meet with the businesses. I'm looking forward to that and introducing you to Loyal Miner and Miner's Leap and all that just having a great time. So, yeah, it was so nice driving in the convertible. I love doing that.
Speaker 1:One of the things I'm really looking forward to is Strawberry Music Festival that's coming up this month. I just love the month of May. Strawberry Music Festival is a four-day festival and it used to be held at Camp Mather up in Yosemite. It was just off Evergreen Road in Yosemite, out of Groveland up that way, and it was like you couldn't even get cell service out there. I just absolutely loved it. You know you'd be out there for four days camping with like-minded people who wanted to listen to music in a gorgeous meadow and interact with people and play music. Here's a video of mine that I did. This is behind the scenes Strawberry Music Festival, spring of 2012. I cannot believe that 13 years have gone by since I created this video. This is one of my favorite, most relaxing times of the entire year.
Speaker 4:Good morning. It's Pat Walsh, the sports guy, and today we're here.
Speaker 1:Back when I was a sports guy. You can see this on YouTube. By the way, if you care to know a little bit more about the Strawberry Music Festival, I miss Camp Mather. This is where we were at Strawberry. Camp Mather was. It was like heaven on earth, you know, just to be there for four days to me, and in this beautiful meadow in Yosemite. Anyhow, if you ever want to see what it was like at Camp Mather, I have this video Strawberry Music Festival Spring 2012. Documentary hosted by Pat.
Speaker 3:Walsh, it's morning time, day one. The gates are about to open for the 2012 Spring.
Speaker 4:Strawberry Music Festival.
Speaker 1:Yeah, so you can see the meadow. You know, one of the things they used to do, oh gosh, is they'd have the. Well, I should just play a little bit of this.
Speaker 3:Okay, I'll play a little bit more the community here at Strawberry and it's a place where they broadcast everything that goes on on the stage.
Speaker 1:Hog Ranch Radio.
Speaker 3:Breakfast Club. You can hear all of that on Hog Ranch Radio so you can go back to your camp, turn on your radio and if you can't make it out to the meadow, you can hear all the performances. Sometimes they play a lot of performances from years past.
Speaker 4:So really looking forward to this, so we'll go take a look around. Now here comes a welcome sight.
Speaker 3:This is our friend Kathy who is so kind this morning to get us coffee on a coffee run First day, hi Kathy. Hey everybody, happy strawberries.
Speaker 4:Let me make sure I get this right. You're the media and publicity director for Strawberry.
Speaker 3:Did.
Speaker 4:I get that right Even close In the same neighborhood.
Speaker 5:Well, you know who needs a title. Up here I run the Birch Lake program, so that's where we're going to go.
Speaker 4:You run the Birch Lake program.
Speaker 3:Yeah, which we're going to go take a look at some of that activity today, and I really can't wait.
Speaker 1:Stage set up by the well birch lake. Is this beautiful man-made lake in yosemite? I think it's man-made, I'm pretty sure. Um, but but it's um. But they have a little stage where. So they have a main stage in the meadow and the gorgeous meadow and then they have another meadow down by the lake. It's called the birch stage and that's where they do some of the side um, some of the other acts will play over there but first things, first things first.
Speaker 3:We really appreciate her bringing us coffee.
Speaker 1:This is early in the morning.
Speaker 4:Great way to start the morning.
Speaker 1:Very early in the morning.
Speaker 4:We've gone to the concession area here at Strawberry. This is where we really actually find some pretty good food, good variety of food, pizza.
Speaker 3:Nice variety of stuff here. It's a pizza.
Speaker 1:Checking out the food court with my buddy, jeff Jefe. Ah, they got some great food, really great cookie pizzas.
Speaker 3:Here you got your Mexican food.
Speaker 1:Hey, happy Cinco de Mayo.
Speaker 4:Hello ladies, Good morning. How are you Preparing for the day?
Speaker 3:Excellent Mexican food here. Check it out. Breakfast burritos Sounds good to me, we've got.
Speaker 4:Yamaguchi's best desserts.
Speaker 3:Breakfast croissants. How are you this morning?
Speaker 2:Good, how are you?
Speaker 3:guys doing Good, shooting a documentary for Strawberry Music Festival. So we're just going around talking to some of the vendors and probably going to be trying some of the foods out here.
Speaker 1:I had morning voice during this video too. It's my morning voice, podcast and video. There you go.
Speaker 5:We got food and then we're going to have turkey.
Speaker 4:Turkey.
Speaker 5:And mashed potatoes, stuffing grape, stuffing cranberry sauce pan fried freshwater catfish fillet with no bones, homemade potato salad baby greens. We're probably about noon. About noon, yeah, and then we're limited. We have turkey drumsticks big ones with barbecue sauce. Oh boy.
Speaker 2:And gumbo.
Speaker 3:Now couldn't you have gone the extra mile? Though Let me ask you you actually got Rams Table Claws rather than Niners. Oh, sorry that.
Speaker 4:It's not a 49er. Okay, I'll let that slip on by.
Speaker 1:Giving her a bad time about her Table Claws, giving her a bad time about her tablecloth. Then I got to visit the Hog Ranch Radio, which is really cool. They had me in for a little interview. At Hog Ranch Radio I'll play a little bit more of this. Here we go.
Speaker 3:This is Hog Ranch Meadow over here.
Speaker 3:That's where they got the name for the Hog Ranch Radio, hog Ranch Radio. We've always wanted to take a tour of Hog Ranch Radio, kind of show you what goes on behind the scenes here. And this morning they're going to have me on and we're going to talk about on the radio, talking about the making of our documentary. So right now people are out there on Evergreen Road ready to come in. They'll give them the news that, hey, the gates are open. Everybody will get real excited. It's a good time for the festival and so we'll cover that and we'll do a little radio.
Speaker 1:Yeah, a lot of people out there. They stay out there on Evergreen Road overnight. We used to camp out there overnight waiting for the festival the next morning. Then they wouldn't allow camping anymore. So you'd stay out on Evergreen Road. Some people would in their cars camping anymore. So you'd stay out on every green road, some people would in their cars. And then they would make the announcement on hog ranch radio that the gates are open for the first time to go to strawberry for four days yeah, I'm looking forward to it all right, test one, two, three.
Speaker 5:Test one, two, three on bitches radio test one, two, three.
Speaker 2:Can you give me a test on the other radio?
Speaker 4:all right, test one, two, three on the walkie, 2, 3 on the walkie talkie.
Speaker 2:Here's the walkie talkie test 1, 2, 3. It's so much better. The second one, the one that you just used, is the one that we need to do. Well, I know folks love to check out the memories and the photos on the website, so that'll be a great addition. You guys are going to be working awful hard, though there are a million stories here at Strawberry.
Speaker 2:You're just going to be able to dip your toes in and kind of get to know a little bit about a little bit, but what amazing stuff. I really hope you have a great time walking around and getting to know some folks and I really hope that Strawberry kind of welcomes you in and folks open their hearts.
Speaker 4:So this morning we're on our way to the front gates here at Strawberry. Good morning, as they open things up and everybody begins to enter into the Strawberry Music Festival. And what is that called again, kathy? The Fuse of Horns. The Fuse of Horns. We're going to go check out the Fuse of Horns. They hum together in one loud yee-haw of horns. We're gonna go check out the fuse of all. I know it was always a lot of fun. You know, when you're on your car waiting on Evergreen Road and you wait for that guy to say that the gates are open, everybody gets real excited. So we're gonna go check that out this morning our camp is Camp Zappa, by the way over there, gorgeous.
Speaker 4:You know, one of the cool things about it is well, first, when they open the gates, we're waiting for the fuse of horns, and that means that essentially, that all the cars in line on Evergreen will blow their horns when they announce that the gates are open. We've been in that line many times this morning. We're going to listen to it. What's happening?
Speaker 5:Hi there, bex. We are out here at the beginning of the line and we are about ready to get the fusing of the horns rolling and get folks into camp for spring 2012 Strawberry. So I think in just about a minute we'll have some horns to honk for you. First car in.
Speaker 1:Here come the cars rolling in, Rolling, rolling. So one of the great things that I got to do in this particular Strawberry was not only interview great people, whether it was people that were attending the festival, whether it was people performing at the festival, whether it was people. And then one of the great moments for me, though, it was after my, so this is my 16th festival. Well, I'll explain right here from the video this was a real honor to me to be able to introduce a band. So this is yeah, after 16 Strawberries, Today it's.
Speaker 4:Saturday. Today we're at Birch Lake and I get the privilege of coming down here and introducing the bands here at Birch Lake on Saturday. They've asked me finally. I've been waiting to get on stage here at Strawberry and do something like this for a long time, so right now I'm just going to introduce Snap Jackson and the Knock on Wood players.
Speaker 1:I remember this was a gray day in the morning by the lake. Can you hear?
Speaker 4:me Snap and then knock out one player. Let's hear it for them. As I said, they brought sunshine to Strawberry. We've all wanted some sunshine, so I want to personally thank them for opening up the festival and for being from Stockton. We're kind of neighbors. I'm from Sacramento, so we covered the Stockton Thunder for you guys. That's right. That's right. 209 and the 916. You want to hear some more from Snap Jackson, the Knock on Wood players. Let's bring it back out for one more.
Speaker 1:So that was fun, that I was able to introduce a band for the first time. Boy, they have all kinds of things to do at Strawberry, whether it's kid stuff, dancing in the meadow. Oh, it's so fun. Out in this beautiful meadow you're just dancing and grooving to the music. People are just. It's like the freest time ever, just to be yourself and enjoy music in one of the most beautiful places Alison Krauss and Union Station. Yeah, like I say, one of the great things about this is they have a more well, there's several. They have a Sunday morning gospel revival down at the lake, at Birch Lake.
Speaker 3:So many people Sunday morning revival down by Birch Lake and it's finally a beautiful day weather as far as the weather goes. So we're going to go down here and join everybody and listen to some good gospel and some good Sunday morning music here by beautiful Birch Lake.
Speaker 1:So many people and getting to interview the people that play at the festival. Really a privilege to be able to meet these folks and get their take on Strawberry.
Speaker 4:Pat Walsh here once again, and I am extremely honored to be sitting with this man right here. Robert Earl Keene, you are one of my musical heroes. I'm not just kissing up here, man. I've seen this man here at Strawberry. You know, I'm a veteran here.
Speaker 1:Robert Earl Keene.
Speaker 4:I've seen him at the Hardly Strictly. I've seen him at the Palms and Davis and Winters. I know I love this guy's music. And first of all let me just ask you, since I know this is not your first time here at Strawberry, do you have any special Strawberry memories that you just think of when you come back, Anything that comes back to you?
Speaker 1:when you come here.
Speaker 5:Oh, I have a ton, you mean like a particularly great memory.
Speaker 4:Just when you look out in that, yeah, a particularly great memory.
Speaker 5:Well, I played here with Guy Clark and Townes Van Zandt one time and it was really early on and you know stepping up on that stage and all those people standing there and them actually listening to what I had to say, because I mean, you know, I kicked and screamed my way into any kind of music life at all, to the point where I brought my own little cassette recorder with applause recorded on it. So when it was a bad show I just pushed, you know, played applause and all of a sudden I'm standing up there with, you know, two serious, you know songwriting icons and everybody's listening. It was fantastic.
Speaker 4:All right now I know what I think it was maybe 1988, you come to Strawberry and you back then you played a couple of sets, you didn't just play the one set and you come out here solo, you bring your guitar out, you knock everybody's socks off, you do this great job. So the difference of I mean, do you remember those days when you came here solo, versus you know, bringing a band out here, what are some of the differences that you feel when you have the two different.
Speaker 5:Well, you definitely want to, you know, make friends in a hurry, you know, because you. I mean, one of the things about a band is you get to be pals and hang around together and sometimes you isolate yourself a little bit, so, solo, you want to kind of blend in and meet some people. So I got to meet a lot more people than I do normally, but back then that was kind of how I was doing it. So it was about getting here and making some friends. I made some lifelong friends here.
Speaker 4:And, if I'm not mistaken now, jeff and I Jeff is my camera guy here, my producer we went and had breakfast this morning at the Breakfast Club. Now, as I recall, you played the Breakfast Club one morning, I played the Breakfast Club. Now you go to the Breakfast Club, you're getting your scrambled eggs, you're getting your bacon and you expect to hear an amateur up there singing their heart out.
Speaker 1:It's Robert.
Speaker 4:Earl Keene, it catches your attention. What made you decide I'm going to go to the breakfast club and do this?
Speaker 5:Really, really, pat. I think somebody just asked me and I went yeah, sure, you know. I mean, this is about music and I play music. So when people ask me to play music, I usually play.
Speaker 1:Robert Earl Keene, nice guy.
Speaker 4:Nice guy.
Speaker 1:So this was a great part of Strawberry 2. You can see the video up there. I just wanted to share it with you because, again, just the camaraderie there, the music. Now it's a little different. Now it's no longer at Camp Mather, now it is at the Nevada County Fairgrounds in Grass Valley, which has its own charm. Obviously it's not as remote as what we were doing up there off of Evergreen Road at Camp Mather. Obviously you're going to be able to get cell service in Grass Valley. Some people live in that area.
Speaker 1:You know, when you go to Strawberry and you're out there for three or four days and when it was at Camp Mather, you know you didn't go home to spend the night, you camped and it was just an incredible experience. But at this one, you know, some people can go home but there's a lot of people that camp. People sit around, they play music together at night. All of these camps we were Camp Zappa, but there's all kinds of camp names out there and that's kind of how people find each other and it goes from. Essentially the good vibes go from morning all the way until night. Okay, so that's coming up Memorial weekend of this month and I'm hopefully going to have some guests on there. That um guests on my show. By the way, I'm the host of the Pat wall show. Maybe we'll get some musical guy. I had Rhonda Vincent on before.
Speaker 1:The other thing I do love is the Father's Day Bluegrass Festival, which is also at the Nevada County Fairgrounds in Grass Valley. If you are interested in seeing the Strawberry Music Festival then you can call 209-984-8630 and we'll hang out, or info at sign strawberrymusiccom. They have the Spring Festival, they have the Summer Festival. Dan Tyminski is going to be there. Dan Tyminski is the guitarist and vocalist, one of the vocalists for Alice and Krauss and Union Station, and to me Dan Tominski has one of the best voices in the genre of, in this case, bluegrass man of constant sorrow, if you like that song. Dan Tominski is the man. So yeah, that's just you know. I think he's headlining at the Strawberry Spring Festival and of course there are all kinds of artists there for the four days. Del McCurry will be at the Fall Festival. I've seen Del McCurry and his band geez so many times now Laurie Lewis in the right hand, seen them many, a lot of these bands I've seen many times because either I'll see them at Strawberry or I'll see them at the Father's Day Bluegrass Festival. John McCutcheon you know, I remember first going to Strawberry Music Festival and seeing people like, well, leon Redbone played there.
Speaker 1:I couldn't believe it. I loved it. Leon Redbone, who was one of my favorite artists, played there. Had artists played there, um, also David Lindley and Hani Nasser, who I just love, played there. I mean John Hartford played there.
Speaker 1:What that guy inspired me. What a songwriter, what an artist. Rest in peace. I mean I could just, you know, alison Krauss. I could, really. I could just, you know, alison Krauss, I could, really. I could just go down the whole list of all of these. John Prine saw him there a couple of times. Rest in peace, john Prine. What a songwriter. Boss Gags, anyhow. The list goes on and on.
Speaker 1:You know who I saw there one time and I just thought, yeah, I don't know and whatever, I don't really not that much into her music and they blew. She blew me away, oh my god, she blew me away. I was backstage doing interviews and I see this little car pull up and in the car, riding shotgun, is Katie Lang, in this little car and she's there with I don't know, maybe it's her girlfriend, I think she said, anyhow, they're both eating Chinese food out of styrofoam containers and I'm like, hey, katie Lang, but inside I thought I'm not a huge fan. Well, please, she comes out on the stage that night and blew my mind. She was so, so good. Tomorrow, barry Manilow interview right here, exclusively on the Pat Wall Show. That's right, barry Manilow on I mean, not on the Pat Wall Show, which I will air some of it on the Pat Wall Show, but on the Pat's Peeps podcast. Super exciting, oh God, I hope I have more than eight minutes with him. I think I saw a thing where it said like eight minutes. I'm like, how am I going to do eight minutes, minutes? I'm like, how am I going to do eight minutes? How am I going to do eight? I could spend one, two questions. Eight minutes, anyhow.
Speaker 1:Cinco de Mayo today, 5th of May, the annual celebration held May 5th to celebrate Mexico's victory over the second French empire, the Battle of Puebla 1862. It's more popular in the United States than it is in Mexico, cinco de Mayo, but let's face it, any excuse that we can use, as Americans, to drink and have a good time and eat tacos and enjoy Mexican culture, the better right. Same thing for St Patrick's Day. Oh, do you mean we can drink? Definitely, let's celebrate.
Speaker 1:Cinco de Mayo became associated with celebration of the Mexican-American culture. Celebrations began in Columbia, california, where they've been observed annually since 1862, gained nationwide popularity in the 80s. Why? Because of advertising campaign Beer, of course, wine, tequila. Because of advertising campaign beer, of course, wine, tequila. And now Cinco de Mayo, I mean the beer sales alone for Cinco de Mayo. They're right there, at about the same level as the Super Bowl. Think about that. In Mexico, the, this commemoration of the battle, continues to be mostly ceremonial Military parades, battle reenactments. The city of Puebla marks the event with festivals, reenactments of the battle. And, by the way, cinco de Mayo is sometimes mistaken for Mexican Independence Day, the most important national holiday in Mexico. The most important national holiday in Mexico. But it is something people love to celebrate here. Some song just hit me. Let me see what song is it. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. I don't know why this just hit me.
Speaker 1:Oh hello, all right, b just hit me. Oh hello, all right, bumped my microphone, sorry about that. I just this. Of all songs, I don't know why this one popped in my head, but this is a good one. Down in Acuna, and you ain't up to being alone Mexican Blackbird, alone Mexican.
Speaker 5:Blackbird, don't spend all your money on just any honey that's grown.
Speaker 3:Go find the Mexican.
Speaker 1:Blackbird and send all your troubles back home.
Speaker 3:They all call her Pooh, because no one really knows her name.
Speaker 1:Wow, that's a great song. I think I know what they're talking about in there. That just popped into my mind that song. Speaking of songs, that just popped into my mind, that song. Speaking of songs, you know, um, I plucked a record from my rare 45 collection today and this is the first time that I have pulled a record on tangerine records. Cool label, tangerine records. So it's red and black. It's got a white lettering, uh the t in the trc, whatever t aren't. Well, I guess tangerine records. Uh the t is sort of shaped into a horn, like a trumpet or whatever. There's no stickers on the label. There is one radio station stamp which says march 15th 1971. Let me pull the record out of the sleeve here. Looks to be in, looks to be in beautiful shape.
Speaker 1:I couldn't find a whole lot about this particular pairing of songs actually. So this is. But Tangerine Records. Like I said, this was an American record label founded by the musician on the record in 1962. And this artist switched to the label in 1966. Tangerine was promoted and distributed by ABC Paramount Records.
Speaker 1:Early singles labels were orange and then later became black. So well, mine is kind of red. You can say it's orange. Oh, later became black, red and white. So that's what this is. Many of the later recordings are now sought after in northern soul circles. Oh well, my gosh, look at that, I have it right in my hand. So if they're looking for this, I may have to let them know that I have this. After this artist left ABC in 73, he closed Tangerine and began Crossover Records.
Speaker 1:Let's see what else do I have about this? Not a whole lot, to be honest with you. There's just not a. This came off an album called my Kind of Jazz, 1970. Thus the sticker that says March of 71. Let's see Bobby Bryant, bill King, marshall Hunt, blue Mitchell, trumpet, glenn Childress, henry Coker, joe Randazzo, fred Murrell, david Phelps, trombone. J Lloyd Miller, alto sax, oboe. Curtis Pigler, alto sax, andy Ennis, albert McQueen, clifford Scott, tenor sax, leroy Cooper, baritone sax, ben Martin, guitar, edgar Willis on the bass, ernest Ellie is on the drums and Teddy Edward is the arranger on track nine only, which would be Angel City. Golden Boy is the first track. We're going to play the second track, other songs this year I remember Clifford Sidewinder, which is the other side, bluesette, paseo, no, paseo, no Blues, zig Zag, angel City and Senior Blues. Right now, my friends, I present to you, cut to Ray Charles on Patch Peeps 255. How about this song called Booty Butt?
Speaker 4:Thank you.
Speaker 1:I'm going to go ahead and do that. Thank you. I kind of wish it would have been lyrics. When it's a song called Booty Butt, let's flip it over. This has got another song on there. I think they might both be instrumentals. Pretty sure they are. Okay, this one. I don't know really anything about it, I'm just gonna play it. This is the flip side of booty butt rich trying to sell that song. Yeah, I get the song called booty butt. What's it about? Uh, booty butt. Here's ray charles orchestra sidewinder Rare R&B Instrumental.
Speaker 1:Thank you to everyone in the Pats Peeps group. Thank you to my businesses, thank you to the Pats Peeps businesses. Please, I'm just asking you if you'll support the businesses. That's what would help us more than anything. More than anything Is if you would just go into a business or call them or support our businesses. That's the main thing. It's, you know, go to Pat's Peeps, check out our store. You know it's not our store, but we'll have a store up there soon Merchandise, but the businesses and the places that we're supporting. You get exclusive offers. I hope I can entice you to do that, alright, and I'll let you know about our gathering. Thank you for listening to Pat's Peeps 255. Enjoy your day. We'll see you on the radio.