And yet, he is more respected as a track and blues expert than you.
Work on your game.
Re still seeing who he can bug.
And yet, he is more respected as a track and blues expert than you.
Work on your game.
Yes, you are trying to bug a lot of people, re .
I don't follow people around just to bug them like you do ya dumb .
No he;s not, it's simply....SFS don't know but Avante brags too much about all that knowledge.
You followed four posters into here just to bug them.
I’d recommend Peg Leg “Joe” Melonhead. But he’s pretty obscure. I’ve probably got one of the few surviving recordings. Trust me though. It’s as good as it gets.
Dude, are you as stupid as you appear?
He is definitely more respected. Look at all the love he got in this thread before your envious ass followed them in and started your whimper waa routine.
You followed them in here.
You follow SFS around like a he was an underage Filipina.
There ya have it. The guy don't know as I said. There is no Melonhead.
It works like this...
You want to cover the regions, which are....
Mississippi Delta
Memphis
Alabama
St. Louis
Texas
Georgia
Louisiana
Georgia
East Coast/Piedmont
You go with those who best represent that region.
You want to cover piano, male/female duet, jug bands, harmonica, guitar, and the ladies
You'd start with Ma Rainey, then some Louis Armstrong, Jellyroll Morton, Bessie Smith, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Papa Charley Jackson, Lonnie Johnson, all recorded prior to 1927. Then you take off with Blind Blake, Charley Patton, Son House, Memphis Jug Band, Memphis Minnie.....using a little from each region, ending up in 1936 and the great Robert Johnson.
SFS mentioned..obscure...that is the last thing you'd want here, you want the famous blues artists for this, not those one record shadows, but there is a place for that.
lol Avante is the most easily trolled poster here.
In before he says NOITROLLU.
Dude, are you blind?
SFS...a 100m is twice as long as 50m.
ST...WOW!
Pavlov, now think, ok? Just don't call me a pedo.
Rookies sheesh~~~~~~~~~
Don't hate, man. Your rage is consuming you.
What really is amazing is just how little you people really know about most things.
I just did like ten minutes ago, you idiot.
Dude, how many threads here are talking about Avante?
What's really amazing is how hard you still care about what people think of you here after all this time.
The ones you're talking about yourself in?
I'm sure there are plenty.
You're really desperate.
Dude, why is it all you ever do is this ? You never starts threads, you do nothing but try and bug others, why? Dude, that is all you ever do, why?
In the last few weeks a HS kid has been tearing it up. His name is Matthew Boling.
Try
10.22
10.21
10.20
20.5 200m
47 something 400
And....a 26-3 long jump.
And........................................he's white.
AUSTIN, TEXAS -- Matthew Boling took over The Texas Relays on Friday.
And all it took were two quick, seismic moments.
But as the season once again showed, the Houston Strake Jesuit (TX) senior, who entered compe ion with US No. 1 efforts in the 100m and 200m and the boys long jump, is a talent worth paying attention to at any given moment.
Earlier in the day, Boling, running in just his second open 100m series of his career, put down the second fastest time of the day -- college or high school -- with an all conditions mark of 10.21 (+4.2) seconds.
The time, which is reminiscent of his wind-legal 10.22 (+1.3) at the Texas Southern Relays, mirrors what the future Georgia Bulldog is likely capable of on the straightway and will be the precursor to whatever he rolls through in the finals on Saturday.
But that was only a teaser for what Boling eventually accomplished that evening.
With an unusually packed grandstands near the long jump that late into the meet -- it was one of the last events to close the Relays on Friday -- Boling suited up for the boys long jump.
And it was clear why: You didn't want to miss what was about to happen.
Boling's series lasted just two jumps.
His first was an all-conditions 25-7.50 (+2.4) mark that once again upped his previous best of 25-2.5.
Roughly 10 minutes, his next effort came.
26-3.5.
From the moment Boling sprung from the mark, almost everyone in attendance knew the attempt was big. A cacophony of oohs and aahs littered through the air
And all that was left was the fact of whether it was wind-legal.
Shortly after, the official measurement recorded the mark with a +1.8 wind, and Boling was done for the night.
Boling's time came and went ...in a flash.
That is from April first.
All you do is complain when we recognize SFS as the best source for track and blues wisdom on this board.
Everything you do here is a pathetic attempt to distract from that fact.
Why the bull guy? You know SFS don't know about track, so why the silly games?
Thanks SFS, as others have said this forum is very fortunate to have you.![]()
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