RIP Quincy Jones... đ pic.twitter.com/m4HIbVsZcI
— Dihya (@Cecilia271212) November 4, 2024
RIP Quincy Jones
— The Sting (@TheStingisBack) November 4, 2024
When he wasn't making groundbreaking albums with Michael Jackson, Frank Sinatra and Ella Fitzgerald, he scored movies. In the Heat of the Night, The Italian Job, The Getaway and this, Soul Bossa Nova from 1962 which Austin Powers inherited.
A Legend has passed. pic.twitter.com/OPStNzODIo
when you lose a close friend, a piece of your heart goes with them. @QuincyDJones pic.twitter.com/VzYpcIHWaL
— Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (@kaj33) November 4, 2024
âFly Me to the Moonâ began life as âIn Other Wordsâ, in waltz time.
— Michael Warburton (@TheMonologist) November 4, 2024
Sinatra asked QUINCY JONES for a swing rearrangement - and here's the iconic result (at a benefit in St Louis in â65) with Q conducting the Count Basie Orchestra.
RIP Q.
And thank you.pic.twitter.com/QuS9m2EgLi
Pretty sweet.going4roses said:âFly Me to the Moonâ began life as âIn Other Wordsâ, in waltz time.
— Michael Warburton (@TheMonologist) November 4, 2024
Sinatra asked QUINCY JONES for a swing rearrangement - and here's the iconic result (at a benefit in St Louis in â65) with Q conducting the Count Basie Orchestra.
RIP Q.
And thank you.pic.twitter.com/QuS9m2EgLi
He was the kind of Republican that helped make the entire nation work. He had his beliefs, but he wasnât steeped in hyped up grievance and rage. RIP
— David Poland (@DavidPoland) November 13, 2024
Theodore B. Olson, Conservative Lawyer Who Took Up Liberal Causes, Dies at 84 https://t.co/OJ4YSao2e5
Frommer gave quite a boost to the travel business, and caused a great many college students to backpack around Europe on the cheap. I did the backpack thing in the Fall of 1984, spending 3 months in Europe on less than $2K, much of the savings coming from tips in Frommer's book, 1984 edition, still advertising Europe on $10 a day.bearister said:
Arthur Frommer, travel writer and guidebook publisher, dead at 95 | CNN
https://www.cnn.com/2024/11/18/travel/arthur-frommer-travel-guidebooks-dead-obituary/index.html
I think this was the version I had when I went backpacking in Europe the summer of 1976 (âŚand there was a heat wave):
*The book turned Europe into a giant Disneyland, except instead of seeing the same people at different rides, you would bump into the same travelers in different countries all trying to check into the same fleabag hotels and hostels.
SFCityBear said:Frommer gave quite a boost to the travel business, and caused a great many college students to backpack around Europe on the cheap. I did the backpack thing in the Fall of 1984, spending 3 months in Europe on less than $2K, much of the savings coming from tips in Frommer's book, 1984 edition, still advertising Europe on $10 a day.bearister said:
Arthur Frommer, travel writer and guidebook publisher, dead at 95 | CNN
https://www.cnn.com/2024/11/18/travel/arthur-frommer-travel-guidebooks-dead-obituary/index.html
I think this was the version I had when I went backpacking in Europe the summer of 1976 (âŚand there was a heat wave):
*The book turned Europe into a giant Disneyland, except instead of seeing the same people at different rides, you would bump into the same travelers in different countries all trying to check into the same fleabag hotels and hostels.
You are also right about the fleabags. Several times I walked into a hotel, and asked for a room. I would stay a day or two, and then politely but firmly be asked to leave, because they had a reservation about to arrive. After getting booted from one charming place on the Left Bank, I had to trudge around all day in the rain, before I found another vacancy. It was in the Hotel Henry IV on the Ile de la Cite in the Seine River. It was 6 stories high with no elevator, and my room was on the top floor, for $6 a night, and I lugged my pack up the 6 flights. The bed was a few inches higher in the middle than in the sides. I started to fall asleep, and began to roll toward the edge. It didn't matter where I tried to lie down, I would start to slide or roll onto the floor. The room wasn't big enough to put the mattress on the floor, so I just lay there on the bed until the sun came up, and didn't sleep a wink. The next day, I was off looking for another of Frommer's affordable hotels. Once in a while, I'd get a night's sleep, or a good meal, and I have to thank Arthur Frommer for that, and for the money I saved while having a great and exciting trip.
Didn't read this book but I basically did this on my cross country bike trip in 1982. I didn't stay in many pay-for places though. A few camp sites, hostels, motels to get a shower occasionally but I spent many nights in open fields, little league fields, a park in downtown Cincinnati (which turned in a whino haven after I was asleep), etc. I basically spent $10/day. Still don't know how I did that. Best thing I ever did.bearister said:
Arthur Frommer, travel writer and guidebook publisher, dead at 95 | CNN
https://www.cnn.com/2024/11/18/travel/arthur-frommer-travel-guidebooks-dead-obituary/index.html
I think this was the version I had when I went backpacking in Europe the summer of 1976 (âŚand there was a heat wave):
*The book turned Europe into a giant Disneyland, except instead of seeing the same people at different rides, you would bump into the same travelers in different countries all trying to check into the same fleabag hotels and hostels.
82gradDLSdad said:Didn't read this book but I basically did this on my cross country bike trip in 1982. I didn't stay in many pay-for places though. A few camp sites, hostels, motels to get a shower occasionally but I spent many nights in open fields, little league fields, a park in downtown Cincinnati (which turned in a whino haven after I was asleep), etc. I basically spent $10/day. Still don't know how I did that. Best thing I ever did.bearister said:
Arthur Frommer, travel writer and guidebook publisher, dead at 95 | CNN
https://www.cnn.com/2024/11/18/travel/arthur-frommer-travel-guidebooks-dead-obituary/index.html
I think this was the version I had when I went backpacking in Europe the summer of 1976 (âŚand there was a heat wave):
*The book turned Europe into a giant Disneyland, except instead of seeing the same people at different rides, you would bump into the same travelers in different countries all trying to check into the same fleabag hotels and hostels.
I will definitely give this some thought. We are not an emotional family but maybe my kids will change that. Thanks for the idea.concordtom said:82gradDLSdad said:Didn't read this book but I basically did this on my cross country bike trip in 1982. I didn't stay in many pay-for places though. A few camp sites, hostels, motels to get a shower occasionally but I spent many nights in open fields, little league fields, a park in downtown Cincinnati (which turned in a whino haven after I was asleep), etc. I basically spent $10/day. Still don't know how I did that. Best thing I ever did.bearister said:
Arthur Frommer, travel writer and guidebook publisher, dead at 95 | CNN
https://www.cnn.com/2024/11/18/travel/arthur-frommer-travel-guidebooks-dead-obituary/index.html
I think this was the version I had when I went backpacking in Europe the summer of 1976 (âŚand there was a heat wave):
*The book turned Europe into a giant Disneyland, except instead of seeing the same people at different rides, you would bump into the same travelers in different countries all trying to check into the same fleabag hotels and hostels.
Have you written your book for your descendants?
I discovered I have a ggggg grandfather who sailed the world since a boy to age 35. Canton, Honolulu, London⌠1790's final trip was 2 years slaughtering 13000 elephant seals for their hides and barrels of oil, sold in NYC.
OMG, where's the book, grandpa?
It doesn't exist.
Have your kids interview you on tape, if nothing else.