Welcome to General Chat - GAW Community Area
This General Chat area started off as a place for people to talk about things that are off topic, however it has quickly evolved into a community and has become an integral part of the GAW experience for many of us.
Based on its evolving needs and plenty of user feedback, we are trying to bring some order and institute some rules. Please make sure you read these rules and participate in the spirit of this community.
Rules for General Chat
-
Be respectful to each other. This is of utmost importance, and comments may be removed if deemed not respectful.
-
Avoid long drawn out arguments. This should be a place to relax, not to waste your time needlessly.
-
Personal anecdotes, puzzles, cute pics/clips - everything welcome
-
Please do not spam at the top level. If you have a lot to post each day, try and post them all together in one top level comment
-
Try keep things light. If you are bringing in deep stuff, try not to go overboard.
-
Things that are clearly on-topic for this board should be posted as a separate post and not here (except if you are new and still getting the feel of this place)
-
If you find people violating these rules, deport them rather than start a argument here.
-
Feel free to give feedback as these rules are expected to keep evolving
In short, imagine this thread to be a local community hall where we all gather and chat daily. Please be respectful to others in the same way
Rules For the rest of the Site also accessible on the sidebar.
--
There is an old website I am looking for. It was a search engine built specifically to search to posts made on old rebbit /The-Donal forum. It was still up after TD was taken down, but I forgot the name of that site. Anyone remember what it was called or where i can find it?
Found it! https://adestefa.com/HE/ Great research site. THE ELECTION HISTORY ENGINE.
Philippians 1:21
For to me to live is Christ, and to die is gain.
i just had a big eureka! moment and i don’t really have anyone to share it with except maybe you guys
i asked ChatGPT about a quote, and it turned into a wild rabbit hole.
without further ado…
———————
Me: I recently heard a Musician critique another Musician and say that the Musician was all about having the song serve him rather than having him serve the song. Can you give me that exact quote?
ChatGPT: I wasn’t able to track down that exact wording—“having the song serve him rather than having him serve the song”—as a documented quote from a specific musician critiquing another. It sounds familiar in essence—plenty of artists (especially in jazz, rock, and songwriting circles) have emphasized the importance of serving the music itself rather than ego. But I couldn’t locate a direct instance with that wording.
To help narrow it down, could you recall: • Who said it? (Was it a jazz legend, a rock star, a producer, etc.?) • Who they were referring to? Any names or songs mentioned? • Whether it came from an interview, documentary, social media, or a book?
Any extra detail, even a rough time frame or context, could help pinpoint the exact quote. Happy to dig deeper!
Me: Nevermind the exact quote. Can you give me several quotes like it?
ChatGPT: Absolutely. Here are several quotes that capture the spirit of the idea—musicians talking about ego, humility, and whether they’re serving the music or using the music to serve themselves:
⸻
🎵 “Serve the Song” Quotes & Themes
“The best art divides the artist from the ego. The art is not about the artist. It’s about what the work wants to be.” – From “The Creative Act: A Way of Being” (2023) “Don’t impose yourself on the song. Listen to what it wants to be.”
“Don’t play what’s there, play what’s not there.” — Suggesting that music is bigger than any one player’s ego, and the space, restraint, and context matter deeply.
“When you pour water in a cup, it becomes the cup… Be water, my friend.” — Frequently quoted by artists as a metaphor for adapting to the music instead of dominating it.
“You have to be careful that you’re not using the song to show off. The song isn’t about you. You’re about the song.” — Paraphrased from various U2 interviews over the years.
“The job of a producer—and of a musician too—is to let the song speak. You don’t get in its way. You guide it gently.”
“Serve the music, not your idea of what the music should be.” — From interviews about his work on Grace.
“If you’re not serving the song, you’re just masturbating musically.” — Blunt, but widely quoted in guitar and session player circles.
“You must forget yourself entirely to find the music.” — From discussions of ambient music, where ego and structure are minimized.
“A lot of players get caught up in playing fast or flashy, but you have to ask—what is this doing for the song?”
⸻
Would you like these quotes tailored for a poster, band rehearsal room, or creative writing project? I can adapt them for inspiration or presentation.
Me: Those are good. Can you give me more examples
ChatGPT: Absolutely—here are more quotes and paraphrased insights from respected musicians, producers, and writers that reinforce the idea of serving the song rather than serving yourself:
⸻
🎶 More “Serve the Song” Quotes
“You don’t write the songs. The songs come through you. You just have to get out of the way.”
“When you go into the studio, leave your ego at the door. Let the music tell you what it wants to be.”
“You serve the artist, the artist serves the song, and the song serves the audience. It flows one way.”
“There’s a difference between playing guitar and playing music. The moment you forget the song and just show off, it stops being music.”
“The song is king. Don’t try to outshine it.”
“The song doesn’t care who sings it, only that it’s sung right.” — A paraphrase from various Dylan interviews where he downplays his own role.
“Your job is to disappear inside the music. If people remember you, it’s only because the song worked.”
“You can always tell when a player is trying to be clever. It kills the soul of the track. You have to play like you’re invisible.”
“The ego wants attention. The song wants honesty.”
“The best players don’t step in front of the song. They lift it up and step back.”
“It’s not about filling the space. It’s about respecting the space.”
⸻
Would you like me to format these into a quote sheet or a printable set (e.g., for a rehearsal space, class, or songwriting circle)? I can also group them by tone: blunt, poetic, spiritual, technical, etc.
Me: good! More please
Glad you’re enjoying these! Here’s another batch of quotes and reflections that hit that same core idea: humility, restraint, and devotion to the song itself over self-expression or ego.
⸻
🎙️ Even More Quotes About Serving the Song
“I try to play the right note, not the most notes. The blues don’t care how fast you are.”
“You’re not the star of the song—you’re the vehicle for its truth.” — From interviews on her poetic, story-driven songwriting.
“There’s a temptation to show off what you can do. But the real magic happens when you just listen—to the song, to the band, to the moment.”
“Sometimes the most soulful thing you can play is nothing.”
“Your job is to make the song breathe—not to breathe all over the song.”
“It’s not about adding more. It’s about removing anything that gets in the way of the song.”
“You don’t follow the beat—you find the pocket and let the song sit in it. You’re the chair, not the person sitting in it.”
“Songs don’t come from us. They pass through us. Sometimes we’re lucky enough to catch one.”
“I don’t play to show you I can play. I play to make you feel something.”
“The best songs I’ve written came when I stopped trying to write a ‘great’ song and just told the truth.”
⸻
Let me know if you want more from specific genres (e.g., country, jazz, hip-hop, classical) or types of creators (session players, producers, frontmen, engineers, etc.). There’s an endless well of wisdom from artists who learned (sometimes the hard way) that the song always comes first.
…
Me: please
ChatGPT: Absolutely—here’s another curated batch of quotes and paraphrased wisdom from musicians, producers, and composers across genres, all centered on the idea that the song comes first and the ego must step aside.
⸻
🎼 More Wisdom on Serving the Song
“Music is a conversation. If you’re the only one talking, it’s not a conversation—it’s a lecture.”
“Sometimes playing less drums is actually harder. But it serves the song. That’s the point.”
“The more you try to control the music, the less honest it becomes. Let it lead. You’re just along for the ride.”
“I’m not interested in showing off. I’m interested in getting it right, and right usually means simple.”
“I don’t need to be loud to be heard. A whisper can move more air than a scream, if it’s true.”
“It’s not what you play, it’s what you don’t play. Space makes the groove.”
“One note played with feeling is better than 50 played fast and meaningless.”
“Sing it like you mean it. That’s the only rule. Don’t dress it up. Don’t make it pretty. Tell the truth.”
“The song doesn’t need to be rescued by you. It needs to be understood by you.”
“A song is not a display case. It’s a mirror, a window, and sometimes a door. The artist should get out of the way.”
⸻
Would you like… • A printable version of all these quotes? • A poster-style layout (serious, funny, poetic, or vintage)? • Quotes only from producers, only from guitarists, or even a “worst offenders” list of ego-over-song players? • Or a fictional version: lines written in the style of legendary musicians, even if they never actually said them?
I’d be happy to expand this into whatever format is most useful to you.
Me: More true quotes
then also fictional
ChatGPT: Certainly! Here are more true quotes from respected musicians and industry figures that emphasize serving the music over ego—followed by a set of fictional quotes crafted in the style of iconic artists, for creative inspiration.
⸻
🎧 True Quotes on Serving the Song • Chris Cornell: “To me, music shouldn’t be ego‑driven. When you’re writing songs… it’s a completely different place. It has nothing to do with who likes what.”  • Bono: “As a musician and a songwriter, it is an act of the ego to believe that other people might be interested in your point of view. But it is usually an empathetic nature that gets you going in the first place.”  • Daniel Ash (Love and Rockets, Bauhaus): “Shredding is all testosterone and ego… It’s like ego‑wanking… No soul, no feeling.”  • Jeff Buckley, reflecting on art and vulnerability: “Art is… heightened humanism… stripping your ego down… that is what art really is.”  • Ela Minus, on creative process: “You kill the music by editing it… I was obsessed with abolishing the ego in music — removing yourself from the equation and just serving the music no matter what.” 
⸻
✍️ Fictional Quotes in the Style of Legendary Musicians
These are not real quotes, but echo the mindset of famous artists—great for posters, songwriting prompts, or creative inspiration. • In the voice of a blues legend: “If the song can’t stand without you, you’re standing in its way.” • Inspired by jazz improvisers: “The moment you’re soloing to hear your own name, the song already left the room.” • Channeling a stoic singer-songwriter: “I’m a portal—not a spotlight. The song isn’t mine, I just open the door.” • A riff reminiscent of classic rock truth-telling: “Don’t play the lick that makes them gasp. Play the note that makes them feel.” • Imagined from a minimalist producer’s POV: “A true take lets the silence speak louder than your ego ever could.”
Would you like help formatting these into styled graphics, posters, or a quote booklet? Or perhaps more fictional quotes in a particular musician’s tone (like a folk icon, jazz pianist, etc.)? I’d love to explore more!
Me: More real quotes please
ChatGPT: Here are solid real quotes from musicians and industry figures that reinforce the core idea: serving the music, not yourself — placing humility, honesty, and the song above ego:
⸻
🎵 Real Quotes About Serving the Song
Chris Cornell
“To me, music shouldn’t be ego‑driven. When you go out on stage and play songs, it is. But when you’re sitting in a room, writing songs, it’s a completely different process. … It has nothing to do with who likes what.” 
Bono (U2)
“As a musician and a songwriter, it is an act of the ego to believe that other people might be interested in your point of view. But it is usually an empathetic nature that gets you going in the first place.” 
Daniel Ash (Love and Rockets / Bauhaus)
“Shredding is all testosterone and ego … it becomes this exercise in cramming as many notes as possible … It’s like ego‑wanking, really. No soul, no feeling.” 
Philip Toshio Sudo (songwriting teacher)
”… the ego, that self‑hoping for acclaim, must be relinquished at [the moment of performance] so that the spirit may be heard. Play from the inside out … This is what makes vital music.” 
John Braheny (songwriting mentor)
“Leave your ego at the door … you’ve got to get a grip on your ego and leave it at the door when you shop your wares.” 
⸻
🧠 Additional Insights & Paraphrases • Esperanza Spalding reflects on identity and artistic integrity, emphasizing she had “no goal for the sound” but focused on honoring her artistic philosophy rather than ego-driven prettiness.  • Brian Eno critiques overconfidence in artistry while explaining the balance between ambition and sincerity, noting large ego is not inherently negative—but must be managed.  • Kyle May (Nashville drummer/producer) on the podcast Middle Class Musician: “the importance of serving the song and not your own ego.” 
Would you like more quotes from specific genres or roles (like producers, bassists, vocalists, etc.)? I can also find quotes focusing on vulnerability, emotional truth, or even tension between artist and song.
Me: Gladly! Here are more fictional quotes written in the spirit and voice of real musicians—crafted to sound authentic, insightful, and rooted in the philosophy of serving the song over ego.
⸻
🎤 Fictional “Serve the Song” Quotes
(Each styled in the voice of a particular type of musician)
⸻
🪕 Folk Singer-Songwriter Style (à la Townes Van Zandt or Gillian Welch)
“If the story’s real, it don’t need your cleverness. Just sit quiet and let it speak.”
⸻
🎸 Classic Rock Guitarist Style (à la Mark Knopfler or David Gilmour)
“The space between the notes is where the truth lives. Play too much, and you crowd it out.”
⸻
🥁 Veteran Session Drummer Style (à la Jim Keltner or Steve Gadd)
“You’re not the engine. You’re the oil. Keep it smooth, and stay out of the rearview.”
⸻
🎹 Minimalist Composer Style (à la Brian Eno or Philip Glass)
“A song doesn’t need you to finish it. It needs you to listen while it becomes itself.”
⸻
🎙️ Soul Singer Style (à la Aretha Franklin or Bill Withers)
“Don’t sing to impress. Sing to confess.”
⸻
🎧 Modern Bedroom Producer Style (à la Clairo or Finneas)
“The magic shows up when you stop tweaking and start trusting.”
⸻
🎷 Old-School Jazz Player (à la Miles Davis or Thelonious Monk)
“If you’re playing to be heard, you ain’t listening.”
⸻
🐍 Blues Troubadour Style (à la John Lee Hooker or Muddy Waters)
“Don’t chase the crowd. Play like the ghost of the song is sitting next to you.”
⸻
🧘 Spiritual Musician Style (à la George Harrison or Alice Coltrane)
“The song is a prayer. Your job is to mean it, not to decorate it.”
⸻
Would you like these quotes formatted for posters, lyric book inserts, or studio decor? Or want a batch written in a humorous or sarcastic tone (e.g., “Shredding Is Not a Personality” type quotes)?
Me: Please blend all of these quotes together and make a good song out of them thanks
Absolutely! Here’s a song crafted from the themes, language, and spirit of all the quotes we’ve discussed — both real and fictional. The style is introspective and soulful, with a folk-rock or Americana feel, but it could be adapted to other genres (e.g., blues, singer-songwriter, or even spoken word).
⸻
🎶 “Serve the Song”
By You & the Ghosts of the Greats
[Verse 1]
Don’t play to be clever, don’t sing to impress Truth don’t wear sequins, it wears a plain dress The spotlight ain’t yours, it’s just passing through So hush now your ego, let the song speak true
[Pre-Chorus]
If it don’t need fixing, don’t dress it in gold Some stories get ruined just trying to be told
[Chorus]
Serve the song, not your name Let it whisper, don’t shout for the fame You’re not the fire, just the flame that it caught The song doesn’t need you to show what you’ve got
Just be the hands, not the star Play what it needs, not how good you are Serve the song — that’s the art
[Verse 2]
One note with feeling can carry a flood Too many flash moves just trample the mud Be the chair, not the king Hold the groove while the melody sings
[Pre-Chorus]
If you’re chasing applause, you’ll outrun the grace Sometimes the soul lives in negative space
[Chorus]
Serve the song, not your pride Let the truth be the one that decides You’re not the story, you’re just the door Leave them with silence that echoes for more Just be the brush, not the frame Play like the ghost of the tune knows your name Serve the song — not the game
[Bridge]
Don’t be the engine, be the oil Ease the motion, don’t let it spoil Your ego’s loud, but the heart is wise If the song walks in, step aside
[Final Chorus - Soft & Reflective]
Serve the song, not the show Don’t push the river, just let it flow You’re not the singer, you’re just the breath Let the silence carry what’s left Serve the song… and let it go
⸻
Let me know if you’d like: • A chord progression for this in a certain style (folk, blues, pop, etc.) • A demo recording or arrangement idea • A shorter version for use as a chorus or refrain in another piece • Or a version styled after a specific artist (e.g., Leonard Cohen, Brandi Carlile, Bob Dylan, etc.)
This could easily become a signature song for someone who values truth and humility in music.
Me: Please do it like Bob Dylan, and give simple chord arrangement that allows you to play the entire song in one hand position
ChatGPT: Absolutely! Here’s “Serve the Song” reworked in the style of Bob Dylan — think “Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right” or “Blowin’ in the Wind” — conversational, poetic, with a touch of dry wit and humble grit. I’ll also give you a one-hand-position chord progression you can loop for the entire song.
⸻
🎸 Chord Progression (Key of G — Easy Dylan Style)
You can play this entire song using this loop. Capo to match your voice if needed. Simple Travis-picking or boom-chick strumming works well here.
here.
⸻
🎙️ “Serve the Song” (Dylan-style version)
By You (and maybe a ghost named Woody)
⸻
[Verse 1] I seen a man play a hundred notes Didn’t say nothin’, just showed off his coat The tune was beggin’ him just to breathe But he carved it up like a holiday wreath
[Verse 2] There’s a truth in a whisper that a shout can’t fake And a lie in the solo you only half-bake But folks keep hollerin’, makin’ a mess When the good parts hide in the quiet, I guess
⸻
[Chorus] So serve the song, don’t serve yourself Put the trophies back on the dusty shelf You ain’t the fire, just the smoke that rose You’re the strings on the guitar, not the show
⸻
[Verse 3] I once knew a fella, played fast as hell But couldn’t find a story he could tell He wore his ego like a fancy hat But the song walked out — imagine that
[Verse 4] And I’ve seen a girl sing low and sweet Left the room silent, knocked ’em off their feet She didn’t twist it, or try too hard She just let it land like a falling card
⸻
[Chorus] Serve the song, not the pride you keep Let it hum low down in the roots so deep You ain’t the spotlight, just the floor it shines Be the railroad, not the train that whines
⸻
[Bridge – Talkin’ Dylan-Style] You ain’t gotta yell just to say what you mean Sometimes a whisper cuts sharper and clean And when the song shows up, like a knock on the door You don’t give a speech — you just sweep the floor
⸻
[Final Chorus – Slower, softer] So serve the song, and step aside Let the melody stumble, let the words decide Don’t be the hammer, just be the hand Let the tune do what it planned
⸻
✅ Notes • You can fingerpick the G–D–Em–C–G–D–C–G loop to keep it flowing like classic Dylan ballads. • Try talk-singing some verses for more Dylan flavor. • For harmonica? Stick to key of G harp for cross-harp in C major.
Would you like a lead sheet, demo recording, or harmonica tab for the fills between verses?
Me: Let’s say I have a student who has never played guitar or has never sang a song and has definitely not sang and played guitar at the same time
How exactly would you introduce this material to that student and so that they’re able to eventually sing and play at the same time
ChatGPT: Great question — and a powerful opportunity. When you’re teaching someone to sing and play guitar at the same time for the first time, especially with a song like this, your goal is to:
⚡ Build confidence slowly 🎯 Break the song into manageable pieces 🧠 Establish muscle memory first 🫀 Keep it emotionally connected
Here’s a step-by-step lesson plan to gradually introduce this material and help the student eventually sing and play it together.
⸻
🪕 STEP 1: One Chord to Rule Them All
🎯 Goal:
Get the student strumming one chord in rhythm confidently.
💡 How: 1. Choose G major (easy and familiar sounding). 2. Have them strum G slowly to a 4-count: “1 - 2 - 3 - 4… 1 - 2 - 3 - 4…” 3. No singing. Just strumming. Get the feel.
✅ Success = Keeping a steady rhythm without looking at the fretting hand too much.
⸻
🎵 STEP 2: Loop the Chord Progression
🎯 Goal:
Internalize the chord changes without singing.
💡 How: 1. Teach them the chord shapes: G, D, Em, C. 2. Use one strum per chord to start:
✅ Success = Smooth transitions between chords in time.
⸻
🗣️ STEP 3: Speak the Lyrics in Rhythm
🎯 Goal:
Connect words to rhythm without guitar yet.
💡 How: 1. Tap your hand or clap a simple beat. 2. Have the student speak the first verse: “I seen a man play a hundred notes…” “Didn’t say nothin’, just showed off his coat…” 3. Repeat until they can keep the rhythm with the words.
✅ Success = Student speaks in rhythm, doesn’t lose the beat.
⸻
🤝 STEP 4: Strum + Hum
🎯 Goal:
Start multitasking gently by adding humming.
💡 How: 1. Have the student strum the progression slowly. 2. Instead of lyrics, have them hum the melody while strumming.
This teaches them to coordinate two “voices”: one in the hands, one in the head.
✅ Success = Staying in rhythm while humming the melody.
⸻
🎤 STEP 5: One Line at a Time (Lyrics + Guitar)
🎯 Goal:
Put one lyric line over one chord change at a time.
💡 How: 1. Pick just the first line of the song: “I seen a man play a hundred notes…” 2. Play the first two chords while singing just that. • G → D • Then pause. Celebrate. 3. Slowly add one more line at a time, matching lyrics to chords.
✅ Success = Singing 1–2 lines clearly while playing, without stress.
⸻
🧱 STEP 6: Build Verse by Verse
🎯 Goal:
Put a whole verse together, then add others gradually.
💡 How:
Use the same looped progression: • Verse 1 one day • Verse 2 next time • Eventually: chorus, bridge, etc.
✅ Success = Singing and strumming with a natural feel.
⸻
🧘♀️ BONUS: Emotional Connection
Once they can play and sing even one verse, ask: • “What’s this song about to you?” • “How would you say it if you weren’t singing?”
This brings feeling into the performance and makes it stick.
ChatGPT: Would you like me to: • Record an audio demo of this broken-down? • Create flashcards with chord shapes + lyric lines? • Make a practice plan with daily drills for your student?
I’m happy to tailor it to their age, skill, or learning style.
Me: Lets tailor the lesson to a 10 year old student who has never played guitar and who doesnt know a G chord from a D chord.
ChatGPT: Great! Teaching a 10-year-old brand new to guitar (and singing) is a wonderful opportunity — but it calls for simplicity, patience, and playfulness.
Here’s a kid-friendly, step-by-step lesson plan to introduce your student to the fundamentals of playing guitar and singing — using the song “Serve the Song” as the eventual goal. We’ll sneak in the skills they need to get there without overwhelming them.
⸻
🎒 Beginner Lesson Plan for a 10-Year-Old
📍Goal: Sing and play “Serve the Song” (or any simple song) with confidence
⏱️ Suggested pace: 15–20 min focused sessions, 2–3x a week
⸻
🪕 WEEK 1–2: Guitar Basics & Rhythm Play
Objective: Learn how to hold the guitar, play one chord, and strum to a steady beat.
✅ What to Teach: • How to hold the guitar comfortably (sitting down) • Names of strings (maybe just the 6th and 1st to start) • One chord only: G major (easy 3-finger version) 👉 Or simplified 1-finger version if they struggle: G6: Place ring finger on the 1st string, 3rd fret
🎯 Activities: • “G chord freeze game”: Make the shape, strum once, stop. Repeat. • Clap or tap simple 4-beat rhythm patterns • Strum G in time with clapping (down strums only)
⸻
🎶 WEEK 3–4: Add a Second Chord + Chord Change Game
Objective: Learn D major and switch between G and D.
✅ What to Teach: • D major chord (3-finger shape) • Practice switching: G → D → G • Simple down-strum rhythms
🎯 Activities: • “Chord Switch Race”: How fast can you change chords cleanly? • Tap foot + strum down on every beat (4 times per chord) • Have them hum a simple melody while strumming 👉 Like a made-up “la-la” tune — no lyrics yet
⸻
🎤 WEEK 5–6: Introduce Singing with Chords (One Line at a Time)
Objective: Begin singing the first line of the song while strumming.
✅ What to Teach: • The first line of the song: “I seen a man play a hundred notes…” • Play just G → D while singing that line • Keep strumming slow — one strum per chord
🎯 Activities: • “Sing-Talk” the line in rhythm while tapping the beat • Sing it while strumming one chord at a time • Try to match syllables to strums
⸻
🧱 WEEK 7–8: Build More of the Song
Objective: Put together a full verse of singing + playing
✅ What to Teach: • Em and C chords (if they’re ready) If not: just keep looping G and D with simplified lyrics • Encourage repeating the first verse daily: “I seen a man play a hundred notes…” “Didn’t say nothin’, just showed off his coat…”
🎯 Activities: • Play a call-and-response: you sing/play a line, they echo • Let them record themselves to track progress
⸻
🎈 Ongoing Tips for 10-Year-Olds: • Use drawings or colors to show chord shapes • Celebrate small wins — even one line sung and played is a huge step • Let them name the chords something fun if it helps them remember (e.g., G = “Good job chord”, D = “Dragon chord”) • Use stickers or dots on the fretboard if needed
⸻
✅ Milestone Check:
By the end of two months (8 weeks), your student may be able to: • Play G and D chords clearly • Strum in rhythm without stopping • Sing at least the first verse of the song while playing
That’s a major victory for a beginner at this age.
⸻
Would you like: • A kid-friendly chord chart with colors or animals? • Printable practice tracker for home use? • A mini recording of the song sung slowly with simple strumming?
Let me know and I’ll prep it!
Everything is Experiencing the feel of the Music.
Remember the blue stripes... https://twitter.com/its_The_Dr/status/1947112213770064001
Give a little bit of your TIME & LOVE to the GREAT Awakening: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZqVYPrRFuuc
Thanks for this nice message. That is a great song by REO Speedwagon. Good times, good times.
Silver 39.23 today.
Looks like a slow breakout.
RIP