The Rhodesian Folk Singer: John Edmond

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  • Опубліковано 10 тра 2024
  • Background Music
    • Rome - A Passage to Rh...
    John Edmond's (along to where you can listen to his music)
    / @johnedmondmusic
    Documentary About Troopie Songs
    • Interview John Edmond ...
    Interview
    • Interview With The Bus...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 57

  • @onkelboeser5574
    @onkelboeser5574 24 дні тому +4

    Man, John Edmond keeping my spirits up in the amry. Really relatable lyrics to many songs

  • @nogoaway4969
    @nogoaway4969 24 дні тому +8

    it's a good day whenever Wyatt uploads

    • @Donna230
      @Donna230 21 день тому

      Evergreen post

  • @DomCillo097
    @DomCillo097 10 днів тому

    There's never a day that I don't listen to John Edmond

  • @joshwest5305
    @joshwest5305 24 дні тому +3

    What I really admire about this whole video is Wyatt clearly showcases how much he's willing to explore in music. Glad to see this channel has evolved past just reviewing legacy and trendy metal crap.

  • @TheJulebrusHorror
    @TheJulebrusHorror 24 дні тому +3

    Great video, very informative. Thanks

  • @brightmooninthenight2111
    @brightmooninthenight2111 24 дні тому +8

    I appreciate the move to create more videos outside of metal. Your passion for exploration when it comes to art really comes across.

  • @Cattani1982
    @Cattani1982 22 дні тому +1

    ROME playing in the background. Nice touch. :)

  • @vestridreaming
    @vestridreaming 23 дні тому +1

    This is wild! I had no idea about this dude, I'll totally have to give his albums a listen. I appreciate it!

  • @paolotoscano754
    @paolotoscano754 17 днів тому

    THAT CRYSTAL CASTELS VINYLLLLLL

  • @DITDdsbm
    @DITDdsbm 23 дні тому

    Thanks for video

  • @LoderryPlaysPVP
    @LoderryPlaysPVP 23 дні тому

    Another great video as always

  • @something6167
    @something6167 23 дні тому

    Gotta love the background music, classic from Rome.

  • @hotrod9028
    @hotrod9028 24 дні тому

    Learned a lot from this
    thx for your hard work

  • @daverome8517
    @daverome8517 24 дні тому

    Great Video

  • @davidmarsh9897
    @davidmarsh9897 24 дні тому

    Thanks for the video, good effort my son. Interesting. Cheers.

  • @BarBarian-sy5xz
    @BarBarian-sy5xz 24 дні тому +5

    Crystal Castles!

  • @rocotaco5517
    @rocotaco5517 24 дні тому

    I enjoy this video a lot cause i learn about a musician who I didn't know about and the history of a nation that no longer exists as well.

  • @Katechon1349
    @Katechon1349 23 дні тому +2

    based

  • @SlickGames2-gd5jw
    @SlickGames2-gd5jw 24 дні тому +1

    that's an unusual guitar stratocaster neck/headstock + acoustic body

  • @JoWinters
    @JoWinters 23 дні тому +1

    Man.. a lot of stuff I didn’t know, thank you for this video!
    A bit irrelevant, but “..Rhodesia” by Japan, is a cool song 🎶

    • @enri_mucca
      @enri_mucca 23 дні тому

      Chatting about Japan is never irrelevant

  • @SlyHikari03
    @SlyHikari03 17 днів тому

    Crystal Castles vinyl, nice.

  • @user-sr6gq7zs2u
    @user-sr6gq7zs2u 24 дні тому +3

    Baked beans are a dish traditionally containing white common beans that are parboiled and then, in the US, baked in sauce at low temperature for a lengthy period.[1] Canned baked beans are not baked, but are cooked through a steam process.[2] Baked beans occurred in Native American cuisine, and are made from beans indigenous to the Americas.[3] It is thought that the dish was adopted and adapted by English colonists in New England in the 17th century and, through cookbooks published in the 19th century, spread to other regions of the United States and into Canada.[3] However, the connection to Native American cuisine may be apocryphal, as legumes such as broad beans and lentils prepared in various sauces had been established in European cuisine long before the Middle Ages. Today, in the New England region of the United States, a variety of indigenous legumes are used in restaurants or in the home, such as Jacob's cattle, soldier beans, yellow-eyed beans, and navy beans (also known as native beans).[3]
    Originally, Native Americans sweetened baked beans with maple syrup, a tradition some recipes still follow, but some English colonists used brown sugar beginning in the 17th century. In the 18th century, the convention of using American-made molasses as a sweetening agent became increasingly popular to avoid British taxes on sugar. Boston baked beans use a sauce prepared with molasses and salt pork, a dish whose popularity has given Boston the nickname "Beantown".[4]
    Today, baked beans are served throughout the United States alongside barbecue foods and at picnics. Beans in a brown sugar, sugar, or corn syrup sauce (with or without tomatoes) are widely available throughout the United States. Bush Brothers are the largest producer.[5] After the American Revolutionary War, Independence Day celebrations often included baked beans.[6]
    Canned baked beans are used as a convenience food; most are made from haricot beans in sauce. They may be eaten hot or cold, and straight from the can, as they are fully cooked.[7] H. J. Heinz began producing canned baked beans in 1886. In the early 20th century, canned baked beans gained international popularity, particularly in the United Kingdom, where they have become a common part of an English full breakfast. According to chef and food historian Walter Staib of Philadelphia's City Tavern, baked beans had their roots as a Native peoples dish in the Americas long before the dish became known to Western culture.[8] In the northeast of America various Native American peoples, including the Iroquois, the Narragansett and the Penobscot,[9] mixed beans, maple sugar, and bear fat in earthenware pots which they placed in pits called "bean holes" which were lined in hot rocks to cook slowly over a long period of time.[8][10]
    British colonists in New England were the first westerners to adopt the dish from the Native peoples, and were quick to embrace it largely because the dish was reminiscent of pease pudding and because the dish used ingredients native to the New World.[8][11] They substituted molasses or sugar for the maple syrup, bacon or ham for the bear fat, and simmered their beans for hours in pots over the fire instead of underground.[8] Each colony in America had its own regional variations of the dish, with navy or white pea beans used in Massachusetts, Jacob's Cattle and soldier beans used in Maine, and yellow-eyed beans in Vermont.[3] This variation likely resulted from the colonists receiving the dish from different Native peoples who used different native beans.[3]
    While some historians have theorized that baked beans had originated from the cassoulet or bean stew tradition in Southern France, this is unlikely as the beans used to make baked beans are all native to North America and were introduced to Europe around 1528.[12] However, it is likely that English colonists used their knowledge of cassoulet cooking to modify the cooking technique of the beans from the traditional Native American version, by soaking the bean overnight and simmering the beans over a fire before baking it in earthen pots in order to decrease the cooking time.[13]
    A dish which was a clear precursor to baked beans, entitled "beans and bacon", was known in medieval England.[14] The addition of onion and mustard to some baked beans recipes published in New England in the 19th century was likely based on traditional cassoulet recipes from Staffordshire, England, which utilized mustard, beans, and leeks.[13] These ingredients are still often added to baked beans today.[13] Nineteenth-century cookbooks published in New England, spread to other portions of the United States and Canada, which familiarized other people with the dish.[13]
    While many recipes today are stewed, traditionally dried beans were soaked overnight, simmered until tender (parboiled), and then slow-baked in a ceramic or cast-iron beanpot.[3] Originally baked beans were sweetened with maple syrup by Native Americans, a tradition some recipes still follow, but some English colonists modified the sweetening agent to brown sugar beginning in the 17th century.[14] In the 18th century the convention of using American made molasses as a sweetening agent became increasingly popular in order to avoid British taxes on sugar.[14] The molasses style of baked beans has become closely associated with the city of Boston and is often referred to as Boston baked beans.[15]
    Today in the New England region, baked beans are flavored either with maple syrup (Northern New England), or with molasses (Boston), and are traditionally cooked with salt pork in a beanpot in a brick oven for six to eight hours.[15] In the absence of a brick oven, the beans were cooked in a beanpot nestled in a bed of embers placed near the outer edges of a hearth, about a foot away from the fire. Today, baked beans can be made in a slow cooker or in a modern oven using a traditional beanpot, Dutch oven, or casserole dish.[13] Regardless of cooking method, the results of the dish, commonly described as having a savory-sweet flavor and a brownish- or reddish-tinted white bean, are the same.[8]
    A tradition in Maine of "bean hole" cooking may have originated with the native Penobscot people and was later practiced in logging camps. A fire would be made in a stone-lined pit and allowed to burn down to hot coals, and then a pot with 11[16] pounds of seasoned beans would be placed in the ashes, covered over with dirt, and left to cook overnight or longer. These beans were a staple of Maine's logging camps, served at every meal.[17][18] While baked beans was initially a New England region cuisine, the dish has become a popular item throughout the United States; and is now a staple item served most frequently along various types of barbecue and at picnics.[19] This is due in part to the ease of handling, as they can be served hot or cold, directly from the can, making them handy for outdoor eating. The tomato-based sweet sauce also complements many types of barbecue. The already-cooked beans may also be baked in a casserole dish topped with slices of raw bacon, which is baked until the bacon is cooked. Additional seasonings are sometimes used, such as additional brown sugar or mustard to make the sauce more tangy.[7] Canned beans, often containing pork, were among the first convenience foods, and were exported and popularised by U.S. companies internationally in the early 20th century.[20] The American Food and Drug Administration stated in 1996: "It has for years been recognized by consumers generally that the designation 'beans with pork,' or 'pork and beans' is the common or usual name for an article of commerce that contains very little pork." The included pork is typically a piece of salt pork that adds fat to the dish.[21]
    The first mass-produced commercial canning of baked beans in the United States began in 1895 by the Pennsylvania-based H. J. Heinz Company.[5] Heinz was also the first company to sell baked beans outside of the United States, beginning with sales limited solely to Fortnum & Mason in 1886, when the item was considered a luxury.[22] They began selling baked beans throughout the UK in 1901, and baked beans became a standard part of the English full breakfast soon after.[5] Heinz removed pork from the product during the Second World War rationing.[23] Originally, Heinz Baked Beans were prepared in the traditional United States manner for sales in Ireland and Great Britain. Over time, the recipe was altered to a less sweet tomato sauce without maple syrup, molasses, or brown sugar to appeal to the tastes of the United Kingdom.[20] This is the version of baked beans most commonly eaten outside of the United States. Baked beans are commonly eaten on toast ("beans on toast") or as part of a full breakfast.[20] Heinz Baked Beans remains the best-selling brand in the UK.[24] The Baked Bean Museum of Excellence in Port Talbot, Wales, is dedicated to baked beans.[25] In 2002, the British Dietetic Association allowed manufacturers of canned baked beans to advertise the product as contributing to the recommended daily consumption of five to six vegetables per person. This concession was criticised by heart specialists, who pointed to the high levels of sugar and salt in the product. However, it has been proven that consumption of baked beans does indeed lower total cholesterol levels and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, even in normo-cholesterolaemic individuals.[26][27] Some manufacturers produce a "healthy" version of the product with reduced levels of sugar and salt.[28]

  • @Based6060
    @Based6060 24 дні тому +1

    Grrrrrrrrrrr

  • @gagacrazy10
    @gagacrazy10 22 дні тому +1

    Good old Rhodesia! 🤠
    💚🤍💚

  • @munkey9064
    @munkey9064 24 дні тому +1

    albert?

  • @DinMamma_1337
    @DinMamma_1337 24 дні тому

    48

  • @StarThePlat
    @StarThePlat 24 дні тому +3

    No views in 40 seconds...

    • @wyattxhim
      @wyattxhim  24 дні тому +11

      yeah I think my channel is getting shadow banned 🙁

    • @StarThePlat
      @StarThePlat 24 дні тому

      ​​@@wyattxhimwhat a shame, UA-cam allows people promoting only fans but not music content.

    • @martinolopezcastro9739
      @martinolopezcastro9739 24 дні тому +2

      Wyatt fell off...

  • @joedirte6476
    @joedirte6476 24 дні тому +7

    Soundtrack for when Rhodesians reclaim their rightful clay from the stinky squatters 😎

    • @wyattxhim
      @wyattxhim  24 дні тому +9

      I can smell your comment from here

    • @joedirte6476
      @joedirte6476 24 дні тому +4

      @@wyattxhim take a nice deep breath and enjoy :-)

  • @mooseduck
    @mooseduck 24 дні тому +25

    Rhodieboos who say shit like 'Rhodesia never dies' when they look at a world map: 😱😱😱 (it died lol)

    • @wyattxhim
      @wyattxhim  24 дні тому +13

      Saw this joke coming a mile away from all the videos/threads of conversation about it lol.
      I mean people admire the hell out of the music from the Red Army Choir (me included) for its prideful sound but yet when you look on a world map it doesn’t say “Soviet Union “ now does it lmao

    • @mooseduck
      @mooseduck 24 дні тому +10

      @@wyattxhim I agree but there is also a degree of difference between expressing fondness for a racist settler colony and the first ever nationwide socialist revolution. The proletariat still exists as a class and has everything to gain, rhodieboos barely exist outside of 4chan boards and retirement homes

    • @wyattxhim
      @wyattxhim  24 дні тому +11

      ⁠​⁠@@mooseduckconsidering how Zimbabwe turned out I I feel Rhodieboos have their moment for some bragging rights in the longevity of its history. Along with the atrocities of what happened in the Soviet Union (even though it wasn’t racial driven) it still has some resemblance to violence.
      Still as you stated and I as well did in the video Rhodesia as a whole was doomed from the start when the tide of decolonization was happening in Africa which even though I made this whole video about John Edmond is something I can see in the argument being absolutely justifiable for the African natives.

    • @mooseduck
      @mooseduck 24 дні тому +7

      @@wyattxhim Wdym, Zimbabwe is a very successful country just look at how many trillionaires they have! /s

    • @joedirte6476
      @joedirte6476 24 дні тому +5

      @@mooseduck cope, seethe, and dilate

  • @JopoJoful
    @JopoJoful 24 дні тому +5

    South/Rhodesia will rise again

    • @dogmatized
      @dogmatized 24 дні тому +10

      Your colonizer settlement is never coming back

    • @JimRizzler
      @JimRizzler 23 дні тому

      “I told you so” - Ian Douglas Smitth

    • @d00mEr88
      @d00mEr88 17 днів тому

      ​@@dogmatizedWhites founded that area first, instigating a bunch of uneducated and poor tribal members to wage war for you isn't really anything close to proletariat, just pawns to use and discard.