Butch Hancock, with Jimmie Dale Gilmore, Jessie Taylor, B.J.Cole, Slim, Scampi, Jeff Mead, Bob Loveday and Martin Deegan performing "Tell Me What You Know" at the Cricketers in London - 30th April 1990.
The late great Jesse Taylor leads an all-star orchestra of British Musicians at the Cricketers in London on the 30th April 1990 on Johnny 'Guitar' Watson's Gangster of Love.
Slim guests on Hammond Organ with Ian Dury and the Blockheads, on the track Blockheads, in December 1979 at Hammersmith Odeon, as part of the Concerts for Kampuchea
Some film I took of a Zydeco Trailride near Opelousas Lousiana in the early 90s using Boozoo's Trail Ride Breakdown by Boozoo Chavis as a backing track.
Automatic adjustments may not be good for your 401(k) - Canton Repository Just because something's automatic, doesn't mean you can totally sit back and relax; especially when it comes to your retirement. In recent years more companies are shifting away from traditional pensions and placing the responsibility for retirement ...
North Bay Accountants - Santa Rosa Press Democrat Jim Andersen is a founding partner and the business succession planning and exit strategies expert of Andersen & Company. Mr. Andersen is called upon from various publications and organizations to write about the accounting industry and lecture. Mr ...
What's a peripatetic worker to do at the end of the walk? - International H... Europeans who spend their careers in more than one country may wonder if the treaties safeguarding the free movement of people and money have an asterisk in the fine print about pensions. With the regulations of retirement systems, and especially the ...
Planning for future - Business Standard Retirement planning, across the world, focuses on the pension amount that a person would be able to garner in his sunset years. A lot of countries have safety nets to make life easier for the older generation. In India, however, we are still ...
Saving for retirement is for women, too - Kansas City Star More women than men outlive their savings, partly because they tend to live longer. But women’s work histories also set the stage for financially pinched retirement years. As a group, U.S. women work fewer years than men, and they’re more likely ...