* (Cover photo: 1959 FORD Thunderbird Convertible in Drive-in Cinema).
=> "Drive-in Cinema" resurfaces as an entertainment alternative in a pandemic time.
"THE VENTURES are considered the most influential, best-selling Instrumental Band in ROCK AND ROLL history.
Over 450 (LPs and CDs including compilations) Released Worldwide."

"THE VENTURES have written over 1000 tunes, and recorded over 3000 songs altogether! If they ever decide to play all of the songs that they've ever recorded, it would take almost 5 days - without a break - to play them all."

"While they predated the advent of the terms surf guitar and surf rock, and they do not consider themselves a surf music group, they were a major building block of instrumental guitar-driven music. "Guitar Player", in an article titled "20 Essential Rock Albums", cited elements of their 1960 "Walk, Don't Run - Album" (Dolton Records BLP-2003 (mono) / BST-8003 (stereo)) which presaged the coming surf trend."

"Most instrumental groups of the 1950s and '60s disappeared after one hit, but the longevity of The Ventures, the best-selling instrumental group of all time, demonstrated the enduring appeal of the genre as well as the band's skill in choosing recording material."

"It was the electric guitars that made the impression; that and the unique rhythmic pulse that Wilson and Bogle had developed in 1958 in Tacoma, Washington, when they tried to make up for the fact that they didn't know any drummers, let alone pianists or sax players. At the time, most record companies wouldn't look at you if you had neither.
- "I played a very percussive rhythm-guitar style", Wilson says: "And Bob used to play with the whammy bar, and once in a white instead of a note he'd hit a chord and give it a little vibrato".
But the most distinctive element of The Ventures sound was that damped, rapidly picked descending glissando, which Japanese call "deke-deke-deke"."

"Through the nuances and characteristics of "THE VENTURES STYLE" in the songs, we can distinguish the unique songs played by them.
This is the "VENTURIZED SOUND". Enjoy !"

Get Venturized !!!

The sound of this website will be better appreciated with High Fidelity Stereo Headphones.

"The Ventures: Stars On Guitars" (Promo)

- New promo video for “The Ventures: Stars on Guitars” documentary, out 12/08/2020 ����❣️ @Staci Layne Wilson
- Please share with anyone you know who loves music ��

https://youtu.be/CnyyFtLYdNI

Coming soon to VOD and DVD- The Ventures: Stars on Guitars!

"The Ventures are one of the most influential guitar-based bands of their era.” — Rolling Stone

The Ventures have been thrilling music lovers with songs like “Wipe Out,” “Walk Don’t Run,” and “Hawaii 5-0” for over half a century. Started by Don Wilson and Bob Bogle in 1959, the band went from humble beginnings in Tacoma, WA., to worldwide acclaim, culminating as inductees into the prestigious Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as the #1 Bestselling Instrumental Rock and Roll Group of all time.

Now, see the story of the world’s most famous instrumental rock and roll band from those who know them the best: movie stars like Billy Bob Thornton, music legends such as Jimmy Page (Led Zeppelin), Jeff “Skunk” Baxter (Steely Dan), The Surfragettes, Lalo Schifrin (Academy Award winning composer of The Mission Impossible theme), Randy Bachman (Bachman-Turner Overdrive), and John Fogerty (Creedence Clearwater Revival), and their family. Witness the rise and influence of the electric guitar, the history, and the relevance of the band in pop culture still today, while you rock out to the stellar soundtrack. @Vision Films

* Soundtrack: "Holy Surf!" (M.Trapp) - The Alien Mike E.T. (2020)

Tuesday, April 21, 2020

"Caravan" Song (1961)

"CARAVAN" song is a "Big Band Jazz" song composed by Juan Tizol and Duke Ellington. And the lyrics by Irving Mills. And it was recorded in 1936 with Duke Ellington (piano), Juan Tizol (trombone), Cootie Williams (trumpet), Barney Bigard (clarinet), Harry Carney (baritone sax), Billy Taylor (bass) and Sonny Greer (drums).


It is a famous song that THE VENTURES play in the final "encore" of concert performances.

There are two versions of this song recorded by The Ventures. The first version was recorded on their first Album "Walk Don't Run", released in November 1960. Producer: Bob Reisdorff. With Bob Bogle as the lead guitarist using a Fender Jazzmaster Guitar, Don Wilson as rhythm guitar, Nokie Edwards with bass guitar and Howie Johnson on drums.


The second and current version was a version that played in shows and was recorded on the 11th Album of the group "Bobby Vee Meets The Ventures" in April 1963. Producer: Bob Reisdorff & Snuff Garrett. This with Nokie Edwards as lead guitarist and using techniques from his idol Les Paul. And playing with a Mosrite Guitar. But recorded without the drums evolution part.

Check out the Caravan of Juan Tizol and Duke Ellington and their Orchestra, the first version of The Ventures and finally the classic and well known version of The Ventures.
Enjoy the phenomenal performance of drummer Mel Taylor.

"CARAVAN" - JUAN TIZOL & DUKE ELLINGTON AND HIS ORCHESTRA (1952)


"CARAVAN" - THE VENTURES - 1960 (FIRST VERSION OF THE VENTURES with Jazzmaster)
Bob Bogle (lead guitar), Don Wilson (guitar),  Nokie Edwards (bass) and Howie Johnson (drums)


"CARAVAN" - THE VENTURES (SECOND VERSION AND LATEST with Mosrite)
Nokie Edwards (lead guitar), Don Wilson (rhythm guitar), Bob Bogle (bass) and Mel Taylor (drums)

Saturday, April 18, 2020

The Ventures: still rocking after 50 years

MUSIC
The Japan Times
Article History
"The Ventures: still rocking after 50 years"
By Philip Brasor
AUG 7, 2008

Link of article in "The Japan Times":
https://www.japantimes.co.jp/culture/2008/08/07/music/the-ventures-still-rocking-after-50-years/#.XptS7NT0lHY

The Ventures have just finished playing 33 songs in the space of two hours in front of some enthusiastic, though seated, middle-aged fans at the Hokutopia concert hall in Tokyo. Kazushi Kojima, who calls himself a “philosopher,” is there with his son. He’s been attending Ventures shows for 30 years.

“My parents listened to The Ventures,” he says. “My first musical hero was Tom Jones and later I was into British rock — Led Zeppelin, that sort of thing.” Eventually, he gravitated back to The Ventures. “I’m really into martial arts and jazz, and I make sure my son listens to everything.” The son nods sheepishly. Asked if he likes The Ventures, too, he says, “I borrowed some CDs from my father. I was impressed.”

“The Beatles were always overrated in Japan,” Kojima says.

It may seem odd to compare the most famous pop-vocal group in the universe with a guitar-based rock quartet that plays instrumentals, but in Japan the contrast is instructive given the way Western pop infiltrated the country in the 1960s. Actually, the statistics contradict Kojima. In Japan, Ventures records have outsold Beatles records by a ratio of two to one. The Ventures saw 37 albums reach the Japanese charts, The Beatles 35. If The Beatles are overrated in Japan, it’s only in terms of lip service. In the places where it counted — record stores and concert halls — The Ventures ruled.

And they still do. At this moment the group is in the midst of its 56th tour of Japan, and by tour we don’t mean the usual Tokyo-Nagoya-Osaka axis. We’re talking almost every civic auditorium in the country: 45 concerts in 57 days. But that’s nothing compared with 1968, when the group did 122 shows in 107 days. The Ventures continue to spend an average of three months of every year in Japan. Of the 100 million records they’ve sold worldwide, 40 million were purchased here.

“Some years we’ve done three separate tours of Japan,” says Don Wilson, 75, the band’s rhythm guitarist and cofounder. “At one point in the ’60s, we were so popular they were lined up five abreast around the block. We’d play Koseinenkin Hall (in Shinjuku) three times in one day.”

Wilson is sitting in his Tokyo hotel the day after the Hokutopia concert with the other members of the band: guitarist Gerry McGee, a laconic Louisiana native and former session man who’s been a Venture on and off for more than 30 years; Leon Taylor, who took over on the drums from his late father Mel in 1997; and bassist/guitarist Bob Spalding, who replaced cofounder Bob Bogle after Bogle retired in 2005. Spalding points out that he attended a show on The Ventures’ legendary first Japan tour in 1962 when he was a teenager and living on a U.S. military base.

“We were the opening act for Bobby Vee and a girl named Joanne Campbell,” explains Wilson. “She was in a movie at that time, a ‘twist’ movie with Joey Dee and the Starlighters, and she was popular in Japan because of the movie. She was the headliner.”

But who remembers Joanne Campbell? It was The Ventures who made history on that tour, despite the fact that they were two men down.

“Our agent in the U.S. said, ‘Would you like to go to Japan?’ ” Wilson continues. “And we said, ‘Of course.’ A couple of weeks later he called and said, ‘They can only afford two of you.’ They put two Japanese musicians behind us — one guy playing a small kit and another guy with a standup bass. But they had been playing Glenn Miller; they didn’t know rock ‘n’ roll. They kept slowing us down, so I talked to the interpreter and said, ‘I think the two of us can handle this by ourselves.’ ”

It was the electric guitars that made the impression; that and the unique rhythmic pulse that Wilson and Bogle had developed in 1958 in Tacoma, Washington, when they tried to make up for the fact that they didn’t know any drummers, let alone pianists or sax players. At the time, most record companies wouldn’t look at you if you had neither.

“I played a very percussive rhythm-guitar style,” Wilson says. “And Bob used to play with the whammy bar, and once in a while instead of a note he’d hit a chord and give it a little vibrato.”

But the most distinctive element of the Ventures sound was that damped, rapidly picked descending glissando, which Japanese call “deke-deke-deke.”

In 1960-61, The Ventures scored three Top 40 singles in the U.S., including the iconic “Walk Don’t Run,” a No. 2 hit that was recently inducted in the Grammy Hall of Fame as one of the most influential records of all time. In the meantime, the duo had added a drummer, as well as a bassist, Nokie Edwards, who would eventually trade places with Bogle and become lead guitarist. In the days leading up to the British Invasion, it was The Ventures, as well as other instrumental music-makers such as Duane Eddy, who played what we would now call rock, since the singers who dominated the U.S. charts were pop artists such as Pat Boone and Connie Francis. Today, “Walk Don’t Run” may sound technical and tame, but it had a bracing effect at the time, especially in Japan, where electric guitars were exotic.

“In 1964 we returned to Japan and 6,000 people met us at the airport,” Wilson says. “In those two years they had been playing our records. You couldn’t go anywhere without hearing The Ventures: coffee shops, radio, even outdoor loudspeakers.”

Not everybody was pleased with their popularity. “The PTA or their equivalent here tried to ban us,” says Wilson, and Spalding adds, “I think they even tried to ban electric guitars.”

It’s difficult to believe that these four mild-mannered men, two of whom are now in their 70s, could ever have provoked such a reaction, but if you see footage of the band playing in the ’60s and contrast it with what was considered standard Japanese pop (kayokyoku) at the time, it could be considered transgressive.

“The electric guitar wasn’t really played here,” says Wilson. “What they had then were things like Trios Los Panchos — all acoustic guitars. That was the Japanese idea of a small instrumental group.”

Generally, electric guitars were used as just another orchestral effect. The Ventures showed them off as a lead instrument. Following the ’62 concert, Japan experienced the “eleki boom”: every instrument-maker as well as a few manufacturers who didn’t make instruments (a sandal-maker, for one) starting churning out electric guitars. In the pop world they were played by technician-musicians such as inventor-musician Takeshi Terauchi and the popular actor-singer Yuzo Kayama.

The electric guitar stood for two things — modernity and sex — which is why it was the sole obsession of boys. Girls went to Ventures concerts to see the matching suits and smiling foreign faces; the boys went to ogle the equipment. To this day, Ventures concerts attract a sizable number of younger men who sit around during the intermission, intently discussing Sunbursts and whether pre-CBS Fenders are better than post-CBS Fenders.

A far less remarked-upon result of The Ventures’ popularity in Japan was the development of the concert-tour business. Foreign artists usually came to Japan to play U.S. bases and Tokyo. The Ventures played everywhere, proselytizing for Western rock ‘n’ roll all over the country.

“The person who hired us was named Tatsu Nagashima,” says Wilson. “He said, ‘I could put you in a ballpark, but you should be in a more intimate setting,’ so he had us play three shows a day at places that held about 3,000.”

It was exciting but unglamorous. “There were no Western-style hotels,” recalls Wilson, “just Japanese-style inns. Also, we toured in the summer and the venues had no air conditioning. They’d place a block of ice on a table and put a fan behind it.”

Inevitably, as more Japanese pop artists adopted electric instruments and started incorporating Western music ideas, they sought the group out, some more tentatively than others. Wilson recalls superstar Kayama showing up in their dressing room before a concert just to say hello. They had no idea who this very polite young man was, but they knew he was a star. “The girls who were serving us, their jaws just dropped to the floor.”

Terauchi would seek the band out whenever they toured. “He found out what train we were traveling on,” says Wilson, “and in those days it took six hours to get somewhere that today would only take 90 minutes. He would bring his guitar and sit with Nokie the whole time, asking him how to do this and how to do that.”

More significantly, the group started writing music for very popular singers such as Oyan Fifi, Yuko Nagisa and Chiyo Okumura. Among the group’s 20 No. 1 hits in Japan were at least five sung by female artists, all of which have become pop standards.

“We got the feel for enka (Japanese folk ballads) when we first got here,” says Wilson. “So we started writing in that vein, but just a little bit away from it. Then the girls who recorded our melodies put Japanese words to them.”

“We often do interviews with younger Japanese,” adds Spalding, “and when we tell them we wrote ‘Kyoto no Koi’ and ‘Futari no Ginza’ they say, ‘Really?’ They know the songs but they don’t know we wrote them.”

Five such Japanese happen to be members of the idol group SMAP, on whose TV show “SMAP x SMAP” The Ventures appeared last year. When they found out that the band had written songs for some of their daisenpai (seniors) they asked if The Ventures would write one for them. “We’re still working on it,” Wilson insists.

Spalding believes something elemental in The Ventures’ music makes it easier for them to write and play in a Japanese pop idiom. “One of the characteristics of our early songs was that muffled rhythm within a minor key, and if you take that sound and place it in a different context, like traditional Japanese music played on a shamisen, it fits. There’s also that plucky quality, and the phrasing is similar, too.”

But while the Ventures sound is immediately recognizable, it’s difficult to pin down. The vast bulk of the group’s repertoire is made up of other people’s songs that the group has, as Wilson puts it, “Venturized.” Most of the songs are rock and R&B classics from the ’50s and ’60s, but they also tackle jazz and Fine Young Cannibals.

“We play a lot of things,” says Wilson, “so when I read that The Ventures are the pioneers of surf music, I go ‘What?’ We were never a surf group.”

“I think the only person in the band who has ever surfed is me,” says Taylor, “and that was when I was a teen.”

The band’s following in its native America has never been quite what it is in Japan, but that could change. Last March, they were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, exactly 50 years after Wilson and Bogle formed the group.

“We’d been eligible 22 years,” says Wilson. “This was the first time we were nominated.”

“It was Madonna’s first time to get nominated, too,” adds Taylor, “and she also got in.”

Since the induction, the band have been busier than ever, playing sold-out shows at Disneyland in California and a festival in Quebec, where they performed for 30,000 people. Wilson says that between the band’s U.S. and Japan obligations, they have no time to tour Europe, where they are also in demand. They are cited more and more by younger musicians who learned how to play by listening to Ventures records — and not just on guitar.

“Billy Joel was backstage at the Hall of Fame ceremony,” says Wilson, “and he told me that one of the very first songs he learned on the piano was ‘Walk Don’t Run.’ “

As the Black Ship that opened Japan to American rock, The Ventures are owed a lot by artists who have since become frequent visitors. And because The Ventures spend so much time here, paths inevitably cross. Some years ago, they were waiting for a train in Nagoya when Wilson noticed a group of foreigners on the same platform.

“One of them comes up to me and says, ‘Are you The Ventures?’ And I say, ‘Yeah.’ And he asks, ‘Can I have my picture taken with you?’ “

Wilson assented, and the man, guitarist Joe Perry, who was touring Japan with his band Aerosmith, gestured to his manager. “Come on over here and get in this picture,” he yelled. “This is history.”

Wednesday, April 15, 2020

"Pipeline" Song (1963)

"Pipeline" it is a song composed by Bob Spickard and Brian Carman and released in compact form by the local label Downey in 1962 (Santa Ana, CA). While The Chantays became known for surfing instrumentals, Carman was not an avid surfer.

The song, originally called "Liberty's Whip", after actor Lee Marvin's whip-flicking bad guy in the film "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valence" (1962 - American western film) .
It was renamed "Pipeline" after Spickard and fellow Chantay Warren Waters saw a surfing film (Bruce Brown film) showing scenes from the Banzai Pipeline in Hawaii. Changing the theme of the song, the origin completely changes.

In 1963 with a new Label Dot Records with national distribution, the band formed by them The Chantays, took this song to the 4th place in the US charts.

The Ventures that made this song really look like a wave forming, with perfect nuances and arrangements. A sound that characterizes and imitates a large wave forming.

In the US, The Ventures released the album "SURFING" by the Label Dolton (Liberty) with this song in April 1963. Producer: Bob Reisdorff. On the cover photo the famous "Big Wave Rider" Sammy Lee and on the back the Ilima Kalama "West Coast Surfing Champion".

In Japan, success came with The Ventures, which released a compact in 1964. And all the young guitarists of the time, copied and played this song.

The term "Pipeline" in the surfing grossaly means "tube" very wide, it is also called the wave that forms in Noth Shore, Oahu, Hawaii. One of the most dangerous waves and coveted by surfers.

Los Increibles - "OS INCRÍVEIS" (former The Clevers) of Brazil (click for details), through the Argentina Label CBS - Columbia Records in 1965, also recorded a very interesting and fascinating version (with tubular echo?!) of this song with the name "OLEODUCTO" (Oil Pipeline).

* [...With the coming of The Beatles and the other bands in the British invasion, surf music receded. As Vietnam protests and the counterculture mushroomed, it began to seem quaint. On his debut album in 1967, Jimi Hendrix promised his listeners that "you'll never hear surf music again."...
...Surf music today is “completely happening,” said Cooley, the UC Santa Barbara ethnomusicologist. Surf bands evolved into garage bands and punk bands, he said, but the form over the years has revived. ...]

* (source link: https://www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-brian-carman-20150306-story.html )

Check out the memorable three versions below:

The Chantays - "Pipeline" (Liberty's Whip) - 1963

The Ventures - "Pipeline" - 1963

Los Increibles (Os Incríveis - ex The Clevers) "Oleoducto" - 1965 (Brazil)

NAMM TEC Awards 2020 - Tribute to DON WILSON (January 18)


* Jeff Skunk Baxter (founding member of Steely Dan and played with the Doobie Brothers also Jimmy Hendrix), Steve Lukather (Toto) and Elliot Easton (The Cars), along with Larry Batiste and the 2Cold Chilibone TEC Band perform a medley of Ventures tunes as a tribute to Don Wilson as he receives NAMM's "Music for Life Award" at the 2020 NAMM Show in Anaheim, CA.

* Elliot Easton plays on a Lefty Mosrite Guitar and Steve Lukather and Jeff Baxter play on a Wilson Bros. Guitar "The Ventures Model". All with the finish in "Candy Apple Red". One of the beautiful colors appreciated by Don Wilson and The Ventures.
Don Wilson in 1963 used a Mosrite guitar all in this color while Nokie and Bob used their guitars in the Sunburst color.
* In the Tribute, a special message from the friend Billy Bob Thornton.

Nokie Edwards: The Ventures, Musical Inspirations, Guitars & More.

Musicians Hall of Fame & Museum (YouTube channel) Upload: June 14, 2020.
Backstage interview: January 23, 2005.

The Ventures: Stars on Guitars – Don Wilson, Deleted Scene 2018 Interview (1 of 2)

"Here is Don Wilson, from the documentary feature film The Ventures: Stars on Guitars, in a deleted scene talking about how much The Ventures love playing Fender guitars, as well as mentioning their 1996 Fender signature line. Shot by: Staci Layne Wilson"
Score/Composer: Michael Trapp (this song is called Holy Surf).
* Fender Guitar Japan - Special Limited Edition - The Ventures Model Signature Line (1996)

The Ventures: Stars on Guitars - Bill Ford Deleted Scene

"Here is Bill Ford, former road manager of The Ventures, talking about how he got this one-of-a-kind1962 “Franken-guitar” (Telecaster neck on a Jazzmaster body), which was Nokie’s lead guitar used to record Walk, Don’t Run Vol 2. This story did not make it into the film, but it’s quite interesting! Shot by: Staci Layne Wilson"

The Ventures: Stars on Guitars - 60th Anniversary Fan Shout-Outs from Around the World

The Ventures: Stars on Guitars is a feature documentary film on the #1 instrumental rock group in the world, The Ventures. This is the story of their rise to fame in the 1960s right up to now, as they celebrate their 60th anniversary of playing the best guitar-rock of all time. With over 35 interviewees in the film, we couldn’t possibly run all of their stories in their entirety—so here you will find some of our favorite extended clips (as well as B-roll and more fun stuff; please subscribe to keep up to date). The feature will be released sometime in 2020; watch our Facebook and Instagram (@theventuresmovie) for details. Director: Staci Layne Wilson—Producers: Don Wilson, Tim Wilson, Jill Fairbanks, Lisa S. Johnson, Michael Kaplan

NEW !!! - The Ventures: Stars on Guitars (2020) Official Movie Trailer

- A 2020 feature documentary film on the #1 instrumental rock group in the world, The Ventures.
- This is the story of their rise to fame in the 1960s right up to now, as they celebrate their 60th anniversary of playing the best guitar-rock of all time.
- Featuring: Billy Bob Thornton, Jimmy Page, Josie Cotton, and many more.
- Director: Staci Layne Wilson. Editor: Nina Helene Hirten.

- Music: "Surf's Up" by Michel Perillard (with drum roll from "Atlantic Surfer" by the 9th Wave).

The Ventures: Stars on Guitars - Unofficial Teaser Trailer

" A sneak-peek at the upcoming full-length documentary about the bestselling instrumental rock group in the world, The Ventures!
Directed by Staci Layne Wilson, produced by Don Wilson, Tim Wilson, Jill Fairbanks, and Lisa S. Johnson. "
* Ending theme song: The Ventures - "Ame no Kyoto" (Bob Spalding) from "Here We Go Again" CD album (2018).

This is Rock n Roll TV feat. Tribute to & The Ventures & The Movie 2020 & Songs like Wipe Out

"Sunday 8pm 3/1/2020Monday 12:30pm & Tuesday 5 am.
This is Rock n Roll TV A Tribute to The Ventures #1 instrumental group. We will be talking about The Ventures Movie 2020 produced by Staci Layne Wilson & Their Music on Fios 34 Optimum 68 or (outside the Bronx) go to Bronxnet.org hit WATCH & BROMNI 68/34 and enjoy. Songs like Wipe Out, Pipeline, Walk Don't Run and much more... w/ Host Dennis Dion Nardone. This is our50th episode w/ guests James Fracassi, Vic Sabatini & Al Belfiore Just Nuts Band. ENJOY"

"Surf's Up" - (Michel Perillard)(2010) / Surfer Plus Haut live version

"Holy Surf!" - (The Alien Mike E.T.) - "Stars On Guitars" Documentary Score

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NOTICE:

This is an independent blog about The Ventures group and not linked to them.
From Fans to Fans.
The material in this blog has been researched and ordered didactically as support and entertainment for the instrumental rock appreciators without commercial purposes.
Some articles or opinions may have different interpretations. Because they are extracted from different sources and different times.
Some publications may change according to new data collected.
Praise and Tribute of The Ventures group.
The use of any copyrighted material is used under the guidelines of "fair use" in title 17 § 107 of The United States Code. Such material remains the copyright of the original holder and is used here for the purposes of education, information, comparison, and criticism only.
No infringement of copyright is intended.
My photo
I am a lover of all good music. My father was a pianist and at home we had piano and mandolin. In the 60s to 70s, when I was a child, my father took me weekly to watch and listen to the Classic Music concerts of the Symphonic Orchestra of the Municipal Theater of São Paulo (Brazil). At that time, we could only enter the theater with sober and classic clothes and leather shoes. - "A song can simply be played on the notes. But the music played with different intensities in each part, transmits liveliness and feeling in the music. The same music is differentiated and appreciated by others."

Thanks For The Visit !

WELCOME !!!
This is a Informative blog by the Instrumental Rock group "THE VENTURES".
This blog was created because there was little information and text about The Ventures outside of Japan.
I hope to contribute a little to new discoveries.
Thanks for the visit !
RICARDO VENTURES

"Music is the link that unites the life of the spirit with the life of the senses.
The melody is the sensitive life of poetry."
(Ludwig van Beethoven)

Nikolas & Nina

A Bridge Called Love

It takes us back to brighter years,
to happier sunlit days,
and to precious moments
that will be with us always.

And these fond recollections
are treasured in the heart
to bring us always close to those
from whom we had to part.

There is a bridge of memories
from earth to Heaven above…
It keeps our dear ones near us
It’s the bridge that we call Love.


winter 2020 (south hemisphere)