DJ Tyrrell's Jukebox Hour - 3

14 October 2010 by David

DJ Tyrrell's Jukebox Hour:  A mix of Rock, Pop, Rhythm & Blues, Soul, and Rock & Rock spanning six decades of super sounds from the 50's through to the present.  It's time travel made easy!

In this edition:

  1. The Beatles: I Saw Her Standing There
  2. Oasis: Talk Tonight
  3. Rod Stewart/The Faces: Maggie May
  4. Kasabian: Where Did All The Love Go
  5. David Bowie: Suffragette City
  6. Jimi Hendrix: Red House
  7. Jimi Hendrix: The Wind Cries Mary
  8. The Who: Long Live Rock
  9. Guns n Roses; Knockin on Heavens Door
  10. Foo Fighters: Times Like These
  11. AC/DC; Soul Stripper
  12. Joe Bonamassa: Bridge to Better Days

DJ Tyrrell



DJ Tyrrell's Jukebox Hour - 2

14 October 2010 by David

DJ Tyrrell's Jukebox Hour:  A mix of Rock, Pop, Rhythm & Blues, Soul, and Rock & Rock spanning six decades of super sounds from the 50's through to the present.  It's time travel made easy!

Songs from Credence Clearwater Revival, Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers, AC/DC, The Steve Miller Band, The Rolling Stones, and Buddy Holly & The Crickets are among some of the featured artists on this edition.

  1. Stevie Ray Vaughn: Mary Had a Little Lamb
  2. Sheryl Crow: Weather Channel
  3. Credence Clearwater Revival; Green River
  4. Roy Buchanan: Hey Joe
  5. J.J. Cale: After Midnight
  6. Buddy Holly: Not Fade Away
  7. Chuck Berry: St Louis Blues
  8. Tom Petty: Mary Jane's Last Dance
  9. AC/DC: Gone Shootin
  10. Allman Brothers: Midnight Rider
  11. Eric Clapton: If I Had Possession Over Judgement Day
  12. Eric Clapton & BB King: Key to the Highway
  13. The Rolling Stones: Synpathy For The Devil
  14. The Steve Miller Band: Rock n Me
  15. Booker T & The MGs: Green Onions

DJ Tyrrell.



East Anglian Mysteries - Black Shuck

18 September 2010 by David

David Tyrrell interviews Alan Mackley about the mysterious Black Shuck

East Anglia's history and folklore is rich with tales of phantoms, witch hunts, prowling demons, and apparitions of every kind. in this series David takes a look at some of these mysteries beginning with Black Shuck, the Devil's Dog, or maybe Shuck is the Devil himself? Along the way discovering some of Suffolk's past where superstition, smuggling, and tales of fire and brimstone were common place.

'Tales tell throughout the ages of a giant spectoral black dog with burning fires for eyes who prowls the East Anglian coastline and marshes. Beware the pad, pad, pad sound of Shuck's heavy paws for if you turn to look at Shuck you will die within one year'