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'Forever Swedish'
the Amery Area Swedish Klubb

Larry Lee Phillipson-Swedish Klubb VP composes music and sings at the welcome for Viet Nam Veterans at Lambeau in Green Bay

 Larry Phillipson

 http://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=125972577428877&ref=mf

 For Memorial Day 

Larry composed and sang a song for the Green Bay event for Viet Nam veteran

 

 

Click on the link below to

see Larry at this event:

Length:11:19

Wisconsin's official "Welcome Home" to our Vietnam Veterans has been called a great success by veterans, family members, and a community honored to host the overdue recognition of those who served in Vietnam and during the Vietnam era. 

An estimated 70,000 people attended over the three days of the LZ Lambeau event - in cities, at Lambeau Field, the Austin Straubel Airport, and at museums around Green Bay. More than 26,000 tickets were dispersed for the special Saturday evening Tribute event. And despite the rain on Friday, 1,244 motorcycles participated in the LZ Lambeau Honor Ride to Lambeau Field to pay tribute to the Wisconsin service people who were killed in action or are still missing in action

 

 

Larry's Page

Visitors to the klubb meeting all the way from Webster buy up some of Larry's CD's

Larry Lee Phillipson

We have so many talented people in our Swedish club here in Amery.

Among our illustrious members is one who is a world reknowned musician and song writer  in the uniquely American rock-a-billy style.

Furthermore we are so lucky that he shares his talents with us at our meetings.

Larry has been a professional musican for many years and is a member of the "Rock-a-billy Hall of Fame" with a huge following even in Sweden.

Jambalaya

 

 Here is an example of his music for our members and our friends in Sweden to enjoy as well.   

 

And Bitter Feelings

 

 

 

 

Also a Writer and Poet

 

 

Riding the Rails of Milwaukee Road

  

I walked to the top of the hill to start the water pump. I could see farmers in the surrounding countryside working in their fields. I had wanted to get an early start in the field but Pa was sore at me for not helping with the morning milking instead so he wouldn't go into town to buy gas for the tractor!

Now, for some reason, the water pump engine wouldn't start. I cranked and cranked, to no avail. "To hell with it," I said and walked down the other side of the hill. "Why fight it."

I walked to Whitehall and was standing by the railroad depot. I looked at the new leaves sprouting from the buds on the maple trees. The faint scent of spring flowers bursting from their buds mingled with fresh, growing grass tantalized the air. The warm May sun felt good on my cotton, plaid shirt.

With its dynamic throb, the diesel engine appeared down the tracks, and pulled up to the station. The train slowed almost to a stop. The porter tossed the mail bag to the station agent. The engineer opened the throttle and the engine roared with a burst of power and the boxcars began rolling by with increasing momentum. The wheels made fast clicking sounds on the steel tracks.

I waited for the train to gain enough speed so that the brakeman wouldn't order me off. I didn't want to miss my grip, I remembered someone had slipped as he tried to hook a train and he had fallen under it. I reached out and grabbed a rung of the steel ladder on the side of a boxcar. I strained to swing myself up off the ground and then climbed to the top and sat down on the narrow board catwalk. I turned my head and watched the town diminish behind in the distance. The train whizzed by trees and telegraph poles as the steel rains reflected the sunlight like long, silver threads streaming back into the horizon.

Around hills and through valleys the train rolled and then climbed a grade that led toward the Mississippi bluffs. The train turned a bend, and there I could see the majestic Mississippi River shimmering in the sunset.

It was getting colder now, and I wished that I had brought a jacket. Thousands of mayflies, that looked like huge mosquitoes, swarmed over the tops of the boxcar and I jumped up and ran along the catwalks leaping from car to car until I found one that was lower than the others. Then I laid down flat on my stomach as the mayflies, like drifting snow, blew past me from the higher car in front. I was getting hungry, but nothing could be done about that at the time so I took off my belt and tied my wrist securely to the catwalk, and in a short time I had fallen asleep.

When I awakened, it was dark as the train was pulling into the Twin Cities. Off to either side as far as I could see were lights twinkling, and then with a deafening roar the train plunged into a tunnel. When the train had emerged on the other side, it began to slow down and then finally stop. The big diesel unhooked up ahead and left the train sitting still. I sat up and put my belt back on and then slowly climbed down the ladder onto the ground.

In the darkness my feet tripped on the steel tracks and I tried to find my way out of the stockyards. I began to walk faster as the rumbling sound of moving trains grew louder. Suddenly, I was blinded by the glare of powerful headlights on trains coming from both directions toward me. The tracks were so close together that for a moment I became confused, but I stepped aside just in time as the two trains thundered past on either side.

Soon another train rolled past where I was standing. I climbed aboard an open topped gondola car that was loaded with lumber. There was an empty space in the corner and I laid down. I listened to the rthythmical sound of the wheels clicking on the steel rails, and soon I was asleep.

I awoke at daybreak, and the train had stopped. Standing up, I peered over the side of the gondola car and saw a town up ahead. I crawled over the side, dropped to the ground, and began walking along beside the train up to the station. There was a sign on the station printed in big letters. I read the words, "WILLMAR, MINNESOTA", and then I sat down on a wooden bench on the station platform. A new adventure had begun.

Author: Larry Lee Phillipson
 
Author Bio:
Larry Lee Phillipson is a notable scripter. Larry likes to pen down articles about this field.

 

 

 

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About This Site

The purpose of this site is to provide a place for klubb members and friends to catch up on news and events in our area and also to learn more about our Swedish heritage, culture, customs, language, music and art. We welcome others with similar interests to join our site and our klubb.

 

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Larry's Page

Larry has a new CD: It can be ordered at the website www.rockabillyhall.com/LLPhilipson.html

"NO WELCOME HOME":

A TRIBUTE TO VIET NAM VETERANS!

CD TRACK LISTING

1. No Welcome Home

2. Rose of Yesterday

3. Old Enough to Worry

4. Charlene

5. Too Blue to Cry

6. Standing in the Shadows

7. Bitter Feelings

8. A Corner in My Heart

9. Absent Minded You

10. The Old Milwaukee Road

11. Give Love a Try

12. I'm Wondering Now

13. The Old Country Store

 

 

Recent Videos

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With their fresh and unique take on Nordic music, the Swedish musicians Erik Ask-Upmark and Anna Rynefors - known as "Dråm" - have taken the roots music community by storm. With much charm and a big sense of humour, they perform traditional Nordic music in a captivating way that speaks to audiences everywhere. They are both "riksspelmän" (a distinction awarded to the best players of traditional music in Sweden) and have toured extensively in Europe as well as in America. The quietness of Sweden’s wide open spaces shows through in the fragile melodies of this talented duo. A wonderful flow of ear-caressing musical sounds, performed with great skill on instruments such as the harp, Nyckelharpa (Swedish keyed fiddle) and Swedish bagpipes. Dråm approaches Swedish music with respect and love, imparting a contemporary and passionate character to tradition, while maintaining the very soul of it!

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Carl Larsson

Featuring paintings and stories!

Döderhultarn

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Axel Petersson Döderhultarn was born December 12, 1868 in the parish of Döderhult, Sweden,As a boy his primary interests was in whittling, and carving small figures. This activity was considered worthless by his friends and family in Sweden. His family decided the best thing for him to do as a young adult was to emigrate to the United States. Peterson did not emigrate to America, as his family had planned, and after a brief time away he moved back to help his now widowed mother in Oskarshamn, Sweden.Döderhultarn became know as one of Sweden's great artists. His work as well as photos of his work were circulated world wide. and he served as an inspiration to other woodcarvers, including Carl Johan Trygg, and H. S. "Andy" Anderson. His popularity was so great that "Döderhultarn figure" became the generic term for any small figure in the minimalist style.

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Recent Forum Posts

by sandra over a year ago
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Swedish Folkdräkt

Swedish folk costumes are a wonderful way to connect with your Swedish heritage.

Kulning

Kulning, or herding calls, the song form is primarily used by women, as they were the ones tending the herds and flocks in the high mountain pastures.The song has a high-pitched vocal technique, i.e. a loud call using head tones, so that it can be heard or be used to communicate over long distances. It has a fascinating and haunting tone, often conveying a feeling of sadness, in large part because the lokks often include typical half-tones and quarter-tones (also known as "blue tones") found in the music of the region.

www.susannerosenberg.com

Nordic Walking

Nordic walking is defined as walking with specially designed poles. It evolved from an off-season ski-training activity known as ski walking, hill bounding or ski striding to become a way of exercising with poles year-round.

Nordic walking combines simplicity and accessibility of walking with simultaneous core and upper body conditioning similar to Nordic skiing. The result is a full-body walking workout that can burn significantly more calories without a change in perceived exertion or having to walk faster, due to the incorporation of many large core and other upper-body muscles which comprise more than 90% of the body's total muscle mass and do work against resistance with each stride.

www.nordicwalkingonline.com

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