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The city of Seattle was named after him. \n--\nSome of the lyrics/components of Chief Sealth’s message are:\n\"The whites must treat the beasts of his land\nAs his brothers not his enemies\nTell me what is man without the beasts\nI’ll bet he will die of loneliness\nOne thing we know that the white man will\nWe know our god is the same god\nYou may think you wish to own him\nOwn him as you wish to own our land\nBut he is the body of man\nAnd the earth is precious to him\nContinue to contaminate your bed\nAnd you will suffocate in your waste...\""}],"showid":66277},{"playid":3633536,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-03-25T22:27:21Z","epoch_airdate":1774477641000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1774477641000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":1943591938,"name":"Black Sabbath","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":28580031,"name":"Master of Reality","largeimageuri":"https://coverartarchive.org/release/ad6c6b58-23bd-471d-bafa-bf0e2b3f2636/5254303248-500.jpg","smallimageuri":"https://coverartarchive.org/release/ad6c6b58-23bd-471d-bafa-bf0e2b3f2636/5254303248-250.jpg"},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":1329110065,"year":1971},"track":{"trackid":2119171765,"name":"Sweet Leaf"},"label":null,"comments":[{"commentid":101320138,"text":"The sound at the beginning is guitarist Tony Iommi coughing after inhaling marijuana smoke from a bong.\n--\nThe guitar riff was taken from Frank Zappa & The Mothers of Invention's \"Hungry Freaks, Daddy.\" This riff can also be heard at the end of the Red Hot Chili Peppers song \"Give It Away\" and is the basis for the song \"Rhymin' and Stealin'\" by The Beastie Boys."}],"showid":66277},{"playid":3633534,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-03-25T22:20:10Z","epoch_airdate":1774477210000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1774477210000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":1133790569,"name":"Beastie Boys","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":1454118173,"name":"Licensed to Ill","largeimageuri":"https://ia801902.us.archive.org/9/items/mbid-2a8aeee5-04f5-40c4-a7b0-7b812428d112/mbid-2a8aeee5-04f5-40c4-a7b0-7b812428d112-3717362313_thumb500.jpg","smallimageuri":"https://ia801902.us.archive.org/9/items/mbid-2a8aeee5-04f5-40c4-a7b0-7b812428d112/mbid-2a8aeee5-04f5-40c4-a7b0-7b812428d112-3717362313_thumb250.jpg"},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":1354136504,"year":1986},"track":{"trackid":1660771348,"name":"Rhymin & Stealin"},"label":{"labelid":110362717,"name":"Def Jam Recordings"},"comments":[{"commentid":1297701772,"text":"This is a Rick Rubin production!\n--\nThis song samples the hook from Black Sabbath's 1971 \"Sweet Leaf.\"\nIt also famously samples John Bonham's drumming from Led Zeppelin's \"When The Levee Breaks.\"  and vocals from The Clash's version of \"I Fought The Law.\"\n--\nPsst!:  Here's the isolated drum track of John Bonham's drumming on \"When The Levee Breaks\": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6RP4pP0-ysk"}],"showid":66277},{"playid":3633535,"playtype":{"playtypeid":4,"name":"Air break"},"airdate":"2026-03-25T22:16:50Z","epoch_airdate":1774477010000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1774477010000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":null,"release":null,"releaseevent":null,"track":null,"label":null,"comments":[],"showid":66277},{"playid":3633533,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-03-25T22:09:09Z","epoch_airdate":1774476549000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1774476549000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":1432903682,"name":"Led Zeppelin","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":62529381,"name":"[Led Zeppelin IV]","largeimageuri":"https://dn710707.ca.archive.org/0/items/mbid-a55a7de4-5a1c-3c84-98c6-28b042ee5202/mbid-a55a7de4-5a1c-3c84-98c6-28b042ee5202-17137828996_thumb500.jpg","smallimageuri":"https://dn710707.ca.archive.org/0/items/mbid-a55a7de4-5a1c-3c84-98c6-28b042ee5202/mbid-a55a7de4-5a1c-3c84-98c6-28b042ee5202-17137828996_thumb250.jpg"},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":1757006019,"year":1994},"track":{"trackid":709758477,"name":"When the Levee Breaks"},"label":{"labelid":1834846595,"name":"Atlantic"},"comments":[{"commentid":1688485749,"text":"The lyrics to this song written by Memphis Minnie and Kansas Joe McCoy in 1929 are based on The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927. \n---\nMemphis Minnie McCoy (born Lizzie Douglas), was a blues artist who recorded \"When The Levee Breaks\" in 1929. Robert Plant had the record in his collection.\n--\nJohn Bonham’s iconic drum sound on the Led Zeppelin version of “When the Levee Breaks” was achieved by placing his drums in the stairwell of Headley Grange, a Victorian house in Hampshire, England. Ribbon mics were hung above him. The echo created a massive, thundering sound."}],"showid":66277},{"playid":3633532,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-03-25T22:03:50Z","epoch_airdate":1774476230000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1774476230000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":1053246172,"name":"Björk","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":1539578407,"name":"Army of Me","largeimageuri":null,"smallimageuri":null},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":433785959,"year":1995},"track":{"trackid":771642959,"name":"Army of Me"},"label":{"labelid":265679554,"name":"One Little Indian Records"},"comments":[{"commentid":1096848474,"text":"The song was written and produced by Björk and Graham Massey. It was inspired by the damaging behavior of Björk’s brother, whom she tells to stand up and to regain control of his life. \n--\nThe drums were sampled from the intro on Led Zepppelin’s 1971 song “When the Levee Breaks.\""}],"showid":66277},{"playid":3633530,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-03-25T21:58:57Z","epoch_airdate":1774475937000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1774475937000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":1053246172,"name":"Björk","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":1690790030,"name":"Debut","largeimageuri":"https://dn710601.ca.archive.org/0/items/mbid-129a9696-1620-3d40-8ba1-7deb3f7ccfad/mbid-129a9696-1620-3d40-8ba1-7deb3f7ccfad-43938310158_thumb500.jpg","smallimageuri":"https://dn710601.ca.archive.org/0/items/mbid-129a9696-1620-3d40-8ba1-7deb3f7ccfad/mbid-129a9696-1620-3d40-8ba1-7deb3f7ccfad-43938310158_thumb250.jpg"},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":823305948,"year":1993},"track":{"trackid":1636474451,"name":"Human Behaviour"},"label":{"labelid":835284987,"name":"Elektra Entertainment"},"comments":[{"commentid":222577933,"text":"“Human Behaviour” samples The Ray Brown Orchestra’s 1970 track “Go Down Dying”. This track was part of Quincy Jones’ soundtrack to the 1970 Charles Aznavour/Candice Bergen film The Adventurers.\n---\n\nBjörk reveals, \"'Human Behaviour' is an animal's point of view on humans. \"I told him (Michel Gondry the video's director), 'I want a bear and textures like handmade wood and leaves and earth, and I want it to seem like animation.' Then I backed out.\" \n\nWatch the video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p0mRIhK9seg"}],"showid":66277},{"playid":3633531,"playtype":{"playtypeid":4,"name":"Air break"},"airdate":"2026-03-25T21:54:45Z","epoch_airdate":1774475685000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1774475685000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":null,"release":null,"releaseevent":null,"track":null,"label":null,"comments":[],"showid":66277},{"playid":3633529,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-03-25T21:49:13Z","epoch_airdate":1774475353000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1774475353000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":402914967,"name":"Ray Brown's Orchestra","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":411529550,"name":"The Adventurers","largeimageuri":"https://coverartarchive.org/release/4c5f42cf-2189-49ca-b727-d4932ac71182/41970810262-500.jpg","smallimageuri":"https://coverartarchive.org/release/4c5f42cf-2189-49ca-b727-d4932ac71182/41970810262-250.jpg"},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":133732019,"year":1970},"track":{"trackid":389285275,"name":"Go Down Dying"},"label":{"labelid":272657732,"name":"Varèse Sarabande"},"comments":[{"commentid":895282438,"text":"\"Go Down Dying\" is a song composed by Brazilian musician Antônio Carlos Jobim. This song was arranged and  produced by Quincy Jones."}],"showid":66277},{"playid":3633528,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-03-25T21:44:16Z","epoch_airdate":1774475056000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1774475056000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":1974613448,"name":"Quincy Jones, Little Richard","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":472056919,"name":"$ (Music From the Original Motion Picture Sound Track)","largeimageuri":"https://coverartarchive.org/release/9548efdb-4208-473c-976f-1e06e2106f7b/16220903845-500.jpg","smallimageuri":"https://coverartarchive.org/release/9548efdb-4208-473c-976f-1e06e2106f7b/16220903845-250.jpg"},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":1824628070,"year":1972},"track":{"trackid":1066186149,"name":"Money Is"},"label":{"labelid":851229252,"name":"Reprise Records"},"comments":[{"commentid":1257557852,"text":"From the Dollars soundtrack—featured in the 1971 movie of the same name—”Money Is” was written by Quincy Jones and performed by Little Richard. The movie, which featured actors Warren Beatty and Goldie Hawn, also included music from other artists like Roberta Flack. The soundtrack, released in 1972, included the single “Money Runner” and “Money Is,” sung by Richard, was the B-side."}],"showid":66277},{"playid":3633527,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-03-25T21:42:27Z","epoch_airdate":1774474947000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1774474947000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":1191512717,"name":"Little Richard","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":1330493079,"name":"The Explosive Little Richard","largeimageuri":"https://coverartarchive.org/release/daa0f4ac-bed9-491b-b63b-05c038ccc02f/19299237907-500.jpg","smallimageuri":"https://coverartarchive.org/release/daa0f4ac-bed9-491b-b63b-05c038ccc02f/19299237907-250.jpg"},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":1136763517,"year":1967},"track":{"trackid":1704316461,"name":"Money (That's What I Want)"},"label":{"labelid":2009143779,"name":"OKeh"},"comments":[{"commentid":1607982197,"text":"Tamla Records founder Berry Gordy wrote this one along with Janie Bradford."}],"showid":66277},{"playid":3633526,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-03-25T21:38:43Z","epoch_airdate":1774474723000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1774474723000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":1191512717,"name":"Little Richard","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":1581215324,"name":"King of Rock and Roll","largeimageuri":null,"smallimageuri":null},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":1718937645,"year":1971},"track":{"trackid":1435208309,"name":"Green Power"},"label":{"labelid":1587906892,"name":"Warner Bros. Records"},"comments":[{"commentid":1154742217,"text":"The wonderfully funky ‘Green Power’ by Little Richard was a single from his 1971 album, The King of Rock and Roll. This album consisted mostly of cover songs, including the Stones’ ‘Brown Sugar,’ ‘Joy to the World’ and ‘Dancing in the Street.' ‘Green Power’ is only one of two original songs on the album, the other being a gospel tune by Richard. ‘Green Power’ was co-written by H.B. Barnum – a former child actor who became a songwriter, arranger and producer."}],"showid":66277},{"playid":3633525,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-03-25T21:36:40Z","epoch_airdate":1774474600000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1774474600000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":1191512717,"name":"Little Richard","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":999403836,"name":"The Very Best of Little Richard","largeimageuri":"https://coverartarchive.org/release/5130f265-14c9-48dc-9f8c-87b54e219540/14476597817-500.jpg","smallimageuri":"https://coverartarchive.org/release/5130f265-14c9-48dc-9f8c-87b54e219540/14476597817-250.jpg"},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":899625517,"year":2008},"track":{"trackid":391162850,"name":"Ooh! My Soul"},"label":{"labelid":1435153963,"name":"One Day Music"},"comments":[{"commentid":1441561926,"text":"“Ooh! My Soul” was a Little Richard original, credited to his real songwriting name of Richard Penniman. \n---\n“It is almost impossible to overestimate the importance of Little Richard as a formative influence on Jim Hendrix,” notes Charles Murray. “On his arrival in England, Hendrix told interviewers, ‘I want to do with my guitar what Little Richard does with his voice…’\n--\nJimi Henrix played in Little Richard's band in 1965,  but was kicked out."}],"showid":66277},{"playid":3633523,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-03-25T21:23:26Z","epoch_airdate":1774473806000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1774473806000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":853958052,"name":"Jimi Hendrix","islocal":true},"release":{"releaseid":114268491,"name":"Live at the Fillmore East","largeimageuri":"https://dn710606.ca.archive.org/0/items/mbid-377565ea-0837-48df-996a-7b446093eb0e/mbid-377565ea-0837-48df-996a-7b446093eb0e-41221512764_thumb500.jpg","smallimageuri":"https://dn710606.ca.archive.org/0/items/mbid-377565ea-0837-48df-996a-7b446093eb0e/mbid-377565ea-0837-48df-996a-7b446093eb0e-41221512764_thumb250.jpg"},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":300031566,"year":1999},"track":{"trackid":2064826489,"name":"Machine Gun"},"label":{"labelid":1173667118,"name":"Experience Hendrix"},"comments":[{"commentid":1309984754,"text":"Did you know that Jimi Hendrix was the lead guitarist for The Isley Brothers from 1963 to 1965?  In this interview, Ernie and Ron Isley talk  about discovering a young guitarist named Jimi Hendrix.: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XvATqTKI3Uc\n--\nThe musical composition of the song was very complex and exemplified Jimi’s exquisite use of guitar effects such as the wah-wah pedal, Uni-Vibe pedal, Octavia pedal, audio feedback, and distortion effects. Jimi masterfully synthesized these musical components to mimic the sounds of a battlefield during his guitar solos, including helicopters, bombs dropping, attack aircraft, explosions, machine guns, and the screams and cries of soldiers.\n--\nRenowned musicologist and guitarist Andy Aledort labeled “Machine Gun” as the pinnacle of Hendrix’s career, describing the track as:\n\"the premiere example of [his] unparalleled genius as a rock guitarist…In this performance, Jimi transcended the medium of rock music, and set an entirely new standard for the potential of electric guitar.\""}],"showid":66277},{"playid":3633524,"playtype":{"playtypeid":4,"name":"Air break"},"airdate":"2026-03-25T21:17:56Z","epoch_airdate":1774473476000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1774473476000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":null,"release":null,"releaseevent":null,"track":null,"label":null,"comments":[],"showid":66277},{"playid":3633522,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-03-25T21:10:37Z","epoch_airdate":1774473037000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1774473037000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":1452852687,"name":"The Isley Brothers","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":22527310,"name":"Givin’ It Back","largeimageuri":"https://coverartarchive.org/release/6d6bff83-e556-4bfc-9403-3ca9b7bab352/31592476616-500.jpg","smallimageuri":"https://coverartarchive.org/release/6d6bff83-e556-4bfc-9403-3ca9b7bab352/31592476616-250.jpg"},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":757565611,"year":1971},"track":{"trackid":341158612,"name":"Ohio/Machine Gun"},"label":{"labelid":360141113,"name":"T-Neck"},"comments":[{"commentid":889731780,"text":"Neil Young responded to the Kent State shooting in 1970 by writing this song immediately. CSN & Y recorded the song at the Record Plant in Los Angeles on May 21, 1970. For maximum impact, the record was quickly mixed and mastered and was released within weeks of the Kent State tragedy. \nYoung later said that what happened at Kent State was “probably the biggest lesson ever learned at an American place of learning.”\n--\nThe following year the Isley Brothers included “Ohio” on their album Givin’ It Back. The Isleys version was taken at a slower, more ominous pace than the original, opening with a funereal drumbeat and featuring the intense guitar work of Ernie Isley. Their passion is evident as they put their own stamp on Young’s powerful anthem."}],"showid":66277},{"playid":3633521,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-03-25T21:08:25Z","epoch_airdate":1774472905000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1774472905000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":1452852687,"name":"The Isley Brothers","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":2044065665,"name":"Go for Your Guns","largeimageuri":"https://coverartarchive.org/release/92e28605-a79c-4ccd-ab56-25d0dd2634ff/32756399663-500.jpg","smallimageuri":"https://coverartarchive.org/release/92e28605-a79c-4ccd-ab56-25d0dd2634ff/32756399663-250.jpg"},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":1167915297,"year":1977},"track":{"trackid":56046507,"name":"Footsteps in the Dark, Parts 1 & 2"},"label":null,"comments":[{"commentid":583405227,"text":"That's Ron Isley on lead vocals here and that terrific guitar playing is by Ernie Isley, who not only played guitar but also played drums and wrote the lyrics to \"Footsteps in the Dark\". \n--\nThis song was, of course, heavily sampled by Ice Cube for \"It Was a Good Day.\""}],"showid":66277},{"playid":3633519,"playtype":{"playtypeid":4,"name":"Air break"},"airdate":"2026-03-25T21:03:35Z","epoch_airdate":1774472615000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1774472615000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":null,"release":null,"releaseevent":null,"track":null,"label":null,"comments":[],"showid":66277},{"playid":3633518,"playtype":{"playtypeid":1,"name":"Media play"},"airdate":"2026-03-25T20:57:11Z","epoch_airdate":1774472231000,"epoch_airdate_v2":"/Date(1774472231000)/","archive_urls":{"32":null,"64":null,"128":null,"256":null},"artist":{"artistid":1798682010,"name":"Ice Cube","islocal":false},"release":{"releaseid":1733870532,"name":"Bootlegs & B‐Sides","largeimageuri":"https://coverartarchive.org/release/2af08ced-7eab-459d-a1d7-26d890c5292f/42305629707-500.jpg","smallimageuri":"https://coverartarchive.org/release/2af08ced-7eab-459d-a1d7-26d890c5292f/42305629707-250.jpg"},"releaseevent":{"releaseeventid":1698386488,"year":1994},"track":{"trackid":1143946313,"name":"It Was a Good Day (remix)"},"label":{"labelid":1675078792,"name":"Priority Records"},"comments":[{"commentid":1693371712,"text":"Hear it?  This song directly sampled multiple elements of The Staple Singers' \"Let's Do It Again.\"\n--\nThis is a remix of Ice Cube's hit 1993 song, released as part of his 1994 Bootlegs & B-Sides compilation via Priority Records. The original song was produced by DJ Pooh and this remix was produced by Ice Cube himself!"}],"showid":66277}]}