Jungleland Sax Solo Sheet Music : Mandolin Piano.
Jungleland Sax Solo Sheet Music
- a musical composition in printed or written form; "she turned the pages of the music as he played"
- Sheet Music is the second album by Manchester rock band 10cc. It was released in 1974 and yielded the hit singles "The Wall Street Shuffle" and "Silly Love". The album reached No.9 in the UK and No.81 in the United States.
- Printed music, as opposed to performed or recorded music
- Sheet music is a hand-written or printed form of musical notation; like its analogs—books, pamphlets, etc.—the medium of sheet music typically is paper (or, in earlier times, parchment), although the access to musical notation in recent years includes also presentation on computer screens.
- Music published in single or interleaved sheets, not bound
- "Jungleland" is an almost ten-minute long, epic closing song on Bruce Springsteen's classic 1975 album Born to Run, and tells a tale of love amid a backdrop of gang violence. It contains one of E Street Band saxophonist Clarence Clemons' most recognizable solos.
- A piece of vocal or instrumental music or a dance, or a part or passage in one, for one performer
- An unaccompanied flight by a pilot in an aircraft
- composed or performed by a single voice or instrument; "a passage for solo clarinet"
- any activity that is performed alone without assistance
- A thing done by one person unaccompanied, in particular
- alone: without anybody else or anything else; "the child stayed home alone"; "the pillar stood alone, supporting nothing"; "he flew solo"
- A saxophone
- a single-reed woodwind with a conical bore
- SAX (abbr. from Slovensky akciovy index; in Slovak: Slovak Share Index) is the official stock index of the Bratislava Stock Exchange.
- a Belgian maker of musical instruments who invented the saxophone (1814-1894)
Jungleland
The colorful history of Thousand Oaks, complete with African elephants galloping down Thousand Oaks Boulevard, was not for the timid and can hardly be forgotten.
From the moment in 1927 when Louis Goebel opened his doors, his wild-animal attraction on the current site of the Civic Arts Plaza was a big part of the Thousand Oaks area. It started as an animal training center for Hollywood. Years later, it opened as Jungleland, an amusement park for visitors from all over Southern California.
However, due to the popularity of amusement parks like Knott's Berry Farm and Disneyland, Jungleland became a part of local history in May 1968.
Circus wagons at Jungleland
Circus wagons at Jungleland, circa 1950. You can see the Standard Oil station across the street (Ventura 101, later Thousand Oaks Blvd.). LHP04048_1f
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