Part 3- New Steven Seagal Photos

Serena

Administrator
suziwong said:
hihihihiihih !! Thank you Serena but all are in the gallery !!! :D

with my love

su

I'm not at all surprised, Suzi! :)
But at least I cleared another folder off my computer. :D
 

suziwong

Administrator
Staff member
yudansha said:
How old is the first pic?
And where is the last one from?

Seagal1.jpg


he was in Exit Wounds Premiere at NewYork !!!
 

TDWoj

Administrator
Staff member
yudansha said:
How could Seagal change his appearence so much since Exit Wounds?
Too much good living, maybe? I've mentioned before his current appearance is like the reverse of the picture of Dorian Grey. He looks dissipated, more than anything, these days.

He's aged about 15 years in the last 4, and if he's been hitting the sauce, as has been suggested, that'll age you PDQ. Also, he clearly hasn't got the sense to stay out of the sun, or at least wear sunscreen, either; and yo-yo weight gain/loss will also have an effect on skin that is no longer as elastic as it used to be (especially if it's been sun-damaged).
 

yudansha

TheGreatOne
Maybe my memore fails me, but I don't think I've seen that article before...

Thank you very much, Serena. :) Seagal sure likes to broaden his horizons.

LOL Serena and that's a nice picture too! :D (when I saw that opening bit of the movie, I thought... "hey now this could get very interesting" :D)
 

Serena

Administrator
yudansha said:
How old is the first pic?
And where is the last one from?

steven_james.jpg

Actor Steven Seagal with legendary guitarist James Burton.

B.B. King thrills Nashville at grand opening of B.B. King Blues Club
Wednesday October 1st, 2003

The timeless B.B. King, with his sleek Gibson Super Lucille in hand, proved that the thrill is still remarkably alive as he wowed packed houses for the new B.B. King Blues Club on Nashville's Second Avenue Monday and Tuesday, September 29-30. King, who was 78 on September 16, played the audience-pleasing electric blues he is legendary for, while interjecting the good-natured banter that kept his hour-plus set rolling. "I'm from Mississippi, I got a knife, and I'm not afraid to use it," he jokingly threatened his nine-piece band at one point.

King, seated because of age and diabetic bad knees, was as soulful as ever on songs including "Bad Case of Love," "Early in the Morning" (one of several songs he got the audience to do a call and response) and of course his 1970 hit "The Thrill Is Gone." He covered Willie Nelson's "Night Life" with equal aplomb, prefacing the song with a Nashville memory - one of many throughout the evening. "Some years back we played a place called the Exit/In," he remembered, "and that night, I'd had two or three - just enough to feel good - and I reared back and got ready to sing the tune we're about to do now. When I reared back, I looked right into the writer's [Nelson's] eye. It scared me half to death."

Martial-arts star Steven Seagal opened King's show both nights, backed by legendary axeman James Burton, who's been a sideman for such luminaries as Elvis Presley, Ricky Nelson, Buck Owens and Merle Haggard. "It's not often I get to take the stage after a big movie star, and he's better than me," King quipped as he introduced Seagal. Legendary guitarist and tunesmith Steve Cropper joined the band, showcasing his chops on Seagal's rendition of "Iko, Iko."

Songwriter Tommy Sims "opened" for Seagal, ending his set with "Change the World," the song he co-wrote with Gordon Kennedy and Wayne Kirkpatrick for Eric Clapton to record for the movie Phenomenon.

B.B.'s band was a polished tour-de-force, with four horn players, two guitarists, a bassist, a keyboardist, and a drummer. "I'd like to introduce our young guitarists - they're younger than me," he said as pointed out Charlie Dennis and Leon Warren, whom he affectionately called "The Fabulous Warren." Warren is on his second stint with King's band (the first lasted 21 years).

"I'm from the old school, and every once in a while I like to shake somethin'!" he shouted as he rolled his middle. "When you get to be my age and you're a male, you don't want to shake too hard, or somethin' will fall off."

Both nights ended with an all-star jam, and King invited guitarists in the audience to join them onstage. Country artist Vince Gill jumped up the second night with his CS-336 and played a blazing solo.

Lee Roy Parnell jammed on a Gibson '57 Les Paul Goldtop, and Larry Carlton got up with his ES-335. Wynonna Judd belted "How Great Thou Art" a cappella and brought the house down, reducing King to tears. He said that he usually tries to keep his emotions in check on stage, but that he had just lost a daughter two weeks ago, and all of the emotions came back.

BB with Gibson President Dave Berryman:

King signed and will donate several Lucilles to venues including the Gaylord Entertainment Center, his new Nashville Club, and the original B.B. King Blues Club in Memphis on Beale Street. In an interview earlier yesterday, he commented on his new status as a club owner. "I never dreamed that this would ever happen," he said, "but to see my name on a club, to be able to go into this club and sit and play as long as I want to, and to have people come in and look at you and have a little drink with you or whatever, dance to the music if they want to, it's something I never dreamed of. And to have it happen today, I feel that I'm one of the luckiest people that's alive."

A full-length interview with B.B. will run in the November blues issue of the Gibson/Baldwin Player e-zine.

And the link to the article with more pictures:
http://www.gibson.com/whatsnew/pressrelease/2003/oct1a.html
 

yudansha

TheGreatOne
Thank you for the article, Serena (again :=)

Thanks for moving it up, so that I could see it in case I missed it (burried below all the other posts :)) :D
 

Serena

Administrator
yudansha said:
Thanks for moving it up, so that I could see it in case I missed it (burried below all the other posts :)) :D

You're welcome, but I actually was deleting the Belly of the Beast picture I had in there to post it separately to ask Suzi a question and deleted the entire post instead. :rolleyes: :D My mind is a wee bit distracted at the moment. I shouldn't be trying anything right now that involves coordination. :D
 

Littledragon

Above The Law
Serena said:
steven_james.jpg

Actor Steven Seagal with legendary guitarist James Burton.

B.B. King thrills Nashville at grand opening of B.B. King Blues Club
Wednesday October 1st, 2003

The timeless B.B. King, with his sleek Gibson Super Lucille in hand, proved that the thrill is still remarkably alive as he wowed packed houses for the new B.B. King Blues Club on Nashville's Second Avenue Monday and Tuesday, September 29-30. King, who was 78 on September 16, played the audience-pleasing electric blues he is legendary for, while interjecting the good-natured banter that kept his hour-plus set rolling. "I'm from Mississippi, I got a knife, and I'm not afraid to use it," he jokingly threatened his nine-piece band at one point.

King, seated because of age and diabetic bad knees, was as soulful as ever on songs including "Bad Case of Love," "Early in the Morning" (one of several songs he got the audience to do a call and response) and of course his 1970 hit "The Thrill Is Gone." He covered Willie Nelson's "Night Life" with equal aplomb, prefacing the song with a Nashville memory - one of many throughout the evening. "Some years back we played a place called the Exit/In," he remembered, "and that night, I'd had two or three - just enough to feel good - and I reared back and got ready to sing the tune we're about to do now. When I reared back, I looked right into the writer's [Nelson's] eye. It scared me half to death."

Martial-arts star Steven Seagal opened King's show both nights, backed by legendary axeman James Burton, who's been a sideman for such luminaries as Elvis Presley, Ricky Nelson, Buck Owens and Merle Haggard. "It's not often I get to take the stage after a big movie star, and he's better than me," King quipped as he introduced Seagal. Legendary guitarist and tunesmith Steve Cropper joined the band, showcasing his chops on Seagal's rendition of "Iko, Iko."

Songwriter Tommy Sims "opened" for Seagal, ending his set with "Change the World," the song he co-wrote with Gordon Kennedy and Wayne Kirkpatrick for Eric Clapton to record for the movie Phenomenon.

B.B.'s band was a polished tour-de-force, with four horn players, two guitarists, a bassist, a keyboardist, and a drummer. "I'd like to introduce our young guitarists - they're younger than me," he said as pointed out Charlie Dennis and Leon Warren, whom he affectionately called "The Fabulous Warren." Warren is on his second stint with King's band (the first lasted 21 years).

"I'm from the old school, and every once in a while I like to shake somethin'!" he shouted as he rolled his middle. "When you get to be my age and you're a male, you don't want to shake too hard, or somethin' will fall off."

Both nights ended with an all-star jam, and King invited guitarists in the audience to join them onstage. Country artist Vince Gill jumped up the second night with his CS-336 and played a blazing solo.

Lee Roy Parnell jammed on a Gibson '57 Les Paul Goldtop, and Larry Carlton got up with his ES-335. Wynonna Judd belted "How Great Thou Art" a cappella and brought the house down, reducing King to tears. He said that he usually tries to keep his emotions in check on stage, but that he had just lost a daughter two weeks ago, and all of the emotions came back.

BB with Gibson President Dave Berryman:

King signed and will donate several Lucilles to venues including the Gaylord Entertainment Center, his new Nashville Club, and the original B.B. King Blues Club in Memphis on Beale Street. In an interview earlier yesterday, he commented on his new status as a club owner. "I never dreamed that this would ever happen," he said, "but to see my name on a club, to be able to go into this club and sit and play as long as I want to, and to have people come in and look at you and have a little drink with you or whatever, dance to the music if they want to, it's something I never dreamed of. And to have it happen today, I feel that I'm one of the luckiest people that's alive."

A full-length interview with B.B. will run in the November blues issue of the Gibson/Baldwin Player e-zine.

And the link to the article with more pictures:
http://www.gibson.com/whatsnew/pressrelease/2003/oct1a.html


Thanks for the article Serena.
 

yudansha

TheGreatOne
LOL Serena! Are you discoordinated? - word of the day? :=))

I think you should always look out for this symptom: "lack of pizzarian consumption" :D ... anyways, you can soon coordinate yourself to the "Laughter" thread (not now ... but soon :))

Don't be caught for DWD - driving while discoordinated. :D
 

Serena

Administrator
You're welcome for the article, yudansha and littledragon. :) Guess I should check the Article section and see it's been placed there yet. We're gradually trying to get some of these older ones in there.
 

yudansha

TheGreatOne
Nice picture, Suzi... Seagal in his groove lol

Is it his size, or is he somehow holding the guitar awkwardly?
 

yudansha

TheGreatOne
Should Seagal open for Metallica?

That would be something! :D
(yeah LOL his hands are too big for the guitar ... he's holding it like a goose by the neck :D)
 
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