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23_75 | David Gamson - keyboards, drum machine, producer, recording engineer |
23_76 | Me'shell Ndegéocello - additional vocals, bass guitar |
23_77 | Federico Gonzales Peña - Fender Rhodes, piano
Luis Conte - percussion
Wah Wah Watson - guitar |
23_78 | Allen Cato - guitar
Olivier Leiber - guitar
Benjamin Wright - string arrangement |
23_79 | Charles Veal - concertmaster
Bob Power - sound mix at Enterprise Studios |
23_80 | Rail Rogut - recording engineer |
23_81 | "Somethin' Deep" (1995)
Keith Crouch - all other instruments |
23_82 | Derrick Edmondson - saxophone solo, horn arrangement
Stephen Baxter - trombone |
23_83 | John Fumo - trumpet
Roy Pennon - bass guitar soloist
Bob Power - sound mix at Enterprise Studios |
23_84 | Rail Rogut - recording engineer |
23_85 | "Your Love Is All I Know" (1993)
Steve Skinner - keyboards, synthesizer, arranger |
23_86 | Chieli Minucci - guitar
Arif Mardin - producer, arranger
Howard McCrary - background vocals |
23_87 | Micheal O'Reilly - mix at Right Track Recording, NY, recording engineer |
23_88 | Carl Nappa - assistant engineer
Jason Goldstein - assistant engineer |
23_89 | Recorded at The New Hit Factory, NY
Gloria Gabriel - production coordinator |
23_90 | "Every Little Thing" (1993)
David Gamson - producer, keyboards, drum machine |
23_91 | Norman Brown - guitar
Me'shell Ndegeocello - bass guitar |
23_92 | Federico Gonzalez Pena - piano, Fender Rhodes
Chris Botti - trumpet, flugelhorn |
23_93 | Micheal O'Reilly - mix at Right Track Recording, NY, recording engineer |
23_94 | Carl Nappa - assistant engineer
Jason Goldstein - assistant engineer |
23_95 | Recorded at The New Hit Factory, NY
Gloria Gabriel - production coordinator |
23_96 | Non-album tracks and remixes
"Never Miss The Water" (Franktified Club Mix) - 9:56 |
23_97 | "Never Miss The Water" (The Classic Single)
"Never Miss The Water" (Frankie's Sunday Mix) - 11:07 |
23_98 | "Never Miss The Water" (Dubjay's Duhlite) - 10:13 |
23_99 | "Never Miss The Water" (The Holywater Drum & Bass Mix) - 8:03 |
23_100 | "Never Miss The Water" (TV Mix) - 4:06
"Never Miss The Water" (Deeper Mix) - 9:00 |
23_101 | "Never Miss The Water" (Deeper Dub) - 7:44
"Never Miss The Water" (Extended Album Version) - 6:12 |
23_102 | "Never Miss The Water" (Lewis & Rich Mix) - 6:33 |
23_103 | "Never Miss The Water" (Stylus' Remix, Radio Edit) - 3:56 |
23_104 | "Never Miss The Water" (Stylus' Club Anthem) - 6:45 |
23_105 | "Never Miss The Water" (Stylus' Anthem Dub) - 6:52 |
23_106 | "Never Miss The Water" (Stylus' Street Mix) - 5:48 |
23_107 | "Never Miss The Water" (Stylus' Straight Pass Through) - 5:34 |
23_108 | "Never Miss The Water" (Stylus' Remix Instrumental) - 6:18 |
23_109 | "Never Miss The Water (A Cappella) - 4:28
"Miles Blowin'" (Tina Harris, Ashley Hall) - 3:56 |
23_110 | "Miles Blowin'" (Disco 9000 Mix) - 6:02
"Miles Blowin'" (Afro Cube Mix) - 5:32 |
23_111 | "Miles Blowin'" (Vinyl Republic Dub) - 5:58 |
23_112 | "Free Yourself" (Sami McKinney, Denise Rich, Warren McRae) - 4:13 |
23_113 | "Don't Take Back Your Love" (Gerry Deveaux) - 5:40 |
23_114 | "My Funny Valentine" (Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart) - 4:06 |
23_115 | "Pain" (Prince/N. Channison Berry) - 5:24 |
23_116 | "You And I Are One" (Howard McCreary, Chaka Khan) - 5:19 |
23_117 | "Power" (Howard McCreary, Chaka Khan) - 3:57 |
23_118 | References
External linksEpiphany: The Best of Chaka Khan, Vol. 1'' at Discogs |
23_119 | 1996 greatest hits albums
Chaka Khan compilation albums
Reprise Records compilation albums |
23_120 | Warner Records compilation albums |
24_0 | St. John's School (also known as St. John's or SJS) is a coeducational, independent K–12 day school |
24_1 | in Houston, Texas, United States. The School was founded in 1946 and is a member of the Houston |
24_2 | Area Independent Schools, the Independent Schools Association of the Southwest (ISAS), and the |
24_3 | Southwest Preparatory Conference (SPC). Though situated adjacent to St. John the Divine church, |
24_4 | St. John's claims no religious affiliation. Tuition costs ranges from ~27,000 to ~32,000 dollars |
24_5 | per school year. |
24_6 | As of July 2021, SJS's endowment is $80,147,000.
History |
24_7 | Founding |
24_8 | Toward the close of World War II, W. St. John Garwood and other prominent Houstonians sought to |
24_9 | create in Houston a "school of exacting standards" in the development of individual, spiritual, |
24_10 | ethical, intellectual, social, and physical growth of its students. In January 1946, these |
24_11 | Houstonians invited Alan Lake Chidsey, former headmaster of both the Pawling School (today the |
24_12 | Trinity-Pawling School) and the Arizona Desert School and the post-war Assistant Dean of Students |
24_13 | at the University of Chicago, to travel to Texas to speak at a gathering of interested members of |
24_14 | the Houston community. Mr. and Mrs. W. St. John Garwood, Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Merrick Phelps, Mr. R. |
24_15 | E. Smith, Mr. J. O. Winston, Jr., and the Reverend Thomas Sumners of the Church of St. John the |
24_16 | Divine Episcopal Church were among those present at the meeting. At Mr. Chidsey's persuasion, Mrs. |
24_17 | William S. Farish immediately committed to her involvement with the School, and many others |
24_18 | followed. |
24_19 | A proposal was drafted that entailed combining forces with the St. John the Divine nursery school |
24_20 | to create the School. St. John's first 344 students filed into St. John the Divine's chapel on |
24_21 | Opening Day, September 27, 1946. The entire campus, located on what used to be Michael Louis |
24_22 | Westheimer's farm, was six acres (2.4 ha). |
24_23 | Today, St. John's covers of land and educates approximately 1,416 total students supported by over |
24_24 | 200 faculty and staff. The School's 41 acres includes 13 acres that were purchased in late December |
24_25 | 2012 for approximately $90 million (the Taub Property). The School's student-teacher ratio is |
24_26 | approximately 7:1. Despite its lack of religious affiliation, the School provides |
24_27 | non-denominational chapel services at the church of St. John the Divine each Wednesday morning |
24_28 | during the academic year. In recent years, the Chapel program has branched out to offer more |
24_29 | multicultural services, hosting speakers from a diverse range of faiths and non-religious |
24_30 | backgrounds, such as environmentalists, athletes, and faculty or student alumni. |
24_31 | Post-founding |
24_32 | In the wake of the murder of George Floyd in 2020, several St. John's alumni, several |
24_33 | African-American and some non-African American, issued a letter to the administration to ask it to |
24_34 | take measures against racism. |
24_35 | Campus |
24_36 | St. John's 41-acre grounds are located in the central part of Houston, Texas, specifically spanning |
24_37 | the Upper Kirby district and the residential neighborhood of River Oaks. |
24_38 | The campus itself comprises two campuses, divided by Westheimer Road, that are connected by two |
24_39 | pedestrian tunnels underneath Westheimer. The Brown (South) Campus contains the Lower School |
24_40 | (classes K-5) and the Georges Middle School (classes 6–8) as well as the Virginia Stuller Tatham |
24_41 | (VST) Fine Arts Center and the Smith Athletic Center. The Cullen (North) Campus houses the Upper |
24_42 | School (classes 9–12) and the focal point of the School, the Quadrangle. The Lower, Middle, and |
24_43 | Upper Schools each maintain their own libraries. Upper and Middle School students share the Upper |
24_44 | School cafeteria, and the Lower School has its own. |
24_45 | In addition, the school's primary athletic field, Skip Lee Field, and its track are located on the |
24_46 | South Campus to the east of the Middle School and to the south of the Lower School. The School also |
24_47 | owns two properties neighboring the South Campus that house athletic fields (Finnegan Field and |
24_48 | Scotty Caven Field) for field hockey, soccer, and lacrosse. |
24_49 | Across Buffalo Speedway from the South Campus is the Taub Property, a 13-acre property acquired by |
24_50 | St. John's in December 2012. The school's baseball field along with temporary offices are located |
24_51 | on the property as of March 2015. |
24_52 | The William Stamps Farish Quadrangle, the first building constructed, has an exterior of Austin |
24_53 | limestone and was designed by Hiram A. Salisbury. It was built beginning in late March 1946, with |
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