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Reversed 24mm Yashica WA lens. Subject is a very small type of lichen about 8mm high. Trying to get both tops in focus was near impossible.

Chrysanthemum florets.....

just on the street corner.....

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Couldn't resist taking this. They looked so fresh and lovely.

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No alcohol was consumed in the making of these shots!! (well not much!)

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luckily grabbed it......

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Nectarine honey.......and helps in pollination

droplets with essence~~

greenish....macro

Shallow depth and soft bokeh......

A hunt for the honey~~

For those viewers unaware my images have started to receive their titles based on their content with some form of link to a piece of music or artist/s. After all, as David Bowie sung, it is "Sound and Vision"

Try to get some web based info about the artist or song posted also that may be of interest to those looking as it saves them having to look. Those then interested will look further and hopefully discover.

 

A Whiter Shade of Pale

Procol Harum

Released 12 May 1967

 

"A Whiter Shade of Pale" is a song by the English rock band Procol Harum that was issued as their debut record on 12 May 1967. The single reached number 1 in the UK Singles Chart on 8 June and stayed there for six weeks. Without much promotion, it reached number 5 on the US Billboard Hot 100. One of the anthems of the 1967 Summer of Love, it is one of the most commercially successful singles in history, having sold more than 10 million copies worldwide. In the years since, "A Whiter Shade of Pale" has become an enduring classic, with more than 1,000 known cover versions by other artists.

 

With its Bach-derived instrumental melody, soulful vocals, melancholic tone, and unusual lyrics, the music of "A Whiter Shade of Pale" was composed by Gary Brooker and Matthew Fisher, while the lyrics were written by Keith Reid. Originally, the writing credits only listed Brooker and Reid. In 2009, Fisher won co-writing credit for the music in a unanimous ruling from the Law Lords.

 

In 1977, the song was named joint winner (along with Queen's "Bohemian Rhapsody") of "The Best British Pop Single 1952–1977" at the Brit Awards. In 1998, the song was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame. In 2004, the performing rights group Phonographic Performance Limited recognised it as the most-played record by British broadcasting of the past 70 years and Rolling Stone placed it 57th on its list of "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time". In 2009, it was reported as the most played song in the last 75 years in public places in the UK.

 

A Whiter Shade of Pale

 

We skipped the light fandango

Turned cartwheels 'cross the floor

I was feeling kinda seasick

But the crowd called out for more

The room was humming harder

As the ceiling flew away

When we called out for another drink

The waiter brought a tray

 

And so it was that later

As the miller told his tale

That her face, at first just ghostly

Turned a whiter shade of pale

 

She said, "There is no reason

And the truth is plain to see"

But I wandered through my playing cards

And would not let her be

One of sixteen vestal virgins

Who were leaving for the coast

And although my eyes were open

They might just as well have been closed

 

And so it was that later

As the miller told his tale

That her face, at first just ghostly

Turned a whiter shade of pale

 

And so it was that later

As the miller told his tale

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