Posts tagged band

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The Right Cigar for the Right Moment

The right moment for the right cigar is a statement that brings to mind times when the stock market is flourishing. It also brings to mind times when the stock market is crashing miserably and it’s time to roll up your sleeves and get to work plotting out new pathways to survival, new pathways to prosperity.

The moment for the right cigar is FDR lighting up a stogie while planning how to rend America away from the chaos of the Depression in a dustbowl-plagued America of the 1930’s and 40’s.

The right moment for the right cigar is Winston Churchill working all hours of the day and night in his underground command headquarters in the London of the blitz.

The right moment for the right cigar is a soldier, a man or woman, who has just walked the gauntlet through a landmine in the field of battle and lived to tell the tale.

The right moment for the right cigar is a different kind of battle, when a producer has a hit after corralling writers, directors, actors and musicians, all of whom have lived their lives in artistic uncertainty, and now because of him, they have a secure future.

The right moment for the right cigar is the end of a championship game of billiards or poker. It’s also the end of a championship game of football, or baseball, or soccer, or basketball…and your side has just won.

The right moment for the right cigar is a revolution of any kind, whether you caused it, fought in it, or just escaped from it.

The right moment for the right cigar is when you realize the difference between pleasure and hedonism, and the difference between desire and necessity.

The right moment for the right cigar is when a lawsuit is over and you just won.

The right moment for the right cigar is when your little girl is crying because she’s been left out of playing with the older kids, she joins you on the back porch, you put the band from a fine cigar on her finger…and she smiles.

The right moment for the right cigar is when your teenaged son is escorted home by the police because he went to them and told them that he didn’t think he could drive safely.

The right moment for the right cigar is just after you attended the ceremony for your kid graduating from, or receiving honors for, any worthy endeavor.

Those are some of the right moments, and the right cigar for those moments may be obtained at purveyors of great cigars. So pick your moment…the right cigar awaits.

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Cigars in Brazil: An Uncertain Future?

Those who know their cigars well also, by that same token, know Brazil-albeit as a source of great tobacco rather than as a top cigar-producing nation. Brazilian tobacco, mainly produced in the country’s temperate northeastern and southern regions, turns up in such world-class cigars as Carlos Torano’s Toro, but the country’s cigar producers themselves haven’t always gotten the same respect. But that may be about to change. After all, Brazilian cigars-including the Angelina, Dannemann and Dannemann, Le Cigar, Don Pepe, Dom Porfirio, and Dona Flor (named for Jorge Amado’s classic novel Dona Flor and Her Two Husbands)-have already convinced many US cigar aficionados that this country’s cigars are as good as its tobacco.

But Brazil’s own rich history-and its sure-to-be-turbulent future-make it an important place for cigar smokers to understand. How has one of the world’s important tobacco-producing nations come to be the home of one of the strongest anti-smoking movements in the Western Hemisphere? And will these two opposing tendencies continue, uneasily, to coexist? Only a prophet could say-but perhaps a brief backgrounder on this Latin American nation can provide some helpful context.

The first thing to know about Brazil is that it’s big-in resources, landmass, and people. It’s the fifth-largest country in the world, and the fifth most populous. Among the world’s pro forma democracies, it ranks fourth in population size, and it controls a powerful economy, ranking ninth in the world in purchasing power. It’s a diverse country, too, with one hundred-eighty-eight living languages, and, interestingly enough, the world’s largest confirmed reserve of uncontacted peoples-small pre-industrial tribes that, for all practical purposes, have stayed sealed off from the rest of the world. In this single nation, then, an ultramodern economy exists side-by-side with some of the world’s last refuges of pre-industrial life, and gleaming cities (Sao Paulo and Brasilia) share the same boundary with huge swaths of rainforest.

What kind of culture does such a diverse country produce? Well-a similar situation produced artistic riches for the United States, and things are hardly any different for Brazil. Consider tropicalismo, one of the country’s major artistic exports. This musical movement, spearheaded by the legendary band Os Mutantes and the singer-songwriters Caetano Veloso, Gilberto Gil, Gal Costa, and manic genius Tom Ze among others, fuses all the diverse musics of this country (along with a hefty dose of Bob Dylan, Velvet Underground and jazz) to create some of the best-regarded music of the 1970s. Whatever political and logistical headaches it may pose, such bursting-at-the-seams diversity is good fortune for any artist lucky enough to benefit from it.

Like many Latin American countries (and like the US), Brazil was originally the colony of an ambitious European nation-in this case, Portugal. Led by its Portuguese-born regent, Pedro I, the country won its independence in 1822. What followed was a long power struggle between Pedro (eventually replaced by his son Pedro II), various rebelling factions of the population, and the country’s economically dominant classes, who found Pedro variously useful and irksome, depending on the situation. Following the deposition of Pedro II in 1889, the country became a republic; during the twentieth century, though, Brazil fell frequently to military coups, some of them (most infamously in 1964) made possible by covert US assistance. Its current relative freedom has lasted only since 1985.

Made up of twenty-six states and a federal district (think Washington, D.C.), the country’s exports include (among others) coffee, iron ore, ethanol, textiles, shoes, and cars. With a major modernizing initiative underway-in 2007, the country’s government, under President Luis Ignacio DaSilva, dedicated three hundred billion dollars to renovating power plants, roads and ports-Brazil clearly intends to keep those exports booming. Including tobacco? Well-that’s dicier. Brazil is incredibly rich in natural resources, but that rainforest shrinks every day. The resulting controversy raises issues for tobacco farmers: only a sustainable ecology will ensure that Brazil continues to yield those fine tobacco crops, and yet some sustainability measures may threaten farmers’ short-term profits (small farmers, many of them, and small profits). It’s a difficult balance.

More threatening, perhaps, for those of us who value Brazil’s contribution to cigar culture, is the strength of its anti-smoking movement. The country has some of the toughest anti-smoking laws in the world, funnels large amounts of money into anti-tobacco campaigns, and forbids tobacco-products advertising in any form. Still, the total number of smokers grew slightly during the past decade. Some business experts forecast that the country’s tobacco industry will have to get used to a shrinking overall population of smokers, and concentrate instead on increasing brand value, making better and safer products. Cigars, designed to be used in moderation and savored, may well flourish in this environment. At any rate, the reported use of genetically-modified tobacco crops in the country’s southern region suggests that tobacco-related controversies will continue in Brazil.

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Padron 1964 Anniversary

Emerson’s Cigars introduced extremely limited production of cigar celebrating their 30th Anniversary that is made from the top tobacco harvested from their Nicaraguan farms.

The Padron 1964 Anniversary introduced by Emerson’s Cigars is the rarest and hardest to find cigar in the world. Padron family is one of the largest boutique cigar makers having a hardnosed commitment to quality. They work by limiting their cigar production each year where the Anniversary series represents the top tobacco from each year’s crop.

The Padron 1964 Anniversary is boxed pressed having a medium to full body with rich complex aromas. It was introduced in the year 1994 to commemorate the companies 30th year in business. The finish on these cigars is long and the unique feature of the cigar is its balance. There are a number of flavors available.  The flavor changes from the moment you light it up to the moment you put it down. Counted as one of the best cigar it is smoked by those who enjoy only the finest cigars.  Padron is the perfect option for everyone’s Humidor. Padron’s 1964 Anniversary cigars are classic where it is hard to believe the blend is only fifteen years old. The 1964 was created to celebrate the Padron company’s 30th Anniversary in 1994. If we talk about production then there are presently ten sizes. All of them are available in either a sun-grown natural wrapper or Maduro. The Maduro version is the most popular one.

Padron is proud of its seed-to-smoke, upright integrated operation, so the Anniversary blend is like all the rest of their cigars: an undisputed Nicaraguan Puro.  The cigar is smooth, medium-bodied and flavorful.  It starts up with Coffee cream and cedar. After an inch, it becomes more multifaceted, adding some sweetness and a silky aftertaste. The aroma is soft but nicely spiced, reminding a way of incense.

The mid-section is a little heavier which exhibits typical Nicaraguan acidic flavor on the sides of the tongue and back of the mouth. Cocoa notes are up front with some mild spice, keeping pace with a sweet woodsy aroma. The smoke surface is medium-bodied which remains very smooth.

The Exclusivo finishes up with a typically Maduro finale — coffee and chocolate with a marvelously creamy texture. This cigar lacks the third stage bitterness making a manifestation towards the band of most ordinary cigars. It is only at the very end is where there is some bitter sweetness.

Maria is an expert author and webmaster of Cigar websites. The website having details of Padron 1964 Anniversary Cigar, Fuente Hemingway Cigar, Ashton VSG Cigar, Davidoff Aniversario Cigar

The One Man Metal Band (Painkiller- Judas Priest)


My little gift for being patient for my next video. I do not own the rights to the song featured, I just felt like paying homage to them. BTW that part at the end where I have a cigar type thing in my mouth, that’s just paper nothing else. I just felt like adding a little bit of rock star to it. Also, don’t complain about how out of sync this is, I don’t care and I never will. So all I can say is don’t take this too seriously and just enjoy my fake performance

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