Planting Buffalo Grass Knowledge Base
What is the best type of grass for a playing field? What kind of grass works best as turf? I'm trying to plant grass for a small field that can be used for sports and games, and it needs to be leveled and new grass needs to be planted. Can anyone recommend a grass that would make a good field? I live in Texas, so maybe a drought-resistant grass? I've heard maybe Bermuda or Buffalo grass would work, but I'm not sure which one.
How to edge between two different types of grass? I am working on landscaping my yard. In order to conserve water, we are using a local drought resistant types of grass. There will be a large (probably 30'x60') play area, featuring a grass with a long green season called Reveille. The rest of the lawn will be planted with a different type of grass which has a shorter green season called Legacy Buffalo grass. I am trying to determine how to create a border between the two grasses, so that they do not blend together. I want it to look natural. Any suggestions?
What is the best pasture to plant to feed sheep? I understand a broad leaf is best but no of none that grow think enough to keep weeds like Sandsburs at bay. I want a perenial. Been told buffalo grass is hard to get started here in the Lampasas TX. area. I have pretty sandy soil, and a little clay. I'd like the sheep to have a well balanced diet. Johnson grass grows well but they keep it eaten down so far it never gets to seed itself. Any helpful information would be appreciated these sheep are primarily for eating and grass mowing.
I need to rid my front yard of Bindis before they turn prickly, What do the plants look like? flowers? An Aussie, I have thick Buffalo grass but each summer out comes the Bindi. I am resolving to get rid of them (pull them out) so We can enjoy the summer grass barefoot, but there are a few weedy plants coming through the buffalo. I've got clover, which i am happy to leave there, One weedy plant with tiny blue flowers, One with tiny daisy-shaped yellow flowers One with a reddish-purple stems and green leaves like that of clover, and One with small yellow flowers like those of clover, and lastly, THere is the one I think it probably is, Which is completely green, but with tiny soft (at the moment) burrs all over looking like small venus fly-traps. One of these is Bindi, or Bindi-eye, whichever you call it, and at the moment I am pulling It all up, but there is only one day of holidays left and I need to be just picking the right one, but which one is it?
How does the plant eating animals manage to grow so big? How can animals such as horse, cow or elephant, rhino, etc., grow so big by grazing and eating plants? Even if they eat a lot of grass, are there enough nutrients in the grass? how do they get enough calories to maintain their size? where do they get protein to grow big muscles like horses and buffaloes, or even deer? if animals can produce muscles by eating grass, how come meat eaters need protein to get big? How does this work?
Can anyone solve these high school Biology quiz for me? 1. Which of the following is not characteristic of life? A. reproduction B. responding to stimulus C. need for carbon dioxide D. grow and develop *** 2. Which part of the experiment is used for comparison? A. dependent variable B. control C. independent variable D. hypothesis *** 3. Which SI unit would be best to measure the mass of a mouse? A. liter B. millimeter C. gram D. kilogram *** 4. Which phrase describes ecology? A. study of matter and its changes B. study of energy and its changes C. study of moral principles and values D. study of the interactions between living organisms and their environments *** 5. Which of the following is a biotic factor? A. temperature B. a parasitic worm C. soil type D. amount of water *** 6. Which term best describes a group of the same species in the same area? A. community B. population C. organism D. ecosystem *** 7. Which term is used to describe the feeding levels in a food chain or food web? A. trophic levels B. pyramids C. omnivores D. heterotrophs *** 8. Which term describes where an organism lives? A. niche B. biomass C. community D. habitat *** 9. Which term describes a type of symbiosis in which both organisms benefit? A. parasitism B. mutualism C. commensalism D. autotrophs *** 10. Which term is given to any living thing? A. heterotroph B. organism C. producer D. consumer *** 11. Which organisms make food using photosynthesis? A. primary consumers B. first-order consumers C. scavengers D. autotrophs *** 12. Herbivores might feed on which of the following organisms? A. grasses B. rabbits C. fish D. all of the above *** 13. Which organism is most likely to be found near the top of a pyramid of numbers? A. grasshoppers B. grass C. fox D. birds *** 14. Which organism is also known as an autotroph? A. producer B. decomposer C. first-order consumer D. carnivore *** 15. A desert community would most likely include which organism? A. evergreen tree B. kangaroo rat C. black bear D. parrot *** 16. The respiration of most organisms releases what gas into the air? A. nitrogen B. oxygen C. carbon dioxide D. methane *** 17. The process of plants losing water from their leaves is part of the water cycle. What is this process called? A. transpiration B. precipitation C. condensation D. evaporation *** 18. Which organisms act as decomposers? A. fungi and bacteria B. bacteria and vultures C. green plants and fungi D. rabbits and squirrels *** 19. Which organism might follow a rabbit on a food chain? A. flower B. grass C. buffalo D. hawk *** 20. If experimental data doesn't support a hypothesis, what would be the next step in the scientific method? A. change the data collected B. revise the hypothesis C. do not publish the results D. decide the experiment was a failure
Biology help me! Ecology and the Environment!? 1. What is an abiotic factor in a tropical rain forest? (Points: 3) the trees the top predator the plant life the rain 2. Which of the following can be considered an ecosystem? (Points: 3) a population of fish in a small lake an entire desert, including abiotic and biotic factors the wood of a rotting log the community of organisms within a desert 3. Which information would a biologist most need to know about an area to identify an ecosystem? (Points: 3) the predators and the prey that live there the biotic and abiotic factors there the longitude of the area the highest degree of latitude 4. Which biome type occupies the largest area on earth? (Points: 3) desert savanna temperate grassland marine 5. Which of the following is an accurate example of how energy flows through organisms in an ecosystem? (Points: 3) from grass to mouse to grasshopper from sun to bird to worm from sun to tree to caterpillar from eagle to rabbit to grass 6. Snakes eat bats. Hawks also eat bats. Bats eat moths and so do spiders. Which sentence best describes how those organisms are related in terms of energy flow? (Points: 3) They make up a community. They make up a food chain. They make up an ecosystem. They make up a food web. 7. The following flow of energy occurs in one ecosystem: alga to insect larva to flatworm to fish. Which trophic level has the most energy to pass on to the next? (Points: 3) alga insect larva flatworm fish 8. Which sentence describes how an animal might interact with the abiotic factors in its environment? (Points: 3) It consumes producers. It inhales oxygen. It is degraded by decomposers. It is part of a food web. 9. Which characteristic could be used to identify a biome? (Points: 3) the history of human impact on the region types of endangered species that live there amount of precipitation the region receives the complexity of the food web in the region 10. Which organisms might you find in a taiga? (Points: 3) polar bears, penguins, and mosses prairie dogs, grasses, and buffalo coral, sharks, and dolphins moose, evergreen trees, and bears 11. If a caterpillar is a primary consumer, what level will energy flow to next after the caterpillar? (Points: 3) producer primary consumer secondary consumer tertiary consumer 12. If arranged in an energy pyramid, which of these four organisms would contribute the least amount of usable energy? (Points: 3) mouse grasses rabbit wolf
QUICK QUIZ IF ANSWER CORRECT(if i say its correct anofe)YOU WILL GET BEST ANSWER!!! ITS TIME TO PARTY!!! YA!!! Thare is Buffalo, Rabbits, Prairie dogs, Fungi, Snakes, Birds, Lizards, Bobcats, Small Trees, Insects, Mice, Grasses, WildFlowers, and Bacteria. 1.Which 1s would eat the grass? ( NO CHOOSING THE STUPID 1S! ) 2.If a large predator,such as a wolf, was introduced into the prairie environment, what effects would it have on the ecosystem? ( NO DUMB ANSWERS ON ANY QUESTION PLZ! ) 3.If the bobcat population suddenly decreased greatly, what would be the effect on the prairie ecosystem?(STILL, NO DUMB ANSWERS!) 4.What would happen if a plant disease killed the grasses and wild flowers on the prairie? Describe the effects on the ecosystem. ( IF I SEE A DUMB ANSWER IM GOING TO ERASE YOUR ANSWER ORRRR I WONT COOSE IT AS BEST ANSWER THAT GOES FOR YOU TO WALLY wait wallys a wall XD ) This is not home work im seeing if thare are smart ( if any ) people who know when its a quiz not hw -.- ARE YALL PEOPLE INSANE IM DELEATING YALLS QUESTIONS! wait i cant delet answers my bad xD srry bout that xD o and srry if im to demanding because lets just say this.......................................... i just want to let people get best answer if thay even do atleast 1 of my quize questions i mean come on! why do you thing i said no dumb answers because (most) thare easy (thats really an opionen o well) so srry if im demanding for you. (just you dont wana know how my "misabral" live is im just lucky meanies in my school arent punchers ohh that just gave me a bad sight.) hyungjin I AM SO AMAZED BY YOUR ANSWERS I CANT BELIVE YOU GOT A - IM GOING TO GIVE YOU BEST ANSWER WHEN IT SAIS I CAN =3 I HOPE YOU LIKE GETING BEST ANSWER, CAUSE YOU EARNED IT!
Help with these plants...? Hey! I need the folowing information for the following plant. Common name- Botanical name- Features and/ or description. why it is a pasture or weed. I need the information for all, or a a few of the following: buffalo Oats White Clover Kikuyu Rhy Grass Stining Nettle Shepards Purse Cape Weed Creeping Sleedwell Chick Weed. Thanks! No need to do all, any information on some would be greatly appreciated. Thanks a bunch! 10 points up for grabs! Cheers!
plz help me!!! what is Y? “Odyssey” by Aldo Leopold An excerpt from “A Sand Country Almanac” It is the nature of roots to nose into cracks. When Y was thus released from the parent ledge, a new animal had arrived and begun redding up the prairie to fit his own notions of law and order. An oxteam turned the prairie sod, and Y began a succession of dizzy animal trips through a new grass called wheat. The old prairie lived by the diversity of its plants and animals, all of which were useful because the sum total of their co-operations and competitions achieved continuity. But the wheat farmer was a builder of categories; to him only wheat and oxen were useful. He saw the useless pigeons settle in clouds upon his wheat, and shortly cleared the skies of them. He saw the chinch bugs take over the stealing job, and fumed because here was a useless thing too small to kill. He failed to see the downward wash of over-wheated loam, laid bare in spring against the pelting rains. When soil-wash and chinch bugs finally put an end to wheat farming, Y and his like had already traveled far down the watershed. When the empire of wheat collapsed, the settler took a leaf from the old prairie book: he impounded his fertility in livestock, he augmented it with nitrogen-pumping alfalfa, and he tapped the lower layers of the loam with deep-rooted corn. But he used his alfalfa, and every other new weapon against wash, not only to hold his old plowings, but also to exploit new ones which, in turn, needed holding. So, despite alfalfa, the black loam grew gradually thinner. Erosion engineers built dams and terraces to hold it. Army engineers built levees and wing-dam to flush it from the rivers. The rivers would not flush, but raised their beds instead, thus choking navigation. So the engineers built pools like gigantic beaver ponds, and Y land in one of these, his trip from rock to river completed in one short century. On first reaching the pool, Y made several trips through water plants, fish, and waterfowl. But engineers build sewers as well as dams, and down them comes the loot of all the far hills and the sea. The atoms that once grew pasque-flowers to greet the returning plovers now lie inert, confused, imprisoned in oily sludge. Roots still nose among the rocks. Rains still pelt the fields. Deermice still hide their souvenirs of Indian summer. Old men who helped destroy the pigeons still recount the glory of the fluttering hosts. Black and white buffalo pass in and out of red barns, offering free rides to itinerant atoms.
Can someone help with my 9th grade essay? Can you read it and tell me what you think? What do I need to do to improve it? I need four of the techniques for goood writting? Could you help point out which parts they are? I have to highlight those parts, thank you! The West has been pictured as open,empty, dry land. The West has a unique geography mountains, plateaus, deserts, and grasslands. The West has the highest mountain ranges and both the hottest and coldest temperatures found anywhere within the continental United States.Prior to the nineteenth century, Native American tribes occupied virtually every habitable region and its large numbers of buffalo, beaver, prairie dogs, wolves, wild horses, and coyotes called the area home. My destination was to explore this lonesome area . We had made a camp and I was hiking around. My dad and his riding companions went to round up some cows earlier that day. I was expecting them back before dark. The desert sets the scene for a sight, It was a blue, black sky at dusk in Nevada, I will never forget. My close encounter with the wild horses.What an experience! It felt like a step back in time. Seeing the horses in their natural habitat. Its hard to describe, But is something everyone should see,something that is truly free ! So beautiful, and strong willed. There were seven in all, two were small, jumping and playing. There was a breeze that made their manes and tails dance in the wind like spiritual creatures. The mares I assume were eating dry grass , and the bigger black stallion pranced around like he was protecting them and watching over the herd.They might have senced I was there, but all I could smell was prairie sage I watched them for quite a while until the riders arrived and the wild horses ran behind the hills that surrounded a small spring. This experience happened several years ago, I have since read articles about people shooting the horses. And the BLM has cought alot of them and brought them in for adoption, if they are not adopted they are shipped to Texas for slaughter by two foreign owned plants Beltex and Dallas and shipped overseas to Europe, Japan, Scandinavia and other countries for human consumtion. Over a billion dollar industry for them.
Please Revise my Dust Bowl paper, tell me what I should/need to fix, etc.? The Dust Bowl also known as Dirty Thirties was a period of severe dust storms causing major ecological and agricultural damage to American and Canadian prairie lands from 1930 to 1936, however in some places it lasted until 1940. The Dust Bowl was caused by a severe drought, (which is a long period without rain) also coupled with decades of extensive farming without crop rotation or other techniques to prevent erosion. Deep plowing of the top soil of the Great Plains had killed the natural grassed that normally kept the soil in place and trapped moisture, even during the period of droughts and high winds. During the drought of the 1930’s with no natural anchors to keep the soil into place, it dried, turned to dust, and blew away eastward and southward in large dark clouds. At times the clouds blackened the sky reaching all the way to the East Coat cities such as, New York and Washington D.C. Much of the soil ended up deposited in the Atlantic. These immense dust storms were given names such as, “Black Blizzards” and “Black Rollers” often reduced visibility to a few feet. The Dust Bowl affected 100,000,000 acres, centered on the pan handles of Texas and Oklahoma, and adjacent parts of New Mexico, Colorado, and Kansas. The Dust Bowl was an ecological and human disaster caused by the misuse of land years of sustained droughts. Millions of acres of farming became useless, and hundreds of thousands of people were forced to leave their homes. Many of these families were known as “Okies” (because so many of them came from Oklahoma), traveled to mainly California, along with other states. Because they found economic conditions better than those places they had left. Many owning no land, traveled farm to farm picking fruit and other crops at starvation wages. On November 11th, 1933, a very strong dust storm stripped top soil from desiccated South Dakota farmlands in just one of a serious of bad storms during 1933. Then beginning on May 9th, 1934, a strong two-day dust storm removed massive amounts of Great Plains top soil in one of the worst storms of the Dust Bowl. The dust clouds blew all the way to Chicago where dirt fell like snow. Two days later on May 11th, the same storm reached cites in the east such as, Buffalo, Boston, New York City, and Washington D.C. That winter, red snow fell on New England. On April 14th, 1935, known as “Black Sunday” twenty of the worst “Black Blizzards” occurred throughout the Dust Bowl, causing extensive damage and turning the day to night. It was so bad that people could not see five feet in front of them at certain points. Some roosters thought it was night instead of day, and went to sleep during them. “If you would like your heart broken, just come out here,” wrote Ernie Pyle, a roving reported in Kansas, just north of Oklahoma border, in June 1936. “This is the dust-storm country, and it is the saddest land I have ever seen.” “In the dust-covered desolations of our No Man’s Land here, wearing our shade hats, with handkerchiefs tied over out faces and Vaseline in our nostrils, we have been trying to rescue our home from the wind-blown dust which penetrates wherever air can go. It is almost a hopeless task, for there is rarely a day when at some time the dust clouds do not roll over ‘visibility’ approaches zero and everything is covered again with a silt-like deposit which may vary in depth from a film to ritual ripples on the kitchen floor.” Says in a letter from a woman of Oklahoma in June of 1935. During president Franklin D. Roosevelt’s first 100 days in office in 1933, governmental programs designed to conserve soil and restore the ecological balance of the nation were implemented. Interior Secretary, Harold C. Ickes established the Soil Erosion Service in August 1933, under Hugh Hammond Bennett. In 1935 it was reorganized and renamed the Soil Conservation Service. President Roosevelt ordered that civilian conservation crops to plant a huge belt of more than 200 million tress from Canada to Abilene, Texas to break the wind, hold in water in the soil, and hold the soil itself in place. The administration also began to educate farmers on soil conservation and erosion techniques including, crop rotation, strip farming, contour plowing, terracing, and other improved farming practices. In 1937, the federal government began an aggressive campaign to encourage Dust Bowlers to adopt planting and plowing methods that conserved the soil. The government paid the reluctant farmers one dollar an acre to practice one of the new methods. In 1938, after extensive work re-plowing the land into furrows, planting tress in shelterbelts and other conservation methods has resulted in a 65 percent reduction in the amount of soil blowing. However the drought continued. In the fall of 1939, the rain came, finally bringing an ending to the drought. During the next few years with the coming of World War 2, the country is pulled out of the Depression and the plains once again b In 1938, after extensive work re-plowing the land into furrows, planting tress in shelterbelts and other conservation methods has resulted in a 65 percent reduction in the amount of soil blowing. However the drought continued. In the fall of 1939, the rain came, finally bringing an ending to the drought. During the next few years with the coming of World War 2, the country is pulled out of the Depression and the plains once again become golden with wheat. Well it was put into paragraphs but this site fucks off everything.
I'm looking for some obscure band recommendations...got any? I have thousands of CDs/vinyls, but so you can get an idea of my taste in music (and so I don't get a long list of bands I already have), here are some of the artists that I have on my computer. Like I said, I have a lot of music so please try to be as obscure as possible with your suggestions. Thank you! ? And The Mysterians 10 CC 13th Floor Elevators 38 Special The 5ths Dimension A3 Abigail Washburn AC/DC The Action Adam and the Ants Aerosmith Agnes Strange Al Green Al Kooper The Alan Parsons Project Albert Hammond Albert King Alice Cooper Alice In Chains The Allman Brothers Band Almendra Amazing Rhythm Aces The Amboy Dukes America Amon Düül II Amos Lee ...And You Will Know Us by the Trail Of Dead Andrew Bird Andromeda Aphex Twin Apocalyptica Apollo Sunshine Apples In Stereo Apriil Wine Aretha Franklin Arlo Guthrie Art Art Garfunkel Arthur Brown The Artwoods Asia The Association Asylum Street Spankers Atomic Fireballs Atomic Rooster The Attack Audience Average White Band Ayreon Aztec Camera The B-52's B.J. Thomas B.B. King Babe Ruth Bachman Turner Overdrive Bad Brains Bad Company Bad Religion Badfinger The Band The Bar-Kays Barbara Acklin Barbara Lewis The Barbarians Barclay James Harvest Bauhaus The Beach Boys The Bears Beasts Of Bourbon The Beatles The Beau Brummels Beck Beck, Bogert and Appice The Bee Gees Beethoven The Bellamy Brothers Ben Harper Bert Jansch Beulah Big Bill Broonzy The Big Bopper Big Head Todd and the Monsters Big Joe Turner Big Mama Thornton Big Star Bill Fay Bill Haley and HIs Comets Bill Withers Billie Holiday Billy Idol Billy Joel The Black Angels The Black Crowes Black Flag The Black Keys Black Label Society Black Oak Arkansas Black Sabbath Black Stone Cherry Blackfield Blackfoot Blackmore's Night Blind Boys of Alabama Blind Faith Blind Lemon Jefferson Blind Melon Bloc Party Blondie Blood, Sweat and Tears Bloodhound Gang Bloodrock Blossom Toes Blue Cheer Blue Oyster Cult The Blue Ridge Rangers Blue Rodeo The Blue Van Blues Image Blues Magoos The Blues Project Blues Travelers Bo Diddley Bob Dylan Bob Marley Bob Seger Bob Welch Bob Wills Bobbie Gentry Bobby Darin Bobby Goldsboro Bobby Womach Bon Jovi Bonnie Raitt Bonnie Tyler The Bonzo Dog Band Booker T. and the MG's Boston Bread Brewer and Shipley Brian Eno Brian Hyland The Brian Jonestown Massacre Bright Eyes Brothers Johnson Bruce Springsteen Bryan Adams Bubble Puppy Buckcherry The Buckinghams Buddy Guy Buddy Holly Budgie Buena Vista Social Club Buffalo Springfield Buggles Built To Spill Butthole Surfers The Buzzcocks The Byrds Cactus Cake Cal Smith Calexico Camel Can Canned Heat Captain Beefheart Captain Beyond Carl Orff Carl Perkins Carlos Varela Carly Simon Carole King The Carpenters The Cars The Castaways Cat Stevens Chad and Jeremy The Chambers Brothers The Charlatans Charlee Charley Patton The Charlie Daniels Band Charlie Musselwhite Chicago Chicken Shack The Chieftains The Chocolate Watchband Chopin Chris Robinson Chris Whitley Chuck Berry The Church Churchills Cinderella Clarence Carter The Clash Climax Blues Band Clint Black The Clovers Clutch Collective Soul Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen The Commodores Comus Confederate Railroad Conway Twitty Corosion Of Conformity Count Five Counting Crows Country Joe and the Fish The Cowsills Crash Test Dummies Cream The Creation Creedence Clearwater Revival Crispian St. Peters Crosby, Stills and Nash (& Young) The Cryan' Shames The Cure Curtis Mayfield and the Impressions Czar Da Vinci's Notebook Damn Yankees Dan Fogelberg Danny and the Juniors Danny O'Keefe Danzig Dave Van Ronk David Allan Coe David Bowie David Bromberg David Gilmour David Lee Roth Davie Allan and the Arrows Dax Riggs De La Soul Dead Boys Dead Kennedys The Dead Milkmen Deadboy and the Elephantmen Debussy The Decemberists Deep Purple Deerhoof Def Leppard The Del-Vetts Del Shannon Delaney and Bonnie The Dells Depeche Mode Derek and the Dominos The Desert Rose Band Desmond Dekker and the Aces Diamond Head Diana Ross and the Supremes Diary Of Dreams The Dictators Dinosaur Jr. Dio Dion and the Belmonts Dionne Warwick Dire Straits The Divine Comedy The Dixie Dregs Dobie Grey Dolly Parton Don McLean Donovan The Doobie Brothers The Doors Doris Troy Dr. Hook and the Medicine Show Dr. John Dream Theater The Drifters Drive-By Truckers Dusty Springfield Dwight Yoakam The Eagles East Of Eden The Easybeats Ed Townsend Eddie Cochran Eddie Floyd Edgar Broughton Band Edgar Winter group Edison Lighthouse Edvard Grieg Electric Flag Electric Hellfire Club Electric Light Orchestra The Electric Prunes Elliott Smith Elmore James Elton John Elvis Costello Elvis Presley Emerson, Lake and Palmer Emmylou Harris Eric Andersen Eric Burdon/The Animals Eric Clapton Eric Johnson Erin McKeown Etta James Everclear The Everly Brothers Explosions In The Sky The Fabulous Thunderbirds Faces Fair To Midland Fairport Convention Faith No More The Fall Family Fats Domino Fear Factory Fionn Regan Firefall Five Man Electrical Band The Five Satins The Flaming Lips The Flamingos Fleetwood Mac Floyd Cramer The Flying Burrito Brothers Flying Machine Focus Foghat The Folk Implosion Foreigner The Foundations The Four Horsemen Frank Sinatra Frank Zappa The Fratellis Fred Astaire Fred Neil Free Friends and Lovers Frijid Pink Fugazi The Fugs Funkadelic Galaxie 500 Gallery Garbage Gary HIggins Gary HOey Gary Moore Gary Wright Gene Vincent and His Blue Caps Genesis Gentle Giant The Gentrys George Clinton George Harrison George Jones George Thorogood The Georgia Satellites Gerry and the Pacemakers Gil Scott-Heron Gilbert O'Sullivan Gin Blossoms Glen Campbell The Godz Golden Earing Goose Creek Symphony Gordon Lightfoot Gram Parsons Grand Funk Railroad The Grass Roots Grateful Dead Gravy Train The Greencards The Gregg Allman Band The Groundhogs The Guess Who Guided By Voices Guillermo Portabales Guns N' Roses H.P. Lovecraft Half Man Half Biscuit Hamilton, Joe Frank and Reynolds Hank Williams Sr. Harper's Bizarre Harry Chapin Harry Nilsson The Haunted Hawkwind Head East Heart Heavy Metal Kids Helmet Henry Mancini Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass The Highwaymen The Hollies The Hombres Honeybus Hoodoo Gurus Hookfoot Hound Dog Taylor The Housemartins Howlin' Wolf Humble Pie Hüsker Dü Ida Cox The Ides of March Iggy Pop/The Stooges Igor Stravinsky Ike and Tina Turner The Impalas Incredible String Band INXS Iron and Wine Iron Butterfly Iron Maiden The Isley Brothers It's A Beautiful Day J. Geils Band J.J. Cale Jackie DeShannon Jackson 5 Jackson Browne Jackyl Jakob Dylan The Jam James Brown The James Gang James Taylor Jane's Addiction Janis Ian Janis Joplin The Jayhawks Jean-Luc Ponty Jean Knight Jeff Beck Jeff Buckley Jefferson Airplane Jerry Garcia and David Grisman Jerry Lee Lewis THe Jesus and Mary Chain Jethro Tull Jim Croce Jim Ford Jimi Hendrix/Jimi Hendrix Experience Jimmy Buffett Joan Baez Joan Jett Joanna Newsom Joe Bonamassa Joe Cocker Joe Satriani Joe Simon Joe Tex Joe Walsh The John Butler Trio John Cale John Mellencamp John Denver John Fahey John Fogerty John Lee Hooker John Lennon John Martyn John Mayall John Prine John Williams Johnnie Taylor Johnny Cash Johnny Mathis Johnny Paycheck Johnny Thunders Johnny Winters Jon Butcher Axis Jonathan Richman Jonathon Edwards Joni Mitchell Journey Joy Division Judas Priest Judy Collins Juicy Lucy June Carter Cash Kaiser Chiefs Kanda Bongo Man Kansas Kate Bush Kenny and the Kasuals King Crimson The Kings Kings Of Convenience The Kingsmen The Kinks KISS The Knickerbockers Koko Taylor Kris Kristofferson Kyuss Larry Graham Laura Nyro Lead Belly The Leaves Led Zeppelin The Left Banke Lefty Frizzell The Lemon Pipers The Lemonheads Leo Sayer Leon Russell Leonard Cohen Levon Helm Linda Perhacs Link Wray little Barrie Little Feat Little Richard Little River Band Live Lobo Local H Looking Glass Loretta Lynn Los Dug Dug's Los Trio Matamoros Lou Rawls Lou Reed Love Love and Rockets Love Sculpture The Lovin' Spoonful Lucifer's Friend Lucinda Williams Lynyrd Skynyrd The Lyres The Magicians The Mahavishnu Orchestra Mahogany Rush The Mamas and the Papas Manfred Mann's Earth Band Manic Street Preachers The Mar-Keys Marianne Faithfull Marillion Mark Knopfler The Marshall Tucker Band Martha and the Vandellas Marvin Gaye Marvin Sease Mary Wells Mason Williams The Masters Apprentices Matthews Southern Comfort Max Webster MC5 Meat Loaf Medeski, Martin and Wood Megadeth Melanie The Melvins Merle Haggard Merrilee Rush and the Turnabouts Metallica Michael Hedges Mick Jagger Mick Ronson Mike + the Mechanics Mike Oldfield Ministry Minutemen The Misfits Mississippi John Hurt Moby Moby Grape The Modern Lovers Mogwai The Mojo Men Molly Hatchet The Monkees Montrose The Moody Blues Morrissey Mother Love Bone Motörhead Mott The Hoople Mountain Mournin Phase Mouse and the Traps The Move Moxy Mr. Bungle Mud Mudcrutch Muddy Waters Mudhoney Mungo Jerry Muse The Music Explosion The Music Machine My Morning Jacket Nancy Sinatra Nancy Wilson Nazareth The Nazz Neil diamond Neil Finn Neil Young Nektar Neutral Milk Hotel New Riders Of The Purple Sage The New Seekers New York Dolls Nic Armstrong and the Thieves The Nice Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds Nick Drake Nickel Creek Night Ranger The Nightcrawlers Nina Hagen Nine Inch Nails Nirvana Nitty Gritty Dirt Band Nitzinger Norman Greenbaum The O'Jays Of Montreal Ohio Express Ohio Players Old Crow Medicine Show Oliver The Only Ones Opeth Otis Redding Otis Williams and the Charms The Outlaws Over the Rhine Ozark Mountain Daredevils Ozzy Osbourne Pantera Patsy Cline Patti LaBelle Patti Smith Paul Butterfield Blues Band Paul McCartney Paul Simon Pavement pearl Jam The Penguins Pentangle Percy Sledge Pere Ubu Pete Brown and Piblokto Peter and Gordon Peter Frampton Peter Gabriel Peter, Paul and Mary Petula Clark Phil Collins Phil Lesh Phil Ochs Phish Pilot The Pink Fairies Pink Floyd The Pixies PJ Harvey The Platters The Pogues The Police Porcupine Tree The Pretenders The Pretty Things Pride and Glory Prince Procol Harum Psychedelic Furs Pure Prairie League Python Lee Jackson Queen Quicksilver Messenger Service R.E.M Racer X Radiohead Rainbow Ram Jam The Ramones Randy Newman Rare Earth The Rascals The Raspberries Ravi Shankar Ray Charles Ray Owen's Moon Red Rider The Remains REO Speedwagon The Replacements Revolting Cocks The Rezillos Richard/Linda Thompson Richard Hell and the Voidoids Rick Danko Rick Drringer Rickie Lee Jones The Righteous Brothers Ringo Starr Rob Zombie Robert Johnson Robert Palmer Robert Plant Robin Trower Rocket From The Crypt Rod Stewart Rodrigo y Gabriela Roger Daltry Roger Waters Roky Erickson The Rolling Stones The Ronettes Ronnie Dawson Ronnie Lane Rory Gallagher Rose Hill Drive Rose Tattoo Roxy Music Roy Buchanana Roy Harper Roy Orbison Rufus Wainwright The Runaways Rush Russell Morris Ry Cooder Sagittarius Sam and Dave Sam Cooke Sammi Smith Sammy Hagar Sammy Johns Samurai Sanford and Townsend Santana Scorpions Scott McKenzie Screamin' Jay Hawkins Screaming Trees Seal Seals and Crofts The Searchers The Seeds The Sensational Alex Harvey Band Sex Pistols The Shadows Of Knight The Shins The Shocking Blue Sigur Ros The Silos Silver Apples Silverchair Simon and Garfunkel Sir Douglas Quintet Sir Lord Baltimore The Sisters Of Mercy Sixx:A.M. Skeeter Davis Skid Row The Skids Skip James Skip Spence The Skyliners Slaughter Slim Harpo Sly and the Family Stone The Small Faces The Smashing Pumpkins Smith The Smiths Smokey Robinson/The Miracles Snake River Conspiracy The Soft Machine Solomon Burke Son House Sonata Arctica Sonic Youth The Sonics Sonny Boy Williamson Sopwith Camel Soul Asylum Soul Survivors Sound Team Soundgarden Spacemen 3 Spanky and Our Gang Spencer Davis Group Spin Doctors Spirit Spiritualized Spooky Tooth Squeeze Squirrel Nut Zippers SRC The Stampeders The Standells The Staples Singers The Statler Brothers Status Quo Stealers Wheel Steely Dan Stephen Malkmus Stepenwolf Stereolab Steve Earle Steve Miller Band Steve Morse Band Steve Vai Steve Wariner Stevie Nicks Stevie Ray Vaughan Stevie Wonder Stillwater Sting Stone Poneys The Stone Roses Stone the Crows The Strangeloves Strawberry Alarm Clock The Strawbs The String Cheese Incident The Style Council Styx Sublime Sugarloaf Supergrass Supertramp Sweet Sweet Smoke The Swingin' Medallions Syd Barrett T-Bone Walker T. 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After it took me an hour to type up, I'm going to keep it handy...
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