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80s New WaveA Better 80s New Wave Radio Station plays the Classics of the New Wave, Punk, Ska and early Electronica and Goth scene.
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Smokin' ReggaeA Better Smokin' Reggae Roots Radio Station plays today's hottest Reggae Smash Hits including Dancehall, Dub, Ragga and your all time favorites.
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Christian HitsA Better Christian and Gospel Radio Station playing uplifting Gospel, Christian Pop and Rock Hits.
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Country KickerA Better Country Kicker Radio Station playing today's best hits and all time favorites from Nashville.
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Office Music HitsThe Perfect Mix for the Office environment! Playing the best Adult Hits from the past 30 years.
Peter Warlock was a pseudonym of Philip Arnold Heseltine (October 30, 1894 - December 17, 1930), an Anglo-Welsh composer and music critic. Although he used his own name when writing as a music critic, he composed under the pseudonym "Peter Warlock" and is now better known by this name. Heseltine's education was mainly classical, including studies at Eton College, at Christ Church, Oxford (for one year), and at University College London (one term). In music, he was mostly self-taught, studying composition on his own from the works of composers he admired, notably Frederick Delius, Roger Quilter and Bernard van Dieren. He was also strongly influenced by Elizabethan music and poetry as well as by Celtic culture (he studied the Cornish, Welsh, Irish, Manx, and Breton languages). Heseltine wrote his earliest mature compositions under the newly adopted pseudonym Peter Warlock, following his sojourn in Ireland of 1917-1918. His most prolific period, both as a composer and author, was in the early 1920s when he withdrew from the financial and social pressures of London to his mother's and stepfather's house, "Cefn Bryntalch", in Montgomeryshire, mid-Wales, where he wrote some of his finest songs, finally completing his song-cycle The Curlew to poems by W. B. Yeats. During this period he also met Bartók, who visited him while returning from a concert in Aberystwyth arranged by Professor Walford Davies, and whose influence can perhaps be seen in The Curlew. Between 1925 and 1929 was one of the most fruitful periods of his life, but by the end of the 1920s his creativity was on the decrease and he had to support himself on music criticism again. He was suffering from severe depression, but whether his death from gas poisoning at the age of 36 was suicide or an accident is not known for certain. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.