The chorus, sung by Teyana Taylor, conveys the satisfaction and joy that comes from making something successful out of nothing. It represents the sense of fulfillment derived from the hard work and dedication invested to reach a higher position in life. The diamonds mentioned symbolize the material rewards that often come with success, showcasing the tangible benefits of their efforts.

This is a rescheduled date from October 2017, so now would be a good time to start looking for your ticket. Inducted to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and the Songwriters Hall of Fame, Seger has earned 13 platinum sales awards, including such landmark albums as "Night Moves," "Stranger in Town," "Against the Wind," "Live Bullet" and "Nine Tonight," all of which have sold more than 5 million units.


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He then said in another tweet, "I been signed to Atlantic/MMG since 2014 it used to be Warner only made 11m on records out of like a 100m.. I only could drop every 9 months something a lawyer never explained to me and they removed me from all festivals also."

Yes, he came here when he was a kid boy. His daddy died and his mother married again, and he left home, he and his sister and two brothers. Up here in the country around Brown's Chapel somewhere. They had a sort of falling out before they was any age at all, hardly. His sister had done left. She was the oldest. She'd left and gone to work somewhere. She went to work when she was about fourteen years old. Well, Papa took his two brothers and went to Saxapahaw. That's another mill town right on up by the river. And he had an aunt that lived up there. He stayed up there a while, and then they walked away from up there and walked down here. He had another aunt that lived over there. She wrote and told them to come down here and stay with her. It was his daddy's sister. So they come down here, and he went to work in the mill and just stayed there with her. He was just twelve years old when he went. But that's they left home. And he never went back any more. I never heard tell of them going back till his mother had some kind of stroke or something, and somebody come down here after him. And he went up there, but she was dead when he got there. They had no fuss or nothing, but they just couldn't get along, seemingly. And she told him, "Well, you all go" and told them where to go, and they took off. And they've been on their own ever since. Pa left there then and worked down there till he was about seventeen years old. got him a job down there , and stayed down there a pretty good while. He come back here and married.

Yes, Lewis Durham, right up above there. Yes, them Durham They sold and made a dwelling out of that. He sold the house, only they owned this home right down here. He sold that and then he sold and he built in Durham County up there, right on the edge between Orange and Durham. He don't live but two or three miles out of Chapel Hill. But he married a girl from up there. He run that store up there from 1935 till, I'd say, about '70; I don't know, '71, maybe, he closed up, sold out. He sold his home and then sold the store. Now he doesn't do anything; he retired. He's in pretty good shape.

No, they come from down here on the New Hope. They moved to Pittsboro and run a mill over there, a cotton gin and a grist mill. And her daddy got a farm and was coming out here between here and Pittsboro nights, farming over there. And he was a young man, and he died. Just died in about two days. They think now it was appendicitis, appendix busted, but they called it a kidney problem that killed him. So Uncle Edgar was the oldest one in the family, and he come across over here and got a job over here in the mill. He took a textile course. They seen something in him, and he was a brilliant fellow. The company helped him with the textile course, and he worked through the mill and he got to be superintendent.

There was a fellow that moved out from here who was overseer of carding here, and when my uncle got to be overseer of spinning, this fellow Jim Cates moved here and went to work for Erwin at Durham. And he left Erwin at Durham and went to Edenton. And he wanted to know if they'd go down there. He got him down there. Mr. Cates got to be a big man down there sure enough. They were both good mill men, good, practical mill men, really.

And had to carry my mother over there. She fell and broke her hip. I was going to the hospital to see my wife; my wife had a cancer. And from the time we knew she had one until she died wasn't but about three months. Just all right now. And while she was in the hospital, my mother fell, and I was going up there to see her. My sister was up here with Mama, but she got up to go to the bathroom and failed to take her walker some way or another, and she just fell and got to going back. She said, "I didn't fall. I just got to going backwards." Something in her head, I don't know what. Got to going backwards and fell and broke her hip. Laid up there four weeks in the hospital, and the doctor told us up there that she'd never walk anymore and we'd have to make some arrangement to get her in a nursing home or something. So I made arrangements to get her over here to Siler City, and we moved her over there. My wife didn't live long after that. And just all at once she got hoarse. She couldn't talk. Thought she just had a spell of laryngitis, and I carried her over to Broad Street in Durham every two months. I carried her over there for a long time for the high blood pressure, to keep it in control. And it was good; he kept it down good. And the doctor noticed that she was hoarse. He said, "How long has that been going on?" And she said, "About two weeks. It's just a little laryngitis." He said, "Well, it might be, and it might not. I want you to go to MacPherson to have it examined." Went over there and he said that he knew what it was, but he didn't know what it was coming from, and I thought then there was something queer about it. And they sent us to another doctor that was uptown. He sent us over there to have some pictures made at the Durham General, and we had three made over there at MacPherson. Then coming on back, Louise said, "We're in trouble. Something's wrong." She had a brother that had a doctor up here at Carolina Memorial, and she wanted to get her a doctor. She said, "Let's don't come back up here anymore. It's too far and everything." So we went to Memorial to Dr. Bryan. And he was just as good as he could be, but he couldn't save her. And , especially when Bryan said, "It's cancer." And it spread. They started the treatment last they started treatment, just drove it down into the lungs. Got to where she couldn't breathe. Just couldn't breathe, I declare. It shut her breath off. It was so quick I couldn't take it in, hardly.

We just met in school. She moved here out of Burlington. Her brother and her, just two children. And they moved from the mill in Burlington. Her daddy was raised up the country here, and he come back down thisaway. And we just met in school and married when we was young. I was seventeen years old. Yes, sir, that's how old I was, about seventeen. We married, and we stayed together about fifty years.

Yes, sir, I did. And then they put me in the other room, and I learned to run stuff in the card room, cards, lappers, drawings, frames, all that stuff. You see, in a mill you start with the lapper, and every machine drafts it down. The card draft about 125. For every inch of rolled lap going in the roll, it comes out over yonder about 125 inches of roll. And for that you go to a drawing, and it's got a draft of about seven or eight on it. that onto a slubber, and it'll draft about thirteen on it. And the spinning draft up to about. . . . You take rope and run it in the back of the spinning roll. There it'll usually draft anywhere from fifteen to twenty, twenty-five, depending on the number of yarns.

Not too many here. They had a good bunch that worked here, ever since I come over there. I don't remember no real sorry folks that would do that much, but it wasn't that big. But around these big mills, they said they was bad about that, and there probably was some here, too. I'm sure there was. But as a young'un I didn't pay much attention to it. And by the time I began to get grown, they were getting away from a lot of it. They done pretty good.

Yes, but now you didn't give them any break; they earned it, but sometimes they'd overdo it, and you'd have to lay them off for a day or two at a time or something like that. They didn't do much of that, and if they did you could break it up by. . . . Say a fellow makes a round. He's doffing twenty frames, say, . Well, he knows this first frame will run four hours. Well, it gets around in three hours, and he's got an hour there he ain't got nothing to do. And they didn't even want him in the mill. They wanted him out. And a whole lot of time [Laughter]

No. Here it's just the management, tough management, just wanted that tight. Now you get some fellows that have been here, they'd have had a fit. You take these folks that come in down here and bought this company out, they stopped that going out of the mill right straight. And it made everybody. . . . A whole lot of them quit and left, and a whole lot of the good help left. And maybe went somewhere else where they're just as tight, but they wouldn't stay here, because they were making less, a little bit, and they. . . . They made less money here than they did a lot of places.

Well, not especially. There was something like that going all the time, some little old tricks and then playing pranks. A new hand would come in down there sometime to work, and they'd send him after a lefthanded monkey wrench, and go down there and get the key to the elevator, and the bobbin stretcher and all that stuff. Somebody that didn't know there was no such thing. Send it to a foreman or something, and he'd send them back. They'd say, "Well, I'll let So-and-so have it" or something, then run him around a little bit. Some dumb folks come to work, but they'd never been in a mill or nothing, you know. They'd play stuff like that. Oh, they just enjoyed themself by doing a thing like that. But they all did seem to have a good time. 2351a5e196

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