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Teach the Young: A Frank-ly Kind Act
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This story was brought to my attention by our esteemed alumnus, Roger
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Q: Can someone at New York state tell me why the DOT doesn’t use a better
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Double and last
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Hi all members of our ABC-Wednesday-family.
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Introduction by Alan David Doane:
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Rutherford neighbor Krish Soni is getting started on his Eagle Scout
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*ANIARA:*
*Passing Our Time in a Meaningless Universe *
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The December Solstice arrived in New Zealand at 10:20pm NZDT tonight,
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Hello. I’m new here….just arrived Wednesday, Nov. 20th. I was perfectly
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1, 2, 3, 4: You Can Count On It
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Up the stairs, count the steps1, 2, 3, 41, 2, 3, 41, 2, 3…Crap, it didn’t
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I wrote yesterday about my possibly retiring this space in favor of
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Sunday Round-up
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Wash your mouth out
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Where We Remain Undeveloped
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One implication of the Son of God being born as one of us is that the
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The long, LONG saga of Mia's new chair
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I've been wanting to write about Mia's new chair for a while, because it's
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Tough Day
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A few weeks ago, I turned 38, and I am still under the scrutiny of
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Change
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Group Reading “The only thing we have in this world that is utterly and
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Retro Y'all
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Been doing a lot of jumping lately, but feel I don't have much to show for
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After a few wonderful, sunny days we are back to a somewhat grey and rainy
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U is for UNDER and UP
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I had no idea what to post for this week's celebration of the letter *U*.
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Song of the Week: "Whispering Your Name"
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I just got this into my head a while back. This is Alison Moyet, from her
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No parallel
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ABC Wednesday: The Importance of Being Bored
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When I was growing up, you being bored was your problem that you were
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Parenting Tips
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Posting for the first time in a while to share some parenting advice. So
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Save Up to Half!
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This has got to be my new favorite classic comic book ad. Accordions? Was
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Berowne's 294
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(Also for Three Word Wednesday and ABC Wednesday: "S" is for "shrewish")
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Age is a State of Mind, Somewhere Near Nebraska
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The End of a Long Day
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#Freaking Out -AND!
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Gaze Upon My Works and Snicker, Part 53.
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Year in Review: My favorite music of 2011
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Top Heavy
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Episode 326: The WGA Strike
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One by one, Ken goes over the many issues the WGA is fighting for and why
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I've also been reading Soulsville U.S.A.: The Story Of Stax Records by Rob Bowman, which came out in 1997 during the 40th anniversary of the label; the book was 12 years in the making. It is stunningly detailed, with footnotes indicating, among other things, differing memories of the participants. It also makes me wonder why Estelle Axton isn't in the Rock Hall, for it was her Satellite Record Shop where the sound of early Stax was developed.
On PBS this month, I got to watch Respect Yourself: The Stax Records Story, which, not so incidentally, will be available on DVD on October 2, 2007; I believe it's available through PBS now. Let me put it this way: if you claim to care about American popular music, you should either read the Bowman book or watch the video. Preferably both, although the last third of each, showing the final decline, is a bit tough.
You'll find out about a problematic deal with Atlantic Records that, along with the deaths of Otis Redding (on a plane in the Midwest) and Martin Luther King, Jr. (assassinated in Memphis), nearly killed the label by 1968, but you'll also learn about how Stax managed to have a racially integrated house band that rivaled Motown's The Funk Brothers in segregated Memphis, including Steve Cropper and "Duck" Dunn, names you might recognize from the Blues Brothers band.
Thanks to the hard work of Al Bell, the record producer who had become president of Stax, the label not only survived but thrived. According to the Wikipedia piece: "On August 20, 1972, the Stax label presented a major concert, Wattstax, featured performances by Stax recording artists and humor from rising young comedian Richard Pryor. Known as the "Black Woodstock," Wattstax was hosted by Reverend Jesse Jackson and drew a crowd of over 100,000 attendees, most of them African-American. Wattstax was filmed by motion picture director Mel Stuart (Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory), and a concert film of the event was released to theaters by Columbia Pictures in February 1973." Thus, today is the 35th anniversary of that seminal event.
Some bank dealings, plus an unfortunate arrangement with CBS Records, helped lead to the label's unfortunate first ending in 1975, although it's been recently revived. The final piece is that today is the 65th birthday of "Black Moses", Isaac Hayes. Long before he started recording as a featured performer, he was a session musician. He also wrote a number of songs, many for Sam (Moore) and Dave (Prater); his songwriting partner was often David Porter. Then he became a star, putting out an 18-minute version of Jim Webb's "By the Time I Get To Phoenix" on "Hot Buttered Soul"; a 6:45 single was also released. Of course, he is probably best known, at least in my generation, as the writer/performer of the Oscar-winning theme for the movie Shaft. "That man Shaft is a bad mother---." "Shut your mouth."
Here's a section from the Bowman book: ...by the time Hayes was eighteen months old his mother had passed away in a mental institution; because his father had disappeared sometime before her death, Isaac was raised by his [sharecropper] grandparents...After his grandfather died, when he was eleven, Isaac, his sister and grandmother, together and separately, lived all over North Memphis...When they were cut off from welfare...they used the wood from their outhouse to burn for heat...The next year, the family ran out of food and Isaac's grandmother and sister got sick from hunger. Yet, Hayes survived, and once he discovered music, thrived.
I enjoyed your story of the time share, but vacations with 3 year olds CAN be tough! And y'know, I somehow missed the Stax set! I have some old Motown box set collections (NOT the complete singles series that's coming out currently, at least overseas (I keep reading about them in Mojo and uncut, but haven't seem 'em here)) and a series of Atlantic singles, but no Stax! Nice thought regarding Julie, but her current obsession? Abba! The Greatest Hits--over and over! And I have all the other CDs, but no, just that one, over and over ( I dig Abba the most as well, I should point out. They'd be in my top 10 bands somewhere, beleive it or not...)
I really need to dive into the whole Motown-Harlem black music history, because I suspect there is a line that runs from the great bluesman to early pioneers in jazz into do-wop to "progressive" jazz (like Bitches Brew) to small portions of disco to hip-hop and the like.
FREDERICK KNIGHT had a big Stax hit in the early 1970s with "I've Been Lonely For So Long"; he was born on August 15, 1944.
LARRY GRAHAM, the former bassist of Sly and the Family Song, did a song with Graham Central Station, "I've Been Waiting", which swipes, big-time, "I've Been Lonely"; he was born on August 14, 1946.
3 comments:
I enjoyed your story of the time share, but vacations with 3 year olds CAN be tough! And y'know, I somehow missed the Stax set! I have some old Motown box set collections (NOT the complete singles series that's coming out currently, at least overseas (I keep reading about them in Mojo and uncut, but haven't seem 'em here)) and a series of Atlantic singles, but no Stax! Nice thought regarding Julie, but her current obsession? Abba! The Greatest Hits--over and over! And I have all the other CDs, but no, just that one, over and over ( I dig Abba the most as well, I should point out. They'd be in my top 10 bands somewhere, beleive it or not...)
I really need to dive into the whole Motown-Harlem black music history, because I suspect there is a line that runs from the great bluesman to early pioneers in jazz into do-wop to "progressive" jazz (like Bitches Brew) to small portions of disco to hip-hop and the like.
Another August STAX coincidence:
FREDERICK KNIGHT had a big Stax hit in the early 1970s with "I've Been Lonely For So Long"; he was born on August 15, 1944.
LARRY GRAHAM, the former bassist of Sly and the Family Song, did a song with Graham Central Station, "I've Been Waiting", which swipes, big-time, "I've Been Lonely"; he was born on August 14, 1946.
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