I'm on the bus to Syracuse, where Myles will pick me up and the action ensues. Funny to say that it has been nearly a year since I had my own GOTV.
Free WiFi on the bus sort of changes the meaning of classic road songs, don't you think? The beauty of being on the road was it's solitude. You are cut off from everything else -- just you, maybe some friends, great tunes, and the landscape.
There is no shortage of classic road songs. I humbly submit these to you:
Canned Heat - On The Road Again
Neil Young - Roll Another Number (For the Road)
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
To Maria, I give everything that was good
This not a song about the heartbreakee, it's a dedication to the heartbreaker. I don't spend a lot of time musing about my own breakup from last year -- whatever "situation" there was has ironed itself out, as appropriate -- but I can't help but think this is the best breakup song there is. It's like Jon-Rae is saying, Oh, Maria, where do I start?
Relationship history is full of baggage. Does it represent my own? Sort of, but if only from the feeling in JRF's voice. Being a great song by Jon-Rae, whom we would listen to at the right moments... that might have something to do with it. I'm not wistful at all, and since moving on I've been happy -- probably happier than I've let on. She's worth it.
Enjoy this one, please, it's top notch.
Jon-Rae Fletcher - Oh, Maria
Relationship history is full of baggage. Does it represent my own? Sort of, but if only from the feeling in JRF's voice. Being a great song by Jon-Rae, whom we would listen to at the right moments... that might have something to do with it. I'm not wistful at all, and since moving on I've been happy -- probably happier than I've let on. She's worth it.
Enjoy this one, please, it's top notch.
Jon-Rae Fletcher - Oh, Maria
Saturday, October 17, 2009
Saturday night special
Another special twosome! Well, it's Saturday night, and not a particularly unique one, so here goes:
Bon Jovi - Someday I'll Be Saturday Night
Somehow that Bon Jovi song hasn't aged as well as this one:
The Grateful Dead - One More Saturday Night
Bon Jovi - Someday I'll Be Saturday Night
Somehow that Bon Jovi song hasn't aged as well as this one:
The Grateful Dead - One More Saturday Night
Labels:
Bon Jovi,
Grateful Dead,
late night,
mundane,
Saturday
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Early to bed twofer
I just might be asleep before 11:10 -- which would mean a whopping nine hours of sleep! A couple of sleep-themed tunes for tonight, albeit with completely different meanings:
Semisonic - Singing in My Sleep
The Vines - I'm Only Sleeping
Semisonic - Singing in My Sleep
The Vines - I'm Only Sleeping
Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Don't Eat the Yellow Snow (Brand)
Another late night, doing something that isn't very hard that I should have done hours ago. It's about the Japanese milk producer, Snow Brand, and just how freakin' terrible they were in handling a food safety crisis about a decade ago. Corporate communications, or lack thereof, was among the problems. Neat case study, actually, and there's some really good stuff on the web about it.
It turns out some valves in the plant had been contaminated and that made about 13,000 people sick. Frank Zappa has some advice on the matter:
Frank Zappa - Don't Eat the Yellow Snow
It turns out some valves in the plant had been contaminated and that made about 13,000 people sick. Frank Zappa has some advice on the matter:
Frank Zappa - Don't Eat the Yellow Snow
Labels:
Corporate Communications,
Frank Zappa,
late night,
negligence
Monday, October 12, 2009
A Democratic Manifesto: Like a Bob Dylan protest song
REP. GRAYSON: Comparing what Joe Wilson did to what I did -- it's not the same. What I did is like a Bob Dylan protest song. What Joe Wilson did is like a belch.
[Crooks and Liars Videocafe]
One would have thought that more of today's leaders—if they're somewhere between age 50 and 65, and almost all of them are—grew up in a time of social upheaval and change. You would think there would be lawmakers whose political senses were sparked by Bob Dylan and Pete Seeger and Sly Stone and maybe even Bruce Springsteen. Most young liberals, including me, derive inspiration in protest songs, songs of change, songs that confront what's wrong with the world we live in. If we are reaching back and finding meaning in these songs, shouldn't the youth of that era be doubly influenced?
Labels:
Alan Grayson,
Bob Dylan,
Crooks and Liars,
Folk Music,
Health Care,
Joe Wilson,
Meg Whitman,
MSNBC,
Music
Thursday, October 8, 2009
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
Chocolate barrel politics?
Not money-filled briefcases. Not lobbyists and corporate contributions. Not influence peddlers and CEOs. Why, the way to a Senator's heart is chocolate! Quick, someone alert the movers and shakers in DC! Capitol Hill newsrag The Hill dropped this bombshell:
...Democrats have practiced small random acts of kindness toward Rockefeller, though it’s not entirely clear if they have any ulterior motives. For example, Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.), a member of Finance, gave Rockefeller his chocolate dessert at a lunch meeting last week.
Labels:
Health Care,
Jay Rockefeller,
John Kerry,
Muddy Waters,
Tom DeLay
Monday, October 5, 2009
Lisa Says
Sometimes I wonder if I would have been a Velvet Underground fan at the time they were recording. I seriously doubt it, it was probably too outside the mainstream, especially if I had been living somewhere other than New York at the time (and I have absolutely no reason to believe I would have been living in NYC). What other bands do you like that you might not have appreciated when they were still active?
The Velvet Underground - Lisa Says
The Velvet Underground - Lisa Says
Goodnight
Still testing out this embedding thing, but I think I've got it down. You can download the song, or you can listen with the flash player (or both!).
A little goodnight from Etta James. Her advice is real.
Etta James - Do Right Woman, Do Right Man
A little goodnight from Etta James. Her advice is real.
Etta James - Do Right Woman, Do Right Man
Sunday, October 4, 2009
Snobbery with a side of that icky, emo-loving feeling
I find myself enjoying a Bright Eyes song. This feels horrible. How many times did I dismiss him as a poseurish emo fraud? Ugh, that's before you add in the fact he was a child prodigy -- and I hate child prodigies. But the song, Four Winds, from the Cassadaga album, well... it's good. Love the fiddlin'.
My seventeenth attempt at sharing/embedding media is below:
Bright Eyes - Four Winds
My seventeenth attempt at sharing/embedding media is below:
Bright Eyes - Four Winds
Labels:
Bright Eyes,
Child Prodigies,
Fiddle,
Snobbery,
Violin
Thursday, October 1, 2009
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)