Monday, July 21, 2014

RESULTS OF THE MASSACRE, OR BATTLE OF THE BANDS XXVI






OK, here we go with the results for BATTLE OF THE BANDS XXVI. Before I get into all of that I want to reminisce a little bit about the past year.

 Mr. McCarthy and I have been at this BOTB thing for a full year now. Wow! I can hardly believe it. There have been times when I’ve been a bit discouraged and even thought about quitting, but then I’ve realized that, at least recently, BOTB is about all I post (occasionally, I sneak something else in, but for the most part, it’s BOTB and the RESULTS posts), so I really wouldn’t want to quit and basically give up blogging altogether.

I do want to extend a great big thank you to those of you who have been loyal followers of this little experiment. Most of your comments crack me up. I appreciate that you keep coming back even when I give you something like ‘Grupo Rush’ or this past BATTLE featuring the always interesting Patti Smith. I enjoy your honest votes and the candor of your comments, so, please keep ‘em coming.

This past BATTLE really wasn’t much of a fight. Alvin Lee pretty much mopped the floor with Patti Smith in their respective versions of ’Hey Joe’. As most of you probably know, just about everybody and their dog has covered ‘Hey Joe’, so there are a lot of different styles, voices, and genres out there. I like to give you as much diversity as possible in my BATTLES, hence this paring. I thought by putting a female up against a male, a hard rocker, up against the beat poet Patti likes to think of herself as, was pretty diverse. Apparently, that kind of backfired on me here because this was a total and complete shut-out (YES, even I am not voting for Patti). I can see clearly that had I put Alvin against Gary Moore it might have been more of a ‘horse race’. From my perspective they were fairly similar, so I went for the diversity.

Ah well, ya live and learn. I’m not really bummed about the shut-out. I did enjoy your comments about Patti. They tended to be a bit diverse themselves, even if you all did agree – YOU didn’t like her ‘Hey Joe’ at all. That even goes for the few of you who are normally Patti fans.

The Final Tally (including my vote)  - 13 votes for Alvin Lee
                                                       0 votes for Patti Smith

We’ll be back in August – kicking off a new year, and there are some surprises in store. I personally, have a theme planned for the entire month of August. Care to give a guess what it might be? I’ll even give you a hint. It’s summed up in one word; a word that has at times been applied to me. – Now, be nice, but leave me your guesses in the comment box, and we’ll see you back here August 1 to start a Brand New Year of BATTLE OF THE BANDS.

After all this talk about Gary Moore I'm gonna post one of my favorites of his here for your listening pleasure, if you have the time.

Saturday, July 19, 2014

A LITTLE MOORE FOR YOUR LISTENING PLEASURE OR MAYBE NOT

On my last BATTLE OF THE BANDS, I wasn't sure which artists I wanted to pit against each other. Now, I see that it might have been a more interesting BATTLE, if I had Put Gary Moore up against Alvin Lee. Two similiar version and yet different. Well, if you scroll down and view and VOTE on that BOTB, you will see that I didn't do that. BUT in light of the current sad events in the world this week, here's something by Mr. Moore that you can enjoy until the 21st, when I'll be back with my vote and the final tally for BOTB XXVI.


Do you know the story behind this song? If not google it. Then look a little deeper into who was on that flight and who they really were. It's pretty interesting - feel free to read SAD. Makes you kind of wonder, doesn't it.

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

BATTLE OF THE BANDS XXVI



Ya ever have that feeling like you’re on top of the world. Like your life is just clicking along and you know exactly where you are going and what you’re doing. Well, if you have, or do – stop it now. Every time I feel like that, if I take time to really look around and really listen, sense what’s going on, I would clearly see that the bridge it out up ahead. Yep, it’s those times when I know I’m heading for a fall.

Anyway…it was a little like that today when I realized that I needed to put together my BATTLE OF THE BANDS XXVI. XXVI (24); Are you kidding me? We’ve, or at least I’ve been at this for a whole year, Carp! Now I don’t mean to imply that I’m headed for a fall or anything like that, other than the mental collapse I had this morning when I realized that I’ve been blogging about essentially the same ole thing for a year. Actually, I’ve digressed to the point where that’s about all I blog about anymore. That has got to change.

Anyway…
I had kind of planned a revolutionary post for July1 in honor of the 4th of July, Independence Day herein the US. I guess you all know that didn’t happen, but I’ll give you my Revolutionary post today. Let’s start with the thought that there are a lot of revolutions going on all around us. Most times we don’t recognize them as revolutionary until long past the initial event. My song choices today go back to something like that. But, let’s start with a movie clip. I love this movie, although I admit I hate to see Maureen cheating on John with Jimmy. This from ‘Mr. Hobbs Takes a Vacation’.




 
Are you still with me? At WOODSTOCK Jimi Hendricks was the closing act. Shame really because a lot of people had bailed – literally. His final number was this song. It kind of became a song of the revolution that was brewing. Funny when you think about it, ‘cause it’s a song about a man who murders his woman cause he caught her with another man. Ha! A battle as old as time. Now I have no doubt that if I posted Jimi’s version of this jaunty little ditty he would shut out just about anybody else, so I’m not gonna do that. This song has been covered by so many different people I couldn’t possible list them all; as a matter of fact here’s what Wiki-wacky says about ‘Hey Joe’:

"Hey Joe" is an American popular song from the 1960s that has become a rock standard and as such has been performed in many musical styles by hundreds of different artists since it was first written.[2][3][4] "Hey Joe" tells the story of a man who is on the run and planning to head to Mexico after shooting his wife.[5] However, diverse credits and claims have led to confusion as to the song's true authorship and genesis.[

Diversity is what I’m all about when it comes to BATTLE OF THE BANDS; so, first let’s hear from Patti Smith. Patti added an unusual lead in on this song referring to some other historical revolutionary type stuff. Sorry if her style offends, but I believe that’s pretty much, what she’s all about.



Next up, (this is a hard choice for me – I’ll tell you it’s between Gary Moore and Alvin Lee – excuse me for a minute while I go flip a coin). OK, I’m back and Alvin Lee won the coin toss (actually, I tossed an erasure that had red print on one side – Moore got the red print and Lee not – you probably didn’t really need to know this, but hey I’m in a chatty mood and in my office, trust me, there ain’t no money up here).

Here’s Mr. Alvin Lee



Now, I know some of you rule breakers will want to vote for Jimi anyway, but come on play along. We all know that Jimi would have it hands down, if he showed up to this party. I kind of hope he and Alvin are somewhere having a laugh over that.

Thinking about Alvin Lee reminds me of a funny 'Craig's List' story about selling my car in the islands to a man  named Alvin Lee. Remind me and maybe one day I'll tell you that one.

Now you know what to do and how to do it. When you finish up here head on over to Ferret-Faced Fascist Freinds the home of ‘the smartest man alive’ and see what he has posted for BOTB 24 (if his post isn’t up yet let it percolate, he’ll eventually show). Once there he’ll give you the links to the other participants in this little game.
 
I’ll be back on the 21’s (or thereabouts) with the results of this Battle and my vote. See ya then!





Wednesday, July 9, 2014

RESULTS - GOOD, BAD, OR INDIFFERENT AND botb #23






I'm two days late with my BOTB results post, not completely surprised, are you?
This may be because my results basically have not been good. Sees this 'dumb blonde' can't pass a 'blood test', I have to keep retaking them, and I'm getting darn tired of it. I promised myself that I'm not going to whine about my health anymore, but just know I'm having a hard time keeping my head above water.

To those of you who commented on my 'I Remember Momma' post. Thank you. I really did appreciate your sentiments, I just was not emotionally able to respond. I did get a chuckle out of some of the stories about your mom's and am glad to hear that I'm not the only disrespectful,name-calling, dumb, child out there.

Now onto the task at hand. The results for BOTB #23. It appears most of you did not like Woody Guthrie's version of his own tune 'This Land is Your Land'. Perhaps if I had posted the version by Peter, Paul, and Mary who have far better voices and sing a great harmony, but alas I went for the direct opposites with Woody and his folksy original nasally singing around the campfire sound, and Ms. Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings and their more jazzed up bluesy version.

I have to tell you I cast my vote for Ms. Jones and the Dap Kings also. They did a super job of making an 'American Classic' sound like a true blue American Classic'.

BTW, I went to the Urban Dictionary to see just exactly what a 'dap' is and they say; it's the equivalent of a 'fist bump'. so, there you have it.

The final tally, including my vote is:

                   Woody Guthrie                      1 vote 
                   Sharon Jones & the DK         11 votes

A special thank you to Donna Hole for casting that lone vote for Woody. When I host a shut-out, I don't feel as though I've done a very good job on matching up my combatants.

I hope to see you back here on the 15th for another BATTLE OF THE BANDS. This next BATTLE will be number 24, can you believe it. I've been at this for a whole year (or will be, if I make it until then).

Saturday, July 5, 2014

I Remember Momma - A Serenade in the Moonlight


 I don't know why blogger won't let me eliminate this big space, but please keep scrolling down there is more.        

Serenade in the moonlight

When I was a kid that wacky duo I call my parents used to whisk me away each summer for a couple of weeks up to the Minnesota north woods were we would stay at a lakeside resort. Please keep in mind I’m talking resort as in a few somewhat primitive cabins on a hillside overlooking a lake, not remotely like any Club Med or fancy spa experience, the word resort might conjure up. The cabin we rented had a large open kitchen/general gathering room, two bedrooms with curtains for doors, and a bath with a shower stall resembling something from a WWI barracks. The cabins were gathered around a big old knotty pine lodge. The lodge played host to the all-important bar curving along one wall, a scarred green felt pool table, well-worn floorboards used to accommodating the feet of running children as well as dancing adults, and that icon of days gone by; the ‘juke box’.

Daddy was an avid fisherman, and Momma did more than indulge his habit. The two of them would be up at the crack of before dawn almost every day, and head out in the boat for those early rising fish. Once I was deemed old enough to be left alone, they let me sleep in. They would be back for breakfast just about the time I was rolling over for the second or third time. I knew the minute Momma’s foot hit the dock, because she would whistle up the hill to me, signaling I had better be out of bed. My parents employed a distinctive whistle, only about twelve notes which they used to call to each other and me. To this day I can’t recreate it, heck I can barely whistle one note, but that doesn’t mean that I didn’t recognize it, and know that I should be looking for them, and they were looking for me.

For some strange reason, or maybe I was simply born under a lucky star, but that fish or die gene did not pass into my DNA. I was impatient just sitting out there in the boat, holding my pole still, waiting, and hoping some poor unsuspecting little fishy would mistake my drowned worm for dinner. I either wanted to be zooming around the lake in the boat with the throttle of our old outboard motor full open, or be in the water frolicking around like the mermaid I thought I was. When forced to endure an afternoon of ‘fishing torture’, while the blazing sun reflected off a perfectly lovely lake, that any normal person would rather be cooling off in, staring at the end of a nylon line as it enters the water, hoping for the slightest jiggle, I immediately started plotting ways to be brought back to shore. My plan was to return early enough to catch the afternoon ‘swim meet’ at the end of the dock with the other captive children of fishing addicted adults. One afternoon, in maybe my eleventh or twelfth year I devised a clever plan of annoyance through constant, meaningless conversation, hoping 
Momma and Daddy would relent and return me to my own generation.

Remember I said I was either eleven or twelve. (You know that age when you have just enough information to be your own worst enemy, and have developed the unwitting art of over sharing to the extent that you constantly run afoul of adult authority.) Also, note that I intentionally set myself on a direct path to annoy my parents. So, at the point when Momma told me to be quiet for the third time, because I was scaring the fish away, I blurted out the first thing that popped into my head. Unfortunately, the tables had taken a drastic turn, and I was seriously annoyed. I then told Momma, “Oh, you be quiet yourself, you old walrus.” The words had no sooner left my mouth when my sun soaked brain kicked back in, and I knew I was in deep goo.

Momma was normally a mild mannered lady who I know loved me more than words could ever tell, but she had a teeny little bit of a temper. Often, I could say silly things, and get away with it because, it would tickle her funny bone more than set off her disrespectful radar. Not so today. She slowly turned her head and gave me ‘the look’. There is nothing that strikes fear into an eleven or twelve year old girl more than getting’ the look’, from her mother. The fight or flight instinct immediately kicked in, and I knew with Momma, flight was the only possible answer.  Flight, while in laying in the bow of a sixteen foot aluminum fishing boat, bobbing serenely somewhere far off shore, in a very large lake, really isn’t practical, so I braced myself for the onslaught of Momma wrath.

At this point in my story it’s probably important to let you know that I’m not up for divulging any more  incriminating evidence about myself, but I am old enough to have been raised in a time when it was thought that ‘sparring the rod would definitely spoil the child’. Yes, I was spanked. On this day, in that little boat, in the middle of that beautiful lake, Momma definitely did not appreciate being called an ‘old walrus’. ‘The look’ was immediately replaced by a glare that screamed at me, ‘run for it’. She stepped up on one of the benches in the boat between her seat and where I was laying, yanked her fiberglass fishing pole out of the water, and gave me a whack. I, of course, screamed as though she had cut off my leg. Then she gave me another whack. At this point the boat is dangerously rocking back and forth, taking on large splashes of water over the sides, while Daddy is trying to calm the situation. Momma is having none of it.

We hadn’t noticed another boat fishing not too far off. They did take note of this crazy woman standing on the seat, frantically waving her pole in the air, and they decided to come see if assistance was needed. Stopping at a safe distance, using proper fishing etiquette, they hailed our vessel. In an instant, the way only a parent embarrassed by their actions toward unruly children in public can achieve, Momma looked up and smiled allowing her pole to sway gently in the soft summer breeze as though she were simply fluttering a scarf to see which direction the wind was blowing. My folks and these would be good Samaritans exchanged pleasantries about the conditions and then they went on their way offering no help whatsoever to my predicament. I must assume that they had unruly children of their own, or were as crazy as Momma, because they easily accepted the entire situation as though nothing were amiss. Fortunately for me, this took the wind out of Momma’s sails, and she stepped down off the seat to continue fishing as though nothing more had happened than she was swatting away a pesky bee away from her delightful daughter. I, on the other hand, learned two valuable lessons; never ever call your Momma an unsavory name while trapped in a small space, and a whack with a fiberglass fishing pole really stings.

What I recall most about those summers up at the lake, was the fact that there was no TV, telephone, or other worldly distractions. Each evening after dinner we would be down at the lodge enjoying the company of the other vacationing folks. The kids were usually fighting to fit their coins into the juke box and make their selections, until the adults chased us off and started playing their own favorites. This is where I was introduced to the old standards, and that famous big band sound, in tunes like, ‘Canadian Sunset’, ‘Stranger on the Shore’, ‘Harbor Lights’ and my favorite ‘Moonlight Serenade’. Us, kids would then head out onto the dock to listen to those great melodies drift out over the water. We were pretty far up north, and on these balmy nights the sun didn’t begin to set until about nine PM and it was twilight until at least ten-thirty or eleven. You could lay out on the wooden dock and still feel the warmth of the sun that had been absorbed in those old water worn planks while your thoughts drifted off. To this day I can almost hear the soft waves lapping up against the beams and feel the sway of that rickety old dock as the stars just begin to peak out of a violet sky.

My favorite song then and now; Glen Miller and his ‘Moonlight Serenade’. I could be sitting out on the end of that dock listening to the dreamlike sounds of this music wafting over the water until a big ole moon rose up in the night sky casting its searchlight beacon over the softly rippling lake. As a very young girl, I recall feeling surely it didn’t get any more romantic than this. I would imagine that one day I would be sitting at the end of that dock with someone who loved me, their arm gently draped around my shoulders while softly humming along to this sweet melody.

I would be out there dreaming of the romance that would be a part of my future until I heard those equally sweet twelve notes of my parents whistle, calling me off the dock, and up the hill. We normally entered the cabin in the dark, hoping not to attract any of the monstrous mosquitoes that the Minnesota north-woods is famous for. I made sure that there was a small gap left in the curtain that hung from my window, as I tried in vain to remain awake keeping an eye on that ole moon as it rose high up in the sky and sulked off till morning.

Today as I rifle through the pages of my memory, I think of the many fantastic vacations I’ve enjoyed and exciting places I have lived. I spent three years on an island in the Caribbean, enjoyed the exciting life of Colorado Ski Resorts, and yes I’ve even seen the inside of a Club Med and visited a fancy spa or two. It was all a great time and I wouldn’t change a thing, but there is nothing that can compare to those summers I spent in the company of that wacky duo. No memories that generate the same warm feelings. No places that I picture as vividly or am taken back to as swiftly as my weeks spent in the north-woods on the shores of the lake. I never hear the first few notes of ‘Moonlight Serenade’ without being instantly transported back in time to a more gentle era when great romance was a possibility, Momma and Daddy were still alive, parents still spanked their children, and we all felt safe, and knew that we were loved.

Happy Birthday Momma, this memory is for you. I miss you today as I have for all the years since you passed from this life. I will be listening for that sweet whistle until we meet again.