Great song
for these times.
As a fan of a wide variety of popular (and not-so-popular) music from the 1950s (and sometimes even earlier) up through the present, one of my bucket list projects for years has been to put together a list of my 100 favorite songs of all time. At some point I decided that, once I got around to figuring that out, I could put it out on a blog, for the infinitesimally small proportion of the Internet world that might be interested. So, here we are. While the Top 100 will be a major focus, I also plan to post on a variety of other musical (and occasionally non-musical) topics, in which you may or may not be interested. (If a particular posting doesn’t ring your bell, you’re only a few clicks away from a dancing cat video on YouTube.)
Monday, November 21, 2016
Sharon Jones
By the time
I got to the theater Saturday afternoon, I was pretty sure there was going to
be bad news.
I was
driving up to Germantown to meet some friends for a showing of Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them,
listening to The Gamut on the radio. (Wonderful station – check it out on the Internet, or on 820 AM Frederick, 98.3 FM Reston, or 103.5 HD3 Washington if
you’re lucky enough to be within listening range.) I was initially delighted to
hear “100 Days, 100 Nights” by Sharon Jones & The Dap-Kings. The next song
(which I didn’t recognize) also sounded like them, but I decided it was
probably someone else, as even such eclectic stations as The Gamut rarely play
two or more songs in a row by the same performer. That was followed, however,
by Jones’s unmistakable cover version of “This Land Is Your Land”.
Bad sign –
when stations that actually care about music do something like that (The Gamut
actually played 6 Jones songs in a row), it generally means “tribute”, and I did
know that she’d had a recurrence of the pancreatic cancer that had previously been
in remission. Sure enough, after I arrived at the theater and finished typing
her name into the Google search box on my phone, the dreaded “Trending” label
appeared.
Although
Jones left a legacy of several fine albums, her dynamic retro-soul persona was
most compelling when experienced live. I was lucky enough to have seen her at
the Lincoln Theater in February of 2014, one of the first shows I saw after my
retirement the previous month. She joins an almost unbelievably long list of
famous figures, musical and otherwise, that we’ve lost in the past week and a
half – Leonard Cohen, Leon Russell, Robert Vaughan, Gwen Ifill, Mose Allison.
(Apologies to any I missed.)
Favorite
songs:
I Learned
The Hard Way
This Land Is
Your Land
Without A
Heart
Stranger To
My Happiness
Sunday, November 20, 2016
Fearing Trump’s wall, Central Americans rush to cross the U.S. border
Great
article, in terms of describing the nitty-gritty of exactly what happens on the
border, and afterwards. (If you read it, you’ll understand more than about 90%
of American voters.) Far more complex and heartbreaking problem than you might
think from all the political posturing.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)