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.)

Friday, December 25, 2020

Chad Stuart

https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/obituaries/chad-stuart-pop-star-with- the-1960s-british-singing-duo-chad-and-jeremy-dies-at-79/2020/12/22/b086f1f4-4497-11eb-975c-d17b8815a66d_story.html

 

The mellow side of the British Invasion. Amazingly enough, the Post’s obit features a quote from a 2007 interview published in Lancaster PA’s Intelligencer Journal.

 

Favorite songs:

A Summer Song

Yesterday’s Gone

Distant Shores

Willow Weep For Me

Before And After

Tuesday, December 22, 2020

A must for the Rambling Rhoads blog

Friday, December 18, 2020

Notable Quote #13

A trifecta from the latest column by Michael Gerson, who continues to have a way with words.

 

“Trump’s diversion into deranged conspiracy thinking while national challenges mount is a fitting end to this sad, shabby chapter in the American story. One imagines the other 43 presidents in Walt Disney World’s Hall of Presidents pointing and laughing at their most embarrassing successor.”

 

“Trump combines the ambitions of a despot with the strategic planning and operational competence of a hamster. He is an evil mastermind without the mastermind part.”

 

“State and federal judges swatted away the meritless lawsuits of Trump and his cronies like so many fat, lumbering horseflies.”

 

Unfortunately, there’s a far more serious aspect to all this:

 

“Would our system have held firm in a closer election against a more talented authoritarian plotter? We have no idea. And the openness of the question should terrify us. Democracies tend to end not by revolt from below, but by erosion from above. They are less vulnerable to revolutionaries than they are to demagogues. While we have not lost our republic, we have glimpsed how it might eventually be lost.”