Great
swingin’ summer song, which also provided the title for Kevin Spacey’s 2004
Darin biopic. The movie wasn’t a bad effort, but had the misfortune of opening
just a few months after Ray (better
movie, more influential musical figure), which probably contributed to its
grossing only around $8M worldwide (according to IMDb).
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.)
Saturday, April 12, 2014
#74 Satellite – Guster (2006)
The first
time I heard Guster live was several years ago at WXPN’s XpoNential Music Festival, held every July right across the Delaware River from downtown Philly.
They were the final act Sunday night, but there was a thunderstorm earlier in
the evening, so I adjourned to my hotel and listened to the remainder of the
show on the radio. Suitably impressed, I picked up one of their CDs, and
several more later.
I did
actually see them on October 23, 2010, a date which for other reasons will live
in infamy. (The Phils lost the deciding game of the National League Championship
Series to San Francisco.) The band came on stage at DAR Constitution Hall to
the strains of “Hail to the Chief” (which I thought was cute, given the venue),
and everyone naturally stood up. I was a little surprised that nearly everyone
remained standing after that, for pretty much the entire show. Same thing
(without the fanfare) when I later saw them at Wolf Trap.
They’ve
done a lot of great stuff over the years – it was tough to choose between
“Satellite”, “Careful”, “Amsterdam”, and “One Man Wrecking Machine” (which was
apparently used in the movie Disturbia).
Friday, April 11, 2014
April 10, 2014 – Nationals 7, Marlins 1 – Nationals Park
Umpires:
HP: Toby Basner. 1B: D.J. Reyburn. 2B: Jeff Kellogg. 3B: Dan Bellino.
Weather:
67 degrees, sunny.
Wind: 6
mph, Out to LF.
T: 2:53.
Att:
20,869.
Odd 4:05
starting time, small crowd, great weather. The afternoon did not start
auspiciously when I was unable to find parking in the “west” parking lot at the
Shady Grove Metro station. (Buzzed the parking attendant so I could at least
exit without having to pay.) After some agonizing, I finally decided to park in
the large Rockville Town Square garage (“Garage A”) off 355 and walk to the
Rockville Metro station. This turned out pretty well – I still got to the park
around 3:30, and did remember to get off at Rockville on my way home. Was
originally planning to grab a couple of the wonderful tacos from the Taqueria
sometime mid-game, but wound up just getting a slice of pizza in order to miss
as little of the game as possible. (After having a Curly W pretzel earlier, I
decided that if the Nats had a special container that fans could use all season
to recycle excess pretzel salt, the District might have enough to keep their
roads passable all next winter.)
The game
did not start out all that well, either. Christian Yelich led off for the
Marlins by lining a single to center off Strasburg, and promptly stole second.
Sandy Leon’s throw went into center field, and after McLouth overran it Yelich
took an extra base – runner on third, no outs. Fortunately, the #2 batter hit a
comebacker right to Strasburg. Not clear whether Yelich thought it was going
through or believed that the Nats would just concede the run, but he broke for
the plate and had no chance in the ensuing rundown, which basically ended the
threat.
The Nats
didn’t break through until the third inning. Marlins starter Tom Koehler
temporarily lost the plate with two out, walking Rendon and falling behind 3-0
to Jayson Werth. Werth got the 3-0 green light and didn’t miss the cripple,
giving Washington a 2-0 lead.
Both
Strasburg and Koehler put up goose eggs for the middle three innings. The Nats
threatened in the fourth – Harper led off with a single, and went all the way
from first to third on a hit-and-run ground out to second by Desmond, but Leon
and Strasburg took called third strikes to end the inning.
Meanwhile,
Strasburg was masterful, fanning a total of 12 Marlins. He finally ran into
some trouble in the seventh – Marcell Osuna hit a solo homer with one out, and
a two-out walk to normally inoffensive Marlins catcher Jeff Mathis ended his
afternoon.
The Nats
bullpen, which has struggled at times during the year, came up big today in the
tense 2-1 game. Jerry Blevins retired pinch-hitter Reed Johnson to end the
seventh, then fanned Yelich and Derek Dietrich to start the eighth. Rookie Aaron
Barrett was then called on to face the righthanded-hitting and always dangerous
Giancarlo Stanton. With the Marlins one big swing away from tying the game,
Barrett struck out Stanton to end the inning.
The
tension was mounting as Soriano started to warm in the bullpen, which did not
seem to fill several fans in Section 416 with a high degree of confidence.
Fortunately, Miami turned to the recently-recalled (and wonderfully named)
Arquimedes Caminaro to pitch the bottom of the eighth. With Rendon (leadoff double)
on third and Werth (single and stolen base) on second with one out, Caminaro
proceeded to walk pinch-hitter Kevin Frandsen and Bryce Harper on 4 pitches
each, forcing in a run. After a mound visit by the Marlins’ pitching coach,
Caminaro did blow a fastball by Desmond, followed by a second one that he took
for a ball. The third pitch proved to be the charm, as Desmond knocked it out
to center for the Nats’ second slam in as many games.
Soriano’s
2 Ks in the ninth brought the whiff total to 17 for the game, which tied a Nats record for a nine-inning contest.
Thursday, April 10, 2014
What Buzz Band at the Lab School, 4/5/2014
The pride
and joy of Westat and Ijamsville, What Buzz Band, came out of winter
hibernation recently to play their annual benefit for the Lab School of Washington. There was a nice crowd, and apparently a good time was had by all.
For some reason the atmosphere and setup, with the dance area directly in front
of the stage, reminded me of summer evening shows at Rockville Town Square
(minus the need to bring your own chairs).
The band’s
two sets featured a few Tim Kirkner originals (“Paris Portal”, “Save Me Too”),
plus a lot of well-chosen covers. Springsteen’s “Atlantic City” got things off
on the right foot, followed by versions of classics by such luminaries as Al
Green (“Take Me to the River”), Aretha Franklin (“Chain of Fools”), Bob Dylan (“Things
Have Changed”), and Bill Withers (“Use Me”). Other highlights included Steely
Dan’s “Black Friday”, which filled the dance floor, “(What’s So Funny ‘Bout)
Peace, Love, and Understanding” (which ended the first set on a high note), “Congo
Square”, and the penultimate “Fever”.
WBB has
promised another appearance sometime this summer – keep an eye on their site
(or better yet join their mailing list) for details.
Monday, April 7, 2014
Keb’ Mo’ at Strathmore, 4/3/2014
Along with
Casey Wasner on percussion and Tom Shinness on various string things (including
a harp guitar), Keb’ Mo’ brought his acoustic tour to the Music Center at
Strathmore this past Thursday evening. Another great show for Keb’ (we had seen
him at the same venue a few years earlier), featuring such classics as “Rita”, “Soon
As I Get Paid”, “Suitcase”, and “Shave Yo’ Legs”, as well as cuts from his
upcoming BLUESAmericana album,
including “The Worst Is Yet to Come” and the instant classic “The Old Me Better”.
We had excellent aisle seats (115-116 in Row K), with the added bonus of no
inordinately tall people right in front of us.
April 6, 2014 – Nationals 2, Braves 1 – Nationals Park
Weather:
50 degrees, sunny.
Wind: 7
mph, Out to LF.
T: 2:44.
Att:
34,327.
Umpires: HP: Doug Eddings. 1B: Marvin Hudson. 2B: Cory Blaser. 3B: Jim Joyce.
Section
416, Row C, Seat 1 (in our regular seats for the first time)
First
“normal” trip to Nats Park, following the rained-out exhibition game vs. the
Tigers and the home opener on Friday the 4th. The drive down was
uneventful and took the predictable 35 minutes, with the former “HH” lot off
South Capitol St. under the freeway still in operation and still $10. (The lot
was originally operated by the Nationals, but taken over by a different
operator starting last year.) Walked down to Subway and, instead of my usual
roast beef, picked up the “$5 Footlong of the Month” (Turkey Breast and Black
Forest Ham). Sunny, but colder than I had expected – really wished I had
brought gloves (for warmth, not for catching foul balls).
Our friend
Jeff was back, heckling the umpires and leading a couple of Charges. Don’t think
he made his traditional announcement of the elapsed time of the National
Anthem, however.
No line
for the men’s room today, but there was a fairly long line for pretzel bites –
naturally, there is no eCash express line at the Pretzel stand. Was happy that
the Nats featured a video montage to Pharrell Williams’s “Happy” in the middle
of the sixth and again in the middle of the eighth. (Would make a great
postgame victory song as well …)
By Sunday,
the euphoria generated by the season-opening sweep of the Mets had pretty much
vanished. The two losses to the Braves featured almost no Nats offense, a shaky
Strasburg start on Saturday, and a “lost at the plate” Bryce Harper. Worse,
Zim’s sore shoulder and throwing woes had resurfaced, contributing to the
Saturday loss and keeping him out of the Sunday game. Topping things off,
Hairston went on the DL with a strained oblique.
Sunday
turned out to be another pitcher’s duel, mirroring the Friday game. Nats
scratched out a run in the top of first on a Rendon bunt single, a single by
Kevin Frandsen (starting in LF for the first time in seven years), and a Dan
Uggla throwing error, but their offense was silent against Alex Wood for the
next 5 innings. Meanwhile, Taylor Jordan pitched an excellent game against the
Braves, throwing groundballs all over the place, getting out of a bases-loaded
jam in the 4th and allowing only one run in the 6th after
the inning started with Braves on second and third with no outs. First base ump
Marvin Hudson was in the middle of close calls all day – Williams challenged
his out call on Desmond in the bottom of the first, but Hudson’s ruling was
upheld on replay.
The Nats
took the lead for good leading off the bottom of the seventh, when Wood served
up a hittable first-pitch fastball to exactly the wrong guy, and Desmond
deposited it deep into the left-field stands. Blevins and Clippard took care of
the Braves in the eighth. Things got a little uncomfortable in the bottom of
the ninth with consecutive two-out infield singles, but Soriano finally fanned
Heyward to send most of the crowd home happy.
Saturday, April 5, 2014
Favorite 3 Baseball Songs
Legendary
Washington area radio DJ Weasel, formerly of WHFS, now does a weekly three-hour program (Weasel’s Wild Weekend) on Towson University’s AAA station WTMD (Friday
nights at 7, repeated Saturday at noon). His program always focuses on one or
more themes, and last night he devoted the entire show to songs that were more
or less about baseball. (The Beatles’ “I’m A Loser” fits into the “less”
category, but close enough.)
This wound
up being a nice way to take some of the sting out of the Nationals’
disappointing loss to the reviled Braves in their home opener in the afternoon.
Although the world doesn’t contain three hours of truly great songs about
baseball, it does possess enough that are at least interesting and fun.
At any
rate, the show inspired me to come up with a very short list of favorite
baseball songs, all of which were included in Weasel’s show.
#3 Take Me Out to the Ball Game -- Bruce
Springstone (1982)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8D3PqhHx5eM
I had
heard this song back in the day (almost certainly on Weasel’s WHFS show), but
until checking Google last night I hadn’t realized that it was a
Baltimore/Washington area product. Featured musicians include Washington
power-pop legend Tommy Keane on guitar and the renowned Ron Holloway on
saxophone. Baltimore’s Tom Chalkley does a great Springsteen impersonation, and
to top things off, it was engineered at Hit & Run Studios (how appropriate)
right here in Rockville.
#2 A Dying Cubs Fan's Last Request -- Steve
Goodman (1984)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7xBxZGQ1dJk
To the
extent that Steve Goodman is known at all, it’s as the writer of “City of New
Orleans”, which was popularized by Arlo Guthrie and recorded by many others. Goodman
wrote and recorded quite a few other great songs during his short lifetime, but
this one is definitely a must-hear for any baseball fan, of the Cubbies or
otherwise.
Trivia
note: among Goodman’s high-school classmates in Chicago was one Hillary Rodham.
#1 When My Buckner Moment Comes -- Dan Bern
(2012)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ef5mlTzlErEhttp://danbern.bandcamp.com/track/when-my-buckner-moment-comes (lyrics, audio only)
I heard
this one for the first time last night, promptly added it to my iTunes
collection, and have played it half a dozen times or so since. Calling it a
great baseball song wouldn’t be quite accurate – it’s a great song about life,
with baseball as a reference point. (Apologies to Katie and other Red Sox fans for dredging up any painful memories.)
April 4, 2014 – Braves 2, Nationals 1 – Nationals Park (home opener)
Weather:
55 degrees, overcast.
Wind: 5
mph, R to L.
T: 3:03.
Att:
42,834.
Umpires:
HP: Cory Blaser. 1B: Jim Joyce. 2B: Doug Eddings. 3B: Marvin Hudson.
Section
129, Row TT, Seat 17 (decided to splurge on lower-level seats for the home
opener – 4 seats on the aisle in the next-to-last row of Section 129, on the
first-base side behind the Nats dugout)
In what
was becoming a theme, the weather forecast for Friday’s home opener was
unsettled at best for most of the past week. By Thursday, it seemed that there
might at least be a window of dryness in the afternoon that would allow the
game to be played. Things actually turned out for the best, as there was no
rain until much later in the day. It wasn’t exactly warm, but the lack of wind
in our seats made for a reasonably comfortable experience, although it felt
chillier in the more-exposed lower concourse.
Since we
were planning to meet at Nando’s Peri-Peri at 11:00 for an early lunch, I
headed down early on Metro, beating the big rush. The Weekend section of the
Washington Post featured a nice write-up (and map, although unfortunately the
latter didn’t appear in my browser) of area dining options, so I strolled
around for a bit checking out the neighborhood to the east of the Park.
Tanner
Roark was originally scheduled to start the home opener, but he was moved up to
start (and win) the Thursday game with the Mets, as Jordan Zimmermann was scratched
with flu-like symptoms. (Hopefully I will get to see Tanner pitch sometime this year.) Fortunately Jordan felt much better on Friday, turning in 5 strong
innings highlighted by 9 strikeouts, with the only damage being an Evan Gattis
homer leading off the 5th.
Things got
more interesting in the bottom of the inning, when Ian Desmond led off by hitting
a shot that got stuck under the padding on the left-field wall. The play was
initially ruled an inside-the-park home run, but on replay was changed to a
ground-rule double. Desmond didn’t improve the situation by getting tossed out
attempting to steal third base with no one out, one of three Nats baserunners
erased on plays that were not particularly close. (While smart aggression is a
good thing, cavalierly giving away precious outs is not.)
Tyler
Clippard joined Desmond in violating a fundamental baseball maxim by walking
the leadoff batter in the 8th inning, who naturally came around to
score, giving the Braves (and their outstanding bullpen) a 2-1 lead. (The Nats
had tied the game in the sixth on a Ryan Zimmerman sac fly, after Atlanta
second baseman Dan Uggla misplayed what was likely a double-play ball off the
bat of Adam LaRoche.)
Given the near-unhittability of Braves closer Craig Kimbrel, it behooved the Nats to get at least one run in
the bottom of the 8th before he came into the game. They started off
well against David Carpenter with a Rendon single and a four-pitch walk to
Jayson Werth, with the heart of the batting order coming up. Things
deteriorated quickly after that, as Carpenter fanned LaRoche, Zimmerman, and
Harper. Against Kimbrel in the 9th, Desmond and Lobaton extended the
string of consecutive Ks to 5 before pinch-hitter Kevin Frandsen popped out to
end it.
A big part
of the Nats underachievement in 2013 was their inability to beat division rival
Atlanta (13 losses in 19 games). One game does not a season make, but the loss
in the home opener certainly magnifies the importance of Stephen Strasburg’s
start on Saturday. Despite Washington’s apparent improvements and Atlanta’s
currently-crippled starting rotation, the Braves are still the kings of the NL
East hill until the Nats prove otherwise.
Hoping to
beat the worst of the crowd, I headed straight for Metro the second that
Frandsen’s foul pop settled into Freddie Freeman’s glove – being near the back
of a section in the lower level helped considerably. As I had hoped, the crowd
waiting to get into the station was quite manageable (actually better than at
many night games with much smaller crowds). The trip back was relatively
pleasant – I didn’t have to wait more than a couple minutes for either train,
and had a seat for the entire trip on the Red Line. I got back to Shady Grove
around 5:20, which certainly beats the toxic traffic mix of a normal Washington
rush hour with a sold-out Nats crowd.
Although
forewarned, I was still surprised that in the top of the seventh I had to wait
in a 5-minute line for the men’s room, which represents a personal Nats Park
record for me. I was also surprised that the much-promoted “G at Nationals Park” sandwich shop was closed up at that point – not sure whether it may have been
open earlier, although it was at the canceled March 29th exhibition
game.
And there
was a foul ball into our section (although nowhere near us) very early in the
game, which is something that we don’t get in our usual Section 416.
Serendipity #11
Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out – Bruce Springsteen (1975)
Heard 4/3/2014 around 9:30am, Wegman’s in Germantown
March 29, 2014 – Nationals vs. Tigers (exhibition) rained out – Nationals Park
Goofy
optimism or cynical exploitation?
Section
416, Row G, Seat 2 – four rows in back of our usual location (more below)
I’m
obviously not supposed to see the Nats play Detroit this year – the Nats-Tigers exhibition game I was supposed to see earlier in March in Lakeland, Florida was
also canceled due to rain. Even the scheduled starting pitchers were the same –
Anibal Sanchez for the Tigers and Tanner Roark for the Nats.
The
weather forecast for Saturday’s preseason exhibition at Nationals Park had been
pretty bleak for the preceding several days, and it had not improved by
Saturday morning: rain, sometimes heavy, expected pretty much all day. Given
the forecast, and the fact that it was only an exhibition game, I really
expected the team to announce by 10 or 11 Saturday morning that the game was
canceled, in order to save everyone from a wasted trip. No such announcement
came, however, and according to the WTOP 12:15 sports segment, the Nats had
indicated that they were still going to try to get the game in. So, grumbling
to myself, I headed for the Shady Grove Metro station. I normally drive to
weekend games, but the Navy Yard Metro station is much closer to Nats Park than
is my normal parking location (thus minimizing my walk in the expected rain),
and there was no aggravating “weekend track work” (suspended due to cherry
blossom season) to mess up the commute.
Metro was
much less busy than usual; very few people were waiting to transfer to the
Green Line at Gallery Place, and I had no trouble getting a seat on either the
Red Line or Green Line section of the trip. A light rain was falling as I
arrived, the tarp was on the field, and it didn’t look like there were more
than several thousand people on hand at most. I took a lap around the lower
level of the park before heading to our seats around 1:45 for the scheduled 2:05
start. Since each of the 4 20-game ticket plans included the March 29th
game, we were not in our usual locations (416/C/1-4), but instead had seats 2-5
in Row G. I had expected that since we were 4 rows further back that we would
at least be able to stay dry, but the wind was blowing the rain in our
direction, so after a couple of minutes I announced that I was going to find a
dry spot and headed for the enclosed elevator lobby, where the Pierce clan
found me 5 or 10 minutes later. Right around 2:00, someone else who was waiting
there told everyone the Nats had just tweeted that the game had been canceled.
The nearby video monitor posted the announcement a couple minutes later.
The non-cynical
side of me would like to think that the Nats management genuinely thought there
was a reasonable shot at getting the game in, as opposed to delaying the
announcement of the cancellation just to get some of us fools to come down and
buy concessions and souvenirs. Unfortunately, I don’t have any evidence
whatsoever to support this theory. (The weather forecast, by the way, turned
out to be completely correct.)
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