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, June 1, 2019

Trump is counting on impeachment


 
The crux of the matter, in four paragraphs:
 
Proponents of impeachment come from three blocs: progressive pundits who have no idea what it takes to win office; occupants of safe seats in gerrymandered Democratic districts; and the Justin Amash wing of the Republican Party, population: one.
 
They make a very reasonable moral argument that people who transgress the law should be held accountable. However, Congress is not a seminar in moral philosophy, nor has Donald Trump ever shown any interest in the subject. Congress is a political institution, and the political argument in favor of impeachment boils down to a scene from the classic film “Animal House.”
 
“This situation absolutely requires a really futile and stupid gesture be done on somebody’s part,” says the suave and cynical Otter. To which earnest Bluto replies: “And we’re just the guys to do it!”
 
Morality is much too important to be left to the righteous. They have a tendency to turn it into crusades, jihads, purges and cults. Instead, society’s moral tenor is best maintained by pragmatists who know enough not to let the perfect become the enemy of the good.

Thursday, May 30, 2019

Favorite Musical Artists: Richard Thompson


Mark Deming begins his excellent biography of Richard Thompson at allmusic.com with the following sentence: “An iconic figure in British folk-rock, Richard Thompson is arguably the genre's greatest triple threat: a dazzling guitarist, an outstanding songwriter, and a strong and evocative vocalist.” I’d certainly agree, but would add “compelling live performer” to the list. One of the advantages of following a non-superstar act (speaking commercially, rather than in terms of talent) is that you get plenty of opportunities to see them in small, intimate venues (Rams Head, Barns at Wolf Trap, the Birchmere) at a reasonable price: since I started this blog, I’ve seen Thompson on 5 separate occasions, not counting his brief opening set for Bonnie Raitt at Wolf Trap.
 
Favorite songs:
 
Keep Your Distance
1952 Vincent Black Lightning
Tear-Stained Letter
Wall Of Death*
 
Valerie
I Misunderstood
King Of Bohemia
Dimming Of The Day
I Feel So Good
 
Don't Renege On Our Love*
Hots For The Smarts
Uninhabited Man
Beeswing
Crawl Back (Under My Stone)
 
Walking The Long Mile Home
Waltzing's For Dreamers
When The Spell Is Broken
How Will I Ever Be Simple Again
Crocodile Tears
 
* - Richard and Linda Thompson

Tuesday, May 28, 2019

“Joe Biden has no public events scheduled.”


This has been a frequent statement from the Biden campaign. Can he maintain his early lead while minimizing on-the-ground campaigning? Time will tell.
 

May 26, 2019 – Nats 9, Marlins 6 – Nationals Park


 
Weather: 87 degrees, Cloudy.
Wind: 8 mph, Out To CF.
Umpires: HP--Whitson, 1B--Muchlinski, 2B--Winters, 3B--Timmons.
Time: 3:06 (Delayed 0:24)
Attendance: 26,365
 
Howie Kendrick led the Washington offense, which put up two 4-run innings, winding up with enough runs to withstand a late Miami rally.
 
Kendrick started things off with a leadoff homer in the bottom of the second against Marlins’ ace Caleb Smith. An inning later, with 2 out and no one on, Smith allowed an Adam Eaton double and then walked the next two batters. Kendrick then singled in two runs, and Brian Dozier doubled in two more. The Nats got to reliever Wei-Yin Chen in the bottom of the 6th, plating one run on back-to-back doubles by Yan Gomes and pinch-hitter Michael A. Taylor, followed by an infield single by Eaton. Rendon then tripled in two runs and scored on a Juan Soto sac fly.
 
Erick Fedde turned in his second consecutive strong start, blanking the visitors over his five innings of work. The Nats’ bullpen started off well, as Tanner Rainey and Javy Guerra kept the Marlins off the scoreboard in the 6th and 7th. Cracks began to show when Guerra allowed a two-run HR to Neil Walker in the always-troublesome 8th. With a 7-run lead, Davey took the opportunity to let James Bourque make his major-league debut in the top of the 9th. He promptly walked Austin Dean on 4 pitches and fell behind Miguel Rojas 3-1 before inducing a double-play grounder. Unfortunately the final out eluded him, as he allowed a double, walk, single, and another double before he was replaced by Wander Suero. Suero allowed one more run on a Walker single, but fanned Starlin Castro to finally seal the win.
 
We had a short period of scattered large raindrops in the second inning, but it ended relatively quickly. Several innings later, however, a similar period led to a brief but torrential downpour, making this our first rain delay or postponement of the season.

Saturday, May 25, 2019

May 24, 2019 – Nats 12, Marlins 10 – Nationals Park


 
Weather: 82 degrees, Partly Cloudy.
Wind: 14 mph, In From LF.
Umpires: HP--Winters, 1B--Timmons, 2B--Whitson, 3B--Muchlinski.
Time: 3:59
Attendance: 29,173
 
Section 312, Row C, Seat 19
 
You shouldn’t win a game when your starting pitcher gives up 5 runs in 4 innings. You definitely shouldn’t win when your bullpen gives up another 5 runs, somehow increasing its already dreadful 7+ ERA. And you certainly have no business coming out on top when you commit 4 errors (which would have been 5 if not for a questionable scoring decision).
 
The Nats fell behind by 3 early, came back to tie, fell behind by 4, came back to tie, and once again gave up the lead in the top of the 8th. Nevertheless, they persisted.
 
Give credit to Anthony Rendon for his game-tying 3-run blast in the 3rd. Give some to Victor Robles, whose 2-run double tied it again 3 innings later. And give a ton to Juan Soto, once again doing Juan Soto things, for finally putting the home team in front with a 3-run homer off a 101-mph pitch.
 
On the pitching side, Matt Grace and Tanner Rainey kept the visitors off the board in the 6th and 7th innings, respectively. With a 3-run lead to protect in the top of the 9th, Doolittle allowed a homer on his first pitch, followed by 2 more hits later in the inning, but finally recorded the final out, allowing the crowd to exhale at last. We were also glad that they chose to play this marathon on a night that Metro kept going past 11:30.)
 
Musical footnote – kudos to Matt Adams for his use of Gary Clark Jr.’s “Bright Lights, Big City” to lead into his ABs, and to Brian Dozier for choosing the ubiquitous “Old Town Road” for some of his.

Friday, May 24, 2019

May 23, 2019 – Frederick Keys 8, Myrtle Beach Pelicans 7 (11 innings) – Nymeo Field at Harry Grove Stadium


 
Umpires: HP: Reed Basner. 1B: John Budka.
Weather: 71 degrees, Partly Cloudy.
Wind: 5 mph, Calm.
First pitch: 11:00 AM.
Time: 3:38.
Attendance: 6,232.
 
Section 204, Row K, Seat 17 – second section from the middle on the third-base side, second row below the concourse, on the aisle
 
It was a good news / bad news / good news kind of day at Frederick. It was all good for the first 5 innings, as Baltimore’s 2017 first-round draft pick, southpaw DL Hall, blanked the visitors in dominant fashion, allowing just 2 hits and 1 walk while fanning 10. Meanwhile, the Keys turned 4 straight singles into 2 runs in the bottom of the 2nd, and added one more in the 5th on a Trevor Craport RBI double.
 
Things quickly broke bad from there, when Travis Seabrooke relieved Hall to start the 6th and allowed a pair of 2-run homers. The Pelicans then added single tallies in each of the next 3 innings, countered only by a single Keys run in the 8th.
 
Trailing 7-4 in the bottom of the 9th, however, Zach Jarrett (son of NASCAR legend Dale) hit a 3-run homer with one out to tie the game.
 
This was the first extra-inning minor-league game I had seen since the recent rules change that starts each half-inning after the 9th with a runner on second base, to increase the chances of scoring (and thus ending the game more quickly). This didn’t particularly bother Frederick reliever Steven Klimek in the top of the 10th, as he struck out the first two batters and retired the third on a grounder.
 
Frederick went for the jugular in the bottom of the frame, pinch-running Jake Ring at second base for Ryan Ripken (son of Cal Jr.). After Sean Miller failed to bunt him over, he got to third on a wild pitch, but was stranded there as the next two batters grounded out.
 
Klimek didn’t have it as easy the next inning, walking two batters with one out to load the bases, but escaped on a nicely-turned double play. Third-baseman Jomar Reyes, spending his 4th consecutive season with the Keys, hit a ground-rule double with one out in the bottom of the frame to end it, sending the remnants of the STEM Day crowd home happy, at least until the torrential rains hit shortly thereafter.

Tuesday, May 21, 2019

May 19, 2019 – Cubs 6, Nats 5 – Nationals Park


 
Weather: 87 degrees, Partly Cloudy.
Wind: 7 mph, R To L.
Umpires: HP--Wolf, 1B--Lentz, 2B--Iassogna, 3B--Holbrook.
Time: 3:15
Attendance: 23,244
 
Things did not begin well.
 
Veteran Nats starter Jeremy Hellickson, who depends on command to make up for the lack of an imposing fastball, walked the first 3 Chicago batters he faced, throwing only 2 strikes in the process and generating early action in the home team bullpen. He hit Willson Contreras with a pitch later in the frame, but after a double play managed to escape with only a single run on the board.
 
Hellickson then stopped walking people and started allowing extra-base hits, allowing single runs in the 2nd and 3rd. Kyle McGowin made his season debut for the Nats in the 4th and continued the trend. Meanwhile, Washington didn’t get a runner on base against Kyle Hendricks until Rendon drew a four-pitch walk with 2 outs in the bottom of the 4th.
 
Things started to look up an inning later, as McGowin retired the visitors in order and the Nats ended the no-hitter and shutout on singles by Suzuki and Parra followed by a Dozier groundout. Unfortunately there would be no shutdown inning, as the Cubs responded with 2 runs in an ugly top of the 6th, during which McGowin uncorked two wild pitches and was charged with an error on Hendricks’ bunt. This was especially painful since Washington finally figured out the Cubs’ starter in the bottom of the inning, but they still trailed by 2 runs after Rendon’s 3-run blast.
 
Howie Kendrick cut the deficit to one with a leadoff HR after the seventh-inning stretch, and the Washington bullpen blanked the Cubs over the final 3 innings, but they were matched by Chicago’s Steve Cishek, who notched a rare 7-out save, allowing only one hit in the process.
 
While we were not happy earlier in the week to hear that the game had been chosen by ESPN for its Sunday night broadcast, the decision worked out well, given how hot it was in the afternoon. Things were much more comfortable for the 7:05 start, especially in the shade.

Thursday, May 16, 2019

May 15, 2019 – Nats 5, Mets 1 – Nationals Park


 
Weather: 72 degrees, Sunny.
Wind: 6 mph, Out To RF.
Umpires: HP--Blaser, 1B--Diaz, 2B--Randazzo, 3B--Nelson.
Time: 2:28
Attendance: 29,673
 
Patrick Corbin seems to be Washington’s designated bobblehead-game pitcher this season. Like the last time we saw him pitch, he turned in a top-notch effort, both times fanning 11 while allowing only a single run. Fortunately for the Nats, a few things were different this time, resulting in a 5-1 victory instead of an agonizing extra-inning defeat.
 
While in our April encounter the Nats scored only 2 runs while Corbin was in the game (one of which he had to drive in himself), tonight they exceeded that total by the end of the first inning. Perhaps inspired by Corbin fanning the side in the top of the frame, Eaton walked, advancing to second on a Robles bunt single. That was followed by consecutive RBIs by Rendon (double), Soto (ground out), and Kendrick (single). They added two more in the third, on a Robles homer and doubles by Rendon and Kendrick.
 
Meanwhile, Corbin sailed through the Mets’ lineup, with the 3rd inning being the only time he allowed a runner past first base. Most importantly, he had a quick 1-2-3 inning in the 7th, allowing him to pitch the 8th before having to turn the game over to Washington’s bullpen. With the team badly needing a victory, Davey went to Doolittle to close things out in the 9th, despite having a 4-run lead.

Tuesday, May 14, 2019

Richard Thompson – Rams Head on Stage, 5/13/2019


Table 102, Seat 4 – front and center, 4-person table. Oddly, 2 of the seats remained vacant, although the show was sold out.
 
As usual, Thompson mixed it up nicely in his 21-song, 110-minute show, with just two songs from his latest album 13 Rivers (plus “They Tore The Hippodrome Down” from the slightly-less-recent Acoustic Rarities). He went back 50 years to Fairport Convention for “Genesis Hall” (which I hadn’t heard before) and Sandy Denny’s classic “Who Knows Where The Time Goes”, and did 4 songs from the Richard and Linda Thompson days, ending the main set with “Dimming Of The Day” as he did last year at The Birchmere. Naturally, the usual crowd favorites were all there as well.
 
The high point for me came with the first encore, when a guy from the next table requested my all-time favorite, “Al Bowlly’s In Heaven”. RT hedged a bit, saying that he was more used to doing it with a band, but proceeded to crank out a great rendition. I also particularly enjoyed the hilarious (but unfortunately never-recorded) “Crocodile Tears” and the somber wartime ballad “Woods Of Darney”.
 

Tuesday, May 7, 2019

Alexa has been eavesdropping on you this whole time


 
"I listened to four years of my Alexa archive and found thousands of fragments of my life: spaghetti-timer requests, joking houseguests and random snippets of “Downton Abbey.” There were even sensitive conversations that somehow triggered Alexa’s “wake word” to start recording, including my family discussing medication and a friend conducting a business deal."
 
Not for me, thank you very much.