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, September 23, 2024

Rosanne Cash – Strathmore, 9/22/2024

Orchestra Center, Row H, Seat 101 – 8 rows from the front, on the center-right aisle. Sightlines and sound were both excellent.

 

This was the third time I’ve seen Rosanne Cash at the Strathmore Music Center, but the experience never gets old. (She doesn’t appear to age much either.) This time I had a sneak peek, as the night before she closed out Saturday night of #XPNFest, the annual three-day music festival that WXPN conducts (and broadcasts) from Camden NJ, right across the river from Philadelphia. The setlists and patter were fairly similar, although the Strathmore show was significantly longer.

 

She reached back near the end of her show for 3 of the 11 (!) country-chart-topping songs from her 1980s commercial heyday (two of which she wrote), but most of her performance consisted of original material from her post-80s albums. She did, however, throw in a song from hubby John Leventhal’s new album, an expressive duet with Leventhal on the classic “Ode To Billie Joe”, Dylan’s “Farewell Angelina” as the encore, and two tracks from 2009’s The List, her record with a dozen of the 100 “greatest country songs” listing that her father had prepared for her. (She teased her husband on “Sea Of Heartbreak”, saying that he’d have to fill in for Bruce Springsteen as a duet partner, and referring to him semi-seriously as “The Boss” at the end.)

 

This year she’s been spotlighting The Wheel, the 1993 album which she remastered and re-released earlier this year once the rights to the recordings reverted to her. The group performed three tracks from it during the first half of the show, including a lovely acoustic take on “Tears Falling Down” and a driving version of the title track, which was one of the high points of the show, along with “The Only Thing Worth Fighting For” (one of my personal favorites) and “She Remembers Everything”.

 

The five-piece band was excellent, with Leventhal on acoustic and electric guitar throughout and Kevin Barry providing additional guitar work, including lap steel on several numbers. It also included Sam Katz on bass, Dan Rieser on drums, and Misty Boyce on keyboards (apologies for any misspellings).

 

Cash also revealed that she was going to be among the speakers at Tuesday’s unveiling of her father’s new statue in the U.S. Capitol, joining the one of civil rights leader Daisy Bates to represent the state of Arkansas.

 

The crowd was attentive and enthusiastic throughout. I didn’t see a single person going in or out until the end of the show (unlike some recent experiences at Wolf Trap).

 

Setlist

Monday, September 16, 2024

September 15, 2024 – Nats 4, Marlins 3

https://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/WAS/WAS202409150.shtml

 

Time: 2:21

Attendance: 18,265

Start Time Weather: 79° F, Wind 8mph in from Rightfield, Sunny, No Precipitation.

Seats: Section 207, Row H Seats 1-2 – 200 level, just beyond 3rd base (FIS Champions Club)

 

The Nationals took the series against Miami by winning the final three games, scoring exactly four runs in each victory. (They also dominated the season series 11-2, an exact reversal of the 2023 results.)

 

The visitors opened the scoring with an unearned run in the 3rd, but Washington responded with a pair in the bottom of the 4th on four consecutive hits. James Wood doubled the lead with a 435-foot blast to left-center an inning later. McKenzie Gore needed 31 pitches to escape the top of the 1st, issuing two walks, but recovered to complete six innings without allowing another run.

 

Things did get a little dicey following Gore’s departure, after Eduardo Salazar gave up a run in the top of the 7th. Wood added what would turn out to be a crucial insurance run with his second dinger of the day in the bottom of the 8th. With closer Kyle Finnegan unavailable, young southpaw Jose A. Ferrer allowed one run in the 9th but held on to notch his first major league save.

 

Mike and Terry’s Excellent Metro Adventure continued; this time we drove to Glenmont and transferred to the Green Line at Fort Totten, reversing the process on the way back. We enjoyed our padded club-level seats, and the location offered a somewhat different perspective on the game. Our experience inside the club was generally good, with numerous TV screens, complimentary fountain beverages, and plentiful tables for eating lunch (as long as you claimed one relatively early). On the down side, the folks at the place where they carved sandwiches were unable to read my eCASH from my phone, and I was disappointed by the three salad offerings, each of which was prepackaged and stuffed into a small cup.

September 14, 2024 – Nats 4, Marlins 1

https://www.baseball-reference.com/boxes/WAS/WAS202409140.shtml

 

Start time: 4:05pm

Time: 2:22

Attendance: 28,175

Start Time Weather: 81° F, Wind 11mph from Right to Left, Sunny, No Precipitation.

 

The Nationals put together excellent starting pitching, shutout work from the bullpen, and three solo homers to pick up a reasonably stress-free victory. Having the worst team in the league as the opponent didn’t hurt either.

 

The teams traded runs in the 2nd inning, with Joey Gallo answering Miami’s tally with a second-deck home run. Two innings later, Washington scored again when José Tena singled, stole second, and scored on a Keibert Ruiz single. The Nats completed their pattern of scoring a run in every even-numbered inning on home runs by Tena and Juan Yepez in the 6th and 8th.

 

Patrick Corbin had little trouble with Miami’s anemic offense, giving up only one run in his six innings of work. Robert Garcia, Derek Law, and Kyle Finnegan blanked the visitors over the final three frames. Overall, the four of them combined to fan 11 while issuing only one walk.

 

This was the only Saturday game included in our season ticket plan, presumably so we could pick up the bobblehead honoring the 1924 world champion Washington Senators. Our half of Metro’s Red Line was closed between Grosvenor and Medical Center due to track maintenance, so we improvised by driving to Wheaton and riding the other half of the line into DC.