Wednesday, February 27, 2019

When Elmore James Held Forth In The Slide Guitar Night

When Elmore James Held Forth In The Slide Guitar Night  








By Lance Lawrence 







I will get to a CD review of Elmore James’ work in a second. Now I want to tell, no retell, the tale that had me and a few of my corner boys who hung out in front of, or in if we had dough for food or more likely for the jukebox, Jimmy Jack’s Diner in Carver where I came of age in the early 1960s going for a while. On one lonesome Friday night, lonesome meaning, no dough, no wheels, no girls, or any combination of the three, with time of our hands Billy Bradley, Jack Dawson and I went round and round about what song by what artist each of us thought was the decisive song that launched rock and roll. Yeah, I know, I know now, that the world then, like now, was going to hell in a hand-basket, what with the Russkies breathing hard on us in the deep freeze Cold War red scare night, with crazy wars going on for no apparent reason, and the struggle for black civil rights down in the police state South (that “police state" picked up later after I got wise to what was happening there) but what else were three corner boys washed clean by the great jail break-out that what is now termed classic rock and roll represented to guys who were from nowhere, had no dough, didn’t have many prospects or expectations in general to do to while away the time.(Since this is a time sanitized version of what we Jimmy Jack’s corner boys did to while away idle nights I will leave it at that although know too that in many a midnight hour when Frankie Riley, the acknowledged leader of the corner boys, was on to something we were entirely capable of doing some drifting, grifting and sifting to make ends meet. Done.) 

Here is the break-down though from one conversation night, or maybe a bunch mixed together since this was a more than one time theme and this is what I have distilled from far remembrances. We knew, knew without anybody telling us that while Elvis gave rock and roll a big lift in his time before he went on to silly movies that debased his talent he was not the “max daddy,” not the guy who rolled the dice for rock and roll but was the front man easily identified. For one thing and this was Billy’s position he only covered Big Joe Turner’s classic R&B classic Shake, Rattle, and Roll and when we heard Joe’s finger-snapping version we flipped out. So Billy had his choice made, no question. Jack had heard on some late Sunday night radio station out in Chicago on his transistor radio a thing called Be-Bop Benny’s Blues Hour where he first heard this guy wailing on the piano a be-bop tune. It turned out to be Ike Turner (without Tina then) blasting Rocket 88. So Jack had his position firm, and a good choice. Me, well I caught this obscure folk music station (obscure then not a few years later though) which played not just folk but what would be later called “roots music.” And the blues is nothing but roots music in America. 

One night I heard Elmore James slide guitar his way through Look On Yonder Wall. That is the song I defended that night. Did any of us change each other’s mind that night. Be serious. I later, several years later, saw the wisdom of Jack’s choice of Rocket 88 that no question had the heady black-etched part of the rock beat down pat and I switched but old Elmore still was a close second. Enough said.       

CD REVIEW

The History of Elmore James: The Sky Is Crying, Elmore James, Rhino Records, 1993

When one thinks of the classic blues tune “Dust My Broom” one tends to think of the legendary Robert Johnson who along with his “Sweet Home, Chicago” created two of the signature blues songs of the pre-World War II period. However, my first hearing of “Dust My Broom” was on a hot LP vinyl record (the old days, right) version covered and made his own by the artist under review, Elmore James. I have heard many cover versions since then, including from the likes of George Thoroughgood and Chris Smither, and they all reflect on the influence of Elmore’s amazing slide guitar virtuosity to provide the "heat" necessary to do the song justice. Moreover, this is only the tip of the iceberg as such blues masters and aficionados as B.B. King and The Rolling Stones have covered other parts of James’ catalog.

Perhaps because Elmore died relativity young at a time when blues were just being revived in the early 1960’s as part of the general trend toward “discovering” roots music by the likes of this reviewer he has been a less well-known member of the blues pantheon. However, for those who know the value of a good slide guitar to add sexiness and sauciness to a blues number James’ is a hero. Hell, Thoroughgood built a whole career out of Elmore covers (and also, to be sure, of the late legendary Bo Didderly). I never get tired of hearing these great songs. Moreover, it did not hurt to have the famous Broom-dusters backing him up throughout the years. As one would expect of material done in the pre-digital age the sound quality is very dependent on the quality of the studio. But that, to my mind just makes it more authentic.

Well, what did you NEED to listen to here? Obviously,” Dust My Broom". On this CD though you MUST listen to Elmore on "Standing At The Crossroads". Wow, it jumps right out at you. "Look On Yonder Wall" (a song that I used to believe was a key to early rock 'n' rock before I gravitated to Ike Turner's "Rocket 88" as my candidate for that role), "It Hurts Me Too" and the classic "The Sky is Crying" round out the minimum program here. Listen on.

Lyrics To "Dust My Broom"

I'm gonna get up in the mornin',

I believe I'll dust my broom (2x)

Girlfriend, the black man you been lovin',

girlfriend, can get my room

I'm gon' write a letter,

Telephone every town I know (2x)

If I can't find her in West Helena,

She must be in East Monroe, I know

I don't want no woman,

Wants every downtown man she meet (2x)

She's a no good doney,

They shouldn't 'low her on the street

I believe, I believe I'll go back home (2x)

You can mistreat me here, babe,

But you can't when I go home

And I'm gettin' up in the morning,

I believe I'll dust my broom (2x)

Girlfriend, the black man that you been lovin',

Girlfriend, can get my room

I'm gon' call up Chiney,

She is my good girl over there (2x)

If I can't find her on Philippine's Island,

She must be in Ethiopia somewhere

Robert Johnson
 She is my good girl over there (2x)
If I can't find her on Philippine's Island,
She must be in Ethiopia somewhere
Robert Johnson







On The 60th Anniversary Of The Cuban Revolution -ON THE ROAD WITH CHE-THE MOTORCYLE DIARIES

DVD REVIEW

MOTORCYCLE DIARIES, 2004

I have reviewed a biography and another film of the life and works of the Latin American revolutionary (I think that is how he wanted to see himself rather than simply as an Argentine) Ernesto "Che" Guevara elsewhere in this space and make no bones about my admiration for his revolutionary skill and ardor while also noting my political differences. In a world that, in the year 2007, is filled to the brim with fake ‘heroes’ that today's youth are pushed to emulate Che was the real thing-a man of revolutionary conviction. The film under review, however, is a little difference take on Che’s life from a time before he became a world-known revolutionary fighter and icon. Apparently this film is based on his diaries written while he and another footloose companion were traveling the highways and byways of Latin America on motorcycle, foot, boat, cart or by any other mode of transportation that would move them forward. During that fateful trip middle class professional (doctor) Che has his eyes opened both to the geographic beauty of his continent and also to the grim underside of life for the masses. We, unfortunately, are painfully aware of how those travels ultimately end in the hills of Bolivia pursued by literally all of the security agencies in the Western world.

Does this early life study of Che work? As a member of the Generation of ’68 I am very, very familiar with the wanderlust that drove many of my generation, myself included, to seek salvation and companionship of kindred spirits on the roads of America and elsewhere. We rode those Volkwagen buses to the ground in that pursuit and if that failed we hitchhiked (nobody does that anymore and, unfortunately, nobody should with all the weirdness out there on the mean roads of America these days). Che got the urge to find 'himself' before Kerouac’s Beat Generation classic On the Road and we got it as a result of that work so this struggle against personal alienation has been going on for a while now. However, that physical liberation from parental authority and the norms of bourgesois existence do not in themselves necessarily produce anything except an existential traveler. If one did not know before hand that this film was about Che then, while it was interesting, cinematically beautiful and the interplay between the two travelers was well-acted it could have been about a fair percentage of the children of post-World War II generation.

The missing link is the politics. In a word the search for revolutionary politics. And that is the real problem with the unfolding of the story here. Based on this presentation it is hard to pinpoint what in Che's experiences acted as a catalyst for ‘enlightening’ him beyond some liberal sentimentality about the miseries of existence seen on his travels that would lead to a revolutionary understanding of the need to overthrow the old regimes. Yes, I know that to recruit people to revolution these days we will be dealing with bright, articulate, thoughtful, concerned liberals like the Che in this period but I believe that the makers of this film took a dive on the politics. If they had wanted to honor the memory of Che then they did a disservice to that memory by reducing him to an inoffensive character serviceable to the liberal milieu. If they merely , as I assume, wanted to ride the wave of popularity for a real icon for international youth then I have even greater political differences with their use of Che's legacy.

A Failure To, Ah, Communicate-Paul Newman’s “Cool-Hand Luke” ( ) A Film Review


A Failure To, Ah, Communicate-Paul Newman’s “Cool-Hand Luke” (1968) A Film Review




DVD Review

By Sam Lowell 

Cool Hand Luke, starring Paul Newman, George Kennedy,


If you want a prime example of 1950s-1960s manliness look no further than the film under review, Cool Hand Luke, to one of the that era’s great male actors Paul Newman who epitomize the “new man” of the post-World War II screen. Gone was the old macho push the edges until it hurt and then double down of the likes of Humphrey Bogart in the Raymond Chandler-Dashiell private detective classics and Robert Mitchum in something like Out Of The Past who took their beating and didn’t cry afterward. But also, did not show the more vulnerable side either. Handsome, almost pretty boy handsome with those piercing blue eyes Newman could take a punch, or as in this film, many punches and come up standing but also shown a side that expressed some doubts about his fate, about how his hurts were not so far from the surface. So not the James Dean sense of serious alienation but a more adult understanding that living in the modern world was a tough dollar even for tough guys. Robert Redford, his pal, later in the decade would exhibit a lot of the same traits and cement that “new man” image for that generation.           

Here’s the play, the rather simple play when you think about it, here. Luke, war be-medaled Luke, had not shaken off that experience, had been drifting along trying to “get by” without thinking too much about his place in the sun, or if he had a place. One drunken night, just for the hell of it, no reason, he went on a spree, a spree of decapitating his city’s parking meters. He got caught as one would expect and was sent to the county farm, the county workhouse for his efforts. Now this was the South that our boy Luke got himself sent away for and so he was in for some hard labor on old Parchman’s farm to express a generic term for what he was up against. He didn’t fit in for a while, also as expected from a loner, a guy who was just drifting along. That did not sit well with Dragline, played by Academy Award winner for his performance George Kennedy, head prisoner “elected” by being the toughest guy out on the prison farm. Even Luke after taking a manly beating where he would exhibit that never give up attitude from Dragline admitted he was beaten even if he could not quit.    

But the rules and regulation of prison life, even the rule and regulations that the prisoners imposed on themselves, did not sit well with Luke and before long he was headed for his new career of episodes of solitary, of the “box” which would break a man after a while. Led to his escapes and captures which the others admired if they could not follow. Led to him being broken inside anyway. Led to Dragline joining him for a minute in his bouts of freedom-seeking. In the end he was hurt but not bowed. Never. Even that fateful last escape where he was mortally wounded. Yeah, that Luke was a piece of work and the guys down on Parchman’s lived for a while on the memory of that “world-shaker.” Kudos Paul Newman on a great performance. You too George Kennedy.             

The Slumming Streets Of Sunny Frisco Town-Steve McQueen’s "Bullitt" (1968)-A Short Film Review


The Slumming Streets Of Sunny Frisco Town-Steve McQueen’s Bullitt (1968)-A Short Film Review



DVD Review

By Fritz Taylor

Bullitt, starring Steve McQueen, Robert Vaughn, 1968


Whenever I think of the late Steve McQueen and his acting career I think of motion, of him in almost constant motion even if that literally was not true. That and those soulful if secretive blue eyes (heightened whenever he wore some frequent worn blue shirt). Those two characteristics were full on display in his 1968 film Bullitt set in hilly San Francisco. You thus know by the locale if you know McQueen’s love of fast cars and fast motorbikes (some on display down at the Automotive Museum in San Diego) that this flick will involve at least one hair-raising car chase (and does not disappoint on that score.) Off of this film we should also include intrepid, Bullitt’s doggedly intrepidness.

To get to the why of the obligatory car chase SF top-rated cop Bullitt (McQueen’s role) has been asked by a politician (played by Robert Vaughn) who is running up the well-trodden road to political success by making a name for himself as a crime-buster to guard his key gangster witness set to expose all before some Senate committee. To make a long story short Bullitt and his men fall down on the job, allow one Johnny Ross, that star witness to be killed by a couple of well-armed and professional hitmen ordered to do him in by the mob bosses in Chicago. Falling down on the job though is not part of Bullitt’s vocabulary (to the chagrin of his girlfriend) and so he will move might and main to bring the killers to their just desserts. Hence the car chase once he has identified his opponents.

But like any good thriller, and this for the times was a good one, there need to be a few twists to keep things interesting. Bullitt sensing something was not right and gathering information from one of his stoolies that this Johnny had absconded with a couple of million in mob money not much today but plenty then and they were miffed about it. But Mrs. Ross did not raise any fool and Johnny had a Plan B to divert the thugs and keep that 2 mil in kale. Johnny conned some poor schmuck who looked like him to sub for him. Too bad. Too bad for a guy and his wife who Johnny subsequently had to kill to leave no witnesses who thought he was getting a nice all expenses paid vacation. Yeah, Johnny was no fool. Except he hadn’t figured on intrepid Bullitt figuring out his dodge and making him fall down in the old SF airport before he could get away. Nice, right.

Happy Birthday Frederick Douglass- A New Biography In Honor Of John Brown Late Of Harpers Ferry-1859 For Frederick Douglass On His 200th Birthday- Blacks Experiences in the American Civil War-A Book Review



Happy Birthday Frederick Douglass- A New Biography

Click on link to hear a serious biographer of Frederick Douglass the revolutionary abolitionist who broke with the William Lloyd Garrison-wing of the movement when the times called for remorseless military fighting against the entrenched slave-holders and their allies. This from Christopher Lydon’s Open Source program on NPR.
https://player.fm/series/open-source-with-christopher-lydon/behind-the-leonine-gaze-of-frederick-douglass

This is what you need to know about Frederick Douglass and the anti-slavery, the revolutionary abolitionist fight. He was the man, the shining q star black man who led the fight for black men to join the Union Army and not just either be treated as freaking contraband or worse, as projected in early in the war by the Lincoln administration the return of fugitive slaves to “loyal” slave-owners. Led the fight to not only seek an emancipation proclamation as part of the struggle but a remorseless and probably long struggle to crush slavery and slaver-owners and their hanger-on militarily. Had been ticketed at a desperate moment in 1864 to recreate a John Brown scenario if they logjam between North and South in Virginia had not been broken. Yes, a bright shining northern star black man.    





February is Black History Month


Book Review

The Negros's Civil War, James McPherson, University of Illinois Press, Chicago, 1965


In his introduction to this volume of documentary evidence gleaned from black sources concerning the role of blacks in the American Civil War James McPherson notes that up until the 1920’s the common historical wisdom was that blacks played merely a passive role in their liberation from slavery. Sound familiar. After that point serious historical studies by black and white scholars, John Hope Franklin, Carter Woodson and C. Vann Woodward among others, have attempted to and generally have redressed that wrong. McPherson’s little volume originally written in 1965 long before he became dean of American Civil War studies represents something of a halfway point in that appreciation. Although this is not the last place to go to find out about the black contribution to the end of slavery it is a worthy first place.

Let me reemphasize that point made above about the older notion of the role of blacks in the liberation struggle by giving a personal example. As late as the early 1960’s my American History textbook had no reference to the role blacks played in their own struggles for freedom. The prevailing line at that time was that the Union Army, that is the white Union Army composed of yeoman and city proletarians, was solely responsible for those results. And the later post-war Freedmen’s Bureau merely sorted out the rest, an early welfare agency if you will. And here is where my personal example comes into play. As a student almost every day I had to pass the Massachusetts State House on Beacon Street in Boston. In a prominent place in front of that building stands the famous work of Saint Gauden's commemorating the role of the Robert Gould Shaw- led Massachusetts 54th Regiment that has since been written about extensively and has been the subject of several film treatments. I did not find out about the heroic role of this regiment until much later, when I, independently, seriously started to study black history. That, my friends, pretty much says it all.

McPherson’s little volume goes into this question of armed black participation in the war and other questions that inflamed the country and the black community during this time. This work, moreover, shows that there was not a unified black response, particularly among better-educated blacks, to the unfolding events. McPherson thus takes care to catalogue the range of black responses to the conflict between preservation of the union and abolition of slavery that were fought out politically in the initial period of the war. He also deals with the question of the white racist response, North and South, as epitomized by the anti-draft riots in New York City, the status of Southern blacks in the military struggle as ‘contraband’ and the fight for some kind of just economic program (the famous forty acres and a mule) to give teeth to physical emancipation.

McPherson also details some incipient black nationalist trends in black thought as he does for black responses to colonization schemes, self-help and political expectations as a result of the civil war. In the 40 plus year period since this work was written a minor academic industry in black studies has gone into greater depth or looked at the subject from other angles but for a basic primer this is not a bad place to start. I might add that the bibliography provided is invaluable for the then available sources.

Update on Venezuela rallies in Maine Feb. 23 Global Network

Global Network<globalnet@mindspring.com>
From: Judy_Robbins
 
Bruce Gagnon writes about the Maine rallies to stop the US coup in Venezuela. [and more]
 
 
 
photos from Brunswick and Belfast
 
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Below: another photo from Resistance Corner in Belfast by Meredith Bruskin
 

You cannot change a corrupt system by taking its money RootsAction Team

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That same point was made by Dutch historian Rutger Bregman recently on a Tucker Carlson segment on Fox News -- a segment that Fox refused to air. But Bregman, a critic of tax-avoiding billionaires, thankfully posted a recording of the discussion in which he accused anchors like Carlson of “being bought by the billionaire class” and of “not talking about the real issues.”

“What the Murdochs [Fox’s owners] want you to do,” said Bregman, “is scapegoat immigrants instead of talking about tax avoidance.”

Before Carlson started cursing and calling the historian a “moron,” Bregman added: “It works by you taking their dirty money. You are a millionaire funded by billionaires.”

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TIME TO MOBILIZE for GVP! MA Coalition to Prevent Gun Violence

Dear Coalition members,

TIME TO MOBILIZE AGAIN! 

Thanks to your calls and e-mails we were successful in securing numerous house co-sponsors, but now we need your help to secure MA State SENATE co-sponsors this week for a critical piece of gun safety legislation. Please call or email your state senator TODAY and ask him or her to co-sponsor MA State Senator Cindy Creem's Bill SD1726: "An Act Relative to Crime Gun Data Reporting and Analysis.  I f Senator Creem is your Senator, please call and thank her for filing this important piece of legislation. 
(Note: You need to call your state senator, not Markey or Warren!)
 
Senator Creem's Bill (also filed by Rep. Decker in the House) requires MA to analyze the crime gun data MA has been collecting since enactment of the 2014 Gun Bill, to determine the source of crime guns recovered in MA, including how many were purchased as part of a multiple handgun transaction.
 
This is a key anti-trafficking and anti-straw purchasing measure and a top priority for the Coalition this year.
 
If you don't know who your State Senator is, you can find out here:

Please call! An aide will answer the phone, ask for your name and address, and then you will ask that your senator please co-sponsor this critical bill. 

This is a simple way to make a big difference!
 
Thank you!
MA Coalition to Prevent Gun Violence
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