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Ken Dryden

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Everything posted by Ken Dryden

  1. A post WWII anti-tank weapon, the French Vespa anti-tank Scooter. It looks like something created for National Lampoon.
  2. I always marvel at the USPS' ability to screw things up, sending packages across the country instead of from New York to Tennessee, or reaching our local distribution center then sending my package to the Nashville or Knoxville distribution center instead of our local post office a few miles away.
  3. I was unfamiliar with Chuck Wells, but duets with Dave McKenna, what could go wrong? A new purchase of an old LP.
  4. I hate it every time Apple airs baseball, their announcers are the pits and I don’t need to pay for yet another channel, especially one that I would rarely watch.
  5. That's a variation of an old joke where a Catholic priest with his arm in a cast and sling encounters two hillbilly boys. The priest is embarrassed and explains to them, "I fell in the bath tub." The first asks his friend after the priest passes by, "Jethro, what's a bath tub?" Jethro responds, "I don't know, Joe, I ain't Catholic."
  6. It turns out that I was missing three of the LPs in this set, glad I ordered it and it arrived today.
  7. Child abusers, especially those who distribute evidence of their crimes, should rot in jail in the general population without parole.
  8. I got to see the David Grisman Quintet twice in concert, Tony Rice with Norman Blake twice and Mark O'Connor three times, once solo and the other two times with his Hot Swing Trio.
  9. I tried watching it and gave up after a few minutes.
  10. I remember discussing this topic with Dave Brubeck, whose lawyer told him the same thing. It would cost far more than a jazz artist would likely recover.
  11. I have moved twice since 2014 and had a better dedicated music library each time with more shelf space. No more moves, it is too much trouble and packing the collection is time consuming, something I have handled myself to make reshelving much easier. Besides, we really like this house. Besides, 70 isn't that far away.
  12. Loved that film!
  13. Maybe the guy is asking $629, but I doubt that he will get it for the set. Another ebay seller has the same set for $155 plus shipping. The one thing I owned as a kid and lost track of was a Mickey Mantle Heartland Statue, they were selling for over $1000 at one time. I evidently got one for a birthday part gift around 1963 or 1964, as my mother took a photo of us with it on the table. Of course, that photo is now long gone. I don't even remember owning it. I guess that those Kellogg's 3D cards curled over time, that's what happened to mine, though none of them are cracked.
  14. The Kellogg's cards from 1980 don't seem to be particularly collectable. https://www.deanscards.com/c/4151/1980-Kelloggs-Baseball-Cards
  15. I still have many of my baseball cards from childhood, though the Post Cereal, Jell-o and 1952 Bowmans are long gone. I am trying to decide the best way to sell them and if I want to invest in getting some of the pricy cards graded and slabbed. i always got a kick out of Topps trying to guess who would be on the roster before printing the new sets, only for them to have to add Sent to Richmond in May or Released Unconditionally in April. Poor Merritt Ranew, he must have felt like he was stuck in a perpetual elevator.
  16. Nothing like botching the legacy of the labels a conglomerate acquired. Carl E. Jefferson must be spinning in his grave with some of the pure crap issued in the past decade or so on the Concord label that he founded. Some musicians who recorded for him had their share of choice words to say about Jefferson, but he recorded musicians whom he enjoyed often and made more than a few of the younger players he recorded extensively widely known.
  17. The only Duke Ellington that I don't need are those crappy audience recording bootlegs put out on various forgettable small labels on LPs, some of which have reappeared on those worthless Squatty Roo bootleg CDRs, which look like they were made and printed in someone's basement. The only Ellington song that I don't want hear any new versions of is Tony Watkins singing the forgettable "One More Time For The People." No wonder that Cootie Williams stormed off stage when that song was called.
  18. I once ran across an All Music review that I had written which had evidently been translated into Portuguese and then back to English, although the English translation did not resemble my original contribution. It was funny, in a way.
  19. The series of unissued concerts on SteepleChase have been great discoveries.
  20. “How many Frenchmen does it take to defend Paris?” “Who knows? It’s never been tried.”
  21. A lot of people who don’t know how sick they are don’t want to seek medical care, thinking it is something that will pass.
  22. My late father in law had diabetes and didn’t know it, then had a heart attack and didn’t know it. He developed a blood clot that caused him great pain in a leg and he never came out of a coma after surgery. This happened in the 1990s so it doesn’t surprise me that anyone would be unaware of a major medical issue back in 1964.
  23. I would have thought that the bump on Eric Dolphy's forehead was either a cyst or fatty tumor, though I am not a doctor. He had it removed (likely with a syringe, as the late photos of him don't seem to show a scar from an incision) before his 1964 tour with Mingus. I read that Dolphy consumed honey, a food to avoid as a diabetic due to its high glucose content and rapid absorption into the bloodstream. It is more likely that he was unaware of his diabetes, but remember that even diagnosed diabetics were not informed as how to control their blood sugar levels with proper diet and exercise back then, as the research and patient education was not at the level that it is today. Even into the 1970s diabetics could have wild swings in their glucose levels, with the results including blindness, heart attack, stroke, loss of limbs due to poor circulation and gangrene from overlooked, untreated foot injuries. One of my uncles who had diabetes lost a leg because he broke a toe and couldn't feel the pain due to his foot neuropathy, he eventually developed gangrene and required an amputation. It might be a bit much to blame the German doctors for being racist. If a patient arrives unconscious and they are unaware that he is a diabetic, they may have well thought that he had possibly overdosed. I imagine European doctors dealt with their share of overdosed American jazz musicians, both whites and blacks. Medical studies have shown African-Americans have a higher genetic propensity for diabetes, regardless of their weight. I remember an African-American around my age who looked very lean and was a chef and he was distraught when he was diagnosed as diabetic, I saw his obituary a few years later. Diabetes does not prey just on grossly overweight people, it can hit people of all shapes, sizes and races.
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