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duaneiac

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Posts posted by duaneiac

  1. I haven't followed baseball since the year they had no World Series due to a player's lockout. (Was that in 1994?) I decided it's just millionaire owners vs. millionaire players and neither side really gave a sweet patoot about the fans.

    That said, I don't understand the animus towards the St. Louis Cardinals so often expressed here. I grew up in Missouri and had to suffer the perennially sucky Cards of the 1970's as an integral part of my youth. Granted, they had Bob Gibson still back then and Lou Brock, but not a whole lot more going for them. Still, one's boyhood team remains one's team to some degree for the rest of one's life, so I wish the Cards well, although I don't expect much of them this year.

    (My ideal World Series would be the Cards vs. the A's, as the A's of the early 70's were my favorite team of that era and I went to a lot of A's games once I moved here to the Bay Area - before I wrote off baseball entirely. It doesn't look that matchup will ever happen as both teams have a tendency to fold in the post-season.)

  2. "digs deep into the musical crate of history and comes up with standards including Summertime, God Bless the Child and I Cover The Waterfront."

    That does not appear to be very deep. Those songs sort of indicate a lazy singer just once again taking a stab at the same tired old warhorses that far too many aging baby-boomer former rock stars have taken a crack at.

    "Among some of the lesser-known songs such as Harry Warren and Al Dublin's September In The Rain and Memphis In June,"

    Ahem -- lesser known by whom, exactly? Of course, I must admit, anything popular on radio today would be "lesser known" to me. (Also, the lazy style of writing would lead one to believe that "Memphis In June" is a Warren & Dubin song when it was written by Hoagy Carmichael and Paul Francis Webster.)

  3. A quick search brought up these intriguing titles, apparently not available elsewhere:

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    51MaamZskiL._SL500_AA280_.jpg

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    That Buddy Rich CD is very good. It's his big band of, I guess, the late 1960's (LaserLight releases are often short on details). There was also a LaserLight CD called Tuff Dude with a Buddy Rich small band that is worth getting.

    The Joe Pass Christmas CD is okay. It's fine for it's purpose (background holiday music) but it is not a major item in his discography.

    I have the Ella Fitzgerald CD too. Haven't listened to it in a while, but I recall it being good, but not dramatically different from many other "live" CDs one can find by Ms. Fitzgerald.

    I think the same company put out the LRC label (with recordings from Sonny Lester's catalog) and LaserLight. Other worthwhile LaserLight/LRC CDs I have include:

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    For some reason, the system would not allow me to post more images, but the other titles included

    Blue Bossa by McCoy Tyner

    Dedication by the Thad Jones Mel Lewis Orchestra

    Parisian Thoroughfare by Stephane Grappelli

    Velvet Soul by Carmen McRae

    Crown Royal by Woody Herman

    Funkiest Little Band In The Land -- Jimmy McGriff

  4. 4. In the late 60s and 70s he was dressing in "gaudily mod oufits" and that he was embarrassing himself. But so wasn't everyone during this

    period, especially the likes of Miles Davis. He was merely following the fashion of the time.

    Indeed.

    Dig this: smilie_sh_023.gif

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    Anybody out there qwho would have recognized Barrett Deems, former drummer with Louis Armstrong's All Stars?? :blink:

    My first thought upon glancing at that photo was "That looks like Barrett Deems", so I guess I'm one who would recognize him. :shrug[1]:

  5. This is a perfect example of going out on a high note:

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    I saw her in concert in San Francisco about a month before this concert was recorded. She was a wonderful performer right up to the end.

    Another singer who was terrific until the final curtain dropped:

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    And there was no such thing as a bad Ruby Braff album, right up to the end, which was this concert recorded in Aug. of 2002:

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    I believe this was Marian McPartland's final recording and it demonstrates that she was still a creative and talented pianist even at the age of 90

    MI0002062271.jpg?partner=allrovi.com

  6. 233421.jpg

    Any one who was a youngster and saw this made-for-TV movie when it first aired some 40 years ago (such as myself) most assuredly had nightmares for a while afterwards. There were 3 stories in this anthology -- each featuring Karen Black in a different role -- the first two of which are rather tame and not at all terrifying. The final tale though, which featured that little Zuni fetish doll (depicted on the cover) which came to life and attacked Ms. Black's character, was genuinely terrifying. Even watching it today, it is both very scary and very absurd. That episode is a completely solo performance by Ms. Black and her work and the direction of Dan Curtis (creator of the TV series Dark Shadows) makes the story believable and viscerally frightening.

    You should read the original short story by Richard Matheson entitled "Prey", the movie version is tame by comparison.

    All three stories in this movie were based upon short stories by Mr. Matheson, but he only wrote the screenplay for the attacking doll one. The DVD contains a "special feature" interview with him and he said he knew that story would be the clincher and he wanted to keep it for himself. Ms. Black said in the commentary portion that she made up some of the dialogue she used on the phone calls in that segment to help her flesh out her character and she said the idea for her character's final, unforgettable transformation in the end was her idea.

  7. 233421.jpg

    Any one who was a youngster and saw this made-for-TV movie when it first aired some 40 years ago (such as myself) most assuredly had nightmares for a while afterwards. There were 3 stories in this anthology -- each featuring Karen Black in a different role -- the first two of which are rather tame and not at all terrifying. The final tale though, which featured that little Zuni fetish doll (depicted on the cover) which came to life and attacked Ms. Black's character, was genuinely terrifying. Even watching it today, it is both very scary and very absurd. That episode is a completely solo performance by Ms. Black and her work and the direction of Dan Curtis (creator of the TV series Dark Shadows) makes the story believable and viscerally frightening.

  8. She is rightfully a screen legend.

    I saw her on stage in the musical Woman Of The Year. She wasn't exactly what one would call a singer, but she could put the songs over by sheer dint of personality.

    I like the old radio series, Bold Venture, she and Bogart did together. Not great drama by any means, but more of that wonderful interplay by the two stars.

  9. Whoa, thanks for posting. That was intensely surreal, the red curtain made it kind of Twin Peaks-ish...

    Anyone know what the tune was starting at around the 5 minute mark (the one that gets the grumpy guy dancing) and whether it appears on an Ellington album? Many thanks.

    That tune is called "Dancers In Love". It was part of the original "Perfume Suite" it appears on a number of live albums.

  10. Friends: Season 2. "You partied with Hootie and the Blowfish?!?!?!?!?" :rofl: Has there ever been a more white, middle-class show than Friends?

    Friends_Season_2_DVD.jpg

    "Has there ever been a more white, middle-class show than Friends?"

    Well, not if you don't count Leave It To Beaver, The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet, Our Miss Brooks, The Andy Griffith Show, The Dick Van Dyke Show, The Patty Duke Show, Family Affair, The Brady Bunch, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, The Bob Newhart Show, Happy Days, etc.

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