Showing posts with label EVENSONG. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EVENSONG. Show all posts

Tuesday, 20 January 2015

EVENSONG. AN OLD MAN SINGS THE BLUES. I GOT A BIRD THAT WHISTLES, I GOT A BIRD THAT SINGS

 Genius offers no thanks and Bob Dylan has never acknowledged any collaborators save those dead at the bottom of the creative well-spring but aside from his touring and recording bands there have been several contemporaneous artists hugely influential upon his writing and playing styles; one of these was Mr Bruce Langhorne, a session guitarist and occasional Tambourine Man


 - he played a huge, Turkish instrument and their collaborations inspired Dylan  to plead, Hey, Mr Tambourine Man, play a song for me.......
More importantly to the musicologist, Mr Langhorne, while playing sessions with Carolyn Hester, the Farinas, Judy Collins and Gordon Lightfoot,
 
 Langhorne, guitar; Hester, vocals and guitar; Dylan, mouth-organ and Bill Lee, bass, CBS Studios, New York 1961

played on Dylan's Freewheeling album and is said to have suggested or played the electric parts on Bringing It All Back Home, notably Mr Langhorne is credited by cognoscenti with the subtle framing of two of Dylan's most perfectly realised songs, Love Minus Zero, No Limit and She Belongs To Me,  as well as with teaching Baby Blue, himself,  the demotic, dropD accompaniment to the almost Satanic, It's Alright, Ma, I'm Only Bleeding.  The complex double-timed finger-picking on the earlier, Don't Think Twice It's Alright - a song, incidentally, about which a plagiarism charge was settled out of court - is also Mr Langhorne's, 

 
as is the memorable, second guitar part on Corinna, Corinna,  a Dylan reworking of a Robert Johnson song, although there are other traditional sources, too.

There is no Langhorne solo recording of Corinna, Corinna and today
 he modestly claims not to remember too much about it but I came across this, by Steve Gillette, which I had never heard and which  among Bobsessives, here and further on up the road, maybe down New Zealand way,  deserves a wider audience.

Saturday, 13 September 2014

EVENSONG. TRIAL AND RETRIBUTION. The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll (Live 1965) - Bob Dylan

Mr Mongoose reminded me of this other example, from fifty years back, of Justice bending over backwards to fellate Celebrity. Actually more inspired and expressive than the studio cut on Times They Are A-Changing, this version reveals how skillfully the young Dylan applied what are fairly rudimentary instrumental skills in augmentation of an idiosyncratic but faultless vocal delivery. The events of the song are broadly accurate, although some have quibbled over the years about details. There are a few judge-songs in the Dylan canon, Percy's Song, Drifter's Escape, Seven Curses, Hattie Carroll and many, many references to judges; I guess they are, by definition, characters of utility to the song-storyteller. The Pistorious judge, wotsername, Thokozile Matilda Masipa, is as deserving of a sung memorial as any, her waltzing deftly around the truth, should figure, somewhere.

 For those, anyway, curious about the legendary Bob Dylan, this performance conveys his power to mesmerise, transfix and move to tears any room. large or small, in which he plied his trade, once upon a time.


Friday, 5 September 2014

SPOKESMAN OF A CORPORATION.

Wouldn't be quite so bad, all this corporate shit, were there a fragment of truth in it; Europe and Japan make the best cars. And Sweden. And Korea. Poor old Bob, once upon a time he dressed so fine. 

Monday, 2 December 2013

EVENSONG. EMMYLOU HARRIS, SLUMMING IT.




Emmylou and her big Gibson, she could harmonise the sounds of the slaughterhouse.  Don't know about him, though; even if he's not unique  you have to admire him as a stylist, but he's hard to like; it's just that, in interviews, he does - if such a thing is possible - a low-key, downbeat  bombast,   an insistent, softly-spoken I-Know-Bestism.  Just becaue he's sold a  hundred and fifty million records and filled amphitheatres of adulation  all over the world.

This, I think, is the best of their rather pointless 2006 collaboration- Emmylou doesn't need to play with an ageing pub rocker, a bald ego from the days of the Compact Disc jamboree.  She brings the odd interesting   dish to the table,  he just eats everything up                                      

Saturday, 3 December 2011

IN THE NAME OF VIRTUE & EVENSONG

The mongoose dropping, earlier, about Annunciata ReesMogg has had me cudgelling my brains for the proper word describing American Virtue names.  Here in Ishmaelia we were delighted, some years ago, to discover it but it has now fled the local collective consciousness, anyone know what it is - the so-and-so names? Below are some examples.

The Cox Family, from the DVD Down From The Mountain are probably more Presbyterian than  Puritan but they all, as we say in Belfast, dig with the same foot.

The History of Virtue Names

Alphabet Soup
Teutonic, or Germanic, refers to the ancient people and languages of northern Europe. Among these languages are Old High German, the ancestor of modern German; Old Franconian which evolved into Dutch; and Anglo-Saxon, the ancestor of modern English.
Virtue names have come to be most closely associated with the Puritans, but they hardly started with this religious group. The Greeks and Romans were also big believers in the power that a name could hold. Gladiators and scholars alike often sought names that would protect their children from negative influences and imbue them with desirable traits, such as strength or wisdom. They hoped these traits would develop in their heirs as they grew up.
Many of the early names that would eventually shape the Indo-European name pool also reflected such prized virtues as wisdom, protection, and strength. The Teutonic element -mund, which formed such names as Edmund, Raymond, and Osmond, meant "peace" or "protector," and these names were all variations on this theme, meaning "wealthy protector" (Edmund), "divine protec­tor" (Osmond), and "counselor-protector" (Raymond).
By 1590, when the Puritan movement first developed as a sect of the Church of England, these names had largely been replaced by the names of saints and martyrs, as dictated by the Catholic Church, and then by the biblical names that were embraced by the Church of England. However, even these names were too evocative of the Catholic Church for the Puritans, and they began to baptize their children with phrases from Scripture or pious admonitions. In time, they also adopted words that reflected abstract virtues as names.

The Things They Carried

What's in a Name
Many of the biblical names favored by the first settlers in America had virtuous meanings, including Solomon ("peaceable") and Enoch ("vowed" or "dedicated to the Lord").
When the Puritans fled to America to escape religious persecution in England, they brought their virtue and phrase names with them. Most of the phrase or admonishment names—like Fly-fornication, Search-the-scriptures, Fight-the-good-fight-of-faith, and Makepeace—were so extreme that they never came into general use. Some of the less vitriolic names were accepted, especially the ones with meanings that emphasized positive virtues, including:
  • Amity: Based on the Latin for "friendship" or "love," it's pretty old-fashioned today but could be an interesting alternative to Amy.
  • Charity: One of the three cardinal virtues taught by Jesus Christ, it's never near the top of the name lists but it never fades entirely from sight either.
  • Faith: Another cardinal virtue but a bit more popular than the others. Current bearers of this name include newscaster and talk show host Faith Daniels, actress Faith Ford, and singer Faith Hill. In 1997, this name was popular enough to rank just below the top 100 on the most popular name list.
  • Grace: The Puritans used this word to describe the state of being in God's favor rather than a reflec­tion of pleasant physical attributes. This name is in broad enough use to rank 70th on the top 100 names for 1998, and could come on even stronger as more parents search for homespun, old-fashioned-sounding names.
  • Honor: Maybe more popular as Honora however, rarely used in either form today.
  • Hope: The third cardinal virtue and one that has seen a revival in the past 10 years or so, possibly due to the use of the name on the popular late 80s television showThirty something.
  • Joy: Somewhat outdated today, but occasionally seen as a middle name.
  • Patience: Along with Prudence, the oldest-sounding Puritan virtue name to survive to the modern era. Not very popular, and unlikely to increase in use.
None of the names used for boys ever made it into broad circulation, which isn't very surprising when you consider how strange these names really were. It's one thing to give your child a somewhat odd or unusual biblical name, like Job or Magog, but it's quite another to brand him with a moniker like Helpless, No-merit, or Repentance.


Next: Page 2 >>



Tuesday, 22 November 2011

EVENSONG. MAESTRO THOMPSON, GALWAY TO GRACELANDS.

As Elvis cropped-up in the last thread and as it was past time for some Richard Thompson, herewith a song of consumer insanity.


Sunday, 20 November 2011

EVENSONG: Van Morrison - These Are The Days

An exaggerated 'sixties talent, hugely over-rated, especially by himself and his cronies but  just now and again, over forty years, he has forgotten that he thinks he's Ray Charles and has waxed elegiacal to fine and great purpose as he  cries Freedom in the night -  Take It Where You Find It, The Healing Has Begun and this, among his memorable efforts.  For Evensongers.