Wednesday, January 5, 2022

"I think it's the hill to die on." Part 2


Found on the street in Berkeley.
Rebel Girl is on the road, wearing her K-95 mask everywhere and showing her vaccination credentials to anyone who asks. She and Red Emma dropped off their offspring at UC Santa Cruz (Go Banana Slugs!) and kept driving north. It's a Judy Chicago and Joan Mitchell art tour, a little of the world before the Spring semester starts. She is now holed up her favorite Berkeley dive hotel, grading late student work (Radical flexibility! Redemption is possible!) and re-planning the Spring semester (Online 'til early February...!)

Meanwhile she is keeping up on the news coming out of O.C., especially those alarming infection numbers. It takes a lot to shock Rebel Girl, after all, she is now 60, but the news this week of the COVID-caused death of Kelly Ernby, truly shocked her. Ernby was last seen in this blog at the side of Supervisor Don Wagner just a month ago at the December 4 anti-vaxx mandate rally at Irvine City Hall.  See "I think it's the hill to die on."  The deputy D.A. and former candidate for Assembly, a "rising star" of the OC GOP, was 46 and, according to her husband, unvaccinated. 

Rebel Girl first found the story via the LA Times which broke the story with the excellent comprehensive coverage by Gabriel San Roman: 

Kelly Ernby, former Orange County GOP state Assembly candidate and deputy D.A., dies of COVID-19

Wagner and Ernby.

Rebel Girl had looked forward to returning to the classroom because hey, two years of computer-mediated teaching and learning is just not the same, no matter what anyone says. It isn't. So little joy. Such limited learning. We are losing so many students in so many ways. 

But is the danger real? It is. 

And the likelihood of returning continues to jeopardized by the kind of hollow leadership pictured above. 

The Register reports that Supervisor Wagner declared his intention to "continue if invited, speaking out against the mandates, and also saying that my choice is to get vaccinated and I believe it should be the choice most people make, absent a genuine health concern or absent a religious objection."

1964: The light I gave to you

 1964: the Jelly Beans, "I Wanna Love Him So Bad"  

 1964: The Shangri-Las, "Remember (Walkin' In The Sand)"  

Note the allusion to military service: boyfriend got drafted?

 1964: Dusty Springfield, "Wishin and Hopin'"
This is the second Bacharach/David tune recently, the other being "My Little Red Book," performed by Love.

 1964: The Drifters, "Under the Boardwalk"

     MEANWHILE: Monday night, I found that neither my phone nor my internet wifi worked, and since I don't have a cell phone (not one that works in these hills), that's pretty serious. The semester is about to begin and, well, being incommunicado isn't helpful.
     The next day, I called AT&T and tried to get them out here to fix the lines. The best I could do was a window of 8:00 a.m. to noon today. 
     They never showed up. They did not communicate with me using the ways I gave them (my sister's land line, etc.).
     I called again. They said they'd try to get someone out there by 6:00. But again, they were a no show.
     I've been trying to call AT&T in the last hour, but they're overwhelmed and said to call back later.
     Naturally, I've been through this before. On occasion, I've been forced to wait weeks while they get their freakin' acts together.
     The world ain't what it used to be. Sheesh.
     UPDATE [Thursday night]: The AT&T guy is supposed to show up between 8 and 12 Friday morning. We'll see.
     UPDATE [Friday night]: they never showed this morning. Eventually, I guy showed mid-afternoon and couldn't fix it. He'll be back tomorrow afternoon, I guess.
     UPDATE 1-8: still have no service. Technician won't call back.
     UPDATE 1-9: at long last, the lines are repaired—but the problem seemed to be something other than the causes earlier claimed. —Whatever; I'm once again connected to the world.

 1964: The Beach Boys, "Don't Worry Baby"
Inspired by the Ronnettes' "Be My Baby," which was a hit a year earlier. Some consider this the Beach Boys' finest recording and Brian's finest vocal. It's my fave.

Friday, December 31, 2021

1966: nearly forgotten, disquieting, vatic gems!

1966: Arthur Lee's LOVE, "My Little Red Book"



I just got out my little red book 
The minute that you said goodbye 
I thumbed right through my little red book 
I wasn't gonna sit and cry

1966: The Seeds, "Can't Seem to Make You Mine"


"...the glorious primitivism and narrower focus of their debut [album] ultimately works to their advantage; there are few albums of the era that mirror the delicious arrogance of a beer-sodden teenage misfit with the effortless simplicity of the Seeds, and it's justly celebrated as a classic of first-wave garage punk."


1966: The Standells, "Dirty Water"


"The Los Angeles band was actually hardly typical of the young suburban outfits across America who took their raw garage sound onto obscure singles recorded in small studios. They'd been playing L.A. clubs since the early '60s, with a repertoire that mostly consisted of covers of pre-Beatles rock hits. Drummer (and eventual lead singer) Dick Dodd had been a Mouseketeer on television, organist Larry Tamblyn was the brother of noted film actor Russ Tamblyn, and Tony Valentino was a recent immigrant from Italy."


Yeah, down by the river 
Down by the banks of the river Charles 
Aw, that's what's happenin', baby 
That's where you'll find me 
Along with lovers, muggers, and thieves 
Aw, but they're cool, too

1966: Syndicate of Sound, "Little Girl"



"...Syndicate of Sound singer Don Baskin and bassist Bob Gonzalez ultimately took that inspiration and penned a unique number incorporating sonic elements of Britpop and folk-rock with a dark, brooding, and dyspeptic lyrical sentiment, delivered with an almost discomforting level of sanguine indifference."

1966: 13th Floor Elevators, "You're Gonna Miss Me"


"The 13th Floor Elevators [of Austin, Texas] were trailblazers in the psychedelic rock scene, and in time they'd pay a heavy price for exploring the outer edges of musical and psychological possibility, but along the way they left behind a few fine albums, and The Psychedelic Sounds of the 13th Floor Elevators remains a potent delight."


You're gonna wake up wonderin' 
Find yourself all alone 
But what's gonna stop me, baby? 
I'm not comin' home

1966: ? and the Mysterians, "96 Tears"


"It only took one song, the organ-driven number one smash '96 Tears,' to make ? & the Mysterians into garage rock legends. Eccentric frontman Question Mark ... cultivated an aura of mystery by never appearing in public without a pair of wraparound sunglasses; he frequently claimed he had been born on Mars and lived among the dinosaurs in a past life, and that voices from the future had revealed he would be performing '96 Tears' in the year 10,000. On a more earthly level, the Mysterians' sound helped lay down an important part of the garage rock blueprint, namely the low-budget sci-fi feel of the Farfisa and Vox organs (most assumed that '96 Tears' had featured the former, but ? later remembered using the latter)."


And when the sun comes up, I'll be on top 
You'll be right down there, looking up 
And I might wave...

1966: The Troggs, "I Can't Control Myself"


"...[T]he words weren't making suggestions but spelling sexual desire out pretty clearly. In particular the line about the slacks hanging low and hips showing, sung with unsuppressed hunger, didn't leave much to the imagination. Nor did the final parts of the verse, where the melody ascended dramatically before pausing for [singer Reg] Presley to seethe the title phrase, after which the band crashed conclusively on a chilling minor chord."


1966: The Monks, "Complication"


"If anything, the Monks were far wilder than their story would suggest; they may have looked bizarre in their matching black outfits, rope ties, and tonsures, but it was their music that was truly radical, with the sharp fuzz and feedback of Gary Burger's guitar faced off against the bludgeoning clang of Dave Day's amplified banjo (taking the place of rhythm guitar), as Roger Johnston pounded out minimalist patterns on the drums, Eddie Shaw's electric bass gave forth with a monstrous throb, and Larry Clark's keyboard bounced off the surfaces of the aural melee."


People cry, 
People die for you. 
People kill, 
People will for you. 
People run, 
Ain't it fun for you.

AND A PERSONAL FAVORITE:

1966: Love, "No Matter What You Do"


Do you remember me? 
I'm the one you talk about 
Do you remember me? 
I'm the one you booted out 

 [Chorus] No matter what in the world you do Hey, 
I'll always be in love with you 
No matter what in the world you say Girl, 
I'm gonna love you anyway

     The rhythm guitarist and second singer for Love was Bryan MacLean, who wrote some of the band's best songs, including the lovely "Alone Again Or." After his association with Love
, MacLean underwent a conversion to Christianity and pursued Christian music. His half-sister, Maria McKee, formed the band Lone Justice in the 80s, and one of that band's best songs was written by Bryan: "Don't Toss Us Away," which was later a hit single for country singer Patty Loveless. Bryan died of a heart attack in 1998 at age 52. 

Wednesday, December 29, 2021

I wild night up here in the mountains

No passage for now. The oak tree is bigger than it looks!

     We're having a wild night here in Lambrose Canyon (Trabuco Cyn. area just above O'Neill Park). Officials are evacuating residents of nearby neighborhoods: Silverado Cyn., Modjeska Cyn., etc. The weather people are warning that we might get 5-7 inches of rain tonight! (That's a frightening thought.) 

     Already, a large tree has fallen and has blocked our exit from Lambrose Canyon. Anni sent me a pic. (See.) 

     Evidently, there was a construction worker at the rental (on our property) who discovered late this afternoon that he was no longer able to drive out (i.e., to drive home). Anni got on the horn to try to get help with moving the tree; she didn't get far; after a while she sought the guy out but could find neither him nor his pickup. But the tree's still blocking the road! Huh?

     I suggested taking a look up Lambrose in the other direction: the road peters out into non-existence and mud as it goes up a box canyon (back in the early 70s, it was still passable but it has steadily deteriorated). But Anni couldn't find him there, nor is there any indication anyone had driven up that way. 

     So it's a mystery. 

     Sounds like one of our neighbors has arranged for help with the tree in the morning. So there's that.

     We'll be all right, I'm sure, though we may experience some flooding tonight (especially down at the studio, which flooded a week or two ago during a relatively moderate storm). 

     And boy is it cold—about 49 degrees already! (My place doesn't have heat, 'ceptin for one or two space heaters.) Sheesh!

     As always, Teddy says "hey!"

Voice of OC photo

Now your Daddy don't mind

Some of my favorites ca. 1960:

 

Henry Gaston: amazing falsetto (1960)


IN THE STILL OF THE NIGHT. The song was recorded in the Saint Bernadette Catholic School basement in New Haven, Connecticut in February 1956. Marty Kugell produced the song. The saxophone solo was played by Vinny Mazzetta of New Haven. The rhythm section was Doug Murray (bass), Bobby Mapp (drums) and Curlee Glover (piano). (Wikipedia)

Fred Paris and the boys: 1956


1961
LOVER'S ISLAND. The Blue Jays were an American vocal doo-woop group who surfaced fleetingly in the 1960s. Hailing from Venice, California, the group consisted of Leon Peels (who came from Newport, Arkansas), Van Richardson, Alex Manigo and Leonard Davidson. They formed n 1961, and landed a record deal with Milestone Records. Their only hit was their debut single “Lover’s Island” which broke into the Top 40 in 1961. (MentalItch)


Rosie and the Originals: 1961 hit. One
of John Lennon's all-time favorites

ROSIE: "I [at age 15] played [Angel Baby] for [the Originals] and I just had the arrangement as [I] knew it. It wasn't sophisticated. They liked it. They just started playing parts. The guy that was on the 45, that played on the record, was not our horn player, Alfred Barrett. He was Tony, who actually played bass guitar. We ended up going to the only recording studio we could find within a 100 mile radius. It was on the outskirts of San Diego, on a farm. He was an airplane mechanic. He'd taken part of his hanger and was gonna have a studio when he retired. So, we were there all day, playing it over and over, trying to get it sounding just right. I was playing piano on it. We called Alfred 'cause he wasn't there yet. He said he couldn't get out of the house. His mother wouldn't let him leave 'til he finished mowing and raking the yard. He didn't make the session, so, that's how the terrible horn solo got on there, 'cause nobody knew what they were doing." (Gary James’ interview of Rosie Hamlin)

Tuesday, December 28, 2021

Major campuses will start January Online

7 U of California Campuses Will Start January Online 

Inside Higher Ed

So will Loyola Marymount, Oakland and McDaniel as fear of the Omicron variant of COVID-19 and its impact spreads. 

Seven University of California campuses announced Monday that they will start instruction online in January in response to the Omicron variant of COVID-19. 

The campuses are at Davis, Irvine, Los Angeles, San Diego, Santa Barbara, Santa Cruz and Riverside. UC Santa Barbara announced on its website that “Given the uncertainties around the Omicron variant, UC Santa Barbara will begin winter quarter with two weeks of remote instruction. The quarter will begin as scheduled Monday, Jan. 3, and in-person instruction will resume Tuesday, Jan. 18, following the Martin Luther King, Jr. Day holiday, subject to reassessment of the situation early in the quarter. The decision to delay in-person teaching is related to supporting students and instructors, particularly those who either test positive over winter break and cannot travel back to campus on time, or who test positive upon arrival and need to isolate.”… 

COVID-19 Changes Plans for Next Semester 

Inside Higher Ed

DePaul, Harvard and Stanford students won’t have in-person classes the first weeks of the semester; Penn State, UCLA and U of Southern California are considering such a move; Cornell has surge in infections; Bowie State, Towson and Tufts move finals online. 

COVID-19 is leading some colleges to alter their plans for the next semester, even as it continues to impact the semester that is finishing up. The concern is the Omicron variant of the virus, which transmits much more quickly than other versions and appears to infect some people who are vaccinated. 

In most cases thus far, the Omicron variant does not cause vaccinated individuals to experience anything but mild symptoms, according to public health experts. But college officials are still worried. .Stanford University announced that it will start the winter quarter online, from Jan. 3 until Jan. 18….

More Colleges Announce Changes for January

Inside Higher Ed

Wednesday, December 22, 2021

Lately overheard in Mayfair

 

I saw a werewolf with a Chinese menu in his hand
Walking through the streets of SoHo in the rain
He was looking for the place called Lee Ho Fook's
Gonna get a big dish of beef chow mein

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...