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Author Message
20 new of 244 responses total.
krj
response 225 of 244: Mark Unseen   Jun 14 06:04 UTC 2001

NPR note #1:  On Wednesday, "All Things Considered" ran a feature about a 
documentary film about the musicians who performed for the film
"O Brother Where Art Thou?"  Director D.A. Pennebaker said that the 
real star of that film was John Hartford.  The film is called 
"Down From The Mountain."
happyboy
response 226 of 244: Mark Unseen   Jun 14 17:49 UTC 2001

i cant wait to see it.

i rediscovered my old wore out tape of
aereoplane, i last played it over a year ago.

i went out and got it on cd, also my sister gave me a 
copy of his lat 60's comp :gentle on  mmy mind and other
originals"
bmoran
response 227 of 244: Mark Unseen   Jun 23 02:30 UTC 2001

Some unknown blues guy quit playing down here and went to the club in the
sky. J.L. Hooker I believe was his name. Couldn't spell very well, they
say he had a hit with "Boogie Chillin'" back in the late 40's. Some
'Modern' rockers said they were inspired by him. (What a voice!)
tpryan
response 228 of 244: Mark Unseen   Jun 23 13:44 UTC 2001

        /tpryan lights a single candle.
happyboy
response 229 of 244: Mark Unseen   Jun 23 16:59 UTC 2001

john hartford
john lee hooker
carrol o'connor


krj
response 230 of 244: Mark Unseen   Jun 23 18:51 UTC 2001

Carroll O'Connor, of course, has a place in musical history for his
vocal performance on the theme song from "All In The Family."
dbratman
response 231 of 244: Mark Unseen   Jun 24 12:22 UTC 2001

... a song which has usurped the title "Those Were the Days", and I 
often wonder if I'm the only person who remembers another song with 
that title, popularized by Mary Hopkin in the 60s ...
tpryan
response 232 of 244: Mark Unseen   Jun 24 14:16 UTC 2001

        based on old Russian folk tune?
gelinas
response 233 of 244: Mark Unseen   Jun 24 18:35 UTC 2001

Is that the one Kool 107 used to play?  (I've switched to WEMU, so I
don't know that 107 isn't still playing it.)
bruin
response 234 of 244: Mark Unseen   Jun 24 20:50 UTC 2001

There was a song by Mary Hopkin in 1968 called "Those Were The Days" 
(not the AITF theme).  It was one of the first recordings on the 
Beatles' Apple label
gelinas
response 235 of 244: Mark Unseen   Jun 24 20:55 UTC 2001

I guess the answer to #231 is, "No."  ;)
dbratman
response 236 of 244: Mark Unseen   Jun 26 04:59 UTC 2001

I guess the answer to 232 is probably "no", and the answer to 231 seems 
to be "dashed close to it."
gelinas
response 237 of 244: Mark Unseen   Jun 26 05:54 UTC 2001

My guess is that the answer to #232 is "yes."  The song is definitely
European; I'd always thought Greek, but Russian works.
sspan
response 238 of 244: Mark Unseen   Jul 1 16:45 UTC 2001

Heard today that Chet Atkins passed away.
krj
response 239 of 244: Mark Unseen   Jul 21 04:18 UTC 2001

I need to get back to writing about Chet Atkins.
 
-----
 
Folksinger Mimi Farina died on July 18.  She was 56; we'd known she 
had cancer and was sliding downhill fast when her sister Joan Baez
cancelled her Ann Arbor Folk Festival appearance, along with the 
rest of her concert schedule, to care for Mimi. 
 
Mimi Farina was best known for the two 1960s duet albums she recorded 
with her husband Richard Farina; their best-known song was "Pack Up 
Your Sorrows."  After Richard was killed in a motorcycle accident 
in 1966 (Mimi was 21), she tried to keep a solo career going 
but it was not much of a success.  In the 1970s she started a 
charity group, "Bread and Roses," which brings music performances 
to the imprisoned, the sick, the elderly and the poor.
 
A recent book, "Positively Fourth Street," reportedly chronicles the 
tangled personal and artistic relationships among Richard & Mimi 
Farina, Joan Baez and Bob Dylan.  I haven't read it; the reviews make
it sound like quite the soap opera.
 
The Farinas' recordings have rarely if ever gone out of print: there 
was a new CD compilation issued last year.  But I've found that few 
people younger than me have ever heard of them.  Time to dust off the 
old Vanguard LPs.
orinoco
response 240 of 244: Mark Unseen   Jul 21 16:00 UTC 2001

I listen to my parents' copy of "Celebration for a Grey Day" now and again.

(Do you know if any of Mimi's solo albums are still in print?  I think I'd
like "Celebration" a lot better if it weren't for Richard's voice...)
krj
response 241 of 244: Mark Unseen   Jul 23 16:37 UTC 2001

I haven't found any in-print listings for any solo Mimi Farina albums.
The only ones I found listed anywhere were "Take Heart," with 
Tom Jans, from 1971; and "Solo", from 1985, which I dimly 
remember seeing as a CD edition.
dbratman
response 242 of 244: Mark Unseen   Jul 24 05:27 UTC 2001

Despite all the reviews of "Positively Fourth Street", the interest 
hasn't translated into obits of Mimi Farina in anything that I read, 
before now.

Unfortunately, I don't know her work, solo or group.  I've heard a few 
Richard-and-Mimi songs, and though Richard's voice is nasal, it's 
infinitely less annoying than that of Bob Dylan, whom I can't stand.
orinoco
response 243 of 244: Mark Unseen   Jul 24 20:39 UTC 2001

"Solo" turned up for sale on a few sites.  There is a CD edition.  I lost the
URL, of course, but it's out there.
krj
response 244 of 244: Mark Unseen   Aug 1 19:57 UTC 2001

From rec.music.country.old-time:  I have not tested the links:
 
Now available for consumption by those who revered him, the program
"Stashed Behind Your Couch", a 6-part retrospective of John Hartford.
Has stuff from his first RCA material up to the most recent, and interviews
with such as  Bela Fleck, Sam Bush, Pete Wernick, Bob Carlin, Tom Smothers,
Dr. Demento, some lesser-known friends and a few cherished bits of John
himself.  Enjoy.

Playlist file:  http://www.kfjc.org/hartford/slowfull.m3u

MP3 files:  http://www.kfjc.org/hartford/SBYC1LOW.MP3 (and 2 thru 6).

This program aired on Sat. July 21 2001 on KFJC 89.7 in the SF Bay Area.


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