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| Author | Message | ||
| 25 new of 673 responses total. | |||
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tod |
This response has been erased.
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lynne |
Only 25.5 hours of Hell left before I get my vacation. | ||
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richard |
latest poll in new hampshire (zogby) released yesterday: Howard Dean 38% John Kerry 17% Dick Gephardt 6% Joe Lieberman 6% Dean is clearly the front runner now. Dark horse candidate may be entering though. Today's New York Times says four star general Wesley Clark is likely to enter in a couple of weeks. General Clark is an outspoken critic of Bush's foreign policy. It can't hurt the Democratic party to have a four star general in the debate bashing Bush '. | ||
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happyboy |
*crosses fingers* | ||
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scott |
In California, visiting my sister. And it's nice and cool here, at least in Berkely this morning. | ||
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tod |
This response has been erased.
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jor |
there are 3 e's in Berkeley
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tod |
This response has been erased.
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michaela |
IHB I spent the evening dying my friend's hair, grilling with her and other friends, and playing Soul Calibur II with the boy. IAHB I got to do laundry for free. This is a big deal to me. :) I HATE going to the laundromat. | ||
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russ |
I'm about halfway through the Halloween 9 paper, and I am finding the deconstruction of SCO's legalese very amusing. | ||
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vidar |
IHB I will be taking a fair maiden to the Renassaince Faire later today. | ||
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gelinas |
Fair? For some reason, I'd guess a brunette. | ||
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happyboy |
with hirsute quality | ||
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richard |
IHB I had a quality Saturday night last night. Spent it across the river on the Jersey side, at Giants Stadium, watching Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band perform live. Bruce is of course New Jersey's favorite son, he lives right near the Meadowlands, so this was literally a home field show for him. Stadium shows are becoming a rarity in this day and age. These days you have acts who have to co- headline just to sell 12,000 seat arenas. Stadium shows are fast becoming something reserved for multi-act festivals. This was the 9th of 10 shows Bruce has done at Giants Stadium, a facility that seats 80,000, and all are sellouts. And not only was this not a co-headline tour, or a festival, but Bruce was as usual his own opening act. A three hour plus show, with no smoke or pyrotechnics, or video montages, or performers disappearing for long periods of time for costume changes. Just a good old fashioned rock and roll show, where the band comes to play, and do nothing BUT play. Pretty refreshing! Bruce played a lot of songs, both old and new, and showed the special chemistry he has with the E Street Band. Rare it is to see a band playing that knows each other so well. These days bands are too often artificially created, put together by PR flacks and talent agents sorting through head shots, with the songs written by professional pop "songwriters" hired by the studios. When Bruce was doing "Rosalita", with this big grin on his face, and jamming to Clarence Clemmons' sax solo, you see the affection they have for each other and can sense the fact that they were flashing back to days when they were playing in nearby Jersey bars years ago and nobody had ever heard of them. When you see Bruce and his band, you are seeing something real, and authentic, and sadly, you don't see that much anymore. The whole music business is corrupted now, and the artists are corrupted, and most of what you get is packaged and processed, and decidely IMO *not* real. This was a great concert. I have never seen a bad Bruce show, he is a hell of a live performer. He did great old hits like Glory Days (with Bruce and Little Steven VanZandt doing an extended guitar jam), Dancing in the Dark, Badlands, Rosalita, Candy's Room, and great new songs like The Rising, Waiting on a Sunny Day, Mary's Place, and others. A special thrill was when one of my favorite singers, Emmylou Harris, came on stage and a beautiful duet of Bruce's song "Across the Border" (which she also sings on her new album btw) Bruce also doesn't hide his political feelings, such as making pretty pointed negative comments about the Iraq war and our troops continued presence there. which he made to lead into the terrific song, "Land of Hope and Dreams" Also, as I've seen at virtually all Bruce's shows that I've been to, he had reprentatives of his favorite causes, the local homeless organizations and foodbanks, as well as Amnesty International, in and around the building collecting money, and he made pitches for them. A wonderful show, but when you left the building, you couldn't help but feel a little sadness mixed with the adrenalin high. Because, as I said, IMO rock and roll is losing its authenticity, the new performers are packaged and processed, and the music is given to them as opposed to being the product of authentic struggle and life experience. Bruce and his bandmates are in their fifties now. When they stop performing, and they will at some point probably not too far off, they won't be replaced. Acts don't grow that naturally anymore. Its all artificial now. So you think, ten or twenty years from now, will you or your kids be able to go to a rock and roll show and have the experience be as real as this was? Answer-- probably not. Bruce is a dinosaur now in the industry, the consummate rock performer. A dying breed, nearing extinction. So when you see him, or others like him, performing live, you have to savor the moment-- as I did-- knowing those moments are soon not to come again. | ||
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jor |
"authentic struggle and life experience"
Oh yea. Like learning to play the guitar.
You've got to give Bruce credit, he keeps
trying anyway.
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slynne |
Richard, sometimes I wonder if you missed your calling to work in PR. Half the time you write something, it comes off sounding like a press release or advertising copy. :) | ||
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goose |
RE#577 -- I've always had a dim view of Bruce's guitar playing, but on the recent VH1 special about Warren Zevon it showed him playing a guitar solo on the record and I have to say I was surprised and impressed. He really can play something interesting. I don't know if he could always do that, but se can now. ^^he | ||
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tod |
This response has been erased.
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vidar |
Although it may seem odd, IHB I got rejected yesterday. | ||
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richard |
#577...Bruce is a terrific guitar player, he did some good solos at the concert. Granted he is not as good as Nils Lofgren, but who is. In fact Bruce first came to prominence in New Jersey clubs as a guitarist, not as a singer. He often sat in on club gigs backing up Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes, the one time house band at the now famous Stone Pony club, and Bruce was before being "discovered", lead guitarist for several long forgotten Jersey bar bands... | ||
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anderyn |
Richard, that is sad. Of course, that's why I still dig folk music, where the performers/performances haven't yet gotten corrupted by being popular. :-) And I am glad to hear that you enjoyed the show. | ||
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scott |
Huh. I've never really heard a good Springsteen guitar solo - great arranged parts, but leads generally sucked. | ||
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tpryan |
re 576,
Hey ricard, how about re-entering that as an item in the music.cf?
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jaklumen |
Music could use a little something different. Not a bad idea. | ||
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mooncat |
re #519- actually, after the first day I was told not to use ice packs but to use heated things (my solution, putting a damp washcloth in the microwave for a few, then putting it in a Ziplock bag and putting that on my cheeks). This worked out really well. IHB- the beau and I have been together for almost a year (a year as of Oct 11)- and not only have we never had anything even resembling a fight (debates on ideas don't count) everything just keeps getting better and better. :) IAHB- while I'm a temp- I am employed. I like the people I work with and the work itself isn't bad. Not my dream job- but it will do until I figure out what my dream job is. | ||
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