Monday, October 19, 2020

Spin the Black Circle

30 years ago, in the Spring of 1990, I was standing with Jason at Penn Station in New York City. We were underneath the big board that releases the track number for our return trip on the Raritan Valley Line when I looked up to see a man with a crate of records. 

From where we were standing, it looked like Mister Cee, Big Daddy Kane’s D.J. from his 1989 hit album, “It’s A Big Daddy Thing”. I quickly approached the man, but to my surprise, he laughed and told me I was confused and he was not the person who I thought he was. One might now be asking yourself, “How would the 15 year-old version of me recognize Calvin LeBrun?” Well, I am that person who reads the liner notes, checks who received credit for lyrics and admires all of the photographs and artwork that accompanies the albums that have floated in and out of my life.

I am one of the youngest in my family, so I inherited a stereo that played 8-tracks (“Born to Run”) and cassettes (“It Takes 2”). I did eventually add a CD component (“Back in Black”), but I did not realize until a few years ago that the gem of all my inheritance was the albums and 45s. 

I do not know seem to be the only one whose records are getting more use than the dusty pile of CDs. Based on a September 2020 article from ‘The Guardian’, “Vinyl records have outsold CDs in the US for the first time since the 1980s, according to data from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).” 

I don’t remember ever actually purchasing albums at Vintage Vinyl in Edison, NJ, but I know that vinyl is clearly now a (big daddy) thing. Already 6 years ago, I attended a Barr Brothers concert at The Andy Warhol Museum in 2014, and the band was only selling their self-titled debut album on vinyl. More recently, I worked my first concert since both the global pandemic stunted live performances and the opening act Nick Perri & The Underground Thieves, only promoted the vinyl release of their new album “Sun Via”. 

These days I go crate-diving and pick up $1.00 classics when I can. Most recently, I found the 1962 release of “The Best of Sam Cooke”. And I also revel in the many classic lines in songs that reference the act of spinning a record. Vanilla Ice simply pumping up the crowd with “If there was a problem yo I'll solve it / Check out the hook while my DJ revolves it” is only one example of artists singing about records. 

For me, I love the sound of the snap, crackle and pop made through my speakers. The three-dimensional grooves cut into the vinyl record represent how the sound waves can move through the air. It is also exhilarating to actually steady my hand to put the needle on the record. I can’t go back to Penn Station and ask the question to Mister Cee again, but maybe if he saw me now carrying my crate of records, he would have a different answer. 

Thanks for reading!

Tuesday, September 8, 2020

Every Breath You Take

Gavin Rossdale sings in Bush’s hit single ‘Machinehead’ – “Breathe in, breathe out, breathe in, breathe out”.  

When one of my sons is up to bat, I remind him to breathe.  When my other son is shooting free throws, I remind him to breathe. I am trying to find a way at this point in time to breathe myself.  I find my myself constantly thinking about the impactful choices that my wife and I are currently facing: deciding to send our boys to school for in-person learning (yes that is a term now), searching for work that is accompanied by a paycheck, and making sure that the four of us consistently have enough groceries to eat ALL of our meals in our house.  But between all of those thoughts, I am finding ways to meander around my neighborhood, as it always seems to be easier to breathe when I am out in the fresh air of Pittsburgh.

To combat one of the pitfalls of spending all this time in my house, I have been trying to run more.  Right now, while I can, it is on the trails of Frick Park.  Right now, I do not listen to headphones or music, due the trails mostly being single track, and I have never seen a runner win a collision with a mountain-biker.  So as I huff and puff to finish a 4-mile course that I have outlined, my head clears and I am brainstorming blog ideas and potential podcast episodes; some that I believe are good which turn into actual posts, and some that will sit forever as post-it notes on my desk.  At the same time, I would be lying if I did not admit that while I am running, I also think of political conspiracy theories, 1980s & 1990s collegiate basketball players, a lot of music to remember to listen to and of course remembering to breathe.  

According to the American Lung Association, we breathe an estimated 17,000 breaths a day, and breathe in about 2,000 gallons of air—enough to almost fill up a normal-sized swimming pool. Most of us don't even think about it as we go about our daily routine. But what if your breathing technique was one of the most important skills to having a successful career?

Wind musicians rely heavily on training their lungs. I can only imagine Rob Wagner, saxophonist and clarinetist player for the New Orleans Klezmer All Stars smoking cigarettes.  And according to https://music.stackexchange.com/, there are hundreds of different types of breathing exercises for brass band players.   If Wendell Eugene was still with us, I can only imagine which of these that he prescribed.   Construction workers need to be mindful of their breathing based on all of the dust that surrounds them.  Even those who sit in front of a screen all day hunched over, according to scientists need to actively think about how they are breathing.

So as life around us continues to intensify, remember no matter where you are, escaping for those few moments of fresh air, or auditioning for the Hot 8 Brass Band, you should try and breathe.

Thanks for reading.

Thursday, July 30, 2020

We Used to be Giants


John Fogerty sings “Got a beat-up glove, a homemade bat, and brand-new pair of shoes / You know I think it's time to give this game a ride / Just to hit the ball and touch 'em all / A moment in the sun / It's-a gone / And you can tell that one goodbye!”

In a previous life it was a badge of honor as a tour manager to barrel into a van with guitar cases, drum kits or even just friends and drive miles and miles to get to a concert.  These days, I am a dedicated equipment manager to my son and his aspiring baseball career.  Instead of a haul from Guitar Center, I find myself loading baseball bats, multiple gloves and catcher’s gear to get to Little League games.


Road-tripping once meant debating classic drive-time conversations like who was more influential, The Beatles or Led Zeppelin as we fought for control over the radio or CD player.  These days, my son and I just take turns playing music for each other on my iPhone that we might like.  Yes – I confess, I slipped DJ Shadow’s collaboration with Run the Jewels “Nobody Speak” into the mix and smiled so big when he hollered at El-P’s flow: “I'm unmentionably fresh, I'm a mensch, get correct / I will walk into a court while it wrecks”.

Traveling to shows also meant a certain amount of pride in performing 8 shows in 7 days, but now it is bragging about 10 games and several practices in 8 days.  Where my mapping skills used to take me to places in Pennsylvania like Media, Millvale and West Chester, these days it is Beaver, Harrison City and Saxonburg.  All special places in their own right, but these days my reason for adventure rivals why people traveled “to Iowa for reasons they can't even fathom.”  With a wink and a nod to W.P. Kinsella and Phil Alden Robinson, I arrive at fields innocently.  Walking out to the bleachers; sitting in shirtsleeves on a perfect afternoon and watching a game and as if I was dipped in magic waters.  It reminds me of all that once was good and it could be again. 

We live in crazy, crazy times but I am taking a lot of positive energy from being socially distant at these games but at the same time rooting on my son and his teammates.  Borrowing from Rage Against the Machine’s song “Renegade of Funk”, these boys believe in each other and are following the mantra, “No matter how hard you try, you can't stop us now".  And just as his team has rallied in the bottom of the 6th inning, I am hoping that we can as people.   

Now instead of wanting to go to a gig at the Williamsport Community Arts Center we have our sights set on a game at Howard J. Lamade Stadium.

Thanks for reading.



Wednesday, July 8, 2020

Pac-Man Fever

I had never had an MRI before June 2020.    I have now had three, but even with all of the time in the scanner tube, I am still having issues identifying the house band that has been making all the sounds in the background. 

Although when most people hear the letters M.R.I., they think of Magnetic Resonance Imaging, my brain continues to turn to music.  And while some people hear jackhammers or a cacophony, I have been spending my different time intervals in the cylinder-shaped magnet thinking about the uniqueness of the sounds.

Could it have been Daniel Maman, better known by his stage name The Alchemist, trying to get the beats just right?  Tom Morello's 1982 Fender Telecaster practicing for the next Rage Against the Machine reunion gig?  How about everyone’s favorite Count von Count, the mysterious but friendly vampire Muppet from Sesame Street tuning his organ?  Had I simply landed inside of the arcade game Galaga?  Unfortunately, we will never know.  Radiologists are not people of many words (or clearly a sense of humor) and when I asked who got to enter his/hear initials for the game’s high score, I just received blank stares.

For the purpose of this post, let’s think that M.R.I. stands for Multi Recording Interface.  And for those who did not graduate from Berklee College of Music in Boston, MA or Belmont University in Nashville, TN, an audio interface is a piece of hardware that expands and improves the sonic capabilities of a computer.  And in my experience, they are an absolutely essential component in audio production.   

Some strong memories jump to the forefront of my mind when thinking of sound recording equipment.  There is my former roommate and childhood friend Danny Marcus recording on a 4-track in the living of our Washington DC apartment.   Another flashback is getting schooled on Pro Tools by Doug Derryberry in his Brooklyn, NY recording studio.  And these days, I have my own equipment sitting in my house in Pittsburgh, as my friend Josh Green joins me from Harlem, NY while we figure out how to use Audacity to record our podcasts.

I know that I am not as talented as Charlotte Gainsbourg, who made the sounds of the MRI scan part of the music itself. Her third album, co-written and produced by Beck, was released in 2010 and titled “IRM,” the acronym for Imagerie par Résonance Magnétique (MRI in French), but what I am doing is trying to keep things in perspective when dissecting a mentally heavy procedure. 

I am not sure when I will have my next one scheduled, and multiple friends have suggested that I request headphones the next time that I have one booked.  I am open to suggestions as to what to listen to, but maybe the soundtrack has already been written?

Thanks for reading!

Monday, June 22, 2020

If I Were A Carpenter

On Facebook, I was recently challenged to name 10 albums that have influenced my musical taste and upbringing over the past 44+ years. You have all seen the posts: One record per day. No explanations, no reviews, just the cover art.  Not my desert island discs, not my top 10 albums of all time, but the 10 albums that are core memories.

For those that know me, seeing my first two listings, "Check Your Head" by the Beastie Boys and "Southern Harmony & Musical Companion" by The Black Crowes were probably not surprising, but then I started to dig deep.  In fact, it was Corey Glover's voice from Living Colour that started to ring in my head, when he sings, "Everything is quiet / Everyone's gone to sleep / I'm wide awake / But these memories / These memories can't wait".  It caused me to think of the early 1980s in Westfield, NJ when it was The Carpenters' "Close to You" that was being pumped out of my parents' faux-end-table size speakers.  I cannot even remember the last time before today when I listened to "We've Only Just Begun".  But it was at this point that the challenge really started to make sense. 

It also made me think that I can relate to my friend Jess who has been spending the quarantine in Moreton-in-Marsh, UK.  She recently wrote,  that she is "Nostalgic in normal times and fairly connected and social, I wondered if this overwhelming longing to hear from people I’m perfectly capable of not talking to with any regularity in other times was just me. Turns out it’s not. It even has a name, a good one. It’s called a memory avalanche, this feeling of nostalgic desire for connection with people from our past . . ."  

This comment made me think of the Disney Pixar film "Inside Out" when Riley, a happy, 11-year-old Midwestern girl gets her world turns upside-down when she and her parents move to San Francisco.  Riley's emotions do their best to try and guide her through this life-changing event in only a way that a clever Pixar film can.  Outside of entertainment, scientific studies find that our identities are defined by specific emotions, which shape how we perceive the world, how we express ourselves and the responses we evoke in others.  "Inside Out” similar to these times of quarantine is a film about loss and what people gain when guided by feelings of sadness.

So for me, it is not the loss of people, but over these weeks and now months, I have been taking the time to reconnect with music.  There have been some recent deaths of musical legends that have hit me right in the gut, leading me to reflect on what music has always meant to me.  I do not own any Bill Withers or John Prine albums, but when I heard the respective news of their deaths, I could not help but remind myself how much I like listening to classic songs like "Use Me Up" and "Lean on Me".  And for Mr. Prine, the memories of hearing  'Dear Abby' and 'Grandpa was a Carpenter' jumped to the forefront of my mind.

Don't ask me how I remember these types of things, but spending all of this time inside has allowed me to dust off some albums that I have held onto and it feels good to connect with these records from my past.  It has even allowed me to hear how I got from polished singer-songwriters who used the Wrecking Crew as their house band to hip-hop pioneers that played their own instruments.

Thanks for reading.

Monday, June 1, 2020

"Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?"

"When things get back to normal . . .".   "When was the last time you went out to eat in a restaurant?" These are becoming all too common questions/phrases that we are currently hearing regularly in conversation.  In fact, I initiated an email thread a couple of weeks ago asking my long-time concert companion Jamie what were his first and LAST shows.  For those keeping score at home, for me it was August 28, 1991:  George Thorogood and the Delaware Destroyers with Johnny Winter at Waterloo (Stanhope, NJ), while for Jamie it was July 27, 1986:  Mr. Mister with The Bangles at  Saratoga Performing Arts Center (Saratoga Springs, NY).  And to keep us in the way-back machine, the first show that we ever attended together was November 23, 1994: G Love & Special Sauce at Maxwell's (Hoboken, NJ).  We have come a long from those days, but obviously not too far geographically since we were both spotted together most recently February 15, 2020:  The Play Trains reunion show at Crossroads (Garwood, NJ).

However, I have decided that I want to stop thinking about things from a perspective of first and last, but instead first and what’s next.   Is it the auto disco, The Micrashell (according to Robby, I can just wear the green blazer over the suit), drive-in shows, streaming concerts?  

The auto disco just doesn't do it for me, I would rather take a road trip and sing and dance in the car all the way to New Orleans instead of parked in one place.  The Micrashell is wild, an extremely futuristic idea and you will always be Halloween ready, but I can only see myself donning it for a Daft Punk show.

Drive-in concerts intrigue me, but similar to the fact that most amphitheaters were built outside of cities, so were drive-ins and not that I have never traveled for a show, but what happens if you don't call "Shotgun"?  Being relegated to the backseat for a show at the Riverside Drive In Theater in Vandergrift, PA makes me think that my friends will treat me like Morgan from 'Good Will Hunting' and that I just ordered a 'double burger'.

As for streaming concerts, I went old-school and watched the Rush in Rio live DVD in the Hickey’s basement with some fanatic fans, I also took the time to connect my laptop to my TV to watch Phish from my own living room as they closed out their 2014 tour at the Verizon Amphitheatre in Alpharetta, GA, but not surprisingly, neither experience captured the feeling of actually being there.

I realize that artists are going to continue to release new music and that they are going to want to present their songs.  In fact, I just read the New York Times '25 Songs that Matter' and I am definitively intrigued by Richard Dawson (the British singer songwriter, not the kissing bandit TV game show host) as well as the band Red Hearse and the idea of seeing these artists perform live.  So what do I think is next?

Well after watching SpaceX launch, I believe we are over-thinking all of this.  In my humble opinion, the same venues re-open, but at smaller capacities.  Concerts adopt the definition of social distancing and take-on the feel as if you are seeing the Avett Brothers at Club Cafe in 2006.  And when that happens you can once again say, "Remember when we saw G. Love & Special Sauce with 50 other people on the night before Thanksgiving."

Thanks for reading.

Friday, May 1, 2020

Rinse, Wash, Repeat


During this unprecedented time, a lot of people might feel that all of their days are blurring together.  Is it Monday?  Is it Friday?  Has the idea of wearing morning sweatpants versus evening sweatpants really become a thing?  I am doing my best to mix up my routine.  I am dipping into my vast collection of t-shirts accumulated over the years and wearing a different one each day.  But there are instances when I seem to be having a battle with the same ol’, same ol’.  I have not gotten to Pittsburgh meteorologist Phil Connors’ level of repetitive, but I find myself asking if I have seen and heard this before?

Most recently, I was stopped in my tracks after hearing the Primitive Radio Gods’ 1996 song, "Standing Outside A Broken Phone Booth" on Pittsburgh's WYEP 91.3 FM in my car on the way to the grocery store and then having it be the first full song I heard in my destination - Giant Eagle-East Liberty.  I am assuming that Giant Eagle was playing some well curated playlist from their streaming music for retail stores partnership, not consulting with the independent radio gods.  Why would they want to mess with one of the few remaining people that still regularly listens to the radio?

I am not sleepwalking through these endless days and weeks.  And I am sure the songwriters: Chris O'Connor and Leonard Feather were not trying to stir the pot, but the lyrics carry weight during COVID-19: “Am I alive or thoughts that drift away? / Does summer come for everyone? / Can humans do as prophets say? / And if I die before I learn to speak / Can money pay for all the days I lived awake / But half asleep?”.

At a different time in my life, I can also think of a handful of times that I sat in my apartment in Washington DC and played a handful of songs on repeat.  Not sure about the songs being penned in 1992, but the jam, “Taking Us Home” by The Samples from their album, ‘No Room’ as well as Jeffrey Gaines’ single “Headmasters of Mine” that included the B-Side cover of Peter Gabriel’s classic “In Your Eyes” were in heavy rotation on my Aiwa stereo.  There was also the 1996 release by the band Satchel (featuring the late vocalist Shawn Smith) which included the song, “Without Love”.

I could listen to these songs, over and over and I found comfort in their familiarity.  These days, I have found myself repeatedly listening to songs both old and new.  My “last” concert before seeing live music in person took a hiatus was Dermot Kennedy.  His song, “Rome”, speaks to me with the line, “All these memories run my mind in slow motion” or Billy Joel’s Miami 2017 (Seen The Lights Go OutOn Broadway) which written in 1976 still has an eerie relevance today:  “I've seen the lights go out on Broadway / I saw the mighty skyline fall / The boats were waiting at the battery / The union went on strike / They never sailed at all…”

Soon these days will be memories and hopefully they won’t repeat this winter.  Thanks for reading.

Sunday, April 19, 2020

And You Can Tell Everybody This is Your Song


I have a lot of memories of my most recent family trip to Israel to celebrate my older son's Bar Mitzvah. However, there is one that repeatedly jumps out at me: playing the "telephone game" with 18 family members at Roza Restaurant in Gush Etzion Junction.  Even if the phrase was something simple like "Shawarma on a Spit", it was guaranteed, that this phrase would not get around the table intact.

The world has changed a lot since that December 2019 trip to the Middle East and these days, with social distancing, my family and I find ourselves on a lot of walks and runs throughout our neighborhood.  During these walks, the topics range from politics to starting your own business to what songs you are listening to when exercising.  At the same time, we also look to keep things light, and what makes me laugh during these unprecedented times is flubbing the lyrics to songs that you really thought you knew the words.  

Recently my younger son has thrown himself into the spotlight.  At the top of the chart this week is Bon Jovi's 'Livin' on a Prayer', which has been affectionately turned into 'Living on a Prairie'.  It reminded me of a Wayne’s World skit that I think would also work with the new Saturday Night Live (At Home) format in which Wayne & Garth highlight the 'Top 5 Misheard Lyrics' from their basement.  I have never forgotten #5 Peter Gabriel's "Shock the Monkey" being sung as "Jacques the Monkey".  

When the topic of this post came up, my wife also recalled a childhood friend that used to sing Rusted Root's hit "Send Me On My Way" as "Simmi & the Whale" and this woman would impressively go on to study at the University of Pennsylvania and Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.  Speaking of colleges, while I was an undergraduate student at George Washington University, the team had numerous players with unique names:  Omo Moses, Kwame Evans and Vaughn Jones to name a few (shout out to Nimbo Hammons and Adama Kah as well).  And cleverly, the GW band changed the lyrics to Tito Puente's song, "Oye Como Va" with "Omo, Kwame, Vaughn".  I am sure there are some Colonials’ fans who never knew the origins of the 1962 Latin jazz and mambo Billboard hit.

The bottom line is that people are listening to a lot of individual playlists these days, but they are not alone in making up lyrics to their favorite songs.  I realize that I too have a couple of errors on the score sheet.  There is the time that I thought that Rush's lyrics to "Tom Sawyer" were tied to a 1980s video game that I played regularly at Warinanco Park in Roselle, "Today's Tom Sawyer, He gets high on you, With Space Invaders, He gets by on you'.  Or The Clash's "Rock the Casbah", in which I thought Joe Strummer was singing, "Kareem don't like it.".  As if #33 needed to be in another song other than Kurtis Blow's "Basketball"?

Good luck with Google Translate.  Thanks for reading.

Friday, March 27, 2020

Brothers don't shake hands, brothers hug


“Yes, no, maybe / I don't know / Can you repeat the question? / You're not the boss of me now / You're not the boss of me now / You're not the boss of me now, and you're not so big”.  As They Might Be Giants faze out of the speakers, the way I remember things is that if my older brother wanted to go to an arena-sized concert, my parents would give him the greenlight if, and only if, I was allowed to tag along.   U2’s ZOO TV Tour lands in East Rutherford, NJ at Brendan Byrne Arena and there I am in the parking lot drinking 16 oz. cans of Budweiser.  While I went to the show assuming that the highlight of my night would be “Mysterious Ways”, "Angel of Harlem" was the one that blew me away.  This song was my gateway to The Memphis Horns who appeared on the studio version of this song and nearly every recording for Stax Records that included a horn section, which if you connect the dots, leads to much of my present day taste of music.


I can certainly attribute some of my tastes in music to the fact that I grew up a younger brother.  My older brother’s interest in music and his vast  collection allowed me to spend hours upon hours (when I was not sorting Jason’s collection in Mountainside) to just sift through his records, which he then replaced with cassettes and then eventually CDs (thank you Columbia House mail-order music clubs!).  In one of the few non-physical confrontational efforts to get me out of his room and to stop poking around his stuff, he would make cassette copies of the music that I expressed interest in.  I remember my copy of The Replacements “Stink” and the closing song “Gimme Noise” which could not have been any more appropriate: “I give you my jacket / You give me your glamor / Gimme that record / Gimme that hammer / Are you sleeping / Are you sleeping /Brother John”.

All of these moments have led to my musical preferences in 2020.  A harmonious stew that even cookbook author Adeena Sussman would envy.  I learned to read the liner notes, lyrics and who played what on each track.  And learning the names of the players and the instruments took me further down the path of discovering what I seek out and listen to now: a lot of New Orleans brass, rhythmic vocals and the occasional piano or organ solo.  So even though my brother will be the first to testify that the majority of the music I listen to now is questionable, music is not just beautiful in the eye of the beholder, but who sits in the shotgun seat of the ’82 Pontiac.

My brother turns 48 tomorrow and we do not see each other nearly as often as we did when we were both on the East Coast. However, when we do connect, it is not strange for the conversation to focus on what we have been listening to or what live show we have seen recently.   And although I do not know the next time I will see my brother, let alone attend a concert together, I will continue to listen to music with a set of younger brother ears and look forward to the next time we can have a beer before heading to see live music.

Thanks for reading.

Tuesday, March 24, 2020

Like a bridge over troubled water


According to the web site Mental Health Connecticut, “Social isolation has been linked to higher blood pressure and cardiovascular disease, vulnerability to infection. . . .  Loneliness can affect your mental and emotional health as well as your physical well-being.”  Musicians have also weighed in on this same subject. Fiona Apple once stated that, “When you're surrounded by all these people, it can be lonelier than when you're by yourself. You can be in a huge crowd, but if you don't feel like you can trust anyone or talk to anybody, you feel like you're really alone.”  And even though I am lovingly surrounded by my wife and two sons, we are all battling the effects that this global pandemic is having on our daily lives – online learning and working from home. To cope with this stress, my wife turns to running on the treadmill, my boys like their video games and playing outdoor basketball, and for me it always seems to in one-way or another lean towards music.


Music is my happy space.  However, I have recently learned that, “Musicians are three times more likely to experience depression” (study completed by University of Westminster, London, UK).  The research surveyed 2,211 musicians, and over 68% stated they had struggled with depression.   This led me to ask myself, do all performers need to experience some sort of heartbreaking event to be able to create the songs that become the soundtrack of our lives?  My dear friend (and cousin) Jason and I have now been going back and forth for the past 48 hours with what seems like endless song titles (a lot of them with lyrics to match) that could be ripped from today’s headlines. 

Who knew that the Guns N' Roses song “Out ta Get Me” from their groundbreaking 1987 album “Appetite for Destruction” would carry so much weight in today’s unprecedented times:  “Been hidin' out / And layin' low / It's nothing new ta me / Well you can always find a place to go / If you can keep your sanity”.  Of course, there is more:  “Isolation” from Joy Division, "Armageddon's Back In Town" by the Drive-By-Truckers or "Don't Come Around Here No More" by Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers: “Don't come around here no more / Whatever you're looking for / Hey! Don't come around here no more / I've given up, stop”.

It is surreal to think that this is where we find ourselves in March 2020.  Nathaniel Rateliff at the Byham Theater – postponed, my trip to New Orleans for French Quarter Fest – postponed, The Rolling Stones NO FILTER tour – postponed.  There are now a lot of red question marks and Xs on my calendar where live music once occupied a spot.  Despite its absence, I still find myself relying on music in this extraordinary era and to a certain extent leaning on a band that encompasses popular music mythology. Although the Beatles can seem larger than life, sometimes it is their grounded lyrics that can bring us to safety: “And when the broken hearted people / Living in the world agree / There will be an answer, let it be. / For though they may be parted there is / Still a chance that they will see / There will be an answer, let it be / Let it be, let it be. Yeah / There will be an answer, let it be.”

Thanks for reading!

Monday, January 6, 2020

CONNECT 4

In my new job, I have taken to signing off emails with the line, “Looking forward to connecting soon.”  I don't write this line in vain because in fact, one of my main responsibilities on a daily basis at work is connecting with people.

Recently, I met with one of the premier special events rental companies in the greater Pittsburgh market late on a Friday afternoon.  At the end of our meeting we exchanged pleasantries and asked what each other was doing that weekend.  The gentleman, being my senior, mentioned that he and his wife would be going to a concert, and when I eagerly asked which one, he politely said that it was an artist before my time.  When I pressed him, he said “Arlo Guthrie” which I quickly responded that “It’s not Thanksgiving until you hear ‘Alice’s Restaurant’.  We then shared a quick laugh, but what really blew me away was that days later, I received a copy of “Alice's Restaurant 50th Anniversary Massacree” in the mail.

Music continues to be a constant in my life that connects me to my friends.  Both songs and bands often times link to me to people from various different points in my life. One of those bands is Phish.  And it is fitting that they are the group that sings a song called “The Connection”, "When I see the connection / Though I see, I don't stare”.  As I look into the figurative mirror of my life, they are the band that ties me to my childhood friends from New Jersey.   They were a constant in my college years in Washington DC and during my years of booking/traveling with bands.  They link me to my brother-in-law who lives on another continent and after seeing the band perform for the first time in a couple of years, I realized that even though I do not own any of their albums, they are a band that acts as a social glue for me.
  
I have yet to introduce my boys to Phish, but the song about connections that they have heard is Kermit the Frog’s “Rainbow Connection”:  “Why are there so many / Songs about rainbows/ And what's on the other side / Rainbows are visions / They're only illusions / And rainbows have nothing to hide.”  My intent of this blog is to share some of my ideas about music and how it plays a part in my life and I understand that by sharing those thoughts, I have put myself out there.  Hopefully in a way that you the reader can connect with . . .



As always, thanks for reading and enjoy my nominees/winners for what has become an obligatory year in review.  Happy New Decade!

Song of the Year:

Better Oblivion Community Center – “Dylan Thomas”
Black Pumas - "Colors"
Citizen Cope – “Justice”
Hozier - "Almost (Sweet Music)"
Daniel Norgen - "Let Love Rule the Game"

Concert of the Year:
J Roddy Walston & The Business at Point State Park - June 11
Cautious Clay at Schenley Plaza - June 29 
Grand Masters of Guitar at THIS IS RED - July 11 
Pink Talking Fish at Hamilton Live – October 12
Phish at Petersen Events Center – December 4

Album of the Year 
Bon Iver “I, I”
City and Colour – “A Pill for Loneliness”
Sam Fender – “Hypersonic Missiles”
Bruce Hornsby - “Absolute Zero”
Dermot Kennedy – “Without Fear”