Concert Convo: Springsteen Wrecks L.A. !

Button Springsteen Concert

Had a dream our love would last forever

Had a dream tonight that dream came true  

Bruce Springsteen, Rendevous

“This button’s goin’ on eBay,” says the security guard guiding us to our seats at the Springsteen concert in the L.A. Sports Arena Tuesday night, the first of three shows before they tear “the dump” down. That’s the name Bruce gave it and the night is billed that way: The Dump That Jumps.

I took this picture of the button [Above] pinned to the chest of the guard. Her name is Gloria and I tell her Bruce wrote a song about her, but I don’t sing it to her, I just want a picture before her button goes on eBay.

An Open Conversation to The Ladies Who Loge

Dear You Two Gals who were near me singing  full-throated like me into the face of that blast back, the kind you can only receive from a nine-piece rock and roll band playing live. Such a high-spirited musical message, delivered with unstoppable untoppable energy. The E Street eight pretty much blew me away.

I also enjoyed almost sitting with you two at the concert last night. You may have been in the Loge section behind me (on the Arena Risers) but I felt we really connected. Especially when I waved and looked at you often back there. Like we were all family, didn’t you?

Springsteen makes that happen in the hall.

“He seems like such a nice guy,” my sister sitting next to me says. Yes. Look at all the friends he has. He’s got lots. And when we all sing “Wrecking Ball” together, because that’s what’s coming to the Sports Arena after the band’s last concert this weekend, we perform it as a farewell tribute. More than ten-thousand of us; it feels like a civic moment, one that we shall never see the likes of again.

Probably. Right?

I mean, just as JFK will only be nominated once in his life and it took place in this building in 1960, these will be the last shows here, although Bruce began playing here in the 1980s.

JFK SPORTS ARENA
JFK got Democratic nomination at Sports Arena in July, 1960

The Los Angeles Memorial Coluseum Sports Arena. Just below the USC campus. JFK was right here at the dawn of rock and roll, the Beatles and all of that hope.

Bruce may be God for a lot of people in here, but it’s Nils Lofgren who puts the shiver in me. Drove it in deep, rounded it off, spun it around. He’s a swirling dirging droning guitar dervish. He stuck in the shiv and I shook for the life of me. (Nils is a mad hatter who used to do backflips on stage too)

So energetic! At some points the show was too much really — too much energy. I had to sit down. Like when they did, “Baby I’m a Rocker,” immediately I thought well, “Baby no, I’m not a rocker.”

Not like that, anyway! I mean where do they get it? This family band who swear they, “would drive all night/ just to buy you a pair of shoes/and to taste your tender charms.” That’s deep, deep love.

Soon come thoughts of like, who am I to be receiving all this? What did I do to deserve these inspiring stories of faith, hope, anger, rebellion, imprisonment, freedom, sex and love. So energetic, as I said, all lined up nine in a row like that! Like BRUCE: THE MUSICAL. Playing every song in a row from The River lps create a concept kind of concert. His up and down adventures and finally breaking free leaving home on “Independence Day”  with a plaintive cry from his harmonica. Other songs popped up like double bubble bubblegum Bruce, especially “Hungry Heart,” a branded pop topper all the way (and his first #1 single). But I looked and you two were definitely happy hoppy teeny-bopping, recognizing we are family when Clarence Clemons’ nephew seems to hit every single sax note originally blasted by the Big Man.

I need to sit down, take a drink of water and think about this. Okay, here’s my energy: I’m living in that Dylan world where “it’s doom alone that counts.” First my father went, then my favorite uncle, now the near and dear older brother I never had. It’s too much doom doom doom and did I mention I’m trying on my third SSRI this week?

So thanks Boss. Appreciate the release. This religious experience I only get from live rock and roll.

I am happy to hear him play “Human Touch.”  I saw you singing it up there in the loge behind me. A song about conversation, after all:

You might need somethin’ to hold on to
When all the answers, they don’t amount to much
Somebody that you could just to talk to
And a little of that human touch

 

Springsteen drawing at Arclight

 

Wow. You gals looked like you were having such a great time. In my mood it sounds at times like The Dirges and Drones concert.  The crush of two pianos and five guitars at one point a buzz snapping at my head in high pitch like the sound mix was off — probably my hearing was.

“One fast song, one slow,” right, that’s Bruce at heart as I explained to my sister. He’s more than heart. He is the heart and soul of integrity. Singing, “Two hearts are better than one/two hearts can get the job done” sends a straight ahead gut-or-just-above-it-level truth that gets into everyone who sings along.

I believe in the love that you gave me
I believe in the faith that can save me
I believe in the hope
And I pray that some day it may raise me
Above these Badlands

For the ones who had a notion
A notion deep inside
That it ain’t no sin to be glad you’re alive

I would follow his stirring storytelling anywhere. And I have for so many years, seeing him play in NYC, D.C. and England. No wonder it is meaningful for me.  Overwhelming at times, this fullness brings tears. Wondering how I will get through this “Lonesome Day,” Bruce asks me to join in :

It’s alright, it’s alright, it’s alright, yeah
It’s alright, it’s alright, it’s alright, yeah
It’s alright, it’s alright, it’s alright, yeahI
It’s alright, it’s alright

And you know it will be, or it is at least right now, which brings such tremendous release.

Speaking of dirging and droning and weeping,  how sad was the band’s rendition of the title cut? “The River” started down and then at the chorus dropped another notch entirely, like the song just drops off the table in a change of gears, like the slowed-down chorus in “Strawberry Fields.” [SEE PREVIOUS WALKY.TALKY POST where George Martin explains how he edited together two sides of that Beatles classic] But this seems the darkest, hardest slog the show has to pull through:

Is a dream a lie if it don’t come true/Or is it something worse?

And a ghostly feminine “woooooooooo” reaches from “The River” into another realm (LA TIMES says it was Bruce in falsetto). Church comes with “The Rising” as Bruce stands in stark white light and “Lonesome Day” brings the group hug everyone needs. Then comes the Benediction of “Thunder Road” and we hear it thunder as only arena rock can, while you’re walking up the concrete steps underneath on the way out.

Oh-oh come take my hand/Riding out tonight to case the promised land

The Beatles are Love and Bruce is Togetherness. All of us dancing in the dark trying to write our story. A union prayer book as big as the world. We use it when we sing and rejoice, sharing one voice. And of course, following Bruce’s story. His myth. A helluva lot better than following the Ted Cruz myth. That path is so depressing, aint it, death and sickness all around –if they’d told me this was what adulthood was really about I’d have tried to have more fun as a young person. More fun with you ladies in the Loge!

My sister describes it this way when I drop her off at her hotel in Santa Monica: “Music surpasses life. You know?”

Wow. That was something I’d never thought of before.

“You’re right,” I say.

“What’s the word I’m looking for?” she asks and then Googles it:

“’Transcends.’”

Yes! She has had a transcendent experience. Just like me. Still believing in the power of music to transcend our daily lives. Now to take the energy from this concert and spread it wherever we go. It will take us a while to recover, hopefully.

 

Nice Pic W Nancy at Springsteen
inside the arena

 

Outside of Sports Arena
outside the arena (Bring on the wrecking ball)

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Fab Confab: A chat with Beatles producer George Martin

BeatlesIllo.aspx

Here’s a really “gear” interview with the Beatles producer George Martin, a soothing soundscape from the top of “Blue Jay Way” all the way down to “Strawberry Fields.” Forever guaranteed to put you in a sweet Pepperland mood, 38 minutes of insights and song samples, George Martin telling KCRW’s Chris Douridas how he added the innovative touches creating the lads’ tunes so lovely & timeless…

 

 

 

 

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DR. SEUSS DAY !

SeussHank

 

Theodor Seuss Geisel was born on March 2nd, 1904. He drew the above picture and the picture below was taken in front of the library named after him at UC San Diego. An amazing building:

 

Smiling at Geisel Library UCSD

 

Two links to his art and life

http://www.drseussart.com/bio/

http://www.catinthehat.org/history.htm

A link to the library

http://libraries.ucsd.edu/blogs/blog/seuss-day-2016/

 

My first cherished Seuss book (after Cat In The Hat and its sequels of course, which my sisters had before me) (Oh, and One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish) had to be Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories. Or was it Scrambled Eggs Super? Alls I recall is getting Happy Birthday To You! on my birthday in 1959 was a revelation. And it still makes a fun birthday gift for adults. My all-time favorite Seuss might be McEllligot’s Pool because it taught me your imagination can save you.  Reading The Sneetches and Other Stories I learned about race, fear, tolerance, the dark side of stubbornness, and not to conform to the money-making machinery scams of Sylvester McMonkey McBean. Thidwick the Big-Hearted Moose was supreme kindness and strength, the above-mentioned Yertle taught me to rebel against authoritarian tyrants, and The King’s Stilts  and The 500 Hats of Bartholomew Cubbins were just darn clownish fun (plus there was a sequel where Bartholomew had to deal with a yucky Oobleck).

Come to think of it, I was raised so much on Seuss I ended up living on Mulberry Street in New York.

Here’s a great site where his books fly by for the picking:

http://www.seussville.com/books/book_detail.php?isbn=9780394800837

 

Roosevelt Kids 3003

Okay kids until next time, enjoy this analysis of Sneetches

http://www.umich.edu/~childlit/Sneetches/display1.htm

 

BONUS!

Radio essay I did in Pasadena comparing The Lorax with James Cameron’s movie Avatar

http://www.scpr.org/programs/offramp/2010/02/27/10140/commentator-hank-rosenfeld-on-avatar-dr-suess-was-/

 

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More Awkward Convo (And Tips To Overcome Them)

 

by Ulla Puggaard
by Ulla Puggaard

Young girls they coming to the canyon

And in the morning I can see them walking.

I can no longer keep my blinds closed

And I can’t help myself from talking.

The Mamas and The Papas

 

Can’t help yourself from talking? Like Joni Mitchell: “I’m always talking/Chicken squawking.”

Sounds like you could be an aspiring folk journalist!

But remember, an awkward phase can be handled. (And it is just a phase so please keep your phasers on stun — nobody wants to get hurt here.)

Did I say phase? I meant phrase.

Either way, self-deprecation that is also funny is your best move.

Here is an actual conversation that took place in an actual restaurant. We’re in the town of Glenwood Springs, Colorado, and my friend Sally orders, “Rocky Mountain Oysters.”

SALLY: I had them once. They’re delicious.

HANK: Really?

SALLY:  Yep.

HANK: Are you sure? I heard they’re slimy.

SALLY: You’re thinking of Oysters Rockefeller. Those are very slimy.

HANK: Oh.

WAITER ARRIVES

HANK: Um, how are these prepared, like fried or garlic oysters?

WAITER: They’re deep fried, served with a barbecue sauce, sir.

HANK: Mmm. Okay.

SALLY: See?

HANK: Sounds great!

FOOD ARRIVES

HANK: These definitely look deeply-fried.

WAITER: Yes, these are your beef bull balls, sir.

PAUSE

HANK: Oh.

SALLY: Oh.

Awkward, right?

Possible lesson: Never argue with a gal named Sal, for you will not win that conversation.

 

Back Pocket Banter

What’s your method to “smooth over” uncomfortable situations?

What did you say to get out of one?

When have you found it awkward to navigate life?

What is the strangest food you’ve ever tasted?

 

Activity Guaranteed To Ease Awkwardnesses

If complimenting a person about an item of clothing doesn’t get you out of an awkward phase, try the following: Do something silly. Lift your right arm above your head, and turning your body slightly to the right, bend that right arm at the elbow, waving your hand over your head with a shout of “Woo Hoo!” At once intimate and anti-intimate (especially if employed too closely, bringing unwanted physical contact), this shticklact* I watched displayed to perfection in 1976 by a British gentleman called David Bernstein at the border between Israel and Lebanon. It proved to be a terrific communication and ice-breaking tool with non-English speakers, also amusing those in uniform.

Lesson: Put an onus of awkwardness upon yourself. This will allow others to laugh and relax.

 

* From schtick http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/us/definition/american_english/shtick

 

The Mamas and Papas song “Twelve Thirty” http://genius.com/The-mamas-and-the-papas-twelve-thirty-young-girls-are-coming-to-the-canyon-lyrics

 

I’m always talking/Chicken squawking

Joni Mitchell song “Talk To Me”

http://jonimitchell.com/music/song.cfm?id=31

 

Jerry: I couldn’t make the transition from conversation to sex. There were no awkward pauses. 

George: You need an awkward pause.   

Seinfeld

 

%22conversation piece%22

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A Couple Kinds of Awkwardnesses

Berke Breathed
Bloom County by Berkeley Breathed with Harper Lee above bed of Opus reading “Mockingbird”

 

What, gone without a word?

Ay, so true love should do: it cannot speak;

For truth hath better deeds than words to grace it.

Two Gentlemen Of Verona

 

Note: This will not be covering majorly awkward convos – after a Minor Auto Accident, what to say at the Precinct Investigation, or convos to a Companion After Running Out of Money and Being Thrown Out of a Motel in Biklabito, New Mexico.

In situations like these, really, what can you say? “D’oh!?”

Remember a few entries ago where I spoke of Convo Everywhere? [Feb 17, 2016] Surely, confabs can break out anytime, forcing everyone to step up and declare something. Sometimes it is demanded of you: “Do you have anything to declare?”

I declare that sometimes it is when you feel at your weakest when you must summon the most strength.

And perhaps the most longed-for awkward moment is a Beatlesque moment when one is unable to speak at all. It’s described as, “Deep in love/not a lot to say” in Things We Said Today or as George (Happy Birthday!) Harrison sings, “But you see that I’m too much in luv” in If I Needed Someone.

The freest thing of all, love means it is fine to just stare. Mildly, wildly, meekly, shriekly inside oneself at the face of it. How can anyone try to capture, contain, explain such feelings in conversational-type words? (Hence, The Beatles!)

Have you been there, been unable to do anything about that? Left speechless with less than bupkis to blurt?Two times immediately come to my mind: after a Rickie Lee Jones concert at Town Hall in NYC and after the play “Sunday In The Park With George” near the same part of midtown Manhattan. Details TK

Think of Dianne Weist in Woody Allen’s Bullets Over Broadway pressing her hand over John Cusack’s lips: “Don’t Speak!”

Back Pocket Banter

Have you ever been so much in love you could not speak?

Is that the greatest or what? How can you make that happen again?

*  *  *

The opposite of this feelings-wise may be Bonnie Raitt lamenting in Angel From Montgomery, “How the hell can a person go to work in the morning, come home in the evening and have nothing to say?”

That’s a tough convo to not have. More lonely inside a couple than alone.

That just makes me want to go to bed with a book [See above comic strip].

 

 

pic of me tipping capMore awkward convo coming soon!

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CONVOS I WISH I HADN’T: Choosing the Wrong People/How Silence Can Be Golden

I’m sorry, it saves a lot of conversation.

Cary Grant (playing “Commander Andy Crewson”) in the 1957 movie Kiss Them For Me, after walking up to a civilian and punching him in the face.

 

Forgive me, gentle reader, for again and again, I have chosen unwisely. Wrongly. The people to converse with. But should this mean that violence should automatically follow?

Folk journalists must be careful when working: language is lethal! Poet Amiri Baraka warned, “Language is inflammatory and TV is the gasoline.”

But for our purposes – going against the grain and screens — by talking face-to-face, the light comedian’s touch is preferred. I try to keep more in tune with Robert Klein who sang on one of his first lps, “I had no punches/but I had a few punchlines!” *

Ya think?

I know what you’re thinking: Is folk journalism too dangerous a profession? How about as a hobby then? Because why oh why do I find myself on the end of so many fists?

(The term, “wrong end of a fist” seems weird to me. The right end of a fist is the wrist, right? Never been punched by a wrist, have you?)

The folk journalist’s wish to talk to someone is a seeking to bring a person into my world. Someone not myself. Bring them in, make them part of my family. And perhaps add interesting stories to my life. Like Bob Dylan put it in Black Diamond Bay: “Seems every time you turn around/there’s another hard luck story that you’re gonna hear/And there’s nothing anyone can say.”

Well Bob, actually there is a lot they can say. To me. And one reason to make the attempt by asking is that aside from other people (and nature’s forests, etc), there is nothing left to do alone but record or write down the words.  And then continue to tell them.

After all, who are you by yourself if you’re not connecting with another human being? But is there a safe line you can attach to keep the convo from crashing?

Safety Line Attached

Bruce Springsteen sings that he’s, “just a scared and lonely rider” in Born To Run, and the fear is definitely a factor folk journalists live with. Perhaps there are people I shouldn’t be talking to. Is it true they can smell the fear?

It is 1992, I’m strolling with a friend in New York’s Little Italy after seeing the movie Hairspray, John Waters’ movie about race relations in the 1960s. Another couple passes by. I exclaim, “Hairspray!” a remark to my friend to notice how the couple passing us both wear throwback piled-high big hair-dos just like….D’oh! Two seconds later, I’m being chased down Mulberry Street and ducking to hide inside a bodega behind the two Dominican brothers who run the joint hoping they’ll protect me.

The guy in the passing couple wanted to punch me out! Can you believe it?

Thus, I learned that no matter if you offer it with joyous intent or simply as an icebreaker, every comment/outburst does not lead to conversation.

 Hank's Liquor

Back Pocket Banter

Ever go over the line in conversation? What happens?

Do you remain silent in situations where you’d like to speak? Why?

What situations have you found yourself in where silence was required?

What’s the oddest or scariest situation brought on by something you said?

Ever tried to converse with silliness as a way out of a dangerous situation?

Peace Fingers

Activity

Some conversations MUST TO AVOID

– Once a movie starts. Come on people!

– Bicycle to car. Car to bicycle convo seems safe (aside from “Get the heck outta my way!”) but there are way too many variables the other way.

– Talking with Rebels. I’m talking about the Upstarts Upstairs. Best to let the kids have their music. Includes keeping leaders of NYC’s Savage Skulls motorcycle club at the long end of your recording device. Interviewing this fellow, I wondered why he wore a swastika button on his leather jacket. His answer: “I wear that because I don’t believe in that. Nazis-ism and shit.”

(Oh. Okay. Who could challenge that? Not even Wordsworth could’ve made words work there.)

– With someone already multitasking. When they’re walking, talking or telling you their computer problems? Best to maintain silence.

– Talking to Someone Speaking in Tongues is not a good idea. Why interrupt?  Also true around Zombies or anyone else giving chase and

(Whoops. Hadda get outta there.) 

 

* Favorite Robert Klein record, his second lp, from 1974.

http://www.allmusic.com/album/mind-over-matter-mw0000310584

More re Klein: http://www.ajhs.org/robertklein

 

 

Never miss a good chance to shut up.

Will Rogers

 

A tall cool one from Seattle

arm wrestling photo

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