Monday, May 31, 2010
Sonny Boy 'Eyesight to the Blind'
Sunday, May 30, 2010
Prof Green
Thursday, May 27, 2010
Is this the greatest psychedelic rock song ever?
I DON'T EVER WANT TO COME DOWN
Well some they pledge allegiance while others treasure seek
And soul wisdom spoken back, each life will be unique
Some want only pleasure, you only want to please
Or bring as the highest life that prayer ever sees.
I don’t ever want to come down from your village and your big town
I won’t tell foreigners earth’s their home
Well armed by the life you’ve been making
And not crush powers not your own
Just stick to your own overtaking
I don’t ever want to come down from your village and your big town
Encouraging all men, I wish you would
To live in a fable, I wish you would
I can’t do no other with you and David’s Saint fable
I’m not even trying to or curious fair
Each unicorn makes it completely prepared
I don’t ever want to come down from your village and your big town
Billy Graves 'The Shag'
Harold Burrage 'She knocks me out'
Sunday, May 23, 2010
Hubert Sumlin teaches you to play 'Smokestack Lightnin''
Saturday, May 22, 2010
The Wolf live in Britain
60s Howlin' Wolf
Howlin' Wolf Centenary
Here's Facebook group I started - Make 10 June International Howlin'Wolf Day
June 10 this year is the 100 years anniversary of Howlin' Wolf's birthday. How are we gonna celebrate it? I know this fact as its my birthday, the same day 50 years later...maybe I'll just have a Wolfing session. Seriously I usually play a bit of Chester Burnett on my birthday anyway - I'll have to think how I can do something a bit more - something special for the 100th anniversary.
Otis Rush 'My Love Will Never Die'
Adam Ant sectioned
Animals & Men 'Nag Nag Nag'
Thursday, May 20, 2010
'Du Pain ou du sang'
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
30 years ago today
PASSION ARMÉE
Sunday, May 16, 2010
The Fall 'Bury' live at Frome Cheese and Grain
Saturday, May 15, 2010
The Fall's new video 'I'm not from Bury'
Friday, May 14, 2010
Piney Brown 'You Bring Out the Wolf In Me'
Thursday, May 13, 2010
The Cortinas 'Defiant Pose'
John and Doreen
My sister has been going through the Mitchard family photo archive and has been scanning them - some of the pics I have never seen - obviously I ain't gonna bore you with many but this is one I particularly liked as it was unknown to me and captures my parents in their 'courting' phase. (No... apparently it's their honeymoon) I love the background too.
The Fall 'Bill is Dead'
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
Us and Dragonflies
Have you ever had a dragonfly larva? When I say 'had' I mean kept one as a pet - I had one as a kid and it ate all my tadpoles - it frightened me to death - it was like the alien in Alien - grossing me out until one morning I came down and found it sat on the side of the washing up bowl I was keeping it in as a beautiful Dragonfly. I almost forgave it.
Anyhow back in the early years of the 20th century they dug up a Dragonfly fossil in Radstock in one of the pits - it was the largest fossilised bug ever found at the time though I now think it has been surpassed. Boltonites radstockensis. Hence the choice of song for the below film.
Yellow Coat - Screamin' Jay Hawkins
Radstock in the snow
Louisiana Red at the Thunderbolt Bristol
Blues Legend LOUISIANA RED & Michael Messer
One of the last great surviving bluesmen, Louisiana Red was born in Alabama in 1932. His mother died a week after his birth and his father was murdered by the Ku Klux Klan. Louisiana Red not only plays the Blues, he lives it through his guitar and his singing. Strongly influenced by Muddy Waters, Lightnin‘ Hopkins and Arthur Crudup, he has long ago found his own voice, his own style, his own form of expression. In a career spanning over half a century, Louisiana Red has played with just about every major bluesman you can name. In 1983 he won the W.C. Handy Award for ’Best Traditional Blues Artist’. Michael Messer is recognised as one of the world’s leading slide guitarists and blues innovators. One prominent critic described him as `an unavoidable force in modern blues` £10Adv from Bristol Ticket Shop Tel 0117 9299008 www.bristolticketshop.co.uk £12 on the door
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Women of the Red Army tribute
The Escape 'Murder' 1982
Interview with Cavan (Kev) Saunders
If you are wondering what the set will be about here's what he says
My vocal style has been compared with Lou Reed , Jim Morrison and Johnny Cash.
Musically the song styles take in Folk, Alt Country,and Rhythm and Blues.
Some have likened what I do to Blue eyed soul/New wave artists such as Elvis Costello and Graham Parker. I play a set that mixes mostly original compositions with,cover versions of songs by people such
as Fred Neil, and Jerry Jeff Walker.
I am looking forward to it already
Monday, May 10, 2010
Your Future Our Clutter - The Fall
Paul Robeson 'Anthem of the Soviet Union'
Paul LeRoy Bustill Robeson (April 9, 1898 – January 23, 1976) was an internationally renowned American bass-baritone concert singer, actor of film and stage, All-American and professional athlete, writer, multi-lingual orator, scholar and lawyer who was also noted for his wide-ranging social justice activism. A forerunner of the civil rights movement, Robeson was a trade unionist, peace activist, Phi Beta Kappa Society laureate, and a recipient of the Spingarn Medal and Stalin Peace Prize. Robeson achieved worldwide fame during his life for his artistic accomplishments, and his outspoken, radical beliefs which largely clashed with the Jim Crow climate of the pre-civil rights United States. He became a prime target of the right during the McCarthyist era.[1][2][3][4] Despite his being one of the most internationally famous cultural figures of the 20th century, persecution by the US government and media virtually erased Robeson from mainstream US culture and subsequent interpretations of US history, including civil rights and black history.[3]
Cab Calloway 'Reefer Man'
Sunday, May 09, 2010
Sam and Friends
Foreign contingents join victory parade in Moscow
Foreign troops join Russia's Victory Day Parade
You might also be interested in this BBC article about Lenin's London connections and the pub in Clerkenwell where supposedly he met Stalin in 1905.
Saturday, May 08, 2010
'Lazy Bones' Hoagy Carmichael
Friday, May 07, 2010
Nathan Abshire 'Jolie Blon'
Leonard Nimoy 'Bilbo Baggins'
Bad Day - Carmel
Thursday, May 06, 2010
Balfa Brothers
Election day in the UK
Swindon Railway school photo
Wednesday, May 05, 2010
Reds (1981)
Four Lions trailer
Budenovka
You may be bored to death with my interest in this hat - certainly my family are but that's just the way it is. If you wanna be in my Red Sotnia you have to take the rough with the smooth. These images I like - the poster's text reads something like 'She was born under the red flag in 1918'.
Anyway according to the wiki on this cap
Budenovka (Russian language: Будёновка, budyonovka) is a distinctive type of hat and an essential part of the communist uniform of the Russian Civil War and later. Its official name was the "broadcloth helmet" (шлем суконный). Named after Semyon Budyonny, it was also known as the "frunzenka" after Mikhail Frunze. It is a soft, woolen hat that covers the ears and neck and that can be worn under a helmet. The cap has a beak and folded earflaps that can be buttoned under the chin.
The hat was created as part of a new uniform for the Russian army by Viktor Vasnetsov, a famous Russian painter, who was inspired by the Kiev Rus helmet. The original name was bogatyrka (богатырка) - hat of a bogatyr - and was intended to inspire Russian troops by connecting them with the legendary heroes of Russian folklore. Bogatyrkas were meant to be a part of a new uniform, so they had already been produced during World War I, but hadn't been officially adopted. Another version, quite popular in Russia, is that bogatyrkas were designed for a military parade as a part of a "historical" stylized uniform (which also included an overcoat with "designer" cross-pieces, which also were used in the Red Army to a limited extent). Some Russian historians even speculate the parade in question was a supposed victory parade in Berlin.
During the Russian civil war, communist troops, who had no obligation to comply with the uniform standards of the Imperial Russian army, used bogatyrkas, as they were abundant and distinctive. Bogatyrkas were commonly decorated with red star pins as a distinguishing mark. Such decorations were often makeshift, but later were standardized, and a bigger star badge of broadcloth was sewn to the front of the hat, typically red but in some cases blue (for cavalry) or black (for artillery). This allowed the communists to use the image of "Red bogatyrs" fighting the old and corrupt Russian system, thus employing the original idea by Vasnetsov. At this time the hat was renamed the Budenovka after Semyon Budyonny, the commander of the First Cavalry Army, as the hat was particularly popular with cavalry units.
Tuesday, May 04, 2010
The Pigs: Youthanasia + They Say:(Bristol 2009)
Rare As The Yeti - Kid Congo & The Pink Monkey Birds
Monday, May 03, 2010
Adam Ant interview
Sunday, May 02, 2010
Smoking ban
The first modern, nationwide tobacco ban was imposed by the Nazi Party in every German university, post office, military hospital, and Nazi Party office, under the auspices of Karl Astel's Institute for Tobacco Hazards Research, created in 1941 under orders from Adolf Hitler.[27] Major anti-tobacco campaigns were widely broadcast by the Nazis until the demise of the regime in 1945.[28]
NB My son on reading this thinks I have succumbed to this phenomenon
Reductio ad Hitlerum, also argumentum ad Hitlerum, (dog Latin for "reduction to Hitler" or "argument to Hitler," respectively) is an ad hominem or ad misericordiam argument, and is an informal fallacy. It is a fallacy of irrelevance where a conclusion is suggested based solely on something or someone's origin rather than its current meaning or context. This overlooks any difference to be found in the present situation, typically transferring the positive or negative esteem from the earlier context. Hence this fallacy fails to examine the claim on its merit.
Its name is a pun on reductio ad absurdum, and was coined by an academic ethicist, Leo Strauss, in 1953. Engaging in this fallacy is sometimes known as playing the Nazi card,[1] by analogy to playing the race card.
The fallacy claims that a policy leads to—or is the same as—one advocated or implemented by Adolf Hitler or the Third Reich, and so "proves" that the original policy is undesirable. For example: "Hitler was a vegetarian, so vegetarianism is wrong." The tactic is often used to derail arguments, because such comparisons tend to distract and anger.[1]
Iron Felix 1919
Biography of the head of the CHEKA here