Curtis,

Forgive me for pulling your chain -- I knew you'd come back with the
below, and so, yeah, I manipulated yer buns to get some entertaining
intimacy with ya.

Your example to us is deep -- some gurus walk silently on hidden
jungle paths, others pluck their paths, but each moves forward.

You're a plucker, dude!

Edg
PS -- Hmmmm, other artists I know of that Curtis doesn't.  
Hmmmmm, give you accounting of your history, have you heard of Elvis? 

Ladysmith Black Mombasa? http://tinyurl.com/cq9y84

Or, hey, how about my favorite all time singing hottie, Milissa George
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qGmcBLsrF5k

Or, I offered this girl to Turq, but he turned her down, so I guess
this babe can't sing.  http://tinyurl.com/uvsm5

Or, http://tinyurl.com/bzer9d is a sample of the King's Singers -- a
group that rocks me -- try a few of their works.

That'll do for starters.





--- In [email protected], "curtisdeltablues"
<curtisdeltabl...@...> wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], Duveyoung <no_reply@> wrote:
> >
> > Curtis,
> > 
> > Am I reading you correctly that you didn't know about Leonard Cohen 
> > until recently?  If so, um, gulp, please tell us that you have at
> > least heard of, say, a guy named Jackson Brown.  Or, from the movie
> > about Leonard, did you ever hear the works of Rufus Wainwright's dad
> > Loudon?  Or, Loudon's ex-wife's group, The Roches?  I mean, gulp, if
> > you haven't heard of Leonard, of whom haven't you heard? 
> 
> It would be a mountain of CDs like Mount Meru!
> 
> There is tons of music that I don't know about.  Popular music and
> folk music has not been my musical interest.  And in my defense (I'm
> guessing that you think I need one) it is only his lyrics that I dig.
>  When I sing his lyrics I do it to my own blues music.  
> 
> I am attracted to singers (which Leonard is not) and black roots
> music.  I also know almost nothing about Motown and soul music except
> what you pick up by being bombarded with it growing up.  Guys with
> broader musical tastes like Geezer and Barry and Vaj (and perhaps you)
> know more about a wider range of music than I will ever know.
> 
> I would like to read more of the Roache's lyrics but I don't own any
> of their CD.  I appreciate their talent but they don't ring my bell.
> 
> I am a musical preservationist of a very specific form of music.  I am
> not a studio session musician.  So my world is full of the nuances in
> Son House's guitar work in each of the eras he was recorded in. I am
> constantly searching for a missing note from a scratchy 78
> reproduction. Every musical genre is a universe, and that is doubly
> true if you want to perform it.  My musical world is both tiny and
> vast! After a about 35 years chasing it, I am just getting close to
> what I want to express in this genre.  If you want to understand who
> moves me watch Son House:
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8jN5vqEyV7g
> 
> If  the lyrics make your eyes well up, and the guitar playing makes
> you want to play a resonator guitar till your fingers bleed, you will
> understand my world.  If you go "that was interesting" and don't  feel
> compelled to search out every one of his recordings so you can study
> every recorded sound he made, you will understand how I feel about
> guys like Jackson Brown. 
> 
> When I am not listening to acoustic blues I listen to African music
> especially acoustic music from Mali.  I also dabble in Brazilian
> ghetto samba guitar. My musical tastes are usually very specific and
> it hits me like a ton of bricks on first listen.  
>  
> > 
> > From Leonard Cohen to anyone is merely, say, two degrees of
> separation> at the max.  He's either shaken the hand of everyone in
> the music> world, or he's shaken the hand of someone who shook the
> hand of> someone he'd not shaken the hand of yet.
> 
> That was an interesting part of the documentary for me. 
> 
> <Snip>
> > 
> > Who would Curtis be if he'd loved Leonard way back sooner?
> > 
> 
> Maybe I would be another one of those guys who gets paid $100 for 3
> sets at the local bar who can play a little of everyone instead of a
> person making their living playing music?  I don't have the broad
> musical talent or interest to be able to become a session musician. I
> have no dreams of fame and fortune in popular music.  I am NOT the
> next American Idol!  But I do one thing well enough to get paid for it.
> 
> Maybe I would be in a wedding band and feel my soul eroding from
> another night playing "Mustang Sally"?
> 
> I am not choosing music, I am following my muse.  And the one I live
> and breath is treating me well.  Wherever I perform I am playing the
> music I love the most.  I never have to compromise my musical taste
> for a paycheck because I am a specialist.  Fill the room with kids and
> pay me, I'll turn them on to Delta blues.  Got a room full of
> customers for a trade show and have a check in your hand...I'll rock
> the house with Son House and whatever latest bluesman I am researching
> that is turning me on. I only play what moves me.
> 
> I do like to discover a treasure trove of talent like Leonard Cohen
> and learn what I can.  Youtube is giving me a much broader musical
> education. I am filling in some musical gaps since it is all free.  I
> have always tended to listen to my own cassettes and now my CDs rather
> than the radio, so I have plenty of musical gaps.  My GF had to
> practically tie me down to get me to listen to the newest acoustic
> star of the college scene, Jason Mraz.  But once I did give him a
> chance I now enjoy playing some of his songs for her.  So I'm
> expanding a bit from the boundaries of my musical asperger's syndrome!  
> 
> But when I hears something like this I am back to chasing my ghosts:
> 
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c8RtayjqqIw
> 
> Thanks for inspiring a music rap Edg.  Please give me some more names
> of people you dig so I can youtube them.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> > 
> > If you haven't been jiggy with Leonard, to me that's another example
> > of what happened to Karna -- Arjuna's evil twin brother who had a
> > special weapon of mass destruction -- Vasavi shakti -- a mantra, a
> > boon from Brahma -- a mantra that would be the equivalent of, say, a
> > 500 kiloton thermonuclear devise.  When Karna got into straits that he
> > couldn't fathom, he finally panicked and decided to use the weapon,
> > but, urp, he couldn't remember the damned mantra!  Couldn't remember a
> > mantra given to him by an adoring but conniving Indra!  How's that for
> > getting close to something important and ending up looking the other
> > way when a Kennedy was shot, or the shuttle blew up, or your perfect
> > woman walked by as you bent to tie your shoes?
> > 
> > Then, of course, when Karna was trying to get his chariot wheel
> > unstuck, Arjuna did this major Kshatriya sin by whacking him right
> > then instead of only shooting at Karna when Karna was braced and ready
> > for impact with both eyes open as befitted a dignified battle to the
> > death donchaknow.
> > 
> > Krishna, Who had told Arjuna, "Yeah, it's a sin to fight like this,
> > but he's your twin and cannot be beaten except by cheating our
> > military morals, and if you don't kill your fucking brother now, then
> > you never will, so get your ass whompin' on Karna, bitch!"  'Course,
> > it is only later that Arjuna finds out that Karna was his frickin'
> > brother!  Mom told him and the Pandavas when she, you know, finally
> > got around to it.  Those sneaky Hindus!
> > 
> > Something like that.  The above paragraph symbolizes a certain
> > dramatic romanticism that resides in the last remaining outposts of
> > Hinduism in my personality.  I've always thought it was so cool that
> > Krishna was willing to sin and tell Arjuna to do so too.  Gave me hope
> > that maybe my sins could also be rationalized, ya see?
> > 
> > Like that, I think we've all missed so many mantras -- so many times
> > in life when we could have taken a left instead of a right and made
> > the rest of our lives peachykeeno, but, noooooo, we had to do it our
> > way, take our roads instead of the obvious roads.  Even when we stood
> > for an hour at Frost's woodsy divergence and considered deeply which
> > path to take, we have all decided that our peering down each until it
> > bent in the undergrowth was enough data to make the decision -- when
> > no decision could be made with any accuracy.  Sorta like you, Curtis,
> > when you were sorting through the racks of CDs in a music store, eh?
> > 
> > Fish or cut bait times have always been my undoing.  Being a trikker,
> > I, of course want to go both ways!  Time itself finally must shout at
> > me from some unseen chariot -- "Don't just stand there!  Decide now. 
> > Decide blindly.  Decide unknowingly, but decide!"
> > 
> > And I do.
> > 
> > Who would Curtis be if he'd loved Leonard way back sooner?
> > 
> > Edg
> > 
> > The Road not Taken -- Robert Frost
> > 
> > Two roads diverged in a yellow wood
> > and sorry I could not travel both
> > And be one traveller, long I stood
> > and looked down one as far as I could
> > to where it bent in the undergrowth;
> > 
> > Then took the other, as just as fair,
> > and having perhaps the better claim
> > because it was grassy and wanted wear;
> > though as for that, the passing there
> > had worn them really about the same,
> > And both that morning equally lay
> > in leaves no feet had trodden black.
> > 
> > Oh, I kept the first for another day!
> > Yet knowing how way leads on to way,
> > I doubted if I should ever come back.
> > 
> > I shall be telling this with a sigh
> > Somewhere ages and ages hence:
> > 
> > Two roads diverged in a wood, and I --
> > I took the one less travelled by,
> > and that has made all the difference
> > --- In [email protected], "curtisdeltablues"
> > <curtisdeltablues@> wrote:
> > >
> > > --- In [email protected], "do.rflex" <do.rflex@> wrote:
> > > 
> > > I love this guy.  I just got turned on to him this year
embarrassingly
> > > enough from this documentary http://www.leonardcohenimyourman.com/
> > > 
> > > That is one of the songs I am singing blues style these days, the
> > > title track:
> > > http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r24_T-HOcyg
> > > 
> > > Great songwriting. 
> > > 
> > > 
> > > >
> > > > 
> > > > 
> > > > Ring the bells that still can ring
> > > > Forget your perfect offering
> > > > There is a crack in everything
> > > > That's how the light gets in. 
> > > > 
> > > > http://www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/leonardcohen/anthem.html
> > > > 
> > > > 
> > > > Song: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tjtE2-dLjSs
> > > >
> > >
> >
>


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