I just bought Missy Higgins' new(ish) album. I'm in love...
'Shindig'
Buffista Music 4: Needs More Cowbell!
There's a lady plays her fav'rite records/On the jukebox ev'ry day/All day long she plays the same old songs/And she believes the things that they say/She sings along with all the saddest songs/And she believes the stories are real/She lets the music dictate the way that she feels.
I just bought Missy Higgins' new(ish) album. I'm in love...
That is a fantastic song, one of my fave breakup songs. (I have the album too - bought it in the States, oddly enough.) I find Secret insinuates itself too.
Oh my brain.
Curious about how accurate this is: "Did Woodstock Kill Rock āNā Roll?" [link]
My opinion? No one would deny the mass marketing of youth culture and the resegregation of popular music that happened post Woodstock. But to claim Woodstock was the cause, or even a major cause, is reductionism at its worst. There were an awful lot of other things going on at the same time.
Thanks Jon. I thought it seemed like overkill, but musical history is kind of a deaf spot for me, so thought I'd seek opinions from people who know something about the subject.
It's the cyclical nature of things, don't you think?
Something avant-garde is amazing and becomes well-loved. Then someone makes a profit. Then you get some poor-quality successors in pursuit of that profit... but none of that makes what was amazing not amazing.
People making money off of good art aren't "selling out," they're just getting to quit their day jobs. (That's such a peeve of mine!)
Can't remember the author or the precise quote, but when asked if the movie would ruin his book he said the book is on the shelf right there -- nothing can ruin it. I love that quote and wish I could remember it.
Can't remember the author or the precise quote, but when asked if the movie would ruin his book he said the book is on the shelf right there -- nothing can ruin it. I love that quote and wish I could remember it.
Stephen King has quoted that quote, more than once, but I'm damned if I can remember who originally said it (he gave the name, I'm just spacing).
James M. Cain was one of the people who said it, but he was not the first. I forget who he stole it from.