It's your birthday Hayden. Happy Happy Birthday.
I did my music thread duty and FINALLY passed on the Sue and bicyclops to meara.
Fred ,'A Hole in the World'
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.
It's your birthday Hayden. Happy Happy Birthday.
I did my music thread duty and FINALLY passed on the Sue and bicyclops to meara.
Thanks, y'all! But think of Pete! Go crank The Who Sell Out!!!1!
Happy birthday, hayden and others!
Should I know who Elvin jones is? I had never heard his name before Jon's post.
And happy birthday to Hayden.
To be sung to the tune of "Happy Birthday, Lisa," as sung by Bart Simpson and the Michael Jackson impersonator:
Hayden, it's your birthday!
Happy Birthday, Hayden!
Hayden, it's your birthday!
Happy Birthday, Hayden!
Elvin's the drummer from Coltrane's classic quartet, Lyra.
And thanks again! But think of Pete!
Pete Shmete. It's Joey Ramone's birthday too!
Hap-Hap-Happy Birthday, Hay-Hay-Hayden Childs! (Chanted to the tune of Ho Ho Ho Chi Minh!)
I like The Zeppos. I'll try to influence your decision by telling you that Eliot's standard description, one of them at least, of his band was "We're the world's greatest Marx Brothers tribute band." Groucho's Toronto song found its way into Eliot's "The Anomaly Song": "It's better to be in Toronto than to be in a place you don't want to." That led to his inspired ad lib when performing in my home town, "It's better to be in Canandaigua than to be a rutabaigua."
From the ridiculous to the sublime... very sad about Elvin Jones. I didn't know he was sick. Odd that Thad Jones died in his early sixties and heart problems plagued Elvin, while the eldest brother Hank is in his mid-eighties but looks twenty years younger. What a great musical family! And from everything I've read, and witnessed personally with Hank, they were really sweet people. It's the obvious choice, but I can't think of a better starting place than A Love Supreme if you aren't familiar with Elvin and want to know why he was a giant. Tons of pages out there available if you want to find out more.
One of the posts on the page Jon linked to mentioned that Orrin Keepnews died a year or so ago, which I did not know and which makes me sad, too. I couldn't Google any confirmation. Not that I doubt the poster, I just want to know more. Keepnews was everything a record producer and executive should be. He co-founded Riverside Records and played an important part in the careers of Monk, Bill Evans, Wes Montgomery and Sonny Rollins among others. Indirectly he played an important role in Elvin Jones' career, too. Without Riverside Monk probably would not have landed his legendary engagement at the Five Spot with Coltrane, a musical internship for Trane that was an epiphany and set in motion the sequence of events that led to Milestones, Kind of Blue and his formation of his great quintet with Elvin, McCoy Tyner and Jimmy Garrison. (I'm not claiming cause and effect, just that it was an important catalyst.) The Times obituary was written by Orrin's son, Peter.
It's Joey Ramone's birthday too!
Y'know, I knew that and forgot. My memory's like one of those things with the holes in it, you know what they're called.
Anyway, gabba gabba hey!
I've been chatting with Eliot this morning. I'll pass on the band name. A google search turned up a Belgian folk band called the Zeppos, so I'm thinking about maybe changing it to The Zeppo Factor. Or maybe The Zeppos UK.
And yeah, it's tragic about Elvin. McCoy's the last one standing now.
Who's Eliot?