Not forgetting of course that it would have been his 75th birthday today!
He was born as Mark Feld in Hackney, London on this day in 1947.
Not forgetting of course that it would have been his 75th birthday today!
He was born as Mark Feld in Hackney, London on this day in 1947.
Bridget was born on January 27th, 1964 in Hollywood, CA into the Fonda family acting dynasty. Her father is film actor and producer Peter Fonda, and her mother is artist Susan Brewer. Her grandfather was Oscar winning movie star Henry Fonda and her aunt is two-time Oscar winning actress Jane Fonda. Bridget is named after actress Margaret Sullavan’s (Henry’s first wife) daughter, and Bridget’s middle name is a reference to both her aunt and mom (Susan’s middle name is also Jane). She has one brother, Justin and a stepbrother, Thomas McGuane, Jr. (!!). Bridget and Justin were raised in Los Angeles for the first half of their childhoods until their parents divorced in 1974, when Peter and his second wife Portia Crockett moved with the kids to Paradise Valley, MT. Bridget graduated from Westlake School for Girls and the Lee Strasberg Theatre Institute of NYU.
Bridget didn’t start acting professionally until she was done with college, but she can be quickly seen in Peter’s and Dennis Hopper’s classic film, Easy Rider (1969). In the hippie commune scene, during the long, pan shot of the local residents, the little girl sitting on Wyatt’s (Peter’s) lap is 4-year-old Bridget. Her breakthrough movie role was in Francis Ford Coppola’s The Godfather Part III (1990), which then followed with substantial parts in the cult hits Drop Dead Fred (1991), Doc Hollywood (1991), Single White Female (1992), Army of Darkness (1992) and Point of No Return (1993). She also co-starred with Nicolas Cage in the popular romantic comedy It Could Happen to You in 1994. Bridget’s most acclaimed performances are as hippie-stoner Melanie in Quentin Tarantino’s Jackie Brown (1997) and as Billy Bob Thornton’s nagging mid-western wife Sarah in Sam Raimi’s A Simple Plan (1998). Journalist-turned-filmmaker Cameron Crowe wrote the script of his romantic comedy Singles (1992) specifically with Bridget in mind, where she played grungy Seattleite Janet.
This is another one of these entries where Bridget could fit into either the film muses/gfs section or the music muses/groupies. But I decided to go with the music one since I don’t think she was ever involved with a writer, producer or director romantically. In Bridget’s personal life she was in her first high-profile relationship with fellow actor Eric Stoltz from 1990 to 1998. They collaborated together in the flop Bodies, Rest & Motion (1993), and also attended the Academy Awards in ’98. The following year Bridget began dating country music artist and movie actor Dwight Yoakum from 1999-2002, and the two were regularly photographed at Hollywood parties. On February 27th, 2003, Bridget experienced a bizarre car crash which resulted in her fracturing her vertebra. The same month she started dating Oingo Boingo frontman-turned-film composer Danny Elfman, and only a month later they announced their engagement in March. The couple married in November ’03 and despite the seemingly rushed origins, Bridget and Danny are still together to this day. They have one son, Oliver, born sometime in January 2005.…No offence to these dudes, but they must’ve felt way out of their leagues being with Bridget.
The weird thing about Bridget is that she completely disappeared from the public eye right after she got with Danny, with no explanation. A lot of people theorise that the car accident was so serious, that it caused permanent damage physically or mentally. But if you look at her resume, her last completed film was The Snow Queen (2002), which finished shooting over a year before the crash. Plus she’s attended a handful of events with Danny since 2009, where she appears to be behaving normally and looks fine. So like, IDK. Maybe she was just over it and burnt out on show business? Especially with the crazy shit in her family’s history. Whatever the reason, good for her living her best life outside of the spotlight (even though we miss her!).
Revamped profile of Bridget over at the Pooneil blog/newsletter
On February 27, 2003, she suffered a serious car crash in Los Angeles that caused a fracture in a vertebra. In March of the same year, she became engaged to film composer and former Oingo Boingo frontman Danny Elfman, and they married in November that year
Fonda retired from her film career back in 2000 to bring up her family and nothing wrong with that and in fact any man doing the same it becomes interesting when such folk as Daniel Day-Lewis decided to step away from a film or artistic career. She has been seen lately and reported in the press especially in the States largely (sic) because of her notable weight gain. I for one find her still as lovely and fascinating as ever and that she should take this course in life makes her even more fascinating. Fat shaming is anathema to me and is a feminist issue isn't it after all. . . . . . . . .
For the want of some relevant sounds that haven't struck me to share lately here's a few articles from my other interests and I check sites like The Selvedge Yard and image sites like favourites Nebulously Burnished or the brilliant, several images per day, site like mudwerks over at the Sloth Unleashed Since a fascination with all things burlesque and an especial penchant for Betty Page I loved the 'innocence' of the appearance of folk like Candy Barr, Sequin, and Lili St Cyr and the names never struck me at first as being puns I just assumed that was their names (sic!) util it was about the time of more modern artists like Dita Von Teese did the penny drop! Candy Barr?! Oh wait I get it! DOH!
The Selecter - Celebrate The Bullet (1981) - ZeroSounds
"Celebrate the Bullet" is the second album by British ska band The Selecter, released in February 1981 on Chrysalis Records after the band had left the 2 Tone label. The album was recorded with producer Roger Lomas, who plays bass on some songs, and frequently seeks a more slow, eclectic sound, with new wave influences. Band members Charley Anderson and Desmond Brown, uncomfortable with the new approach, left the band during production and after the release of 1980 single "The Whisper" to form the band The People. They were replaced by keyboard player, James Mackie, and bass player, Adam Williams. Ian Dury and the Blockheads bassist Norman Watt-Roy played bass on the title track and "Washed Up and Left for Dead".
The album's lyrical content is frequently bleak, taking inspiration from early 1980s racial and social conflicts, economic problems and war. Upon release, the album was a critical and commercial failure. The release of the title track as a single unintentionally coincided with the attempted assassination of Ronald Reagan, and "at such a time it would have been a brave radio producer who would have earmarked a track titled 'Celebrate the Bullet' for a prime time slot." As a result, the single and album flopped and the band subsequently split up. Nonetheless, the album has more recently been reappraised, and is considered by lead singer Pauline Black (OBE) to be among the band's best work.
Celebrate the Bullet is a dark and tense album, featuring a "less lively sound" than previous releases, and is strongly political, with lyrics focusing on social and racial relations, "cold war paranoia and fear for the future." In the words of Martin C. Strong, the album was a "more lugubrious state-of-the-nation musing" than "Too Much Pressure". In the Rough Guide to Rock, Peter Buckley said, "with a title like Celebrate the Bullet, we knew we were in for a serious sit-down talking-to. Sure, it was still pop music, it was still Britska (a term that, thankfully, was never widely used), it was still Pauline and the lads dancing around with lots of brass and a beat you could lean against, but it wasn't happy, not at all." One interviewer, whilst interviewing Black, described it as "a dark, haunting, bluesy iteration of ska that to my knowledge has never been attempted before or since." He said that "at times the songs have a new wave feel via synthesized keyboard melodies that buzz over Neol Davies' blistering, bluesy and soulful guitar solos and riffs. Other times its almost undefinable as the songs are driven by a seamless melting pot of rock, reggae and new wave via memorable melodies that stick in your head."
"Bristol & Miami" concerns the racial riots that had occurred in spring 1980 in Bristol (the 1980 St. Pauls riot) and Miami (the 1980 Miami riots), and is said to slightly predate fellow 2 Tone band the Specials' "Ghost Town", a documentation of UK riots released later on in 1981. The energetic song features "punky ska rhythms", which are "typical of the 2 Tone sound". According to one journalist, "the song can’t be read as encouraging rioting, but there is an eerie embattled exuberance to it, which complements the tension in the lyrics. The strangely uplifting ending reflects this contradiction of styles and thoughts." "Red Reflections" is a "joyous" song. The title song has a "staunch anti-violence, anti war-theme."
"Deep Water" has been interpreted as "the inner monologue of a person here in the U.S. contemplating the loss of their home in the sub-prime mortgage crisis." Black, who sees the song as working "on many different levels," was named after a town that Black saw a highway sign for whilst riding on the band's tour bus during their first American tour. She explained "The name just struck a chord with how I was feeling at the time. That tour was fraught with internal problems among us and I was deeply unhappy for most of the time, so I began to pen a song to reflect those inner feelings. I finished writing the song just around the time that keyboardist Desmond Brown finally walked out of the band for some unknown reason, just prior to the sacking of Charley Anderson. Believe me, it really did feel as though we were in ‘deepwater’ back then."
Please note: this is still listed [on Amazon] but at £224 which I take to mean they are out of print. They are also available as limited edition clear plastic vinyl so if anyone wants me to take them down please do me the courtesy of getting in touch and we will see what we can do.
The legendary Rough Trade say:
2022 Remaster. The Selecters's second album, Celebrate The Bullet was released in February 1981 as the follow up to the successful 2 Tone debut album Too Much Pressure, along with the hit singles On My Radio, Three Minute Hero and Missing Words.
Switching labels to Chrysalis Records, the band returned to On My Radio producer Roger Lomas, moving into a more melodic slower pace, whilst keeping their lyrical commentary on racial and social issues. Original members Desmond Brown and Charley Anderson departed before the recording began, with Lomas and Norman Watt-Ray (Ian Dury) helping on bass before new members James Mackie and Adam Williams joined to complete the recording.
Due to unfortunate timing, upon release the title of this album was misunderstood due to the recent murder of John Lennon and an assassination attempt on U.S. President Ronald Regan meant radio stations didn't support the single or album and the release was largely ignored.
This forgotten classic from the 2 Tone era is a timely reissue and will give time for a re-evaluation in the same way the 2021's reissue of Too Much Pressure showed the band as relevant.
Celebrate The Bullet Limited Edition Clear Vinyl available here . . . . £30
Rolling Thunder tour . . . . . .
and more to bid you a very Good Night
Bob Dylan & Joan Baez, “Never Let Me Go,” The Rolling Thunder Revue—The Music Hall, Boston, MA (Afternoon Show) November 21, 1975.
with Thanks as usual to O My Soul
Before the Beatles ushered in the beat revolution, the British pop scene reverberated to a tidal wave of home-grown instrumental music. However the golden age of the instrumental was destined to wither as quickly as it had bloomed, yet British rock owed much to its wordless past. This excellent 3 disc compilation includes tracks such as "Telstar", "F.B.I." and "Sleepwalk" and aptly plays out with At The Sign Of The Swingin Cymbal by Brian Fahey & his Orchestra, the original 1960 version of the chart rundown tune for BBC Radio s Pick Of The Pops. If you’ve got that far, we guarantee you’ve enjoyed 60 of the greatest instrumentals British popular music has to offer. (Record Runner)
"Poetry is just the evidence of life. If your life is burning well, poetry is just the ash.
There are always meaningful songs for somebody. People are doing their courting, people are finding their wives, people are making babies, people are washing their dishes, people are getting through the day, with songs that we may find insignificant. But their significance is affirmed by others. There’s always someone affirming the significance of a song by taking a woman into his arms or by getting through the night. That’s what dignifies the song. Songs don’t dignify human activity. Human activity dignifies the song." - Leonard Cohen
Urbanaspirines has turned up trumps (again!) here with a triple album tribute article on Julian Cope and his work with Teardrop Explodes specifically three albums worth of treasures (apparently with Julian's blessing) as the Deluxe edition featuring Kilimanjaro plus Bates Motel 1978 - 1980, and the BBC sessions from 1980.
Teardrop Explodes Triple - here
and still more
Teardrop Explodes - WILDER + Buff Manilla
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It should be noted perhaps that Julian has written two fantastic books; The Modern Antiquarian an erudite and studiously academic work on ancients sites across Great Britain and a companion volume on sites in Europe. Both go for serious money now so if you find them in second hand bookshops BUY them!
[on checking the Modern Antiquarian is going for over a £100 now and Megalithic European upwards of £150]
trax CD 1:
1. Livin' Lovin' Doll - Cliff Richard & The Drifters 2. Don't Knock Upon My Door - Billy Fury 3. Brand New Cadillac - Vince Taylor & The Playboys 4. Slippin' 'n' Slidin' - Dickie Pride 5. I'm a Man - Mort Shuman 6. Please Don't Touch - Johnny Kidd & The Pirates 7. Once More - Bill Forbes 8. What Do You Want to Make Those Eyes At Me for - Emile Ford & The Checkmates 9. Sea of Love - Marty Wilde & The Wildcats 10. Maybe Tomorrow - Billy Fury 11. Feelin' Fine - The Drifters 12. Apron Strings - Cliff Richard & The Drifters 13. I Vibrate - Larry Page & The Saga Satellites 14. Frantic - Dickie Pride 15. Tallahassee lassie - Tommy Steele 16. Ah Poor Little Baby - Adam Faith 17. A Teenager in Love - Marty Wilde & The Wildcats 18. Don't Tell Me Your Troubles - Emile Ford & The Checkmates 19. Guitar Boogie Shuffle - Bert Weedon 20. The Train Kept-a-Rollin' - Jim Dale 21. Jelly Baby - Jimmy Miller & The New Barbecues 22. A Girl Likes - Janice Peters 23. Pretty Little Pearly - Terry Dene 24. Be-Bop-A-Lula - The Drifters 25. Bad Boy - Marty Wilde & The Wildcats 26. Tryin' to Get to You - Joey Castell 27. Turn Me Loose - Mort Shuman 28. Growl - Johnny Kidd & The Pirates 29. Too Hot to Handle - Michael Cox 30. Big Blon' Baby - Larry Page & The Saga Satellites 31. Donna - Marty Wilde & The Wildcats 32. Saturday Dance - The Shadows 33. Soda Pop Pop - Vince Eager & The Vagabonds 34. The Rough and the Smooth - Dean Webb 35. 49 State Rock - Nikki Papas
...originally served by Gyro1966...
UPDATE
trax CD 2:
1. Come On Baby - Derry Hart & The Hartbeats 2. Big Fat Mama - Roy Young 3. Crazy Little Daisy - Neville Taylor & The Cutters 4. Fabulous Cure - Dickie Pride 5. Feelin' - Johnny Kidd & The Pirates 6. Gonna Type A Letter - Billy Fury 7. Red For Danger - Tony Crombie & His Rockets 8. Lady May - Eddie Hickey 9. You've Gotta Way - The John Barry Seven 10. Hey Miss Fanny - Dean Webb 11. Rock Around The Mailbag - Terry White & The Terriers 12. New Love Tonight - Do & Dena Farrell 13. Don't Burn Me Up - Ray Ellington 14. Five Finger Boogie - Winifred Atwell 15. Kansas City - Jack Parnell 16. I'm Walkin' - David Ross 17. Peanuts - The Southlanders 18. Rainbow Road - Four Jacks 19. Margo - Billy Fury 20. Big Beat Boogie - Bert Weedon 21. See You Friday - Don Lang & His Frantic Five 22. Wait For It - Lorrae Desmond 23. Young Magic - Do & Dena Farrell 24. Swaller-Tail Coat - Ray Ellington 25. Blackout - Terry White & The Terriers 26. The Horrow Show - Sharkey Todd & The Monsters 27. Don't Be A Fool With Love - The Drifters 28. She's Mine - Terry Wayne 29. The Golden Mile - The Sleepwalkers 30. If You Were The Only Girl In The World - Johnny Kidd & The Pirates 31. Runk Bunk - Adam Faith 32. Coffee Break - The Rock 'n' Rollers 33. Rock Rock Rock - Don Lang & His Frantic Five 34. Rockin' Rhythm Roll - Victor Silvester & His Rock N' Roll Rhythm 35. Cool Gool - Sharkey Todd & The Monsters
...originally served by Gyro1966...
Everything But The Girl [Benn Watt and Tracey Thorn]
Another nice (free) article from Ray Padgett over at Flaggin Down the Double E about Bobby guitar playing obsessive Eyolf Østrem. Always worth a read and consider subscribing you won't be sorry.
Ray Padgett |
Oh you want more?! I think you should . . . . . . . .
SUNDAY Update - and of course the guys have made disc 2 available today. . . gotta be worth a listen to liven up your Sunday . . . . . .
Great British Rock n Roll Vol III - Disc 1 here
As we have already mentioned with Vols I & II this series is hysterical and whilst probably only me finds it funny, it is GREAT! Truly it is fascinating and lays bare the history of the earliest roots of Brit Rock n Roll and now we are coming to Cliff's hit singles and still some Tommy Steele classics (check out Come on Let's Go the Ritchie Valens (read: Los Lobos) classic hit. There is more Marty Wilde and some great songs like Cliff's Move it to Rave On, Singing The Blues and Wake Up Little Susie. This is full of great stuff . . . . . . it is available through Zippysh***e so not directly available through British file servers or rather web browsers so you may have to use a VPN if like me you live in the UK but none the worse for that. NB: noting that the second disc available via the easy MEGA in NZ and also that this volume contains monster classic hits like Tequila and Hoots Mon by Lord Rockingham XI!!(Send me a message of you struggle with that first one)
Many would argue that there was no such thing as Great British Rock 'n' Roll in the 1950s, or at least not until 1958 when Cliff Richard's "Move It" offered a rather more convincing home-grown hit than all of its predecessors. However, apart from the Skiffle explosion, there was another quirky musical scene happening in Britain during the late '40s and 1950s. As far as we are aware, this compilation is the first authoritative musical documentation of that scene.Thanks as ever to RYP
Perhaps it should better be classed as NOSTALGIA rather than Rock 'n' Roll but there is a lot of fascinating stuff here, such as the Deep River Boys (from Virginia, USA, recording in Britain during their many UK tours), Ray Ellington (a British-based black bandleader of American & Russian descent) and Winifred Atwell, a classically trained pianist from Trinidad who would go to 'her other piano' to belt out some rockin' boogies. Elsewhere there are numerous talented British jazzers seeing which way the wind was blowing and jumping that jive, and some up 'n' coming UK popsters swaying their hips to the transatlantic rhythm. And of course Tommy Steele, who was acclaimed as Britain's first Rock 'n' Roll star (long before he started serenading little white bulls).
This goes to show that swing rock 'n' roll was being recorded and performed on Britain in the early 50's far more than most realized.
trax CD 2:
1. Penny Loafers And Bobby Socks - The Southlanders 2. Itchy Twitchy Feeling - The Deep River Boys 3. Living Doll - Ray Ellington 4. Rock Shuffle Boogie - Tony Crombie & His Rockets 5. Rock Pretty Baby - Don Lang & His Frantic Five 6. Rosie Lee - Wee Willie Harris 7. Rock Baby Rock - Bertice Reading 8. Ko Ko Mo - The Rock 'n' Rollers 9. Mercy Mercy Mercy - Neville Taylor & The Cutters 10. I Wanna Jive Tonight - The Southlanders 11. Six Five Blues - Ken Mackintosh 12. Not Too Old To Rock N Roll - The Deep River Boys 13. Hey Baby - The Four Jacks 14. Priscilla - The Four Jacks 15. Big Guitar - Ken Mackintosh 16. This Little Girls' Gone Rockin' - Janice Peters & The Frank Barber Band 17. Happy Baby - The Rock 'n' Rollers 18. Party Time - The King Brothers 19. The Squelch - Lord Rockingham's XI 20. Every Which Way - The John Barry Seven 21. If You're So Smart, How Come You Ain't Rich - Billy Sproud & The Rock N Roll Six 22. The Big Beat - Don Lang & His Frantic Five 23. Weekend - Red Price 24. It's A Lie - The Four Jacks 25. Dynamo - Les Houbeaux 26. Tequila - Johnnie The Gash Gray 27. Take Me Back Baby - Tommy Steele & The Steelman 28. Bye Bye Baby - Paul Rich 29. Rex Rocks - Tony Crombie 30. A Million Tears - The Four Jacks 31. Alligator Roll - Victor Silvester & His Rock N' Roll Rhythm 32. Gettin' Ready For Freddy - Alma Cogan 33. Hoots Mon - Lord Rockingham's XI 34. A Sweet Old Fashioned Boy - Terry Thomas Esq. With His Rock N Roll Rotters
...originally served by Gyro1966...