.................................the blog nobody reads
Saturday, May 09, 2026
Doug Sahm: Live: Paul's Mall, Boston, MA on March 29th 1973 | FLOPPY BOOT STOMP
Commander Cody & His Lost Planet Airmen - Ebbets Field, Denver, CO, USA 11th August 1973 | Albums That Should Exist
Commander Cody & His Lost Planet Airmen - Ebbets Field, Denver, CO, 8-11-1973
The Wikipedia entry intro is badly written, so I'll try to come up with my own summary. This band was led by pianist and vocalist George Frayne IV, a.k.a. Commander Cody. The band was formed in 1967, but they didn't release their debut album until 1971. Once they did, it contained a surprise hit with the song "Hot Rod Lincoln," which made it all the way to the Top Ten in the U.S. singles chart. It was a surprise hit because it was a cover of an obscure 1950s song, and the 1950s style was very much out of step with the musical trends of 1971.
Unfortunately, it would prove to be their only hit. The band broke up in 1977. However, Frayne continued to make a lot more music using the "Commander Cody" name. He died in 2021.
Although Wikipedia didn't have a good intro for this band, it does have a good paragraph explaining the band's style. So I'll quote that here: "[the band's] style was built on the foundation of country music, which the band fused with boogie woogie, rock and roll, rhythm and blues, Western swing and jazz, which Classic Rock said resulted in 'a counter-cultural twist to the Nashville sound.' Relix said that the band 'tossed together rockabilly, blues, country, boogie-woogie, Western swing and whatever else came their way.' Tinnitist called the band 'one of the more interesting bands of the hippie era, fusing county, rockabilly, western swing, jump blues, and more into an infectious amalgam that set the table for outfits like NRBQ.'"
The music is unreleased. The sound quality is excellent.
This album is 58 minutes long.
01 Instrumental Intro
02 Good Rockin' Tonight
03 talk
04 What's the Matter Now
05 talk
06 Truck Driving Man
07 talk
08 Four or Five Times
09 talk
10 Down and Out
11 talk
12 Mama Hated Diesels
13 talk
14 Little Sally Walker
15 talk
16 Ain't Nothin' Shakin'
17 talk
18 Daddy's Drinkin' Up Our Christmas
19 talk
20 Beat Me Daddy Eight to the Bar
21 talk
22 Hot Rod Lincoln
23 talk
24 Rave On
25 talk
26 Rock That Boogie
27 talk
28 Jailhouse Rock
29 talk by emcee
30 talk
31 Mean Woman Blues
32 Lost in the Ozone Again
33 talk by emcee
(all tracks Commander Cody & His Lost Planet Airmen
The New Piccadillys : Judy Is A Punk! | TWILIGHTZONE
The New Piccadillys If The Beatles played Punk
KOLOB: The home planet of God, according to Mormons : THE BOOK OF MORMON | Will Howard : Dangerous Minds
After the look at Scientology the other day (can’t see anyone having the cojones of releasing a music based on the Book of Dianetics!) Comes this from Will at Dangerous Minds!!
Credit: Dangerous Minds / Bertel Thorvaldsen / Joseph Smith / Reuben Hedlock / Public Domain
Kolob: The home planet of God, according to Mormons
Like pretty much all jokes in the hit musical comedy The Book of Mormon, the song ‘I Believe’ on the Mormon belief system is very simple, yet extremely effective.
It’s actually quite similar to the South Park gag about Scientology beliefs when you think about it. In both cases, the libertarian in your life’s favourite comedy writers sit back and let the bizarre beliefs of a religion do the hard work for them. Citing the most bizarre parts of both dogmas as a way of making both of them look cretinous.
Among the lines about ancient Jews building boats and sailing to America, the president of the church, Thomas Monson, speaking directly to God and how in 1978, God changed his mind about Black people, is one absolute gem that Elder Price tosses out like it’s absolutely nothing – he says that he believes God lives on a planet called Kolob, that Jesus has his own planet as well, and when someone who believes in him dies, they get their own planet as well.
Yup, this is all completely congruent with Mormon belief systems. Viewed from a certain perspective, Mormonism sounds just as much like a sci-fi acid trip as Scientology, principally because it’s completely obsessed with planets. Or, as they’re referred to in the scripture, “stars”.
The Book of Abraham refers to the star of Kolob being “the nearest to the throne of God”, and since we know today that stars aren’t actually, y’know, habitable, “stars” have been retconned to be the word this particular holy book uses for planets. So, where exactly does this idea come from?
The idea of Kolob is one put forward by Joseph Smith himself, the founder of Mormonism and the Latter Day Saints movement – according to Smith, he purchased a set of Ancient Egyptian papyrus scrolls in the mid-1800s, and he transcribed what he found and brought its teachings to the world, first via his newsletter Times and Seasons in 1842, then in The Book of Abraham, and it’s there that Smith lays down one of the key tidbits of information regarding the planet.
To quote The Book of Abraham, it says, “The measurement according to celestial time, which celestial time signifies one day to a cubit. One day in Kolob is equal to a thousand years according to the measurement of the Earth,” which checks out.
Especially when you take into account the accepted Christian dogma of the world being built in seven days. Or at the very least, six days, then rested on the seventh. Those were Kolob days – to us, they would have taken 6000 years, then 1000 more to move Earth from Kolob to its current position in our Solar System.
This would imply, however, that it can’t be anywhere close to us, despite a number of early Mormon converts declaring that our sun was Kolob. However, according to Smith himself, Kolob is visible from our world. Or at the very least, Methuselah and Abraham saw the planet by looking through Urim and Thummim, a set of seer stones embedded in a pair of spectacles that could also translate all languages. Handy to have around, I’m sure you’d agree.
It just goes to show that, say what you want about Trey Parker and Matt Stone (I will and I do), they are the masters of giving people enough rope to hang themselves with. They just repeated what Mormons actually believe, and now the entire church believes that their music is the work of the devil. Because truly, sometimes the only difference between religion and the rantings of a madman is how many people believe in it.
Greta Thunberg collapses into fits of giggling
RUSSELL HOWARD Interviews GRETA THUNBERG!
Birthdays: Paul Heaton, born in Bromborough, Cheshire on this day in 1962 | THE BEAUTIFUL SOUTH /THE HOUSEMARTINS
Happy birthday to Paul Heaton, born in Bromborough, Cheshire on this day in 1962. He kept it all in.
Stephen Wilson : Stand By Me
. . . . .anybody know this guy? Extraordinary voice and great guitar style
The Blues : A film by Les Blank 1968 Lightning Hopkins Billy Bizor Mance Lipscomb 1968
The Blues According to Lightning Hopkins . . . . . .
Cream - Look Here Princess (Demo) | HERBERG DE KELDER/ thespiritofvexation
“Look here Princess
I want to be famous and rich
So I can be empty and bitter like you
Sitting home with nothing to do
Princess look now
I’ve got fifteen women called Sue
Twenty women called Jane And I’m sad"
HERBERG DE KELDER
Wow never heard this one before and it is streets ahead of Cream and as always I remain fascinated by Jack and Pete's collaborative work on songs . . . . .way ahead of its time IMHO
