Back to Work

Three weeks in a sling consuming a ton of media, mostly TV, movies and reading.  I didn’t listen to a lot of music, sorta on purpose.  I didn’t listen to any of my own stuff on purpose.  I did, after 2 weeks, start working in PhotoShop and tweaking some lyrics.  Loved Loudermilk, not much else significant enough to note.

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Be Careful What You Say About Johnny Cash

There was a brief period of time in early 2003 that I practically lived at The Red Lion in Eagle Rock. I had always liked the place, good hearty German food with attractive waitresses dressed like they were working in a pub in Bavaria rather than Los Angeles. A lot of them even had the accent to go with it, which is kind of sexy in that cold, high school teacher sort of way. However, what brought me back there almost every Friday and Saturday night was Olivia.

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Punk Rock and the Entrepreneurial Spirit

One thread of the punk rock fabric I touched on was DIY – Do It Yourself. Looking back I don't know if those of us with an entrepreneurial spirit were attracted to punk rock or if punk rock necessitated an entrepreneurial spirit. Either way, if you wanted anything to happen, you had to do it yourself.

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ThoughtsJeremy ClimerDIY
Intellectual Rebellion

Many people consider tragedy to be romantic. We idolize those who died young and tragically, such as: James Dean, Kurt Cobain, and John Lennon to name but a few. When you die young, you leave a small body of work to be judged and any indiscretions can be blamed on youth. Perhaps no musical genre benefits from this more than rock music and no subculture is more known for it than punk rock. And there are two reasons for that – Darby Crash and Sid Vicious.

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“Wildwood Flower”: The Guitar Picker’s Song

Professional songwriters may have written “Wildwood Flower”, but it has since become not only a country classic, but also redefined as a “Carter Family Song” .  It has been selected by National Public Radio as one of the 100 most important songs of the 20th century and is “the closest thing country music has to a true anthem”.  This is largely due to the guitar playing of Maybelle Carter and her influence over several generations of musicians.

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"Single Girl, Married Girl"

If there was a single song that gave birth to country music as we know it, it would be “Single Girl, Married Girl”.  The song was one that Ralph Peer specifically requested the Carter Family sing in their first recording session, and it was the song that convinced him that the Carter Family was worth signing to a record contract.  However, as in the case of many famous incidents, it is a song that almost did not get recorded. 

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"Will the Circle Be Unbroken": A Bridge from the Past

The Carter Family first recorded what would be their signature song in Camden, New Jersey in June 1933.  RCA Victor, their record company, never released this version and the song sat until 1935 when the Carters, once again, recorded “Will the Circle Be Unbroken”, a song about a mother’s funeral.  This song would go on to be one of their most famous songs and inspire the title of an album that would re-introduce the Carters to a different audience 40 years later.

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