never heard the expression "as old as Methuselah"? almost rhymes with "all over the fuselage" (picks up twin-neck 12 string/flying V combo and sings over picked jazz-folk chord stylings...)man appears to have been the longest-living human at 969
also see "Requiem for Methuselah", a third season episode of Star Trek: Original Series, first broadcast February 14, 1969
of course not, I know Star Trek dates like the back of my...please tell me you just googled that!![]()
Nice toonage, Matt. Rawk!
Me too. I like it when he comes with the stuff about trumpet music as access to one's own divinity, someone needed to be saying that. BBC2 must swoop down here but the dance moves will risk causing a riot like what Elvis done a while back. This could be as big as Nigella Lawson. The very least is that they get him on The Late Review complete with headgear. If u get there I need a signed promise that you get up from the couch and do the dance moves as well as the crit.I just love Mr Woebot when he is off on one... riffing on music and nature and the universe and all the nice little visual ticks. It makes me very happy.![]()
Very interesting stuff. When Sam Lee was introduced, I was expecting some old fogey.
Really liked this one. Oh, how I'd love to just spend a day just going through as many of those old records as I could!
It's particularly interesting to me, in that so many American folk and "mountain music" songs have roots in this stuff. It'd be interesting to hear the more original takes on some of these songs, without the slight blues inflection that American mountian music adds...
On a related note, is the tradition of "murder" or "death ballads" rooted in British or Irish folk, or is that a distinctly Appalachian thing?