Something To Cheer Us Up

Josh Turner (without guitar!) focuses on the singing this time, with Martina DaSilva, Sonny Step, Luke Bob Robinson, and David Linard. Written by Duke Ellington, Johnny Hodges, and Harry James, with lyrics by Don George.

More at Josh Turner Guitar

Fentanyl: Jesse Welles

Monday morning, a world runs on its favorite drug.

More at Jesse Welles

Scarlet Macaws

(Click to enlarge)

They have to be my favorite birds ever, otherworldly in their beauty. The macaws would fly by our hotel room balcony in twos or threes, around twice a day. Fortunately, their raucous call alerts one to drop everything else and pick up a camera.

Manuel Antonio, Costa Rica

Summer Tanager

(Click to enlarge)

While slipping down the trail, we couldn’t miss this lovely tanager when we looked up! A lifer for me.

Trail to Playa Biesanz, Manuel Antonio,

Costa Rica

The Best Folk Singer/Songwriter Of His Generation?

“Jesse Welles has got a voice like John Prine, plays guitar like Bob Dylan, and can write a song that’s as topical and clever as the songs of Phil Ochs or Tom Paxton or Woody Guthrie. It turns out, despite his handsome shaggy-haired babyface look, he has been making songs for a long time. In an age where so much music is artificially created with plastic lyrics and digitally manipulated instruments, it is refreshing to hear a protest song on a simple acoustic folk guitar that doesn’t just talk about generalities, but actually names names, and has a political point of view…”

Click on the mp3 link or triangle above to hear the rest of my commentary on Welles, as broadcast this week on WBAI FM NYC and Pacifica affiliates across the country.

Firesign Theatre: Part Two

Herein, Part two of our conversation with Jeremy Braddock, author of the book, Firesign.

Click on the mp3 link or triangle above to hear the interview as broadcast this week on WBAI FM NYC and Pacifica affiliates across the country

Note: Our posting lately has been more sporadic than usual–we hope to be back up to speed in a week or two.

Beat The Reaper With The Firesign Theatre

If you are of a certain age, growing up as a high school or college kid during the late 60s or early 70s, then odds are that at least one time as you were toking up, the surrealist record LPs of the Firesign Theatre invaded your brain. As the albums brilliantly shifted in and out of tv, film and radio parody, they broke down walls of time, space and authority. Now in a new book about the Firesign Theater, called Firesign, author Jeremy Braddock provides a wonderful non-linear look at the four influential guys who turned the art of radio and recording upside down. I was happy to have as our guest on the show, the author of Firesign, Jeremy Braddock.

Click on the small triangle or mp3 link above to hear the interview as heard on the Arts Express radio program broadcast this week on WBAI FM NYC and Pacifica affiliates across the nation

Part Two here:

If I Had A Hammer

Monday Morning, Pete Seeger, Arlo Guthrie, and Seeger’s grandson, Tao Rodriguez-Seeger, belt their song out.

Thanks to YouTuber Evan

Magical Paperplanes

What a beautiful magic act! Magician Nikolai Striebel takes a simple premise and keeps expanding on it…

More at Nikolai Striebel

Bullsh!t

Monday morning, It is what it is. Another Jesse Welles gem. This guy is writing topical songs as fast or faster than Phil Ochs and Tom Paxton used to in the Sing Out! days.

More at Jesse Welles

The Strike: Part 2

Above, Part 2 of my interview with the directors of The Strike, JoeBill Munoz and Lucas Guilkey.

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La Llorona: Chavela Vargas

What a voice. You can read about the singer here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chavela_Vargas

And the eerie legend of La Llorona:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Llorona

Thanks to YouTuber Milan Music

The Strike

I’ve watched a lot of film documentaries this year, but none more  powerful than The Strike. It’s the story of how the inmates of Pelican Bay prison in California, incarcerated in solitary confinement sometimes for decades, went on a life-threatening hunger strike in order to regain their rights and dignity. I was happy to speak to the the directors of The Strike, JoeBill Muñoz and Lucas Guilkey for Arts Express.

Click on the small triangle or mp3 link above to listen to the interview as broadcast yesterday on the Arts Express radio program, heard on WBAI FM NYC and Pacifica affiliates across the nation.

And Part 2 is here…

This Is The Life

Monday morning, Shut Up and Kiss Me wonder where’re you gonna sleep tonight.

This catchy song was originally a big hit for its singer-songwriter, Scottish Amy Macdonald, who wrote it when she was only 16. The song made its way all through Europe a decade and a half ago, and landed here with this Romanian band.

Thanks to YouTuber Shut Up & Kiss Me!

The Ultimate Hidden Truth Of The World

A posthumous collection of essays by anarchist anthropologist David Graeber, who coined the phrase “We are the 99%,” has just come out, and we look into one of its most interesting pieces.

Click on the triangle above or mp3 link to hear my commentary on the book, as heard on the Arts Express radio program this week, broadcast on WBAI FM NYC and Pacifica affiliates across the nation.

Slaves

Monday morning, it’s Martin Luther King Day, and Capitalist Class Leader Inauguration Day, but Jesse Welles reminds us how things actually work.

More at Jesse Welles

Camouflage Unit

(Click for a better view)

This Brown Creeper is happy it’s hard to spot from even a slight distance!

Prospect Park,

Brooklyn, New York

Which Side Are You On?

Monday morning, Pete Seeger puts the question…

Thanks to YouTuber Mark Parker