Monday, January 31, 2011

Fake Kurt Loder Facebook

 


Fake Kurt Loder Facebook
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I was briefly taken in by the new Facebook page for Kurt Loder.

At first I thought it possible, but then after reading a few of the comments made by "Kurt Loder," I immediately realized it was either a joke or a mediocre pretender.

Others were apparently taken in too, like Roger Hughes, an old Army buddy from Munich who I'm sure Kurt would like to reestablish contact with or just say hello, and the women who went to OCHS with Kurt back in the Sixties.

But then reading the comments "Kurt Loder" posted, it was immediatly clear that whoever this character is, it isn't Kurt Loder, and must be somebody that not only doesn't work with him, or know him, but hasn't even read his stuff.

I tried to post a comment exposing this fraud, noting that the real Kurt Loder would never say any music is "cool," or "Kurt Loder Rules!" but they won't let me expose them on their own page, so I'll do it here.

Kurt would not ask people to "never forget" him, or ask anyone who loves him to say so or post it. And he would never ask anyone to promote him in any way.

And he certainly didn't "always enjoy interviewing musicians," but thought it was work, and tedious work at that. He didn't think that most of those he interviewed were doing anything "really groundbreaking and fascinating" or even interesting, and with only a few exceptions (ie. Keith Richards, Captain Beefheart).

Kurt Loder is an interesting person, a good guy, a smart guy, a neat acquaintance, fine friend, excellent writer and good guitarist.

But he didn't enjoy interviewing idiot celebrities, thought the most significant music went unhearld. He despised the direction that music video television went, and didn't follow it there.

Now he's writing good film reviews, and sometimes his reviews are better than the movies he's writing about.

But he's not on Facebook, and probably doesn't even know there's an idiot imposter posting junk under his good name.


http://www.facebook.com/pages/Kurt-Loder/356924534103

L. Korkos: I went to school with you Class of 63 O.C., N.J. must say you did your homrwork and loved English

January 24 at 9:28pm
Roger Hughes: Kurt , this Roger Hughes your old Army Buddy in Munic Germany , Hope that You Remember ...

December 28, 2010 at 1:19pm
Kurt, I remember reading your book on Tina Turner and borrowing it from my local library in my teen years... and growing up watching MTV watching you interview Madonna, Marilyn Manson, Trent Reznor and soooo many artists/bands I listen to.

Being the music journalist you are... stay true to what you're doing because I'm ...sure it's working!

Peace.
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November 18, 2010

Kurt Loder: hey thanks for the comments. always enjoyed interviewing the musicians who were making some really groundbreaking and fascinating stuff. i look forward to previewing some really cool music here on this fan page real soon. stay tuned, and thanks again.

November 19, 2010 at 5:54am · Eric Cobain hey kurt how did you feel about interviewing nirvana when they were around

Kurt Loder: If you really love Kurt Loder, post how much you love Kurt Loder and help promote this page and Kurt Loder's legacy to the World Forever!!!!!!

November 18, 2010 at 12:07pm
Kurt Loder: Kurt rules FOREVER!!! Never Forget Kurt Loder!!!!

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Merion Inn Fire

 


Merion Inn Fire, Christmas Eve, 2010
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The Merion Inn on Decatur Street in Cape May had a serious fire on Christmas Eve, and while everyone got out okay, including George Mesterhazy and his girlfriend, her brother was seriously injured.

After a cleanup and rehab of the damage, they reopened in time for New Years and should be back in business now.

Looking forward to stopping by and seeing George during this spring Cape May Jazz Fest.

This fire could have been a disaster, not only to those who were there, but to everyone who ever enjoyed the place, one of Cape May's most historic bars and restaurants.

Built circa 18?? by members of the exclusive Merion Golf and Cricket Club in Philadelphia, the Merion Inn catered to those who enjoyed living first class.

The old hardwood bar against the wall is one of Cape May's oldest, possibly challenged only by Prince Edward at the Chalfonte Hotel.

George Mesterhazy, who I know from the old Atlantic City Days, has been behind the baby grand for years now, and whenever there's some musicians or singers in town they usually stop by to say hello to George and end up jamming or singing along.

At least we can depend on George being there next time we're in town.

George Mesterhazy

 


George Mesterhazy at the piano at the Merion Inn, Decatur Street, Cape May, New Jersey
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Mesterhazy

By BOB INGRAM
Cape May County Herald

July 2008

http://www.capemaycountyherald.com/article/30858-mesterhazy-gentleman-jazz

The Merion Inn on Decatur Street in Cape May harkens back to more genteel, Victorian times. This particular evening, eight women of late middle age, in summery pastels, cluster at the near end of the stately bar, sipping wine and chatting amiably while they wait for their table.

At the handsome Steinway upright grand piano nearby, George Mesterhazy, 55, the house pianist, long hair and beard flecked with gray, moves easily from one standard to the next, graciously taking requests that he mixes in with his own selections, while the tip level in the giant martini glass on the piano slowly rises.

“Night and Day” moves into “Some Enchanted Evening” into “Side By Side” into “I’ll Be Seeing You” into “Younger Than Springtime” and so on into the long, easy evening.

Later, on the patio, Mesterhazy reacts to a comment that his status at the Merion Inn is not unlike that of the great jazz pianist Marian MacPartland, who for so many years was the featured solo attraction at the famed Hickory House in New York City. Miss MacPartland still hosts the popular “Piano Jazz” program on PBS Radio.

“It’s funny you should mention Marian,” Mesterhazy says. “I was part of her 90th birthday tribute in March. It’s supposed to air on PBS Radio. I don’t know when. They already sent me a check, though. It was great. I only did a few songs. I accompanied Jeannie Bryson, Dizzy Gillespie’s daughter. I love Marian.”

George Mesterhazy has a natural, accessible way and loves to talk about his life’s work and joy, which is jazz. He seems to know everybody in jazz and has an endless wealth of jazz stories. He is a gentleman raconteur of what has been called America’s classical music. He is, in short, a jazz man.

He has been at the Merion Inn keyboard since he was interim musical director at the First Presbyterian Church across the street from the inn eleven years ago. The church is itself a local jazz Mecca, holding regular jazz vespers since even before Mesterhazy became affiliated.

“I would get done playing church services,” he recalls, “and the inn was doing lunch in those days, so I’d come over here and play piano for nothing and get a free lunch and have a good time, the main motivation being to talk to Vicki.”

Vicki is Victoria Watson, whose family owns the Merion Inn. She and Mesterhazy are now a couple, living over the restaurant on the second and third floors. They also have an apartment in Manhattan for when Mesterhazy is working there, either as a pianist, composer, arranger, music director, or producer. He is involved in every aspect of his music.

“I just always dabbled in it,” he says of his piano playing. “I didn’t even know I was going to be a piano player until I was 18 or 19. I would play a friend’s organ or the piano in somebody’s house or high school. I played just to amuse myself.”

Raised in New York State, Mesterhazy moved to Somers Point and attended Mainland Regional High School and considers himself “a Jersey boy.”

He played rock guitar and trumpet until he jumped in for a less-than-sterling keyboard player and just went on from there.

“I had the house band in the Strand Hotel in Atlantic City,” he notes. “I was 17. It was great. I was still in high school and I had a band called the Penthouse Trio and we accompanied all the acts who came to the 500 Club and stayed at the Strand.

To pay for their rooms, they put on free shows for the other guests at the pool and one of my jobs was to accompany them besides playing at night with the trio. It was a great job!”
Mesterhazy continues: “I hung out in those days. I mean, it was part of my childhood. I knew Skinny (Paul “Skinny” D’Amato, legendary owner of the 500 Club) very well. I played a solo piano job at a club called the Apartment Lounge. I was 18-years-old! I worked in an auto parts store during the day and played piano at night at the Apartment Lounge.”

Since those long ago and far away days, Mesterhazy has literally traveled the world as a jazz piano player. One of the highlights of his career was a Grammy nomination on Shirley Horn’s 1998 album “Loving You.”

The story of how he came to play with Shirley Horn says a great deal about Mesterhazy’s outlook and career. He was playing with Boston jazz singer Rebecca Paris, he recalls, “in a dive called Twins in D.C. It was owned by twin Ethiopian sisters. I thought, ‘Who the hell is going to come into this bar to watch Rebecca and I play jazz with a trio?’ I’m just kind of closing my eyes and playing. I open my eyes and the place is packed! And then these two guys in tuxedoes come in.”

The two guys were Joel Siegel, Shirley Horn’s manager, and the composer (Sir) Richard Rodney Bennett; they’d been at a formal affair at the Kennedy Center. Siegel said he loved Mesterhazy’s playing and understood that George would be in Los Angeles producing a new album for Rebecca Parris at the same time Shirley Horn would be having a record release party at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel.

Siegel invited Mesterhazy to the party. There was one hitch: when Mesterhazy got to Hollywood, he had a suit with him, but he didn’t have socks. He called Hal Levy, Sarah Vaughn’s last manager, and asked to borrow a pair of socks. Levy said that was fine with him, “so I went over to his fancy high-rise apartment in the marina somewhere and borrowed a pair of socks,” Mesterhazy remembers with a chuckle.

He met Shirley Horn at the party, they hit it off immediately, and the rest is jazz history. George Mesterhazy counts Horn as one of his main influences, as well as Grammy winner Herbie Hancock, and points out that “there’s a direct lineage between George Shearing and Bill Evans and Herbie Hancock, and I have pretty much followed that lineage, which follows a line of harmonic development that I really love. And I’ve always loved Oscar Peterson. We finally met last year, shortly before he died. It was a real honor to sit in a room and talk about music together.”

Among composers, he favors Johnny Mandel and Nelson Riddle, along with Don Costa, Burt Bacharach, Michel LeGrand, and Antonio Carlos Jobim.

“All you have to do is listen to a Sinatra record,” he goes on. “You don’t even have to listen to anything else to learn all there is to know about music.”
On Aug. 8, Mesterhazy will begin producing a new CD with singer Paula West at Sears Sound in New York City.

“It’s a good studio with great old microphones,” he says. “The new style of recording is you go in and lay your tracks down and you don’t even meet anybody. I’m writing for the Paula West record now and we’ll have everybody in the room together and we won’t even be wearing headphones.”

He says he’s in his third year with a production company called Razz Productions and also works for seven straight weeks every year at the Razz Room at the Hotel Nikko in San Francisco with Paula West and a quartet out of New York.

“We opened the place so we’ll be the main headliner there again next year,” he says.
As to his playing at the Merion Inn, he says, “I treat it with the same care as I do everything, so it doesn’t affect me negatively in any way, even though I don’t play as jazzy as I would if I was in a real jazz environment.

On Tuesday night, though, the group we have at the Merion swings, man. It’s me and Tim Lekan on bass and Bob Shomo on drums. I pay for the band out of my pocket just so I can do it. For me, it’s mental health night. You ought to come out.”

(Thanks for the great article Bob Ingram - BK)

George Mesterhazy

 


George Mesterhazy at the piano at the Merion Inn, Decatur Street, Cape May, New Jersey

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Captain Beefheart RIP 1941-2010

 
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Captain Beefheart RIP 1941 - 2010

When I bought my first LPS, which I played on my parent's AM/FM/turntable in a giant cabinet, I was limited to a few albums I had bought - Judy Collins "Both Sides Now," Herb Albert's Tijuana Brass "Cream," because of the cover, and somehow I got a copy of Captain Beefheart's "Trout Mask Replica," which was certainly unique.

I didn't know what to make of it. Some of it was blues, the first blues I heard, and some sounded just like noise, but it was unique and something I threw on when things got boring.

Then I learned a little more about Captain Beefheart and Frank Zappa from Meatball Fulton's radical radio program on Sunday nights (on WXPN?) and then a little more with Dave Herman (on MMR), and tried to keep up with him as time when on.

Much more into the music and to Beefheart, Kurt Loder was surprised when I expressed familiarity with Trout Mask Replica, and told me some Beefheart stories that made us laugh.

So I wasn't surprised when Kurt caught up with Beefheart, and he devotes a chapter on him in his book, which I think takes it name from a Beefheart song.

Here's an article Loder wrote about Beefheart for Rolling Stone back in the day.

Kurt Loder piece from Rolling Stone, Nov. 27, 1980

http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:Xxn876ZyHyUJ:beatpatrol.wordpress.com/2009/07/01/kurt-loder-captain-beefhearts-ship-comes-in-1980/+Kurt+Loder+Captain+Beefheart&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us

After 16 years and a dozen albums, the world has finally caught up with Don van Vliet.

It’s a dogshit day on West Forty-second Street, the neon-choked main drag of Manhattan’s cheap-thrills district. As the daily midmorning traffic jam congeals into an unmoving mass, Don Van Vliet peers out a drizzle-streaked car window at the shuffling tribe of hookers, hustlers and head cases that clogs the sidewalks, then squints up at the lewd movie marquees looming above: SLAVES OF THE CANNIBAL GOD.

SUGAR BRITCHES. THAT’S PORNO! Reeling out into the street, a sputtering madwoman, dizzed-out and in full rant, does battle with her demons, flinging curses at the soggy September sky Van Vliet perks up, chuckling in appreciation. “Tell you what, I like her style,” he says, flipping to a fresh page in the squiggle-filled sketch pad on his lap. “I don’t pay attention to peripheria. Only noises pull me in.”

Forty-eight hours ago, Van Vliet and his wife, Jan, were puttering about anonymously in their tiny trailer out in the sun-baked wastes of the High Mojave Desert. But now, in his capacity as Captain Beefheart – “The shingle that’s given me shingles,” he grumps – Don has ventured back down into the commercial lowlands to make yet another attempt at hustling art in the East Coast rock & roll casbah. Doc at the Radar Station, the eleventh Captain Beefheart album (twelfth, if you count Bongo Fury, his 1975 collaboration with erstwhile pal Frank Zappa; fourteenth, if you include two live bootlegs, Easy Teeth and What’s All This BoogaWooga Music?), had critics baying in adulation even before its official release. Not surprising: Beefheart has always been a critical icon and a commercial impossibility, one of the sadder facts of contemporary American music. But this time, after two years in eclipse, there’s a feeling of triumph in his return. Beefheart’s spiritual children –bands like Pere Ubu, XTC, Devo, the Contortions – have helped create a more amenable context for the master’s inimitable music.

Now, his anarchic guitar wrangles, lurching rhythms, quirky animist poetry and seven-octave vocal swoops don’t seem nearly as weird as they once did. In fact, although Doc at the Radar Station must surely confirm Van Vliet’s position as a major American composer, it could also lay claim to being the ultimate dance album – depending, of course, on how many dances your body is capable of doing at one time.

In 1980, Captain Beefheart and his Magic Band sound utterly contemporary, even though Van Vliet hasn’t altered his musical approach one iota in order to achieve that effect. “I’m not Chuck Berry or Pinky Lee or something,” he says. “I’m right now, man. If I wanna do something, I do it right. Look how long I’ve been at this, my tenacity. It’s horrible. It’s like golf – that bad. But it’s what I do.”

Van Vliet had his own slant on things right from the start. Born thirty-nine years’ ago in Glendale, California, he taught himself to read at the age of three. At four, he dropped out of kindergarten (“They were playing with these gigantic blocks, and I never liked squares that much”) and took up sculpture. At five, while visiting Griffith Park Zoo in Los Angeles, he met a noted Portuguese sculptor named Agostinho Rodriquez, and soon young Van Vliet was displaying his artistic talents on Rodriquez’ weekly television show.

When he was thirteen, Don was offered a major scholarship to study sculpture in Europe. His parents, Glen and Sue Van Vliet, fearing that their only child might fall in with an evil – or possibly effeminate – crowd, decided instead to move him out to the desert, to the nice, safe town of Lancaster. There, Don met Frank Zappa, who was not a wholesome influence. The two spent much of their time auditing obscure R&B records. Sometimes they would sneak into the bakery truck that Don’s father drove for a living and fill up on the fresh-baked goodies inside.(Although they were fast friends then, over the years Van Vliet has come to resent what he sees as Zappa’s wholesale appropriation of his musical vocabulary; “He got a lot of goodies off a me,” Don says glumly “He never quit.”)

The early Sixties found Zappa and Van Vliet in Cucamonga working on a concept for a band, the Soots, and a movie, Captain Beefheart Meets the Grunt People. Neither project panned out, and Zappa soon departed for L.A. to form the Mothers of Invention. Van Vliet returned to Lancaster with his new moniker (“I had a beef in my heart against the world”) and started gathering musicians. By 1964, he was gigging locally and before long, Captain Beefheart and the Magic Band were signed to A&M Records, which released a single – a version of Bo Diddley’s “Diddy Wah Diddy” – that became a local hit in 1966. A&M, of course, wanted to follow up with an album, thinking it had a hot white blues-rock group on its hands. This was the first in a series of executive misperceptions that have plagued Van Vliet throughout his career.

A&M found Van Vliet’s original material profoundly perplexing, and passed on putting out an LP. Buddah Records was willing to give Don a shot, though, and in 1967 released Safe as Milk, which contained such Beefheart classics as ‘Abba Zaba” and “Electricity” The next year’s Strictly Personal, however, was grotesquely distorted by phasing – an obnoxious studio effect of the period – which was grafted onto the album without Van Vliet’s approval. Fortunately, at that point, Frank Zappa reappeared and signed his old buddy to his new Straight label. Assured of complete artistic freedom, Van Vliet sat down at a piano and in eight and a half hours composed twenty-eight astounding songs, combining field hollers, fatback boogie and free-jazz blowing into a stupefying new sound that still seems exhilaratingly avant-garde thirteen years later. For those won over by Trout Mask Replica, run-of-the-mill rock & roll would never again seem quite sufficient.

Van Vliet’s genius continued to flower on Lick My Decals Off Baby (1970), The Spotlight Kid and Clear Spot (both 1972). Unfortunately, not many people bought those records. His career hit what is generally regarded as its nadir in 1974, when he signed with Mercury and released, in quick succession, Unconditionally Guaranteed and Bluejeans and Moonbeams, two unabashed bids for straight commercial success.

(The former is an album of simple but engaging pleasures; the latter, a true turkey). After the holding action of Bongo Fury in 1975, Van Vliet found himself labelless. Zappa helped him organise the sessions for what was to have been his next album, Bat Chain Puller, and eventually, most of this material appeared on 1978′s Shiny Beast (Bat Chain Puller), which also introduced the nucleus of his current Magic Band. However, a legal dispute between Van Vliet’s American and European record companies prevented the album from being released abroad until late last year, effectively scuttling any major impact it might have had.

Given this chronicle of woe, it is remarkable that Doc at the Radar Station is one of the strongest and most uncompromising albums Van Vliet has ever made. “The people at Virgin Records told me that their favourite things were Lick My Decals Off Baby and Trout Mask,” he says. “They said that it wouldn’t bother them at all if I just went all out and did some things like that, and I said, ‘No problem.’”

The album’s twelve tracks were essentially cut live in the studio, with roaring performances by the Magic Band: Jeff Moris Tepper on guitars, Eric Drew Feldman on keyboards and bass, Robert Arthur Williams on drums, Bruce Lambourne Fowler on trombone and John “Drumbo” French – the original Magic Band drummer – on guitars, marimba, bass and drums. (Gary Lucas contributes French horn and fingerpicks a solo Stratocaster on the tricky neomadrigal, “Flavor Bud Living.”) Produced by Van Vliet (who plays soprano sax, bass clarinet, Chinese gongs and harmonica), the album is a dizzying blast of pure, unadulterated Beefheart, from such (relatively) straightforward stomp-alongs as “Hot Head” and “Run Paint Run Run” and the delicate, glimmering ‘A Carrot Is as Close as a Rabbit Gets to a Diamond” to the monumental flailings of “Sue Egypt” and especially “Sheriff of Hong Kong.” Listening to the latter track, it’s hard to comprehend how Van Vliet, an unschooled musician, is able to compose each instrument’s part – from crashing guitar chords to the tiniest sizzle of a cymbal – and then teach each musician how to play it. In effect, he’s responsible for every sound on the record, and he says it just comes to him naturally.

“‘Sheriff of Hong Kong’ was done on a grand piano,” Don explains. “I played that damn thing exactly the way it is. I think guitar on one hand, bass on the thumb and the other guitar on the other hand. Pianos are great to compose on, man.” He also wrote some songs on his latest acquisition, a Mellotron, the original, now-antiquated string synthesizer. “I heard them played so many horrible ways that I got interested in getting hold of one of them. The Mellotron’s the only thing that can get that Merthiolate colour, you know what I mean?’ Really abused throat”
Although Van Vliet is only marginally aware of the many admirers he has among New Wave musicians (“I’ve heard a few things they’ve done that kind of annoyed me”), some of his new songs suggest that he resents the way certain of his techniques – usually the jangly slide guitars and discombobulated rhythms – have been adapted for fun and profit by some young bands, while he remains generally unheralded and basically poverty-stricken. In “Sue Egypt,” he mentions “all those people that ride on my bones,” and in ‘Ashtray Heart” he sings:

You picked me out, brushed me off
Crushed me while I was burning out
Hid behind the curtain
Waited for me to go out
You used me like an ashtray heart

Don insists that ‘Ashtray Heart” is “purely just a poem,” which may well be. He couldn’t be blamed for holding at least a slight grudge, though.

Bolstered by the clamorous reception accorded Doc at the Radar Station, Van Vliet is now itching to get out on the road. “Our sets will probably be an hour and thirty minutes, I think. That’s too long, but after the Grateful Dead and Zappa, what can you do? I mean, if you don’t have it, man, you have to play longer. It makes me feel funny. It’s an insult to people to stay up there that long.”

Long sets also mean more lyrics to be recommitted to memory – not an appealing prospect with a repertoire as complex and lengthy as Van Vliet’s. “I have to learn all of that vomit, you know? It’s like reaching back in a toilet, bringing it back up. God, that stuff is so far back to me at this point I mean, Jesus Christ, I can’t even remember where my keys are in my pocket.”

Van Vliet and the Magic Band (with new guitarist Richard Snyder replacing the recently departed Drumbo) will kick off a major US tour on the East Coast in late November, then head west after a brief holiday break. First, though, the group will embark on a two-week tour of Europe. Don likes visiting Europe.

“My favourite wine I ever had was in Brussels,” he recalls, obviously relishing the memory “This stuff was old – seventeenth century There was a petrified spider in the cork. I thought it was about time we had some good wine, so I bought everybody in the band a bottle and charged it to the room. I did – charged it to Warner Bros. It was good. And it was snowing in Brussels, and the snowflakes were like white roses falling in slow motion. Ooh, it was wonderful – especially on that wine.”

His enthusiasm is understandable – such conviviality is hard to come by back in the High Mojave. “I split a bottle of wine in the desert with this black hobo,” Don says. “Very hip fellow. He’d hitchhiked down from Oakland. He didn’t take a train anymore. He said, ‘I don’t ride the rails because the young people, they kill tramps now, you know.’ I said, ‘That’s disgusting.’ He said, ‘It isn’t like it used to be, Don…’”

Breaking free from the Forty-second Street traffic impasse, we head north toward Central Park, where a photo session has been set up at the Children’s Zoo. The photographer has decided to shoot Van Vliet with some dwarf goats, which sounds like a good idea. “I used to drink a lot of goat’s milk when I was a child,” Don explains. “Now they say you can get TB from it, but that’s a bunch of hooey. Man already has TB, especially the government – Tired Butt.”

The goats are nowhere to be seen, having retired inside their wooden shelter at the first sight of humans bearing photographic equipment – an entirely reasonable reaction. As soon as Don swings one leg into their pen, however, they come trotting out. One of them nuzzles his knee. Another chews lightly on his trouser cuff. Not only that, but a pair of squirrels come scampering up the walk to observe the scene, and as Don chats away, a totally unexpected banty rooster steps out from behind a nearby bush. It’s really something to see: Doc and his radar.

Being around Don Van Vliet for any length of time, it’s hard to repress the feeling that he’s in direct contact with some benign but alien force. Or maybe he’s just open to it. In “Dirty Blue Gene,” a song on the new album, he mentions “‘The Shiny Beast of Thought / Standing there bubbling like an open cola in the sun.” Where does it all come from – the poems, the paintings, the strange and wonderful music?

“Probably from a tortured only child,” he says. “It just all comes right out of my… sometimes cesspool, sometimes not. It’s always there. I just hope it doesn’t stop. And I hope my water doesn’t stop – wow, can you imagine that? I’m more afraid the water’ll stop. God have mercy: all of a sudden you can’t go to the bathroom. After all these years – what, thirty-nine years of going to the toilet. Wow it certainly is comforting.

Kurt Loder

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Guitar Shorty coming to TonyMardigras

 


Guitar Shorty will perform on Monday, August 30th at 6:30 PM as part of this summer's TonyMardigras on the Boardwalk series of free concerts that so far has featured such acts as the New Riders of the Purple Sage, Buckwheat Zydeco, the fabulous Neville Brothers and John Lee Hooker, Jr.

Guitar Shorty can really play the guitar, and used to collaborate with his brother-in-law, one James Hendrix.
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http://www.tonymart.com/Default.htm


http://www.tonymart.com/live-events.htm

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Charlie Grace

 


Charlie Grace on guitar.
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http://www.charliegracie.com/schedule.php