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Yesterday, the drive-through at Starbucks was just nuts. Everyone in the universe, and a few visitors from other universes I think, came through the drive-through and ordered at least one and usually 2 - 5 caramel frappuccinos. Nothing else. No coffee, so pastries, no tea or tazoberry ... just oceans and oceans of caramel frappuccino. The caramel smell was enough to knock you down after a while! Oy. Thanks goodness I have today off at home.
As of this week, I am instituting a new cartooning goal: that by Saturday midnight, all the strips for the following week (both SJ and NN) will be drawn and posted, or at least sent to Hikaru (i.e.,
katayamma) for coloring. I am getting really sick of all these missed days. I'm spending all of today and whatever time I have tomorrow night working on next week's strips, to get them out of the way. Then, in the future, if I can get the strips done before Saturday, I can use the rest of that week to write, play games, work on D&D, or whatever.
Once pay starts rolling in, I need to add a few tunes to my jazz collection. I have a lot of swing classics, particularly of Glenn Miller and Artie Shaw, but I really want to get recordings of:
There's also a song I haven't heard in a long time, but would like to find, called "The Tennessee Birdwalk." I have no idea who did it, unfortunately.
Anyway, that's all the news that's fit to transmit electronically at the moment. Catcha later!
-The Gneech
As of this week, I am instituting a new cartooning goal: that by Saturday midnight, all the strips for the following week (both SJ and NN) will be drawn and posted, or at least sent to Hikaru (i.e.,
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Once pay starts rolling in, I need to add a few tunes to my jazz collection. I have a lot of swing classics, particularly of Glenn Miller and Artie Shaw, but I really want to get recordings of:
- Louis Prima's original "Just a Gigilo"
- Take Five
- Classical Gas
- Popcorn
- Alley Cat
- The Syncopated Clock
- The Music Box Dancer
There's also a song I haven't heard in a long time, but would like to find, called "The Tennessee Birdwalk." I have no idea who did it, unfortunately.
Anyway, that's all the news that's fit to transmit electronically at the moment. Catcha later!
-The Gneech
all dat jazz...
Date: 2002-02-22 11:49 am (UTC)While most of my generation was listening to Duran Duran and Madonna, I was listening to Glenn Miller, Louis Armstrong, Ella Fitzgerald, and Duke Ellington on KKGO in LA (back when it was all jazz---now it's a classical station)...MLD
Re: all dat jazz...
Date: 2002-02-22 02:13 pm (UTC)Take Five, sounds like you're covered there. Somebody Desmond, was it?
Classical Gas by Mason Williams (from the Mason Williams Phonograph Record) -- this is a very clever fellow who made up his own muscial notation system, and some of his songs (such as "Sunflower" from the same album) were derived from it. Sunflower's tune begins with the notes indicated by the word "SUNFLOWER" in his notation. Very strange, and not dissimilar, I now realize, to the Gayne Ballet Suite used in "2001" and as the theme to "Aliens".
Popcorn -- I realize that I don't know which of the many music pieces you're referring to. However, I'm going to hazard a guess, based on the presence of the other pieces: "Popcorn" by Hot Butter, early 70's, a synthesized piece. (I really enjoyed "Electric Eclectics of MOOG", and "Age of Electronicus" -- and not just for "Topless Dancers of Corfu".{g} ) You probably are NOT talking about, say, James Brown's "Popcorn" collection.
Alley Cat (used as the theme to an early late night science fiction/horror movie show -- kind of an early predessor to "Mystery Science Theater 3000" -- let's see... 'twas a wierd name -- aha! Bent Fabric -- 1962. Hah! He also did "Never Tease Tigers!".
The Syncopated Clock by Leroy Anderson -- probably the Arthur Fiedler recording. Some game show uses this, neh? Recorded late 40's or early 50's -- Fiedler would be 50's or later.
The Music Box Dancer by Frank Mills. Recorded in 74 and 78, you want the later one, probably. Cute, quick, catchy little piece, and everybody has heard it.
Now, if it was classical music you wanted, let me send to to the next door down: Ask for "Malver". ;)
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