Saturday, March 30, 2024
The Full Story
Thursday, March 28, 2024
Gheorghe's 6-Pack: World Party
Who is Mike Scott?
It depends upon whom you ask. You'll get different answers from different pockets of people.
If you ask OBXDave, I bet he'd first say that Mike Scott is the Houston Astros pitcher who dominated the National League in 1986 with his newfound, profound splitter, something he developed after scuffling for the Mets for a few years in the early 80's. (He went from scuffling to scuffing, it's said.) The Mets traded him for Danny Heep and then suffered twice over. In '86, this Mike Scott struck out over 300 in '86, won the Cy Young, threw a frickin' no-hitter, and was a whisper away from starting a Game 7 in an utterly insane NLCS that I'm super glad didn't go 7. Danny Heep... did none of those things.That's not who I came to write about today.
If you ask rob and AuguryDave, I bet they'd first say that Mike Scott is our pledge brother who also goes by deep cover pseudonyms such as Mitch Scotch, Miles Scoles, Milt Scolt, and Mick Scock. This Mike Scott is a Cherry Hill guy who's an artist in NYC. He once had works in an exhibit comprised of all Legos, ones that featured renderings of up-close faces like Mike Tyson getting punched and porn stars in climactic moments. At least that's what I recall from it, as it was back in my drinkin' days. This Mike Scott was a prop / second row guy and is a quiet but quick wit. Great guy.
That's not who I came to write about today.
That's not who I came to write about today.
If you ask someone who listens to the kind of alt-80's and 90's music that Squeaky, Dave, rob, and I (among others) enjoyed who was not also our fraternity brother, I bet they might say that Mike Scott is the leader of The Waterboys. This Mike Scott is a Scot (and a Scott) who enjoyed minor success in the milieu of Celtic rock or something that sounds less dorky and pompous. A multi-instrumentalist who has had some solo work but is best known for the Waterboys catalogue.
You all know "Fisherman's Blues," perhaps most famous for being covered by Random Idiots as "Fischel Man's Blues." You may well be familiar with "Whole of the Moon." You probably don't know "Old England," "This Is the Sea," "Red Army Blues," or the sublime "Church Not Made with Hands," but you should. [ed. Note: Seems like a Waterboys 6-Pack is coming.] Their double-discer The Live Adventures of the Waterboys isn't on Spotify, and it's their best starter kit. [ed. Note: Seems like a Notify is coming.] Anyway, all of this music is a product of this Mike Scott.
Oddly, that's not who I came to write about today.
I came to write about Karl Wallinger. That's right. You see, Karl Wallinger was another multi-instrumentalist like Mike Scott (and Rootsy) who was a member of The Waterboys for a few formative years in which the band generated all of the above songs save "Fisherman's Blues." His influence is apparent, and his role with the band was large enough for him to pull a "this town ain't big enough for the both of us" and split in 1985. One song he co-wrote with that Mike Scott before departing was eventually recorded and released in 1998. It was based on watching Live Aid and was called "World Party."
World Party became Karl's band name, though it was mostly him at work there. [Factoid #... however-many: Mike Scott himself took the name "Waterboy[s]" from the sort-of chorus lyric in the Lou Reed song "The Kids."] World Party had a tidy but enjoyable run at the modern rock charts whilst a few of us were matriculating, and I have a couple of their discs.
A couple of weeks ago, Karl Wallinger had a stroke and passed on at the age of 66. Here's a nod to the work he issued while he attended the great big world party called life.
Gheorghe's 6-Pack: World Party
Vitals
Where: Karl is from Prestatyn, Wales; World Party debuted in London
When: 1986-2015
Who: Karl Wallinger mostly, with live and studio performers scattered throughout
Wednesday, March 27, 2024
Earworm Exorcism!
A year and a half ago, Marls told me I was too stupid to make a podcast. He said I was a mouth-breathing troglodyte with spoiled tapioca pudding for brains and that the constitutional right of freedom of speech should not apply to me (those might not have been his exact words).
He may have been right-- until now.
In honor of Marls, I humbly present the greatest (and possibly most dangerous) audio project ever slapped together in the history of mankind (or at least the history of Greasetruck Studios).
What an excellent day for an earworm exorcism.
"Earworm Exorcism" is an obsessive, comprehensive, and digressive deep dive into how these insidious creatures worm their way into our brains, wrap around our cerebral cortex, and make us susceptible to suggestions of the catchiest kind.
Thanks to this guy for that description . . .
This is the longest, most ambitious, and most complicated podcast I've ever done. I don't think anything like this exists on the internet.
It is a montage of the sounds that capture our consciousness (and the theory and philosophy of why and how they do this).
But be warned: your brain might not survive unscathed . . . this many earworms have NEVER been assembled in one place before.
Here's a visual of how many audio clips are wedged into this episode.
Tuesday, March 26, 2024
Music to Make Y'all Happy
The Steel Wheels are an Americana/folk outfit from the Blue Ridge Mountains near Harrisonburg, VA. They've been playing together in various configurations since 2005. I'd hazard guess that the Rootstone Jug Band might've shared a bill with them at some point along the way.
Lead singer and primary songwriter Trent Wagler happens to have a daughter who's a second-year dance student at Virginia Commonwealth University, just a couple years behind my kid. Wagler's daughter took over the VCUarts dance program's Instagram this morning. And that's how I happened upon this beautiful song and video from the band's new record, which features Wagler's kid and some of her colleagues at VCU. I couldn't love it more, unless my kid was one of the dancers featured. As it is, several of their friends are.
Sunday, March 24, 2024
Sublime Human Tricks
Little bit of mellow human harmony to get your Sunday started on the right note. Pun so, so intended.
English musician Jacob Collier is variously described as a "musical prodigy", a "multi-instrumental musical maximalist", and "one of the most inventive and gifted musicians working today". The 29 year-old has six Grammys and two Album of the Year nominations. His newest record, Djesse Vol. 4, features collaborations with artists from Brandi Carlisle to Chris Martin to Steve Vai to Kirk Franklin to Camilo to Anoushka Shankar. And until yesterday, I'd never heard of him.
As frequently happens late into the evening on weekends, I was wandering around the musical interwebs when I stumbled upon Collier. It wasn't his music that I found so interesting. Rather his habit of turning his live audiences into harmonic musical partners. For example:
Collier's critics say his prolific energy means he never stays in one place, musically, long enough to have a real voice of his own. It's true that his stuff is all over the place, from lullabyes to fuzzy pop rock to ethereal new agey. It strikes me that in that diversity is a uniqueness. I think I'll celebrate his whole catalogue. Even the weird stuff.
Friday, March 22, 2024
U.S. Reed and the 49-Foot Memory Maker
If you think I'm not watching that soccer game from Turkey that features two of the country's big three, you don't know me all that well.
But if the games must not go on, we do have the benefit of the memories of the games that did to remind us why this time of year is often such a thrill.
Thirty-nine years ago yesterday, and I remember it as if it were, like, 20 years ago. The shot Arkansas' U.S. Reed hit to beat Louisville is one of my earliest NCAA Tournament memories. The Razorbacks, seeded fifth in the West, fell behind fourth seed and defending National Champion Louisville with five seconds to play on a Derek Smith jumper in the the lane. The Cardinals' press had bothered Arkansas all game, so coach Eddie Sutton instructed his team to just get the ball as far up the court as they could.
And then this happened:
Sports was pretty cool.
Wednesday, March 20, 2024
The Curse of G:TB is NOT a Thing
At the risk of an epic jinx, or more accurately, the risk of bad timing when something inevitable happens, we come today to talk about one of the more remarkable runs of form in major European soccer history.
Bayer Leverkusen's Alex Grimaldo might be the best free kick taker in all of Europe |
A funny thing happened on the way to the Salatschüssel, in one of those happenstances that sport is so good at delivering every so often.
Bayer Leverkusen was founded 119 years ago, and has been in top division of German football for the last 45 years. They've finished as runner-ups five times, most recently in 2010-11, and have never won the league. The won the Pokal in 1992-93, which is by far the greatest moment in club history, except perhaps winning the UEFA Cup (the second-tier continental tournament at the time) in 1986-87. Over the past several years, Die Werkself (the company's team, so known because the team was associated with the Bayer pharmaceutical company at it's founding) has finished fifth, fifth, fourth, sixth, third, and sixth in the Bundesliga, solid and competitive. But there was nothing at all over that time that hinted at what was to come this year.
Or maybe not nothing at all. In October 2022, legendary midfielder Xabi Alonso (who played at Real Sociedad, Liverpool, Real Madrid, and Bayern Munich and earned 114 caps for Spain) took over as Leverkusen's manager. At the time, the team found itself fighting a relegation battle, second-to-last in the league with a quarter of the season already played. Alonso's possession-based style and innovative tactics proved effective in his first high-level coaching stint, and Leverkusen easily escaped relegation and rose all the way to sixth at the end of the season.Leverkusen lost, 3-0, to VfL Bochum, on the last matchday of the 2022-23 season. Alonso's team haven't lost a match in any competition since. They've won 22 and tied four in 26 Bundesliga matches, and have advanced to the semifinals of the DFB Pokal and the quarterfinals of the Europa League (the successor to the UEFA Cup). Last weekend, they were on the brink of defeat in their Europa League Round of 16 match against Azerbaijani side Qarabağ FK, when they did this:
Leverkusen are the only first division club still alive in the Pokal, which makes them odds-on favorites to lift their second cup. They face Premier League West Ham in a two-leg Europa League knockout April 11 and 18, which represents the toughest challenge they'll face until they go to Borussia Dortmund in league play on April 21. They'll almost certainly lose one of the maximum of 14 matches still to come.
Which will NOT be our fault. Don't @ us, Leverkusen fans. We're celebrating you, too.
Monday, March 18, 2024
March Maddening
Sunday, March 17, 2024
Pluck of the Irish
Only fitting on this day that we celebrate Ireland rugby's hard-fought 17-13 win over a game Scotland squad in Dublin yesterday. The win on the final matchday of the 2024 Six Nations gave the Irish back to back titles. The hard-luck Scots dropped all the way to fourth in the table.
So if you have occasion today, and I suspect you do, tip one back in honor of the lads in green.
Thursday, March 14, 2024
Annoying Words, Redux
Nearly 15 years ago, in a very different age, Whitney took to these interwebz to decry the use of the trite in most conversation and how it signals a lack of creativity. At least that's how I took it.
Among other things, he took aim at "it is what it is". He had no way of knowing at the time that my father would fall back on that phrase to deflect well-meaning concern from folks worried about the progress of the cancer that would eventually take him. Fucking cancer.
I digress.And I write what follows with some trepidation, because "it is what it is" became meaningful enough to me that a graphic variant of the phrase is tattooed on my arm. Let's hope nobody here has cause to claim "thank you for all that you do".
I don't love the ubiquitous "thank you for your service" many people offer to our military and veterans, but it's a damn sight better than how we treated uniformed service members early in my life, and it at least acknowledges a specific sacrifice made.
"Thank you for all that you do", on the other hand, is the absolute bare minimum one human can offer another. It requires no creativity, no active thought about what the received actually, y'know, does. It's the gratitudinal equivalent to saying "you are here".
In first encountered the phrase in question in a corporate setting, when some anodyne executive thanked a team by using it. I knew from the moment he said it that he didn't really know what the team did or how they contributed. Or if he did know, didn't care enough to take the 30 seconds to think about it and offer a tiny little customized grace note.
Once I started hearing it, I became attuned to it. Politicians say it as pablum to feed constituents. Parents say it to teachers - guarantee Dave has heard it (or at least had it directed to him - not sure Dave listens much to other people).Look, I know that cliches exist for a reason - they're a shorthand that can be helpful in certain situations. And I'm prone to my own verbal and written crutches (this sentence offers one such exhibit - I start way too many sentences with "and"- this is the second one in this short post). Dammit, though, when I'm trying to tell someone I appreciate them, I try really hard to be sincere, and at least offer an inflection that conveys I mean what I'm saying.
It's possible I'm becoming (even more) curmudgeonly as I age, and that I protest too much about an innocuous platitude. I can only offer my own testimony here. You may not share my opinion. If that's the case, I hope you have a great day, and thank you for all that you do.
Wednesday, March 13, 2024
Best of Enemies
Last Sunday, Jurgen Klopp's Liverpool tied Pep Guardiola's Manchester City, 1-1, in a cracker of a Premier League match at Liverpool's Anfield Stadium. The two teams are separated by one point in the league table with 10 matches to play. To make things even more potentially epic, Arsenal is tied with Liverpool and technically atop the table on point differential.
In late January, Klopp announced his intent to leave Liverpool at the end of the season after 8 and a half years with the club. During that span, Klopp won a Premier League title, a Champions League trophy, the FIFA Club World Cup, the FA Cup, the League Cup and the UEFA Super Cup. He will go down as one of the most beloved managers in club history, as much for his Teutonic Care Bear personality and rollicking, fast-paced, pressing football as for his results.
@meninblazers JURGEN KLOPP GIVES THE BEST HUGS. "It's very important that you're empathic. That you try to understand the people around you and give real support to the people around you." #LFC #Liverpool #Klopp ♬ original sound - Men in Blazers
While Liverpool fans revere Klopp, one imagines that they wonder what might have been if Guardiola hadn't been at City at the same time (and the Emirati-owned club hadn't spent prolifically - and allegedly illegally - on amassing exceptional talent). Guardiola has been in Manchester since 2016, and won five Premier League crowns, two FA Cups, four League Cups, a Champions League title, a UEFA Super Cup and a FIFA Club World Cup.
If the results on the field in England were tilted towards Guardiola, the two managers are actually evenly matched across their careers. Over the course of their careers, the pair have met 29 times (Before England, Klopp coached Borussia Dortmund in Germany against Guardiola's Bayern Munich). Klopp's teams have won 12, Guardiola's 11, with six draws. No manager in world football has beaten Guardiola more times than Klopp.
There are rare occasions in sport and, really, in any endeavor, where rivals compete intensely while maintaining great personal respect and in doing both, elevate their profession. Klopp and Guardiola have undeniably changed English football from a smashmouth war of attrition to an attractive, pressing, intense competition.
And the two know it and respect the others' contribution to the game. Klopp recently said of Guardiola, "I knew 3,000 players who were better than me but I still loved the game. It never frustrated me, he made me a better manager. I know I am not bad but he is the best."
For his part, Guardiola admitted, "Personally he has been my biggest rival from when he was at Dortmund and I was at Bayern Munich. He will be missed, personally I will miss. I am pleased because without him I will sleep a little bit better the night before we play against Liverpool! But I wish him all the best."
The two exchanged words and a warm embrace after Sunday's classic. We won't likely see a better rivalry any time soon.
Monday, March 11, 2024
We're a Joey Votto Fan Site Now
🇨🇦 @JoeyVotto 🇨🇦 pic.twitter.com/7bxFn5EaFK
— Toronto Blue Jays (@BlueJays) March 9, 2024
Friday, March 08, 2024
Gheorghe Explains: We Need to Talk About North Carolina
Thursday, March 07, 2024
RIP Steve Lawrence
Steve Lawrence passed away today at age 88. For you young folks (including me), he was a singer and actor known to our elders and Vegas-goers of a generation or two ago. You could look him up.
But I'd rather post Mike Myers' rendition of the man, as seen in one of my favorite SNL sketches.
Enjoy.
Wednesday, March 06, 2024
Participation Trophy
Monday, March 04, 2024
Gheorghasbord
All over the place as we head in college hoops tournament season. I'll be pulling for both of Colorado's squads - the men really need to win out to get a bid, while the women are playing their worst ball at the wrong time and need to turn things around in the PAC-12 tournament to gain some momentum heading into the dance. We've got some hoops, some houses, and some honkytonk to entertain you at the start of your week. (Honkytonk? Forget it, he's rolling.)
Haven't really had the motivation to man the Wrenball beat this season, so a big thank you to OBX Dave for carrying the ball. A big reason for my hoop-driven doldrums is that this season feels like the nadir of the Huge Mistake, the inevitable result of the incomprehensibly stupid decision to fire Tony Shaver when he was about to return a conference favorite squad that could've been the best team in the school's modern history. Fuck. Ing. A.
Beating on, boats and currents, whatever. The 13th-seeded Tribe play 12 seed North Carolina A&T at 2:00 on Friday in the play-in round of the CAA Tournament. I don't even care enough to ask Marls and The Teej if they want to play hooky and watch some hoops. The game will likely be the last one that Dane Fischer coaches in green and gold (unless he goes back to his assistant role at George Mason). Fischer is, by all accounts, a lovely person. And it's not his fault he got this job as a result of a historically awful decision. But it is time for a new Big Whistle in Williamsburg.
My latest online obsession (sliding into place alongside cute animal videos) is an Instagram feed called @old_house_life. Every day, the proprietor posts 2-3 sale listings for interesting old houses, mostly in the rural and/or mountain southeast, and nearly all far cheaper than anything one can find in and around a city. I'm besmitten by the idea of a few acres out in the country 5 or 10 miles from Asheville or some such funky little town, and The Old House Life feeds my real estate kink. My wife, on the other hand, generally rolls her eyes at me when I show her stuff like this:
4 bedrooms, 2 baths with river and mountain views in Alderson, WV. Could be yours for $259,000. Just sayin'. |
The Avett Brothers announced their first studio album in five years last week. It's a self-titled joint that continues their collaboration with Rick Rubin. They released the first single from the record, entitled 'Love of a Girl' which is a kicky little bop that'll probably be a blast to play and hear live.
Friday, March 01, 2024
Filler That Deserves Better
This story deserves a bigger treatment, but we're nothing if not editorially disciplined. Maybe we'll follow up when it comes to its celebratory conclusion.
Cole Brauer is a 5'1", 29 year-old Long Island native who happens to be among the most badass sailors in history. She's about a week away from finishing second in the Global Solo Challenge, which is exactly what it sounds like - a race that started in A Coruña, Spain in August 2023 and ends in the same location. Brauer is on pace to finish second, and will become the first American woman to sail solo around the globe.
The New York Times (in addition to People Magazine, Sports Illustrated, and a number of other outlets) just wrote a story on Brauer. I commend it to your attention, and to her Instagram account, where's she shared the details of her journey to an audience that's grown to 400,000.
Here's to badass women.