Published on Aug 23, 2011
Aretha Franklin Queen of Silly (PBS pledge drive)
Aretha Franklin loves PBS
The TCB Thunderbolt Logo
Elvis' motto was 'Taking Care of Business in a Flash', represented in his personal logo by the letters TCB and a lightning bolt. Elvis wore a famous ring with the TCB logo on it.
Where did the phrase and logo come from?
It was designed in the Seventies by Elvis and his new bride, Priscilla'.
Taking Care of Business was a Black expression, recalls 'Memphis Mafia' member Marty Lacker, and Elvis used to say it in a sort of ethnic way.
It was just a hip saying.
Aretha Franklin sang
'Take care/TCB' on her version of Respect, for example''.
The lightning bolt has two meanings, Lacker explains. One is ‘in a flash'. In other words, ‘whatever you need to do, do it quick'. But the lightning bolt was also the insignia for the West Coast Mafia.
In addition to doing things in a flash, [Elvis] liked the idea that the West Coast Mafia used it'.
As a student at White Station High School, Dickinson formed his first band, The Regents; he later had the distinction of singing on The Jesters’ 1966 garage-rock nugget “Cadillac Man,” the final release on Sun Records. After a stint in college in Texas, Dickinson returned to the Bluff City, where he began a career as a session player, eventually forming The Dixie Flyers, a group that became house band for Atlantic Records, and backing artists such as soul queen Aretha Franklin and R&B belter Little Richard.
BOTH VIA one of my favorite YouTube Channels:
richfofo
Jerry Lee Lewis - Mike Judge - "Tales from the Tour Bus" (complete playlist)
Jerry Lee Lewis Story #14 - Final Jerry Lee Lewis Story #13 - Weddings Jerry Lee Lewis Story #12 - Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On Jerry Lee Lewis Story #11 - Crazy Arms Jerry Lee Lewis Story #10 - Poor people lifestyle Jerry Lee Lewis Story #8 - John Lennon Jerry Lee Lewis Story #7 - He Can't Play Jerry Lee Lewis Story #6 - Elmo Lewis Jerry Lee Lewis Story #5 - Machine Gun Jerry Lee Lewis Story #4 - Liberace Jerry Lee Lewis Story #3 - Burning Piano Jerry Lee Lewis Story #2 - Limousine Jerry Lee Lewis Story #1 - My God Is Real Jerry Lee Lewis Elvis Invasion--Memphis Police are en route to Graceland! by Doug Meet
Myra Lewis Williams Lenny Smith Samar Lorrento seems like i should have more friends who are Killer freaks, but I guess that's enough. oh, yeah, i got kicked out of the Jerry Lee Facebook group the first week. bunch of paranoid, possessive, patronizing panderers living in their own echo chamber...
It’s painful to have to label myself “artist” or “composer” or “writer” or “musical director.” Yet I was gifted with abilities to do what these persons do. Can’t I do the things without taking the names? One day the answer came in a letter from a Texas student of my works: “I’m not attracted to your uniqueness. I am attracted to the Substance of your uniqueness which is ‘Christ in you.’ It’s His workmanship that attracts me.” -Tupper Saussy
Well, I lived his music, back in the late ’60s, but I didn’t understand the music.
I’m talking about Tupper Saussy, who was a kind of wild man Southern gentleman who was also an extremely gifted composer and keyboard player who was also a unique and visionary Christian. Moreover, he was a graduate of Sewanee and cherished his roots.
What I lived was Tupper Saussy’s music, composed and produced under the name “The Neon Philharmonic”. (Don Gant was the singer.) Remember “Morning Girl”? It was our college theme song for the lush Spring of 1969. It was a romantic, lyrical, indelible pop classic, and it wasn’t lame! It was a little like Brian Wilson — tho’ almost no one understood about him yet — and the lush strings were all right. They added to and did not detract from the hook of the Song.
Saussy’s “Neon Philharmonic” followed up with “Morning Girl, Later”. “Morning Girl, Later” is unbelievable. (See attachment below.) You’ve got to hear it! Her ring is on the wrong hand, and “it’s hard to find your man in a woman’s world”. Poor kid! Moreover, “Catherine’s getting up, and I’ve got things to do.” (Where did ‘Catherine’ come from?)
By the way, Saussy’s whole album, entitled “The Moth Confesses”, was completely inspired, or almost completely inspired. Every time the arrangements threatened to drown the lyrics, he would put in some perfect horns or a throbbing, arresting bridge.
But wait, this is Mockingbird. Let’s add a few facts:
Tupper Saussy came from an ancient Huguenot family, with Savannah roots, but didn’t understand the true anchor that that gave him until a teacher of his at Sewanee explained the origin of the name “Saussy”. (It’s like the origin of “Dabney”).
When you listen to Saussy’s early piano jazz, which he recorded when he was in college, you’ll hear a rare blend of sophistication and soul. Then, when you get to 1969 and The Neon Philharmonic, you’ll wonder, Where did this inspired artist come from?
Later, Saussy turned into a kind of visionary “nut”, who refused to pay U.S. income tax on principle, and ended up in prison — after being a fugitive from federal agents for ten years. He also embraced his Christian and Protestant heritage big time, writing a book that basically blamed all of America’s problems on the Vatican. He even ghost-wrote, we are told, the autobiography of James Earl Ray.
When Saussy was betrayed by a fellow fugitive in l997, he said that his Christian faith comforted him: “A Christian is honored by betrayal.”
After he came out out of prison, where he had become music director of the chapel, Tupper Saussy returned to Nashville, and recorded an album of songs he had written, sung and accompanied by himself. He died in 2007, two days before the release of that album. He was buried at Christ Church Cathedral (Episcopal).
The reason I introduce Mockingbird readers to Tupper Saussy is that his Neon Philharmonic is a titanic and optimistic pop achievement. Moreover, Saussy’s commitment to the Lord is striking and even odd. We ought to celebrate this kind of original Christian and artist. Have to admit I appreciate his air of refinement, too, and the way he dressed.
Reminds me of our late friend Page Grubb, genius composer, pianist, and wit, who also… went to church, and loved God.
Related
Slade - Gudbuy T'Jane - Female Swiss Polka stolen by Marc Campbell of dangerousminds.net 8.4.2010
Slade 'Gudbuy T'Jane' Swiss Polka - BEST DISCOVERY OF THE MONTH!
Marc Campbell and Dangerous Minds must've thought so too - THEY RIPPED IT OFF two months later!
Best Retro Outsider Discovery of the Year! (at least until i discovered that Marc Campbell has been ripping me off for almost every post)
This languished unremarked and untitled in a YouTuber's back pages, listed only as 'Unknown Swiss Group'.
This is the Shags Meets Ricola, or the female Shooby Taylor 'My Three Sons' (the trumpet is the best part), or ... u TELL ME!
UNB'LEEVABUL
Slade 'Gudbuy T'Jane' All-Girl Swiss Polka Threesome (stolen by DangerousMinds - Marc Campbell 8.4.2010)
"Gudbuy T'Jane" was Slade's follow up to their hit single "Mama Weer All Crazee Now". In his autobiography Who's Crazee Now?, bass player and lead vocalist Noddy Holder explained the inspiration for the song.
Jane Aldridge was the co-host of a TV chat show in San Francisco they met on their US tour. They wrote the song in about half an hour, "one of the easiest songs we ever recorded".
The line "Got a kick from her '40s trip boots" is a reference to her kicking Holder up the backside when the band were having a laugh at her expense.
Jane Aldridge had bought a pair of platform shoes which she called her '40s trip boots, and somehow managed to lose them.
"She thought they were original '40s shoes and she told us that she had paid a fortune for them", he said, adding "She was a real loony, a typical San Francisco hippy".
limbsandthings1 — May 08, 2010 —
Jim Lee came up with the title; Holder wanted to call it "Hullo T'Jane," which doesn't have the same ring to it. They recorded it in two takes, and backed by the typically misspent "I Won't Let It 'Appen Agen," it was released on Polydor, and went on to become a monster hit.
The single was produced by Chas Chandler; there was a second track on the A Side, "Take Me Bak 'Ome".
The sheet music credits "Gudbuy T'Jane": "Words and Music by Neville Holder and James Lea"
Female polka band does world’s best cover of Slade’s ‘Gudbuy T’Jane’