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March 5, 2009

PURPLE DRANK: Know what I'm sayin? WASN'T 'PD' MADE DJ Screw, 'Screw it!' ~ Know what I'm sayin? [5-PART 'VBS' SERIES: PURPLE DRANK, HOUSTON, TX]

http://vice.typepad.com/vbs/images/2007/03/28/syrupsig.jpg
'The dreamy syrup held me,
and I realized it was perfect company.'

P
URPLE DRANK

Know what I'm sayin?

'One hand on da syrup. One hand on da 'lean on.'
Know what I'm sayin?
KooBo's prep-ritual is slow, fastly deliberate.
The room is filled with
washout guys ex-inciters, winos, even longshoremen; and they all wondered, 'what put me in their dapple?' would a white whatsit, DRANK?


Know what I'm sayin?


Codeine syrup all difficult to obtain and expensive.
So what?

Warn Hitler! I'm hotter than fresh- fucked sheep to get PURPLE!
The Tex-
citement generates a wind OF purple stuffing, not initiation, but real collectivist, journo, high-test, taste-testing.

No anything
brutalized everybody, is what my brain wants me to remember. Every drug-thin, gummy, backcombin' superhero's hoping for a cupful.
Same as me.


The fuel COMES on
slow but pleasant, LIKE a camisole. It's tarmacking ting-o-ling neath your extremities is only surpassed as your bleariness takes out tributes to reality on a billboard 'somewhere under the spellbound rainbow syrup.'

Now,
i'm all bespectacled and in a solid lamppost alleyway, but I drink as every like-thing...

Waiter?
Finished mine quick.


Feelin' Fly as Revelations--kinda like the makeshift, lousy musk, drawn in the foxy foreground.

presto!

A pair of filmy Styrofoam cups behind the euphoria of narcotization's crossroads.

Sold my sore soul to the devil long ago.

How far can I push the Experience down?
shh... Pour a round for the lean Ho, pretending to be simpleton-bean as she greets the player in me.





Know what I'm sayin?
1



Know what I'm sayin?
2


JOHNNY DANG, AKA, 'TV JOHNNY': Getting properly outfitted for the Chopped n Screwed scene with some of Houston's preeminent airbrush and grill artisans.
Know what I'm sayin?
3


The tireless self-promotion, "Houston hustle."


Know what I'm sayin?
4



Know what I'm sayin?

5


Know what I'm sayin?
Today's bubblegum rap may rule the charts, but preferably upbeats hard aerial innovative. Follow along as we head south to the Third Coast to groove on one of the most original rap scenes ever realized. Houston is a city defined by its geography--low and slow, hot and hard, bayous and parking lots spreading for endless flat suburban miles. But a lack of citywide zoning creates pockets of distinct communities within Houston's sprawl, and in these unofficially cordoned-off neighborhoods, Dirty Southern rap was born.

Initially characterized by the hard-charging Veto Boys, Houston's style was based on life in the 3rd and 5th Wards as well as South Park. When DJ Screw emerged from the shadows, his Screwed and Chopped sound created a sub-genre of rap music that would soon take the music world by storm. Bundled with DJ Screw's sound was the controversial romanticizing of syrup, a drug almost solely associated with Houston rap. The Bayou City has since blown up as a Mecca of the new southern style, and the slow sticky sound of Screwed and Chopped has come to dominate the public's perception of the Houston scene. VB gambled that the story of Houston Rap was more fascinating than mainstream media's simplistic version, so I dusted off my fanciest duds and moseyed my way down to find out what the hell had happened in this place written off by the East and West coasts as mere fly-over territory.

As you'll see, layered between hard-working dedication and street-smart hustle, Houston is its own distinct world. A music scene accented with the homegrown trappings of Slabs, Grills, cumulus-sized clouds of marijuana smoke, and the ever present aura of syrup yields a swansong' vibe that could have only been Third Coast Born. Watch as a host of Houston MC, led by the Screwed Up Click, Devin the Dude, the South Park Coalition and Bun B, lay this rags-to-riches story out for the whole world to see in simple black and white.

Bob Dylan - "Love And Theft" promo

A tv ad for Dylan's "Love And Theft" from 2001. The style is simillar to "Masked and anonymous", Bob is dressed in white and gives some mysterious smiles as usual...

Slingshot: You Shook me all night long [DANCE SHOW: The Scene - Detroit with nat morris]

Detroit dance with nat morris

Sharevari ( The Scene DEtroit 1982 ) via 'seaofshoes'

A Number of Names-Sharevari debut on detroit's local dabnce show "the Scene"

March 4, 2009

Dick Clark: 30th Anniversary All-Star Band-JAM [ABC TV L@@k Special]

L@@k



Dick Clark's 30th Anniversary All-Star Band
ABC TV Special

with

Mickey Gilley
Billy Preston
Ray Parker Jr.
Johnny Rivers
Stanley Clark
Dash Cot
Mick Leftward
Tom Scott
and many more


Bob Dylan: Renaldo and Clara [1 - 7 out of Full Film's 44] AN EPIC IN BOTH FILM AND CONCENTRATION: 30 mg. ADDERAL SHOULD DO IT!


Renaldo and Clara

This extensive discussion of the film 'Renaldo and Clara' was originally posted to rec.music.dylan by Marc Stein in late 1993. Perhaps it more properly belongs in a Bob Dylan Web Site, but there is enough OBC (Official Beat Content) to justify its inclusion here in Literary Kicks.

Renaldo and Clara

staged as follows:summary are synopsis

"Renaldo and Clara", written and directed by Bob Dylan is known to be obscure (devastating bald reviews).

Bob Dylan's troubled relationship with women: wife, Sara, and ex-lover, Joan Baez is the film'
s loveless triangle, its mirror life. Blatantly deceptive [jokerman] and obfuscating; layering meaninglessness into unified, connected, whole, multiple sub-themes, derelictions and Dylan's sideline headiness.

.

Dylan's experiment's first-half, 1975 tour, Rolling Thunder Revue's live concert footage, between "Desire" and "Street-Legal," had never been seen before Renaldo and Clara's release [much of its still not been seen simply because no one's seen the film]. It's filled with live cuts, unreleased re-recordings; and no studio recordings .

I am presenting the first seven sections [out of 44, i think]; however, they are numbered to coincide with Mr. Stein's diligent dissection and useful annotation, entirely authored by him and accompanying YT KAFKA's appropriate clip:

Marc Stein and Kafka [the first, wrote the synopsis , which i changed until satisfactory; the second, no less laboriously, uploaded all 44 videos, included them on a play list, and painstakingly annotated each one before posting to YT, where they surprisingly remain after a year.]




band



| Wyeth | | Rix |
| drums | | perc. |
|__________| |__________|
____________ ____________ ____________ ____________
| Ronson | | Burnette | | Stoner | | Mansfield|
| l. guitar| | guitar | | bass | | misc. |
|__________| |__________| |__________| |__________|

| McGuinn | | Rivera | | Dylan | | Neuwirth | | Soles |
| guitar | | violin | | v., harm.| | guitar | | guitar |
|__________| |__________| |__________| |__________| |__________|





Rob Stoner -- bass, backup vocals, musical director

Plays Gene Vincent in some scenes

Steven Soles -- rhythm guitar
Plays Ronee Blakely's abusive boyfriend

Scarlet Rivera -- electric violin
featured on the "Desire" album.

Bob Neuwirth -- rhythm guitar
"The Masked Tortilla" reads some poetry in scenes

Roger McGuinn -- twelve-string guitar
Formerly of the Byrds

Mick Ronson -- lead guitar
Plays a backstage bouncer in one scene.

David Mansfield -- electric violin and pedal steel
Plays an angel in his underwear in the bordello scenes.

T-Bone Burnette -- backup guitar, keyboards

Howie Wyeth -- Drums

Luther Rix -- Percussion





1
Bob Dylan- Renaldo and Clara Part 1 (When I Paint...)

2 & 3
Bob Dylan- Renaldo and Clara Part 2 (David Blue)

1
Bob Dylan and Bob Neuwirth are on stage singing "When I Paint My Masterpiece" as the titles roll. Dylan is wearing a rubber mask that gives him an other- worldly appearance. The rest of the band is not yet seen, just Dylan and Neuwirth (Neuwirth, for those who don't know, is a longtime Dylan companion and fellow Greenwich Village folksinger-hipster).

2
A crowd of people in a dark room are discussing tour logistics and hotel arrangements. Roger McGuinn's face is visible among them.
3
David Blue (another G. Village early 60's folksinger) is playing pinball next to a swimming pool and telling the camera about his first trip to New York -- he swiped money from his father's wallet, took a bus to 42nd Street and then went right back home. He talks about old Village figures like John Brent and Hugh Romney, and about how they used to pass the hat after reading poetry. (Blue will continue telling stories while playing pinball throughout the movie.)

4

Bob Dylan- Renaldo and Clara Part 3 (Helena Kallianiotes)
Bob Dylan- Renaldo and Clara (Helena Kallianiotes)

4
Dylan is in a garage idly playing an acoustic guitar with a dark-haired woman by his side. A mechanic asks "Why are you in such a hurry?" Apparently Dylan is trading a T-bird for a cheap motorcycle. The mechanic asks "Are you running from the law?" and Dylan says "I am the law." This is Dylan in his Renaldo persona.




5, 6, 7

Bob Dylan- Renaldo and Clara Part 4 (Bob Neuwirth, etc.)

5
Bob Neuwirth, in a mask, is on stage in a small club reading a poem written by a badly disabled black guy named Tony Curtis who sits watching. At the end of the poem Tony Curtis asks for money (asking for money for poems or songs will be a recurring motif in the film.) Phil Ochs (I think!) comes on stage, takes a guitar and plays a chord.

6
Record executives talk in a conference room.

7
The dark-haired woman (DHW) from the fourth scene is running up a set of stairs. Scarlet Rivera, is playing violin backstage and pauses to tune with Dylan. In the background, a Dylan version of the Hank Williams song "Kaw-Liga" plays. We see a truck labeled "Hemingway" with an Indian head on the side. As the song continues to play, a disk jockey announces that the Rolling Thunder Revue with Bob Dylan is coming to town. NOTE: there are three Indian images here -- the song "Kaw-Liga", the Indian head on the truck, and the name "Rolling Thunder" (which is the name of a famous train, but is also the name of a famous Indian chief who we will hear more of later in the film.)


8
Bob Dylan- Part 5 (Sara Dylan and Helena Kallianiotes)
8
Sara Dylan (Bob's wife) and DHW are in a restaurant. The DHW needs a ride to Vermont and is picked up by a stranger who overhears them talking. It seems that Sara already has a ride (that is, a lover) but that the DHW doesn't. NOTE: Sara will later put on a wig and play Clara -- without a wig I will refer to her as Sara.

9
Bob Dylan- Renaldo and Clara Part 6 (Isis)
9
Dylan and the Rolling Thunder Revue on stage performing "Isis". This is the excellent version from Biograph. The sound is full, rich and chaotic (there are five guitars!) and fits very well the image of rolling thunder. NOTE: The live cuts tend to echo the drama. The song "Isis" (on Biograph he precedes it with 'This is a song about marriage') is connected to Sara's first appearance in the film. Dylan wears white makeup covering his face, as he does in all subsequent concert scenes.


10 + 11 +12

Bob Dylan- Renaldo and Clara Part 7 (Sara Dylan, etc.)

10
Sara picks up a rose. (This rose will continue to appear in the film.)

11
A Hollywood-style woman announcer in a fur wrap is at a microphone waiting to announce the appearance of Bob Dylan. She mistakes the first person to approach her for Bob Dylan, so she obviously has no idea who Dylan is. He tells her he's not Dylan, "Dylan is wearing a hat". Ronnie Hawkins (the blues singer who originally worked with the Band) turns up, and he's wearing a hat. The woman asks if he's Bob Dylan and he says he is. Since Ronnie Hawkins is a big bruiser with a deep voice and a thick beard, the effect of this is rather funny. The woman asks him to explain who Bob Dylan is and Hawkins says solemnly, "A hero of the highest order".

NOTE: in the final credits, Ronnie Hawkins is listed as playing Bob Dylan (while Bob Dylan is listed as playing Renaldo.

12
Ronnie Hawkins (as Bob Dylan) is propositioning a young brunette to join him on tour. He lays it out straight for her -- she's a very lovely young lady and he'll give her a good time, no strings attached. Beethoven's "Moonlight Sonata" begins to play in the background. Hawkins/Dylan tells her, rather ominously, "You'll come back a much wiser young lady." She is hesitant; she wants to stay on the farm (though she looks nothing like a farm girl -- cf. Dylan's song "Sooner or Later": '... you weren't really from the farm'.) She wants to ask her father for permission, also recalling the Dylan song "Motorpsycho Nitemare," about a farmer and his daughter. Hawkins/Dylan and the girl begin debating about whether the world will soon end; Hawkins/Dylan says "the world's going to explode", hoping to entice her to join him. This (the world ending, apocalypse) will be another recurring motif in the film.


THE AUTEUR [Preview trailer]

McDonald's Fried 'Chicken McNugget' COCK'S HEAD FOUND: WOMAN CALLS 911 [DON'T WORRY! [::] NOT TURNING INTO JOKE BLOG--DIS SHIT REAL-REAL!]


If McDonald's runs out of Chicken McNuggets don't call 911... Florida woman calls 911 over McNuggets.

You may need to call 911 if you eat the Chicken McNuggets!
According to the McDonald website, Chicken McNuggets® (10 piece) has 29 grams of total fat and 1000 mg of sodium.
No mention of chicken heads?


Only On Mondayes 1964 「titles: Ko Nakahira (ユカ)加賀まりこ Mariko Kaga月曜日のユカ」のタイトルバッ

やたらカッコいいタイトルバック
real cool title role
英題 Only On Mondayes 1964日活
監督 中平康 Ko Nakahira
(ユカ)加賀まりこ Mariko Kaga

KUMI Kaori - Kuchizuke ga Kowai 1968 久美かおり - くちづけが怖い

KUMI Kaori - Kuchizuke ga Kowai
1968