SEO

August 23, 2009

In the Garden - IN THE CONTEST ‘Dylan’s strangest song’, there are few that can challenge In the Garden.


In the Garden

IN THE CONTEST ‘Dylan’s strangest song’, there are few that can challenge In the Garden. Dylan himself has expressed some bewilderment as to how it all came about, and upon first hearing, one can only agree: The chord changes seem to go randomly in any direction, but strangely, it doesn’t fall apart, and somehow it even seems to make sense. What’s going on here?

The whole ‘mystery’ of the song hinges on the chord at the end of the first phrase. For the sake of simplicity, in the following explanation I have transposed the song up a semitone, to C.

When they [C] came for Him in the [G] garden, did they [Am] know? [?]

To begin with, it is all plain and easy chords, well within the C tonality. The last chord, however, is the pivot. When it first enters, if one judges it according to what comes before it, it should either be seen as a Ammaj7 (i.e. Gmmaj7 465444 in the song). The logical continuation would then be Am7 – D, which could eventually lead back to C again, either directly or by way of G7 – something like this (the next few examples are of course constructions, just to provide possible, working continuations):

When they [C] came for Him in the [G] garden, did they [Am] know? [Ammaj7]

When they [Am7] came for Him in the garden, did they [D7] know? (etc.)

Or it could be regarded as a variant of E, which would work as the dominant of Am, with possible continuations to F or back to Am again:

When they [C] came for Him in the [G] garden, did they [Am] know? [E]

When they [F] came for Him in the [D/f] garden, did they [G7] know?

It could even be seen as a variant of C itself, which might have continued like this:

When they [C] came for Him in the [G] garden, did they [Am] know? [C/g]

When they [F] came for Him in the [C/e] garden, did they [D7] know? [G7]

The reason for this wide array of possible interpretations is that the chord I’ve called [?] is an augmented chord, i.e. a chord where the fifth step – G in this case – is raised a semitone (one fret). This gives a chord which consists of three equal intervals – major thirds or four semitones – and they may in principle be stacked whichever way you want. The tones in the chord are c, e, and g, and depending on which tone is given priority and is interpreted as the key note, it can either be heard as a C (c-e-g) , an E (e-g-b) or a G(or A) (g-b-d, or A-c-e). In each of the alternatives, the fifth is altered, for extra flavour. The Ammaj7 option is basically a variant of the C interpretation.

Now, the C and E interpretations are both well within the limits of the main tonality, as the examples above will show: they don’t really stand out, and they don’t cause major disturbances in the tonal fundaments of the song. This is because they are both united to C through their common ‘relative’, Am.

What Dylan does in In The Garden, however, is to choose the third alternative, G, which is a much bigger step. True, it is ‘just’ a matter of going in the opposite direction of E, and, true, it is used, occasionally (the James Bond theme comes to mind), but the effect is much more spectacular than the turn to E.

Once the augmented chord has been interpreted as a G, the whole trick is done: we are now in the key of G– for a little while. But first the chord is reinterpreted again. In the following line:

[Gaug]

When they [Cm] came for Him in the [Gaug] garden, did they [E] know? [F]

both of the Gaug chords could be played as plain G, but as an augmented chord, it is already almost an E, which is where it immediately goes to. So one might say that Dylan repeats the trick: he has shifted the whole key of the song down in two leaps, first from C to A/G, then further down to E – both times in the unexpected direction. The rest of the song is laboriously working its way up again, step by step, whole tone by whole tone: E, F, G, A, and finally back to C again.

The E doesn’t live long enough to take on the role of ‘tonal centre’ on its own – it appears as an episode within the larger Gepisode. But one might call it, slightly figuratively speaking, the collecting of the energy necessary for the ascent through the keys back to C again.

If we stay with the ‘energy to run up the stairs’ metaphor, this will account for the end as well: the melody has reached the top, but needs an extra step in order to gain balance and to really be able to come to a halt – it is not enough just to rush up through the keys – an ending ‘needs’ something more to be felt like an ending, and the final flourish, after the singing is over, is what accomplishes that.

Thank you for your attention, will the last one to leave please wipe the blackboard.

dylanchords.info - Bob Dylan: Chords and Lyrics - dylanchords.com unofficial mirror

Vincent Van Gogh

Vincent Van Gogh

Words and music Robert Friemark
Sung with Bob Neuwirth on various dates and places during the second Rolling Thunder II, 1976

Tabbed (if it can be called that...) by Eyolf Østrem


    D       G          D
I'd like to tell you a story
D G D
of a man that you might know.
D G D
His parents all called him Vincent,
D A D
his last name was Van Gogh.

He started drinking and painting
and living a life of sin.
He fell in with evil companions,
a man named Paul Gaugin.

They went to the city of Auvers,
pursuing their carnal delights.
They painted all during the afternoon
and they played music all night.

Now the people of that small city
thought he was a little bit queer,
to prove his love for mankind,
he chopped off his outside ear.

So they put him in an institution
but they could not keep him there.
He picked up his paints and his easel
and he went out to take some air.

He picked up his paints and his easel
and he went out to paint some crows.
They found him face down in a cornfield,
shot right between two rows.

D A G D
Now where did Vincent van Go?
Vincent Van Gogh

cocaine

cocaine.gif (image)

allmusic ((( Jungle Jim and the Voodoo Tiger > Overview )))

 
Jim Dickinson
Jungle Jim and the Voodoo Tiger
4 Stars
May 30, 2006
Dec 2005
Memphis International
R   837246
Reviewby Thom Jurek

Hot on the heels of Fishing with Charlie and Other Selected Readings, his deeply mystical series of spoken word readings of various heroes of vernacular culture, comes Jim Dickinson the hoodoo music man on Jungle Jim and the Voodoo Tiger. This is a fitting part two, given the immediacy and raw soul in music he covers. (Yep, not an original in the bunch -- thank you Jesus, because, as Tav Falco says, "there's too many of them already.") Here are forgotten, truth-telling songs written in the rock, country, soul, blues, gospel and even samba vernaculars -- the beat-conscious languages of people who have often been excluded from the discussion, either by governments, race, class, or record companies -- by non-legends who should be (and are, among their small aesthetic constituencies) like Bob Frank, Terry Fell, Jim Isbell, Shari Paulus, J. Mathus, Eddie Hinton, Collin Wade Monk, Greg Spradlin, Chuck Prophet, Bill Nettles, Luiz Bonfá, and a few others. This is shack-shakin' music, full of deep R&B with Southern soul overtones ("Hadacol Boogie" and "Can't Beat the Kid, Pt. 2"), country boogie ("Rooster Blues" and "Truck Drivin' Man"), honky tonk balladry ("Violin Bums" and "Somewhere Down the Road"), and Brazilian ghetto samba ("Samba de Orfeo"). Dickinson, who plays keyboards and sings, is accompanied by drumming son Cody and guitar-slinging son Luther (with a bit of help from Alvin Youngblood Hart on both "Love Bone" and "Can't Beat the Kid, Pt. 2"), acoustic bassist Amy LaVere, Tommy Burroughs on violin, Mark Sallings on harmonica, Jim Spake on baritone sax, and Jimmy Davis and Reba Russell on backing vocals. Fans of the original Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen will go nuts for this, as will fans of roots music done with excellence (and a certain irreverence for pristine studio procedure), and lovers of cheap beer and whiskey. Actually, anyone drawn to what is truly and gloriously vulgar in working-class culture and who loves music will celebrate this as a classic -- in much the same way we hear the great records of Hinton, Jerry Lee Lewis, and even Dickinson himself (Dixie Fried). Amazing.

allmusic ((( Jungle Jim and the Voodoo Tiger > Overview )))

Baggage Too Much for Reality Star, Checks in and Checks Out: Ryan Jenkins Found Dead

Reality Star Ryan Jenkins Found Dead

Reality Star Ryan Jenkins Found Dead
Copyright 2009 Buena Park Police Department

Murder suspect Ryan Alexander Jenkins was found dead Sunday in British Columbia, according to Canadian police.

Jenkins, 32, was a fugitive suspect in the murder of his ex-wife and swimsuit-model Jasmine Fiore. The reality star was found dead of an apparent suicide in a motel in Hope, British Columbia, the RCMP Federal Border Integrity Program confirmed.

Jenkins was a contestant on VH1's reality show "Megan Wants a Millionaire."

Reality Star Ryan Jenkins Found Dead

Video: Second Pharmacy Searched In Michael Jackson Death Investigation

Video: Second Pharmacy Searched in Michael Jackson Death Investigation

Canvas background demo

ET has obtained video of the raid that took place on Friday at the Mickey Fine Pharmacy & Grill in Beverly Hills in connection to the Michael Jackson death investigation.

"We're looking at improper dispensing," a Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) official told Hollywood.tv cameras. "The pharmacy cooperated and provided prescription records, original and copies. That's what we're taking today."

Earlier this month, authorities raided a Las Vegas pharmacy seeking evidence that Jackson's former personal physician Dr. Conrad Murray or his employees "administered, prescribed, obtained, transferred, sold, distributed, and/or bought" the anesthetic Propofol, according to the search warrant.

Posted August 23, 2009 2:27:00 PM
Video: Second Pharmacy Searched In Michael Jackson Death Investigation

Dr. Jackoff, Mr. High? or Row v. Laid! Jackson wanted genetically perfect children

Michael Jackson wanted genetically perfect children

Article from: Herald Sun

August 24, 2009 12:00am

MICHAEL Jackson acted like Dr Frankenstein to create a perfect family of test-tube children, close associates say.

From 1994 to 1997, the King of Pop begged Hollywood A-list pals to donate eggs and sperm to produce what he thought would be ideal kids, Britain's News of the World reported yesterday.

It said Jackson, who died in June aged 50, was not the father of Prince Michael, 12, Paris, 11, or even Blanket, 7.

Close associates said he worked with fertility doctors and his skin specialist, Dr Arnie Klein, to produce the children.

He kept dossiers on "ideal-looking" children and his bedroom was littered with books on IVF.

It said Jacko had fertility problems due to drug abuse and he had tried to adopt a child from Thailand.

A source, who has known the Jackson family for more than 16 years, said: "Michael is not the father of a single one of the children in the biological way, but in chemical terms he oversaw their creation as a dad.

"He was adamant that the children should come from intelligent, respected and -- most importantly - healthy genes.

"He feared passing on vitiligo (his skin-whitening condition).

The source said Jackson's ex-wife, Debbie Rowe, carried the fertilised eggs he had created.

"One friend he asked to donate sperm was a well-known Hollywood actor who now suspects he may be the father of Blanket. He had a unique bond with Michael," the source said.

"Once Michael decided, the names were noted and given to Arnie, who locked them away in a safety deposit box."

Ex-child star Mark Lester believes he is Paris's dad. The identity of Prince Michael's father is not known. It has been speculated it might be Dr Klein.

Jackson's personal maid from 1990 to 1994, Adrian McManus, said: "Michael had dozens of babies' photos and books packed with naked kids.

"He stared for hours at videos of children playing. Some he called 'ideal-looking', and he would say how he loved 'ruby red lips' and 'blonde hair'."

Since Jackson's death, Ms Rowe has won visitation rights to the two eldest children.

Jackson's mother Katherine, 79, is the legal guardian of all three.

Michael Jackson wanted genetically perfect children | Herald Sun

Secret Michael Jackson email accounts discovered by police - mirror.co.uk

Secret Michael Jackson email accounts discovered by police

Michael Jackson (pic: Getty)

Michael Jackson had two secret email accounts he may have used to buy prescription drugs.

Detectives last night said they only recently discovered the King of Pop operated the gmail and AOL sites.

They want to trawl through his messages to see if he contacted several doctors or illegal pharmaceutical websites.

A source close to the investigation said: “They could hold vital evidence with regard to Michael’s death and the drugs he was using regularly. Not only did he get prescription drugs through a network of doctors, it’s believed he may also have got them from illegal websites or drug cartels. The LAPD has to get a search warrant first and this takes a few days.”

It has also emerged police have got the number for a private mobile phoneline used by Jacko. Amazingly detectives had not been told about the rarely used number until last week – despite interviewing some 35 witnesses close to the singer.

It is possible Jacko also used the phone to contact people for his drugs. Jackson, 50, died two months ago after being given powerful sedative propofol to help him sleep.

The star is also believed to have taken a mixture of other prescription drugs that night.

His personal physician, Dr Conrad Murray, is the focus of a manslaughter probe.

Secret Michael Jackson email accounts discovered by police - mirror.co.uk

Transcript: MRIs Can Find Signals that Trigger Drug Cravings - NIDA Podcasts

2/22/08
Podcast MRIs Can Find Signals that Trigger Drug Cravings
Listen Now
Length: 2:50
Format: .MP3
Size: 2.6MB
.
More Podcasts

AKINSO: MRIs can find subconscious signals that trigger drug cravings according to a study by the National Institute on Drug Abuse. Using a functional MRI, scientists have discovered that cocaine-related images trigger the emotional centers of the brains of patients addicted to drugs, even when the subjects are unaware they’ve seen anything. Dr. Steven Grant, NIDA’s Chief of the Neuroscience Branch in the division of Clinical Neuroscience and Behavioral Research, said cues outside one’s awareness can trigger rapid activation of the circuits driving drug-seeking behavior.

GRANT: This study shows that in the area of substance abuse for drug addicts, this processing of very highly relevant information about the presence of stimuli and cues and triggers in the environment that may lead to drug taking are processed by specific areas in the brain in the absence of awareness by the subject.

AKINSO: To verify that the patterns of brain activity triggered by the subconscious cues reflected the patients’ feelings about drugs, researchers gave the patients a different test two days later, allowing them to look longer at the drug images. The patients who demonstrated the strongest brain response to unseen cues in the functional MRI experiment also felt the strongest positive association with visible drug cues. Dr. Grant said understanding how the brain initiates that overwhelming desire for drugs is essential to treating addiction.

GRANT: I think the most immediate payoff here is the empirical demonstration that the drug abuser’s behavior can be influenced by even the most leading exposure to drug related stimuli. That it’s going register in the brain. It’s going to be processed in the brain. And it’s going to be processed in parts of the brain that are also involved in drug seeking. 

AKINSO: He added that these results could improve drug treatment strategies.

GRANT: Now what this means for a therapist is it just reiterates what has long been a strategy in the treatment of substance abuse. That the recovering addict needs to be avoiding people, places, and things that are associated with their past drug use and they need to be aware that if they are in overtly exposed to people, places and things that it’s going to literally push bottoms in their brains. And they need to develop strategies even though they may not be aware that those buttons are being pushed.

AKINSO: This is Wally Akinso at the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland.

Transcript: MRIs Can Find Signals that Trigger Drug Cravings - NIDA Podcasts

JASON D WILLIAMS ROCKIN BOOGIE WOOGIE PIANO

mornin'