Hey Louise (1980) – Neil Diamond

I was going to feature his ending song America from the movie The Jazz Singer which I reviewed here, but since it already appeared in that article I will skip right on to another grandiose song from the movie soundtrack – Hey Louise. Neil Diamond is certainly a glitzy entertainer who also took part in The Band’s send off concert – The Last Waltz singing Dry Your Eyes.

His songs are still immensely popular in particular Sweet Caroline which gets played often at large sporting events to cajole the crowd. We listened to his music frequently in my youth. I haven’t heard much from him besides his greatest hits and The Jazz Singer soundtrack.
This soundtrack was an enormous success unlike the movie with the critics. It was Neil Diamond’s biggest selling album in the United States, selling over 5 million copies reaching #3 on the pop albums chart.
Interesting, Hey Louise didn’t comprise one of the three songs from the album which became top ten hits on the Billboard Hot 100. Love on the Rocks, Hello Again and America reaching attained Nos. 2, 6, and 8 respectively.

Hey, my Louise
If I take you home
Will you make me plead?
My sweet amour
If I come to close, will you close the door?

Oh ma cherie, do you know my name?
I remember yours
And I know what you need
What you need my Louise

Sadly, I read here that 81 year old Diamond announced in 2021 that he was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease which is affecting his speech and movement- the disease is currently incurable.
Diamond has sold more than 100 million records worldwide, making him one of the best-selling musicians of all time.

Diamond was born in Brooklyn, New York City, to a Jewish family. All four of his grandparents were immigrants, from Poland on his father’s side and Russia on his mother’s. He was a member of the Freshman Chorus and Choral Club, along with classmate Barbra Streisand. Diamond recalled they were not close friends at the time: “We were two poor kids in Brooklyn. We hung out in the front of Erasmus High and smoked cigarettes.” Later on in this music library project a song duet by Barbra and Neil will feature called You Don’t Bring Me Flowers.

What entails the ‘Music Library Project’?

References:
1. The Jazz Singer soundtrack – wikipedia
2. Neil Diamond – wikipedia

Tagged with: , ,
Posted in Music

Hey Hey My My (Into the Black) (1979) – Neil Young

Neil Young songs have been coming here thick and fast, but I’m reluctant to admit I haven’t got that many in my collection. Like David Bowie (the previous artist to feature here), I wish I had delved more into Young’s discography. Today’s song Hey Hey My My (Into the Black) is from Young’s 1979 live album Live Rust. Yeh, you know the tour; where his roadies dressed as Jawas (see image inset). Trippy huh?

Combined with its acoustic counterpart My My, Hey Hey (Out of the Blue), the song bookends Young’s 1979 album. The song was influenced by the punk rock zeitgeist of the late 1970s, in particular by Young’s collaborations with the American art punk band Devo, and what he viewed as his own growing irrelevance. The lyrics, “It’s better to burn out than to fade away” were widely quoted by his peers and by critics. The song later appeared on Young’s Greatest Hits in 2004.

Hey hey, my my
Rock and roll can never die
There’s more to the picture
Than meets the eye.
Hey hey, my my.


Out of the blue
and into the black
You pay for this,
but they give you that

Young used the phrase “rust never sleeps” as a concept for his tour with Crazy Horse to avoid artistic complacency and try more progressive, theatrical approaches to performing live. The album won Rolling Stone magazine’s 1979 critics poll for Album of the Year and peaked at Number 8 on the US and Australian Billboard charts. I really like this heavier rock sound from Neil and how his strained voice interfaces with it.

References:
1. Hey Hey, My My (Into the Black) – wikipedia

Tagged with: , ,
Posted in Music

Heroes (1977) – David Bowie

‘Heroes’ Tour 1978

This is my favourite song by Bowie although I am an admirer of many including Ziggy Stardust which features currently in the music audio on my page. I am by no means a connoisseur of his music, but this song was the first that I loved from him. I think I first heard it in an old music documentary in the early 90’s and it floored me.
Heroes co-written by Bowie and Brian Eno is the title track from his twelfth album released in 1977. Interestingly, the backing track was recorded before the lyrics were written, and in recording the vocal; three microphones were placed at different distances from Bowie and would open when he sang loud enough.

I, I will be king
And you, you will be queen
Though nothing will drive them away
We can be heroes, just for one day
We can be us just for one day


I, I can remember (I remember)
Standing by the wall (By the wall)
And the guns shot above our heads (Over our heads)
And we kissed as though nothing could fall (Nothing could fall)

Over time the song has grown substantially in reputation and remained a staple throughout Bowie’s concert tours and live performances also being widely used in television and films. The majority of the tracks on his Heroes album were composed on the spot, but the the lyrics had not been written. John Lennon commented in 1980 that when making his album Double Fantasy, his ambition was to “do something as good as “Heroes”.

References:
1. Heroes (David Bowie song) – wikipedia

Tagged with: ,
Posted in Music

11/07 – 17/07/22 – James Webb Telescope, Human Intelligence & Museum of Almora

news on the march

Welcome to Monday’s News on the March – The week that was in my digital world.

How Far Back is the James Webb able to See? with Dr Klaus Pontopiddan
Audio interview at Event Horizon

Project scientist for the James Webb Space Telescope Dr. Klaus Pontoppidan explains the science revealed in the first full-color images released from the JWST. (Listen to audio interview here)

Richard Haiier: IQ Tests, Human Intelligence, and Group Differences – Lex Fridmen podcast 302
Video podcast at Lex Fridmen

Richard Haier is a psychologist specializing in the science of human intelligence. (View video interview here)

A Short Visit to the Museum of Almora; An Introduction to the Life and Struggle of Govind Ballabh Pant
Blog article by Narayan Kaudinya at Road to Nara

Even though I wanted to make this city trip very short, an intention kept growing in me to visit something old. I started asking whomsoever I could If there is any museum in Almora? Or at least a gallery, any old building dedicated to the region, on rich history and crafts that this blessed state carried. But strangely I met no one who seemed to have any idea about it.
The Taxi guy wanted to extort 3x money from me for the tariff when I took a stern stance like I was one of the locals. He dropped me three Kilometres outside the city. I decided to walk.  (Read entire artcle here)

news on the march the end

Tagged with: , , , ,
Posted in News, Reading, Science

Great Sporting Moments 5 – Cameron Smith wins The Open at St Andrews

“What a week. I’m going to fall apart here I know,” a tearful Smith said after lifting the trophy…
“I had a lot of support out there, especially the Aussie guys. You kept me going out there. This one’s for Aus.”

Cameron wasn’t the only one going to fall apart. I have been watching Cameron compete at the highest level of golf for years now and I was always floored by his golfing prowess, but he hadn’t won a Major tournament until about an hour ago. Cameron Smith produced a final round for the ages at St Andrews. For a fellow Australian to win at St Andrews (where my Great-Grandfather worked before he migrated to Australia) and hold the most cherished trophy in all of golf – The Claret Jug after being 4 shots back at the start of the round – well, I’m besotted with felicity.

It is the best round of golf I have seen and by a consummate professional. How Cameron withstood that pressure as he was about to drive on the 17th hole – arguably one of the hardest par 4 holes in the Mayors and then manufactured a putt of pure finesse to curve around the most infamous bunker of all golf was the stuff of sporting legend. It really was. I am so elated that my Colombo-Australiano kids bore witness to that amongst other stupendous plays in the final holes.

Regarding who Cameron Smith is personally..well there is so little information about him apart from what I could find on the PGA tour web site: He is a Brisbane native and has aspirations to open a coffee shop when he retires and he is passionate about tinkering with his cars when he is at home.
(Edited: 14/4/2025) Below is the 150th Open Official Film. I like how someone commented in a previous video:
The scraggly stache (and sometimes chin hair) + the mullet makes him look like he should be on the groundskeeping staff and not hoisting PGA trophies. And that made me root for him all the more, especially since he’s gotten so close to winning other majors before.

It was very timely that Mariah Carey’s classic Hero preludes this one.

Tagged with: , , ,
Posted in Sport and Adventure

Hero (1993) – Mariah Carey

I have strong memories of this song. In 1994, I was in Sydney on rest with friends at the Coogee Bay Hotel. At the time, fires were burning along the coastal areas of New South Wales and I remember being in contact with my family about their plight in Western Sydney.


The same day I recall hearing this song, I met by chance a fellow Navy employee Tania while playing pool. After us having a few under the belt I saw ten’s of local firefighters entering the Hotel with this song playing on the loud speakers. It was a sight to behold although perhaps a little blurry. After the event Tania and I roamed Coogee Beach.

Whenever I hear this song it propels me to this event cheering on the firefighters; their faces smudged with charcoal entering the Hotel. The scene couldn’t have been written better or to more rapturous fan-fare. At the time I had a celebrity crush on Maria until I saw her in a documentary; and if memory serves me correct; throwing food in her house and laughing like a hyena. Despite that I can’t help but adore this song.

There’s a hero
If you look inside your heart
You don’t have to be afraid
Of what you are
There’s an answer
If you reach into your soul
And the sorrow that you know
Will melt away


And then a hero comes along
With the strength to carry on

This song has an interesting backstory. Carey wrote the song, but gave it to Gloria Estefan who sang it for a film of the same name. Carey was encouraged to keep the song and she wrote more personal lyrics thereafter. It is regarded as one of her more personal and inspirational ballads.
Carey’s vocal performance on this always blew me away and it was around the same time I heard that both Maria and Roy Orbison had the biggest vocal ranges of all contemporary singers; although this story could be apocryphal.

In an interview with Fred Bronson he discussed the process in which they had completed the rough version of the song:

I went to New York and we were in the studio and came to a break. I was sitting at the piano and told Mariah about this movie. Within two hours, we had this incredible seed for this song, ‘Hero’. It was never meant for Mariah to sing. In her mind, we were writing a song for Gloria Estefan for this movie. And we went into an area that Mariah didn’t really go into-in her words, it was a little bit too schmaltzy or too ballady or too old-fashioned as far as melody and lyrics.

If you are interested for more information about the song I point you to the reference below because I have read few which have more content about them including lawsuits and what-have-you.

Reference:
1. Hero (Mariah Carey Song) – wikipedia

Tagged with: , ,
Posted in Music

Fire on the Mountain (1975) – The Marshall Tucker Band

This song was recommended to me recently by fellow music-blogger Max at Powerpop. I’m appreciative he did that, because I have played it many times and it seems to sound better upon each listen. In fact you can read Max’s article about today’s track here. It’s the second song to feature at Observation Blogger from this southern rock group – The Marshall Tucker Band. The first Heard it in a Love Song was released two years after Fire on the Mountain. The Marshall Tucker Band is renowned as one of the best Southern Rock bands to ever play, like Lynyrd Skynyrd.

Took my family away from my Carolina home
Had dreams about the West and started to roam
Six long months on a dust covered trail
They say heaven’s at the end but so far it’s been hell


And there’s fire on the mountain, lightnin’ in the air
Gold in them hills and it’s waitin’ for me there

Fire on the Mountain is a song written by George McCorkle of The Marshall Tucker Band. The song was recorded by the band on their 1975 album, Searchin’ for a Rainbow, and released as the album’s first single. It peaked at number 38 on the Billboard charts. It was their first Top 40 hit single and it remains one of the most popular Southern rock tunes.

According to wikipedia – The song’s lyrics are set during the California gold rush. “Fire on the Mountain” details how a family sets out from their home in South Carolina looking to make some money panning gold. In the end, the singer ends up getting shot and killed, and his widow is left behind with a worthless claim. 

The Marshall Tucker Band originated from Spartanburg, South Carolina. Noted for incorporating blues, country, and jazz into an eclectic sound, the band helped establish the Southern rock genre in the early 1970s. While the band had reached the height of its commercial success by the end of the decade, it has recorded and performed continuously under various line-ups for 50 years.

The “Marshall Tucker” in the band’s name does not refer to a band member, but rather a blind piano tuner from Columbia, South Carolina. While the band was discussing possible band names one evening in an old warehouse they had rented for rehearsal space, someone noticed that the warehouse’s door key had the name “Marshall Tucker” inscribed on it, and suggested they call themselves “The Marshall Tucker Band,” not realizing it referred to an actual person. Later it came to light that Marshall Tucker, the blind piano tuner had tuned a piano in that rented space before the band and his name was inscribed on the key.

References:
1. Fire on the Mountain (The Marshall Tucker Band Song) – wikipedia
2. The Marshall Tucker Band – wikipedia

Tagged with: , ,
Posted in Music

Helpless Heart (1989) – Maura O’Connell

Helpless Heart written by Paul Brady is the title track of Maura O’Connell’s 1989 album (see image above). I wrote about Paul Brady’s cover of the old Irish ballad Arthur McBride a little while ago. Maura like Paul is an Irish singer. It’s difficult to pin down her music since she’s a bit of a folkie, country singer, and pop artist. Overall, she is known for her contemporary interpretations of Irish folk songs, strongly influenced by American country music. Maura cherry-picks the work of such writers as aforementioned Paul Brady, Nanci Griffith (who recently passed away, but gave a wonderful contribution in Dylan’s 30th anniversary concert with her rendition of Boots of Spanish Leather), Linda Thompson, and others.

I really like what Maura O’Connell does here with Helpless Heart:

‘Cause there is a dream deep inside my head
And it may seem like it’s breakin’ the thread
That holds me to you
Still you have never wanted to change me
But darlin’, I know though we’re far apart
The signal is strong
This helpless heart will always belong to you
.

O’Connell was born in Ennis, in the west of Ireland. She grew up listening to her mother’s light opera, opera, and parlor song records. Despite the presence of classical music in the house, O’Connell got very involved in the local folk club scene. She began her professional musical journey during a six-week tour of the US in 1980, as vocalist for the traditionally-based Celtic group De Dannan. Her impact as a solo artist was minimal until receiving a Grammy nomination for Helpless Heart.

In addition to her solo work, O’Connell has collaborated with a number of Celtic, folk, pop and country artists, including Van Morrison and Dolly Parton. Aside from the music world, Martin Scorsese cast O’Connell, scruffed up for the role, as an Irish migrant street singer in his 19th-century epic Gangs of New York.

References:
1. Maura O’Connell – wikipedia

Tagged with: ,
Posted in Music

Helpless – Neil Young (1976) – (feat. The Band and Joni Mitchell)

I first heard this song in Martin Scorsese’s film account and presentation of the final concert of The BandThe Last Waltz on American Thanksgiving Day 1976 at San Francisco’s Winterland Ballroom. Many of the songs which feature in that concert will also appear here like today’s track Helpless. This song was written by Canadian singer-songwriter Neil Young and recorded by Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young (CSNY) on their 1970 album Déjà Vu. The song was originally recorded by Young’s band Crazy Horse in 1969, but Crosby, Stills and Nash convinced Young they could do a better job with it.

It is a simple song which has a repetition of a D-A-G chord progression. I really like what Young does with the harmonica in The Last Waltz version as well as Joni Mitchell’s backing vocals backstage. It’s a mellow ‘Americana’ sound which I alluded to in posts about Bob Seger, Tom Petty and The War on Drugs. I found Helpless invigorating from the first moment I heard it and has remained a live favorite of Young’s for over forty years.

There is a town in north Ontario,
With dream comfort memory to spare,
And in my mind
I still need a place to go,
All my changes were there.

Blue, blue windows behind the stars,
Yellow moon on the rise,
Big birds flying across the sky,
Throwing shadows on our eyes.
Leave us

The “town in North Ontario” referred to in the opening line of the song is often presumed to be Ontario native Young’s hometown; Young himself cleared up the rumors in a 1995 Mojo interview with Nick Kent: “Well, it’s not literally a specific town so much as a feeling. Actually, it’s a couple of towns. Omemee, Ontario, is one of them. It’s where I first went to school and spent my ‘formative’ years. Actually I was born in Toronto…“.

References:
1. Helpless (Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young song) – Wikipedia

Tagged with: , , , ,
Posted in Music

Great Sporting Moments 4 – Tomorrow’s Wimbledon Match Nick Kyrgios vs Rafael Nadal (edited below)

Nick Kyrgios after yesterday’s win against Chile’s Cristian Garin

Has there been a more anticipated tennis match in recent memory than this semi-final tomorrow at Wimbledon? (edited: Nadal has retired injured…thanks to Sheree for the update!) Not since John McEnroe who I watched in my youth (and even copied his serve to be relevant and ominous) has a greater tennis villain shone to Tennis mainstream discussion? That person, of course, is Australian Nick Kyrgios. He mentioned in the above interview that tomorrow’s match will probably be the most anticipated match of recent memory and in all honesty it’s hard to disagree with him.

When I was viewing today’s Australian ABC news site to see how anticipated it would be; the following article appeared about his recent assault charge against fellow tennis player – Ajla Tomljanović. And this adds more fuel to the controversy surrounding Kyrgios.
Rafael Nadal is the consummate professional tenista. Loved world wide for his application and courage on the tennis world-stage. Ok let me digress..Nadal is a robotic tennis player who has his rituals between plays and that’s all fine and good, because he gets the job done and prevails despite the insurmountable odds given his age and injuries… But do I like watching him play? Not much, until seeing the end of his games or where he makes stupendous comebacks.

There is a cool video here between Federer and Nadal having lots of giggles because of Nadal’s challenges with English. Because of my challenges with Spanish early on I could relate a lot to Nadal’s frustration in trying his hardest to pronounce what was expected. Where am I going here? Nadal is the good guy, ok? And Kyrgios the villain; but his play like Federer’s in many respects is unorthodox, but compelling to watch. And then you add Krygios’ antics in games towards himself, umpires, his team and disrespectful fans. He made this relatively conservative sport; a spectacle; a theatre of sorts. Good vs Bad.

The Mama of my kids – Constanza hopes tomorrow that Rafa teaches Nick a ‘tennis’ lesson and I get that. I have my feet in both trenches and that rarely happens. I wouldn’t be disappointed with that result, but on the other hand, if a fellow Australian through superior innate tennis tectronics were to overcome the forever ‘I’m old and injured‘ tiresome pants and rectum pulling Nadal then I could have my cup of tea too. Whatever happens it’s one for the ages in terms of what Tennis is about. It’s theatre and thank God for that!

Posted in Uncategorized

Follow Blog via Email

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 753 other subscribers

← Back

Thank you for your response. ✨