California Christmas (Full Christmas Special) – Christina Perri

Finally, something I’ve always dreamed of – my very first christmas special! Come along with me as we celebrate holiday cheer with my family and friends. grab some cookies and hot cocoa and settle in for some of my favourite songs off my new album ‘songs for christmas’

– Christina Perri

Now we are in for a real treat as we near the peak of the Christmas festive season. Frankly, there is no other artist I feel so anticipatory towards writing about. The music of Christina Perri has featured here nearly twice as much as any other female music artist (17 appearances until now). Australian country music artist Kasey Chambers is second on that list (9 appearances). As I was writing a post about Kasey’s track Bluebird on Thursday, I realised that another song titled Bluebird had already been posted here, by guess whom?…Christina Perri. Immediately as I drew the link in that post I received a notification on my mobile – about the launch of today’s featured presentation – California Christmas. Now if that isn’t serendipitous I don’t know what is.

Perri’s persona in this XMAS presentation is the most unguarded, fulfilled, animated, yet intimate I have seen from her. She welcomes us into her gorgeous home and then presents us with 4 Christmas tracks; the first ‘Christmas Dream‘ is an original written by her. The special includes playful ribbing by her husband Paul Costabile; who you may remember appeared in the last ‘merry-go-round’ scene of Perri’s legendary Evergone track with their eldest daughter Carmella Stanley. Yesterday’s XMAS launch also includes Carmella and her 1 year – old sister Pixie Rose; the latter was the topic of my last Perri post – Pixie Dust. Once again Christina Perri’s guitarist and back-up singer Johnny Hanson is there to solidify her music sanctuary along with her other ‘favourite person’ Emily Frost on keys and backup.

Christmas has indeed come early y’all! I hope you enjoy and oh….Merry Christmas! 🎅🎁🎄☃️

Reference:
1. Christina Perri – Wikipedia

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Nowhere in Africa (Nirgendwo in Afrika) 2001 – Caroline Link (Friday’s Finest)

Jettel Redlich: Tolerance doesn’t mean that everyone is the same. That’d be stupid. What I’ve learned here is how valuable differences are. Differences are good. And intelligent people will never hold it against you.

One recent morning I was channel zapping. Unless it’s a big day of sports (like this coming Saturday) I usually settle upon either The Europa or Film & Arts channel. I genuinely prefer their movies because they are in keeping with my original aim here at Friday’s Finest – the presentation of art-house, independent, foreign and low budget cinema.
I lucked upon finding today’s featured movie Nowhere in Africa. The plot of a German – Jewish family fleeing Germany before the Second World War for Africa intrigued me, so I buckled myself in because it seemed like an epic at least according to its theme and runtime. Unbeknownst to me I was watching the winner of the 2002 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. The screenplay is based on the 1995 autobiographical novel of the same name by Stefanie Zweig.

IMDB Storyline:

A Jewish family in Germany emigrate short before the Second World War. They move to Kenya to start running a farm, but not all members of the family come to an arrangement with their new life. Shortly after their departure, things are changing in Germany very quickly, and a turning back seems impossible. So everyone has to arrange himself with the new life in a new continent.

I mentioned ‘epic’ earlier well this stand out German film is a ‘grand epic’ on the scale of Gone With the Wind or Lawrence of Arabia. But where Nowhere in Africa distinguishes itself is in its intimacy and modest characterisation. I found it such an immersive film and one of the best movies I’ve seen this year. I felt as a viewer so consumed and vested in the family and the African culture that I didn’t want the film to end. I was humbled to say the least. Also, I had never really liked the German accent before until hearing it beautifully spoken here in Nowhere in Africa.

The performances are first-rate, too. They are compelling, three-dimensional characters. Julianne Kohler is perfect; we understand this woman fully, even when she doesn’t speak. Merab Ninidze has some great scenes with Walter, the father; and Sidede Onyulo is simply magical as Owuor. But the movie belongs to the two girls who play Regina. They look amazingly similar, and they are both stellar. Lea Kurka brings much hope as the adorable young Regina, and Karoline Eckertz is subtle and remarkable as the older Regina, particularly in a heartbreaking exchange with her father at her school.

I couldn’t recommend Nowhere in Africa more to anyone who wants to partake with their closest ones a unique family-viewing adventure of a grand scope which we used to have growing up like The Sound of Music, The Wizard of Oz or Spartacus.

References:
1. Nowhere in Africa – Wikipedia
2. Nowhere in Africa – IMDB

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Bluebird (2004) – Kasey Chambers

Kasey Chambers’ childhood comes straight from the pages of a country music song book – raised by a fox hunting family on the fringes of the Nullarbor, where the nightly campfire sing-along was the only entertainment. It could have been crisp desert air, but more likely sheer talent, that turned Kasey into one of our most sensational singers.

At home with country superstar Kasey Chambers | 60 Minutes Australia

To my recollection, Kasey is the only country artist during the first decade of this millennium that Australians fell head over heals. I think what resonated so strongly with us was Kasey’s ability to write just what she felt without pretence. The honesty she evoked in her lyrics and demonstrated in her artistry as a singer-songwriter was a match made in heaven during this era in Australia including with yours truly who saw her several times in concert.

Today’s featured track Bluebird is the second song titled Bluebird to feature here in 7 months. The other Bluebird was sung by the one and only Christina Perri. And would you believe I just received a notification of the launch of Perri’s California Christmas Special. Yippy, Christmas has come early! It goes without saying, this special will be the focus of another post in the lead up to XMAS.

Bluebird is the fourth song from Kasey’s third studio album Wayward Angel released 31 May 2004. The album went to spend five weeks at number-one being knocked off to number five by For All You’ve Done by Hillsong Church which happens to be one of my favourite Australian albums (like Kasey’s previous album – Barricades & Brickwalls). Although Bluebird is the 9th song to be presented here from Kasey Chambers, it is the first from the Wayward Angel album.

If I fall like rain
Will you still feel the same
Will you hold me and call out my name
If I’m lost in the crowd
Will you shout out loud
Will you take me to the other side of town

When that sun beats down
Will you stay
Will you turn around
And fly away
Like a bluebird tail wing
It sounds just like the angel singing
Am I ever gonna see you again
Bluebird with a brand new wing

If my heart turns blue
Will it still belong to you
Will you keep it just like him
If I lose my wing
Will I hear you sing
You will make my tears go away

Chambers wrote most of the songs on the album including Bluebird. The album differs from her previous two because Chambers became a mother and she states it is the “most life changing things that you go through” and she did not feel any pressure recording the album. It debuted on the Australian ARIA Albums Chart at number-one making it Chambers second number-one album but the sales did not match up to her previous album Barricades & Brickwalls (2001) which was certified seven times platinum by ARIA.

References:
1. Wayward Angel – Kasey Chambers

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The AnkiDroid Collection (Part 48) – Endogenous, VO2 Max & Adumbrate

Ankidroid additions related to Science, History and Philosophy. More information about Anki can be found in this article.

Endogenous

  1. Having an internal cause or origen (contrasted with exogenous)
  2. Growing or originating from an organism
  3. Confined within a group or society.

VO2 Max

VO2 refers to the maximum amount of oxygen your body can absorb and use during exercise. So rate = V of O2. It measures aerobic fitness levels. The video below explains how VO2 max correlates with longevity.

Adumbrate

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All I Can Do Is Write About It (1976) – Lynyrd Skynyrd

We are backpedalling in the Music Library Project to present a fabulous Lynyrd Skynyrd song posted by Max (Aka Badfinger) at Powerpop in January this year (2023). I was so impressed listening to it again the other day that I wanted to post it here at the earliest opportunity.

When you think of Lynryd Skynyrd you don’t think of an Environmental Friendly band but Van Zant was that. They all grew up in Gainesville Florida and were around wildlife and natural tropical areas.  This song is a warning about the growth of his hometown and he was cautioning about urban and suburban areas claiming wild lands as their own.

‘Cause when I can see the concrete a slowly creepin’
Lord take me and mine before that come

Van Zant saw this happening all through Dixie which include South Carolina, North Carolina,  Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Texas, Virginia, Arkansas, and Tennessee.

This song was on their Gimme Back My Bullets album released in 1976 after Ed King had left the band. It was the B-side to Gimme Back My Bullets.

Read more at Lynryd Skynyrd – All I Can Do Is Write About It – PowerPop

Well this life that I live took me everywhere
There ain’t no place I ain’t never gone
Well it’s kind of like the sayin
That you heard so many times
Well there just ain’t no place like home

Did you ever see a she-gator protect her youngin’
Or fish in a river swimmin’ free
Did you ever see the beauty of the hills of Carolina
Or the sweetness of the grass in Tennessee

And Lord I can’t make any changes
All I can do is write ’em in a song
‘Cause if I can seen the concrete a slowly creepin’
Lord take me and mine before that comes

References:
1. Gimme Back My Bullets – Wikipedia

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11/12 – 17/12/23 – Oak Tree, 2023 Movies & Solomon’s Temple

news on the march

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

Love Under An Old Oak Tree
Poem at Sharon’s Writers Tidbits

There stands an old oak tree
up on a winter hill
its battered brown bark
gnarled after many a season,
fallen are its leaves, they lie scattered
crisp and curled
upon the cold cold ground beneath,
bare are its branches
a winter skeleton, cold and still.

And so wintertime has fallen away -
the sun is awake
golden light streams through
lush green leaves.
How young hearts quake and quiver;
souls gather and melt with a whisper
and a promise and a prayer
carried away on warm air
to Eros for a love that will last
as long as old oak.
Oh how it blossoms yellow and orange
in celebration,
up on a summer hill.

Reely Bernie’s Top Ten of 2023
Blog article at Reely Bernie

I certainly had more favorite movies to choose from this year than last. I’m not sure if you will agree with me, but the quality, diversity, and creativity went up a level in 2023.

Still, I’m well aware of a current transformation I’m experiencing as the eccentric, polemic indies I once adored now annoy me, and the safer bets in mainstream theatre/streaming bring me peace. I just turned 45, and I’m an older dad with two wonderful, young daughters. That’s one of the reasons behind my new cinematic motives. (I also enjoy an occasional Hallmark movie with my wife.)

Some other reasons might include: I found critically acclaimed Poor Things to be smug, overly pleased with itself, and hypocritical in its so-called feminist statement (dare I say the same thing about Barbie?); Scorsese’s impertinent historical message was sidetracked by Leonardo and De Niro’s caricature acting in Killers of the Flower Moon; and, Wes Anderson has finally achieved picturesque nothingness with Asteroid City. Millennials can call me Scrooge, but their preferences couldn’t be any more cynical.

– Read the remainder of Bernie’s article here.

Who Built Solomon’s Temple?
Video presentation at Centre Place

The Bible credits the wise King Solomon with building the temple in Jerusalem, but extra-biblical sources are lacking Solomon is one of the most important figures in the Bible, credited with writing Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and the Song of Songs, as well as building the original Jerusalem temple (destroyed 587 bc). But for all his fame, why is there no contemporary mention of Solomon in historical sources outside the Bible?

news on the march the end
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Life (1998) – Des’ree

Here endeth the trilogy that I alluded to in the Gabrielle post recently, where I cited three specific songs all completed within a decade of the other which had a certain cadence, feel and brand that I love in Pop form; namely No One by Alicia Keys which featured here back in September, Gabrielle with Out of Reach and now Life by British pop artist Des’ree. Listen to how Des’ree’s voice deepens in the line: Never walk under ladders. That’s baritone or bass material. It puts such a spring in my step and then the piano bridgesques lift it even further. I miss this music.

[Verse 1]
I’m afraid of the dark
Especially when I’m in a park
And there’s no one else around
Ooh, I get the shivers
I don’t want to see a ghost
It’s a sight that I fear most
I’d rather have a piece of toast
And watch the evening news

[Chorus]
Life, oh life, oh life, oh life
Doo, doo doo doo
Life, oh life, oh life, oh life
Doo, doo doo doo

[Verse 2]
I’m a superstitious girl
I’m the worst in the world
Never walk under ladders
I keep a rabbit’s tail
I’ll take you up on a dare
Anytime, anywhere
Name the place, I’ll be there
Bungee jumping, I don’t care

Life was the third single from Des’ree’s third album, Supernatural (1998). This song remains Des’ree’s biggest hit, peaking at number one in Austria, Hungary, Italy, and the Netherlands, as well as on the UK R&B Chart. Just like the other aforementioned songs, I love Des’ree’s voice and her style. It can get you motivated. The older you get, the better and deeper the lyrics get even though I probably scoffed them off way back then. It makes me feel sooooo good now.

Des’ree was born in Croydon, South East London, England, on 30 November 1968. Her mother is from British Guiana (now Guyana), and her father is from Barbados. She was introduced to reggae, calypso and jazz music by her parents. At the age of 22, and with no connections in the music industry, she was signed in 1991 to Sony 550 when she asked her boyfriend to send a demo to the label, and they quickly contacted her. I can see why.

References:
1. Life (Des’ree song) – Wikipedia

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Panic Beach (1989) – Maria McKee

Talk about blood, sweat and tears; it feels Maria McKee conveys it all here in voice and sound: ‘then so goodbye to Panic Beach‘. Someone recommended this to me, but I can’t recall whom. This is where the chorus kick’s arse. Give this song time to unfold. It’s a musical – art form made like origami.
Panic Beach appears as the 5th song on Maria McKee’s debut album by American released in 1989. The songwriting was inspired in part by books about the history of vaudeville, as well as by Tennessee Williams plays.

[Verse 1]
Well, the dog act got drunk again last night
The king and queen of the waltz clog team had another fight
The king was careless with his tango grip
Nearly lost his queen in a dip
Yeah, she righted herself
Straightened out her slip and kicked him in the shin
Miss Billy Begonia thinks she’s hit the big time
She wants a thick red rug from the dressing room door
To the front-line of the footlights
She’s got a sky blue swan’s down powder puff
And a corset to keep her spirits up
Yeah, she don’t sweat
She sours and melts like ice cream in the sun
She’ll be out of a job at the end of this three-week run

[Chorus]
We’re having fun out here on Panic Beach
All the vaudeville bums are here out on Panic Beach
I hear them talk about the palace but it’s so far out of reach
So I’ll do my time, then say goodbye to Panic Beach, yeah
Goodbye, goodbye, goodbye

Panic Beach has a bitter-sweet carnival-esque feel to it since it deals with down-and-out vaudeville performers living and working in obscurity. Each word paints a picture. The song abounds with color, characters and melancholy. My favourite lines: ‘she don’t sweat, she sours and melts like ice cream in the sun‘ and “a sky blue swans down powder puff and a corset to keep her spirits up“.

Maria Luisa McKee (born August 17, 1964) is an American singer-songwriter. She is best known for her work with Lone Justice, her 1990 song Show Me Heaven which I’m sure most of the readers here will be familiar and her song If Love Is a Red Dress (Hang Me in Rags) from the film Pulp Fiction.

References:
1. Maria McKee (album) – Wikipedia

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Cuomo: Footage from Oct. 7 attack on Israel shows ‘Hamas wanted war’ | Cuomo

For recent information:

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Pancho and Lefty (1993) – Willie Nelson & Bob Dylan (written by Townes Van Zandt)

I first became familiar with Pancho and Lefty from the duet below by Willie Nelson & Bob Dylan. I liked it a lot from first listen. It’s reassuring to know Townes was alive to see these two honour him by playing a medley of his hit. Pancho and Lefty, originally Poncho and Lefty, is a song written by American country music singer-songwriter Townes Van Zandt. Perhaps his most well-known song. For more information about his version I point you to my friend Max’s Pancho and Lefty post below:

Townes Van Zandt

The royalties from this song helped Van Zandt through the years. He told a story of getting pulled over by a couple of policemen. His car sticker was out of date so he got into the police car and they asked him what he does for a living. He said he was a songwriter and the policemen shook their heads. He then told them that he wrote “Pancho and Lefty” and their eyes lit up and they started to grin. Pancho and Lefty were the policemen’s police radio code names. They let Townes go after that.

Van Zandt did not like fame or what came attached to it. It’s been reported that he turned down opportunities to write with Bob Dylan. He respected Dylan a great deal but it was the celebrity part he didn’t want. He never ended up on a major label through his career…by choice.

Pancho and Lefty at PowerPop

Living on the road, my friend
Was gonna keep you free and clean
And now you wear your skin like iron
Your breath as hard as kerosene
You weren’t your momma’s only boy
But her favorite one, it seems
She began to cry when you said goodbye
And sank into your dreams

Pancho was a bandit boy
His horse was fast as polished steel
He wore his gun outside his pants
For all the honest world to feel
Pancho met his match, you know
On the deserts down in Mexico
Nobody heard his dying words
But that’s the way it goes

All the Federales say
They could’ve had him any day
They only let him slip away
Out of kindness, I suppose

As alluded to above in Max’s post; Pancho and Lefty has been recorded by several artists since its composition and performance by Van Zandt, with the Willie Nelson and Merle Haggard version selling the most copies and reaching number one on the Billboard country chart.  

In an interview, Townes Van Zandt recalled, “I realize that I wrote it, but it’s hard to take credit for the writing, because it came from out of the blue. It came through me and it’s a real nice song, and I think, I’ve finally found out what it’s about. I’ve always wondered what it’s about. I kinda always knew it wasn’t about Pancho Villa, and then somebody told me that Pancho Villa had a buddy whose name in Spanish meant ‘Lefty.’ But in the song, my song, Pancho gets hung. ‘They only let him hang around out of kindness I suppose’ and the real Pancho Villa was assassinated.”

References:
1. Pancho and Lefty – Wikipedia

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