Wednesday, March 21, 2018

Dionne Warwick

I just saw this:


  1. Replying to 
    Italian and German version of Walk On By Dionne Warwick
  2. Replying to 
    Walk On By in Italian and German available on Dionne Warwick's latest release
  3. Replying to   and 
    Dionne Warwick Odds and Ends Rarities Specter Records available at Amazon and other retailers



Dionne Warwick's rare tracks?  Okay, I'm in.

Dionne is a one of a kind singer, a true original.  Even now, there's no "new Dionne."  She is too unique.

And so this release should be big news and a huge delight.  Here's the press release for the album:


Dionne Warwick Odds & Ends--Scepter Records Rarities CD

$ 12.98

Dionne Warwick: Odds & Ends--Scepter Records Rarities CD
Dionne Warwick’s ‘60s Recordings for the Scepter Label (Many Written by the Legendary Team of Hal David and Burt Bacharach) Remain Right at the Pinnacle of ‘60s Pop
With a Total of 40 Chart Hits, Dionne’s Run at Scepter Is the Most Successful of Any Female Artist on an Independent Label During the ‘60s
But All That Success Led the Scepter Label to Be Bought and Sold Twice Before Dionne Bought Her Tapes Back, Leaving Her Recordings in Disarray
Now, Real Gone Music Is Bringing Order to the Pop Universe with a 25-Track Collection of Dionne Warwick Rarities from the Scepter Vaults
9 Unreleased Tracks Out of 25 Total
Almost All Tracks Make CD Debut
Includes Rare Alternate Versions of Hits Like “Don’t Make Me Over,” “I Say a Little Prayer,” and “Do You Know the Way to San Jose”
Includes Stereo Single Versions of Songs Like “He’s Moving On” and “Amanda”
Also Features Foreign-Language Single Versions of Such Hits as “A House Is Not a Home” and “Walk On By” and Long-Lost Songs Like “Monday, Monday” and “Our Ages or Our Hearts”
Released with Cooperation of the Legendary Dionne Warwick Herself, Who Sat Down for an Interview with Liner Note Writer Joe Marchese
Also Includes Rare Photos Remastered by Ted Carfrae
Some of the Greatest—and Rarest—Vocal Pop of the ‘60s
With a total of 40 Pop chart hits,
Dionne Warwick’s recordings for the Scepter label rank as arguably the most successful run of any artist—and certainly of any female artist—for an independent label during the 1960s. But all that success had a downside for her considerable legacy: Scepter became a hot property for acquisition, and as a result the label’s holdings were bought and sold several times before Dionne herself arranged to buy her own masters back. By that time, though, the Scepter tapes had been scattered in disarray, thus leaving a lot of material in limbo and causing compilers to throw up their hands. Well, where other reissue labels fear to tread Real Gone Music goes full speed ahead! Odds & Ends—Scepter Records Rarities offers 25 hard-to-find tracks (plus some bonus promo spots) from the Scepter vaults, including rare alternate versions (of hits like “Don’t Make Me Over,” “I Say a Little Prayer,” and “Do You Know the Way to San Jose”), stereo singles (“He’s Moving On;” “Amanda”), foreign language singles (“A House Is Not a Home” in Italian and French; “Walk On By” in German and Italian), and just plain lost tracks (like “Our Ages or Our Hearts” and “Monday, Monday”). Many of the selections are previously unissued and most are making their CD debut. What’s more, this one’s released with the full cooperation of the legendary lady, Dionne herself, who sat down for an interview with liner note writer Joe Marchese, and includes rare photos. Remastered by Ted Carfrae, Odds & Ends— Scepter Records Rarities is a stone solid must for any Dionne fan, and of course any Bacharach-David fan as well...this is some of the greatest—and rarest—vocal pop music of the ‘60s!
  1. I Say a Little Prayer (Alternate Version)
  2. Monday, Monday
  3. A House Is Not a Home (Italian Version)
  4. He's Moving On (Stereo Single Non-Soundtrack Version)
  5. Amanda (Stereo Single Non-Soundtrack Version)
  6. Walk On By (German Version)
  7. Don't Make Me Over (Alternate Version)
  8. Reach Out for Me (French Version)
  9. The Good Life (Studio Mix)
  10. Loneliness Remembers What Happiness Forgets (Alternate Version)
  11. Walk Little Dolly (Italian Version)
  12. If You Let Me Make Love to You, Then Why Can't I Touch You
  13. La Vie En Rose (English Version)
  14. You'll Never Get to Heaven (German Version)
  15. As Long as There's an Apple Tree (Extended Version)
  16. Our Ages or Our Hearts
  17. How Many Days of Sadness (French Version)
  18. I Love Paris (Studio Mix)
  19. Silent Voices (Stereo Mix)
  20. The Windows of the World (Italian Version)
  21. C'est Si Bon (Studio Mix)
  22. Odds & Ends (Alternate Version)
  23. A House Is Not a Home (French Version)
  24. Walk On By (Italian Version)
  25. Do You Know the Way to San Jose (Alternate Version)
  26. Dionne Radio Promo Spots & Public Service Announcements




Closing with C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"

Wednesday, March 21, 2018.  "I want my money back."




I never meant to be the needle that broke your back
You were here, you were here, and you were here
Don't look back
I never meant to be the needle that broke your back
You were here, you were here, and you were here
Don't look back
He war he war
He will kill for you
He war he war
He will kill for you
From who you can
You know you can
-- "He War," by Cat Power, first appears on her YOU ARE FREE

However you count it, the Iraq War is now 15 years old.  (Or the latest wave of it.)  The Bastard War?  No, The War Of The Bastards.  It's a long, long list of bastards -- Bully Boy Bush, Barack Obama, Donald Trump, Tony Blair, John Howard, Dianne Feinstein, Hillary Clinton, John Kerry, John McCain, Mitch McConnell, Harry Reid, Chuck Schumer, Olympia Snowe . . . 
The War Of The Bastards.  How appropriate that it's birth is so clouded.  It began at the same moment around the world but, due to the time zone differences, it started on March 20th in Iraq and the late night of March 19th in the US.  

The War Of The Bastards ignored international and domestic law, used pysops on the American people, was willfully sold by the media whores and left the US forever in debt.  US President Donald Trump's slammed for saying three trillion dollars.  Slam him when you want but when he's actually right and you slam him, you make it look like your problem isn't with his actions, it's just with him and that's not going to build a resistance though it may bring one or two more over for your circle jerk.  Play safe, kiddies.

Three trillion is the estimated cost.  That's when the medical needs of the veterans of today's wars are factored in.

Three trillion dollars.  And it wasn't Bush or Barack or Donald's money.  It was We The People's money.

And we suffer, across the country as a result.




I want my money back
I'm down here drowning in your fat
You got me on my knees
Praying for everything you lack
I ain't afraid of you
I'm just a victim of your fears
You cower in your tower
Praying that I'll disappear
I got another plan
One that requires me to stand
On the stage or in the street
Don't need no microphone or beat
And when you hear this song
If you ain't dead sing along
Bang and strum to these here drums
Till you get where you belong

I got a list of demands
Written on the palm of my hands
I ball my fist, you're gonna
Know where I stand
I'm living hand to mouth
You wanna be somebody? See somebody?
Try and free somebody?

"List of Demands (Reparations)" -- the new single from The Kills

"I want my money back!" should be the cry of the American people.

Mike rightly called out Bernie Sander's latest for show action.  But grasp that if Bernie wants to focus on the economy, on jobs (the lack of), on the crumbling infrastructure, you can't do that without talking about where the money went.  It went to the colonize Iraq.  Three trillion dollars and counting.  And counting.

I want my money back.

If the senator wants to run for president again, he's going to have to explain where the money went and how, as president, he'd avoid the same thing.  Because we've now had three occupants of the Oval Office conducting the war on Iraq: Bully Boy Bush, President Barack Obama and President Donald Trump.  The money continues to flow to Iraq.

Not to help the Iraqi people, understand, but to prop up the US-created government.  The occupation and the colonization of Iraq continues as surely as the war itself does -- they are all intertwined.

I want my money back.

Gordon Block (WATERTOWN DAILY TIMES) reports:

Soldiers from the 10th Mountain Division formally took the lead of the international ground forces helping Iraqi troops defeat ISIS in the country.
The ceremony took place 15 years to the day from when American forces first entered the country to take on Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, after President George W. Bush and his cabinet built the case that the country was developing weapons of mass destruction.
The Combined Joint Forces Land Component Command — Operation Inherent Resolve, previously managed by the 1st Armored Division, represents 75 nations and international organizations supporting training, advising and equipping Iraq’s security forces.


The Iraq War has not ended.  It's amazing that those who supported the war grasp that while those of us who opposed it have a large number who self-deceive that the war is over.  Tara Copp (MILITARY TIMES) spoke with one service member who supports the ongoing and never-ending war:

Fifteen years after the U.S. launched Operation Iraqi Freedom, the remaining U.S. troops deployed there are still needed, the spokesman for U.S. operations in western Iraq said Tuesday.
Marine Corps Col. Seth W.B. Folsom was one of the 150,000 U.S. and coalition troops who initially crossed into Iraq 2003 and is now the commander of Task Force Lion, the continued U.S. effort in Anbar province. 
"My Marines and I came to Iraq in 2003 because we thought it was the right thing to do and we served honorably," Folsom said Tuesday at press briefing with reporters at the Pentagon.
"Unlike a lot of people out there right now, I'm not really interested in engaging in the same sort of self-loathing a lot of people are doing today on the anniversary.  The simple fact is this: the war has changed out here.  It's not the same war anymore.



Well then that would mean -- if it's not the same war anymore -- that it would need something other than the 2002 Congressional authorization to go forward.  The war continues.  Many Americans live blissfully unaware of that.  Who knew we were a nation of Barbara Bushes (the old one, not the young pretty one).




"Why should I waste my beautiful mind on something like that?"

Take a look in the mirror, America, we've become Barbara Bush.

We're saggy and flabby -- and that's just our minds.

How does this happen?  Well you can't pay Rachel Maddow over a million a year and still do news, apparently.  Of television outlets, all but CNN pulled out of Iraq at the end of 2008.  The only real American withdraw has been the US media's 2008 withdraw.  The print outlets?  THE WASHINGTON POST has journalists in the region -- often in Iraq itself.  MCCLATCHY NEWSPAPERS?  None.  Because MCCLATCHY never did s**t.  Bill Moyers started that lie.  KNIGHT RIDDER was the newspaper chain questioning the war and the claims made to support it.  KNIGHT RIDDER was purchased by MCCLATCHY (it ceased publication in July of 2006).  Now MCCLATCHY was around in the lead up to the war.  It did nothing but whore.  Don't give MCCLATCHY credit for what KNIGHT RIDDER did.  It had papers but it chose to whore like THE NEW YORK TIMES did.  THE NEW YORK TIMES?  They do have reporters in Iraq.

Now under Barack, coverage fell there -- despite the money the paper was spending.  Why?  Jill Abrasmon -- who has attacked Judith Miller on the record and on background in a catty manner that can only be described as bitchy (well, there's the c-word but I'm still not comfortable using that).  She supported the war.  She tries to pretend otherwise but she did.  And when she was made editor of the paper, it was all about bury Iraq.  Tim Arango, remember, had the exclusive news in September 2012 that Barack was sending US troops back into Iraq and he had an on the record US military brass source.  Jill wouldn't let that be a story.  Tim finally managed to squeeze it into a report on Syria -- two paragraphs buried in there.

Jill was trash and so is her son.  Poor Jill, disgraced.  And her son's once promising career no more.  Yes, I had a hand in the departure of Jill -- a hand (Elaine actually documented my role at her site, my part -- in the lead up to Jill being fired) -- from the paper.  But when it came to take down her son, that was pretty much 72% me.  You're welcome, Jill.  The Iraqi people pay for your sins, it's the least I can do to make sure that you and your son are miserable.

Jill's gone (and exposed as a racist at the paper).

If Jill were still at the paper, we wouldn't get this announcement:



On the 15th anniversary of the American invasion of Iraq, we are relaunching At War, which began as a blog for our journalists and contributors in Baghdad years ago. You can read more about that here.
One contributor, Matt Ufford, writes about rolling into Iraq on a tank, as a Marine. Above, U.S. troops keeping watch as the Iraqi Ministry of Transportation burned in April 2003.
In our Op-Ed section, the Iraqi-born novelist Sinan Antoon writes about how he opposed the invasion, and he mourns what has happened since.
“The invasion of Iraq is often spoken of in the United States as a ‘blunder,’ or even a colossal mistake,’” he writes. “It was a crime.”


We wouldn't get that if Jill were still at the paper.  But she's gone.  Scribbling a weekly column for THE GUARDIAN -- a foreign newspaper -- and trying to pretend like that qualifies as disgrace when it's shame, she's bathed in shame and embarrassment.

Those objecting to Judith Miller?  Miller's reports were wrong.  Miller didn't make up things, she just trusted her sources and trusted them way too much.  After the fact, Jill tried to whisper to the press to make herself look better.  Reality, Jill had the power to stop Miller's reporting but she supported it.  A lot of people want to pretend that Judith Miller is responsible for everything.  She's responsible for what she wrote.  Others above her are responsible for it making it into print and for it making it into print the way it did.

People sometimes say no lessons were learned from this ongoing war.

How could lessons be learned?

There was no accountability.

MOTHER JONES, to name but one outlet, rewarded pro-War Cheerleaders like Kevin Drum.

The people who were right, to this day, are not applauded.

The people who lied are still in positions of power -- even in the press.

How can lessons be learned when that happens?

Also true, we didn't demand accountability as a people.  When Ed Needham did his "trend" story about bug chasers (AIDS), outraged readers called that junk nonsense out and demanded that ROLLING STONE extend their subscriptions by one issue.  Imagine if NYT subscribers had done that with regards to all the editions of the paper with lies published as fact?

The following community sites updated: