Wednesday, August 22, 2018

Carly Simon, Mick Jagger, the Mamas and the Papas, Amy Winehouse and Prince

A lost recording has emerged of a duet between Carly Simon and Mick Jagger.  It's thought to be "Fragile" and recorded in 1972.

I always think it's great when lost recordings are found.

One of my saddest moments was a UK boxed set of The Mamas and the Papas.  Love the boxed set and the great songs but so sad that in an essay for the set Michelle Phillips notes that the set represents everything the group recorded.  That meant no lost recordings that might emerge.

I'm the type who buys Amy Winehouse's odds and ends, that album they put out after she died.  And I hunt for something wonderful even though, in almost every case, the best stuff was released already while the lost stuff tends to be poorer quality.

Prince will obviously be an exception.  He recorded mountains and mountains of songs.

I don't think they can be shaped into an excellent album.  If Prince were alive, I think he could do that himself.  But without him to put the tracks together, I don't think we're in store for another excellent album.  But I wouldn't be surprised if he didn't have 30 to 50 great songs -- maybe even more -- still in the process of being released.


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


DOD names the soldier killed in Iraq this week as Chief Warrant Officer 3 Taylor J. Galvin, 34, from Spokane, Wash. Says crash occurred in Nineveh province, in Sinjar.







Army pilot killed in Iraq on 9th deployment. 9th deployment.





U.S. soldier killed Sunday in Iraq helicopter crash was on his ninth combat deployment, officials say.





DOD: Chief Warrant Officer 3 Taylor J. Galvin, 34, from Spokane, Washington, died Aug. 20, 2018, in Baghdad, Iraq, as a result of injuries sustained when his helicopter crashed in Sinjar, Ninevah Province, Iraq. The incident is under investigation.





Chad Garland (STARS AND STRIPES) explains, "Galvin’s death brings to 11 the total number of U.S. troops killed in Iraq and Syria this year. He is the eighth American killed in a helicopter crash in Iraq; in March, seven servicemembers were killed in the downing of an Air Force HH-60 Pave Hawk in western Anbar province."  THE SPOKESMAN REVIEW notes:

Galvin was married and a father of two, according to an article on Military.com.
He graduated from Lakeside High School in Nine Mile Falls in 2002. He was a member of the school’s football and wrestling teams.
Scott Jones, a former wrestling coach at Lakeside High School, said Galvin was one of the favorites of the coaching staff.

Dylan Smith (TUSCON SENTINEL) provides an overview of Galvin's military career and notes:

His awards and decorations include one Air Medal (C device); Air Medal (3OLC); Army Commendation Medal(2OLC); Joint Service Air Medal (OLC); Army Achievement Medal (2OLC); Meritorious Unit Award; Army Good Conduct Medal (3); National Defense Service Medal (2); Afghanistan Campaign Medal; Iraq Campaign Medal; Global War On Terrorism Expeditionary Medal; Global War On Terrorism Service Medal; NATO Medal; Noncommissioned Officer Professional Development Ribbon; Army Service Ribbon; Overseas Service Ribbon (3); Combat Action Badge and Senior Army Aviator Badge.
There are about 5,000 U.S. troops deployed in Iraq, with another 2,000 operating in Syria. About 14,000 U.S. forces are in Afghanistan, 17 years after the first American invasion.



The crash that took Galvin's life also left three US service members so injured that they had to be evacuated.


In other violence, REUTERS notes, "A suicide attack on a former Iraqi lawmaker’s house killed at least six tribal militiamen and wounded seven others in a northern Sunni Muslim village early on Wednesday, police said."


Protests continue in Iraq and over 50 protesters have been killed so far.


: Peaceful protests continue after demonstrator killed in Basra





Pictured above is the late Harith al-Salmi.  GCHR reports:


On 14 August 2018, a protest tent, erected by demonstrators who live in Ezzedine Salim (formerly Al-Hawair) and neighbouring areas, in front of the West Qurna 2 petrol field in Basra was attacked by the security forces, who burned the tent and beat the demonstrators with batons. Three demonstrators were severely injured. Among the injured was well-known activist Harith Al-Salmi, 33 years old, who was taken to hospital where he died the next day. The medical report obtained by the Gulf Centre for Human Rights (GCHR) said his death was caused by a fractured skull.



Matthew Ayton (MEE) observes:

Demonstrations began, and are still ongoing, in oil-rich Basra, home to 70 percent of Iraq’s oil production, yet the majority of jobs in the industry are given to foreign contractors rather than locals. Protesters in the southern city have called for increased employment opportunities and an end to slum-like living conditions and corruption among Baghdad’s political elite. 
In response, Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi - often coupled with that hackneyed word “moderate” in Western journalese - dispatched the country’s “elite counter-terrorism service” to swiftly crush the protests before momentum could reach truly inconvenient levels. This was the same unit used in the battle to retake Mosul from the Islamic State (IS) group.
Within days, seven people in Basra had been killed and many mercilessly beaten, which led to protests in other parts of the country. Accounts in Arabic media vary, but at least 12 protesters are believed to have been killed by regime forces, while hundreds more languish in their dungeons, with some reportedly tortured.
This unavoidably raises the question: where is that “representative government” and constitutional guarantee of “complete freedom of expression and assembly” that Bremer extolled all those years ago? 





2018 has been, so far, another very hot summer in Iraqi politics, thousands of Iraqis have taken the streets to protest | Find all the information to understand why and which could the consequences in the new … …







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