Monday, February 13, 2023

U2, Carly Simon

If you watched the Super Bowl last night, you probably saw the ad for U2 which is going to do a residency in Vegas because . . .  Well because they're dried up and have nothing left to offer?  They peaked early and never recovered.  Imagine the Rolling Stones doing a Vegas residency so early in their career.  

Of course, it's not really U2.  The youngest member (61 years old) found the idea "tacky" and has refused to play Vegas.  So you won't have Larry Mullen Jr. on stage playing drums.  They'll bring in a scab.

U2's not a group, it's a gathering of greedy men and they're willing to bastardize the band -- Paul, Adam and The Edge -- in yet another desperate grab for cash.  

I give props to Larry for not worshiping the almighty dollar.  The others really are disgusting. 

If you missed it, my "Kat's Korner: Carly Simon LIVE AT GRAND CENTRAL" posted Sunday at THE COMMON ILLS.  I really love that album.  


I looked to see about any press on the album.  Not finding much but I'll note what I have found.  FORBES looked at albums released that week and included Carly:

Carly Simon

Live at Grand Central

It must have been a strange sight for regular commuters at New York City's Grand Central Terminal in 1995 to witness Carly Simon and her band perform a surprise show there. What these New Yorkers got instead was a memorable concert experience as documented on Live at Grand Central, which has now been released as an audio recording for the first time. The grand space and the acoustics of the terminal provided a perfect setting for Simon as she vibrantly performed material from her then-recent album Letters Never Sent (including “Touched by the Sun,” the title song and “Davy”) as well as the classics (“Anticipation,” “Jesse,” "That's the Way I've Always Heard It Should Be" and “Coming Around Again,” among them).


AMERICAN SONGWRITER opens with:


Carly Simon/Live At Grand Central/MRI/Legacy
Four out of Five Stars

Carly Simon was famously known for having stage fright, which may explain why her concert at New York’s iconic Grand Central Station, performed in April 1995, was unannounced and took commuters entirely by surprise. The fact that it was her first live performance in 14 years further attests to her reticence to take the stage. And yet, choosing a locale as public as the middle of the station does make one wonder if, in fact, she was as fearful as her reputation implied.

The performance was filmed and shown on Lifetime Television and subsequently released commercially later that year. That was likely a way to assuage her fans and conveniently allow her to avoid appearing in public, at least until she returned to the stage in the latter part of 2008.


And this is the opening of RIFF's review:


Carly Simon has had tremendous staying power in the music industry, with her successes and accolades spanning five decades, despite a shyness that sometimes made performing a difficult proposition for her. She’s hesitated to label her condition as stage fright, but she was famously one of the few artists allowed to pre-tape her “Saturday Night Live” appearance. Perhaps her anxiety was lessened by playing unannounced, as she did for a Lifetime TV special filmed at New York’s Grand Central Terminal in April 1995. With no advance hype, commuters were treated to Simon and a full band performing some of her biggest hits. Until recently, this special had been relegated to VHS tapes, but now it’s been digitized and re-edited for release on audio and Blu-ray.

Grammy-winning producer and engineer Frank Filipetti obviously took great care with the remix of this performance. For a concert recorded in the cavernous Grand Central, it doesn’t sound muddy or echoey at all. The instruments are clean and distinct, with Simon’s vocals loud and clear at the top of the mix. The recording now sparkles and properly showcases her gorgeous contralto. Can an artist who’s just been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame rightly be called underrated? Perhaps not, but Simon’s work is certainly due for the kind of renaissance Joni Mitchell’s has been having of late. And in that respect, this newly refurbished Grand Central concert has arrived right on time.


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


Monday, February 13, 2023.  THE NATION is so broke and corrupt, it's using interns to churn out bad copy and we're all suffering as  a result.

ADDED: MARCI E-MAILED TO REMIND ME THAT I FORGOT TO NOTE ROSEANNE BARR'S COMEDY SPECIAL DEBUTS TONIGHT ON FOX NATION.  THANK YOU, MARCI.  (SEE "Libya, Roseanne.")


A little over 90 minutes ago, THE NATION published a piece by Zurie Pope:


If a State of the Union Address holds any real purpose, it is for the president to amplify his past accomplishments while giving a preview of what’s to come. Although President Joe Biden largely accomplished that goal on Tuesday, some topics were, of course, given more time than others. Biden rightly used his speech to alleviate concerns about inflation and corner Republicans on Medicare. But, unfortunately, as the right’s crusade against queer people intensifies, LGBTQ rights were scarcely mentioned.

Though the address lasted more than one hour, the totality of Biden’s comments on the subject could be found in two lines: asking Congress to pass the Equality Act, to ensure that “LGBTQ Americans, especially transgender young people, can live with safety and dignity,” and referencing the recently passed Respect for Marriage Act. “While the legislation was intended as a buttress against right-wing attacks on LGBTQ+ rights, activists have criticized the Respect for Marriage Act for writing Republican religious liberty exemptions into law and focusing on an issue that impacts only a small and wealthy portion of the LGBTQ+ community,” wrote Theia Chatelle in The Nation last month.


We've already called out Joe for those two sentences -- and we noted them when we covered the State of the Union Address.  We didn't, like Theia Chattelle, play a dumb bitch.


Marriage equality does not just effect "a small and wealthy portion of the LGBTQ+ community."  What a stupid ass thing to write.  We were kind when it was posted and ignored because it was so stupid.  It's very telling that idiot Theia didn't write of the same legislation that it only "impacts a small and wealthy portion of the interracial marriage community."

See, the bitch is stupid, but she's not that stupid.


And maybe an undergraduate at Yale is the last person to talk about anything in terms of history or, for that matter, in terms of wealth.  In other words, zip up your pants, Theia, your dangling wealth and privilege are hanging out.  


Entitled and stupid, that's Theia -- a PUFFIN FOUNDATION winner on top of everything else.  The entitlement reeks off Theia like body odor.  


I was on the phone with a friend at THE NATION who had e-mailed saying, "Please highlight" the article we linked to and that THE NATION was finally going to take LGBTQ+ issues seriously.  




Bout damn time but THE NATION's still not quite there.


Maybe that's the problem when you highlight the immature?


First off, Joe Biden made a huge mistake in the SOUA by refusing to seriously take on the attacks on the LGBTQ+ community.  It was the victory lap that he took for the 'meaningless' (to Theia) that helped his polling (briefly) climb.  Then came more stupidity from Joe with the classified documents being mishandled and people slowly grasping that the original claims put forward and attributed by Joe's lawyers were not accurate.  That brought Joe back down to his low polling numbers.


The speech could have influenced the numbers if Joe had spoken seriously about the LGBTQ+ community.  No, it wouldn't have won over the right-wing or the Jimmy Dore and Aaron Mates who hate gay people.  You're never going to win those freaks over.  But there is the segment of middle America that does not condone hate, that rallies against attack on LGBTQ+ people.  


They recoil in disgust when they read a report like this one by Daniel Villarreal (LGBTQ NATION):


A Catholic school teacher says the local archdiocese fired her after seeing a photo of her kissing her same-sex partner.

Maggie Barton wanted to share values from her religious upbringing with future generations, so she became a technology and media teacher at the All Souls Catholic School in Englewood, Colorado. For six years, she taught kindergarten through 8th-grade classes. She called the school community her “second family.”

She was fired after someone sent the archdiocese an image of her kissing her same-sex partner. The image was taken from the partner’s social media account, Barton said. While the archdiocese said it won’t fire Catholic school teachers for having same-sex attraction, it apparently will fire them for acting on it. 

“The school found it necessary to conclude the teacher’s employment because she did not honor the commitments she agreed to in her contract with the school,” the archdiocese said in a statement to CBS Colorado.

In Barton’s employee contract, she agreed to “personally exemplify the characteristics of Catholic living” and “[refrain] from taking any public position or conducting … herself in a manner that is contrary to the teachings of the Catholic church.” Her relationship violated that agreement, the archdiocese said.

Of course, she disagrees.

“I don’t think that being in a same-sex relationship or someone’s sexual orientation hinders your ability to [embody Catholic values],” she said. “It is hard for me to wrap my head around how these issues are still possible and things like this can still happen.”


This stuff took place all in the time in the past.  Lillian Hellman's THE CHILDREN'S HOUR was first staged in 1934, after all.  And Americans were bothered by it then -- not the lesbian teacher, but how she is treated because of who she is.  And Americans today are bothered by the firing of the teacher.  

Last week, when AOC noted the attacks on the LGBTQ+ community, she rightly said of the GOP, "This is the party that cannot pick on anyone their own size."  (Words are easy for AOC.  We haven't seen any follow up or action from her.)


Joe was seen as fighting for something important -- unless you're the dismissive Theia who doesn't know about life because she's so immature -- and Americans liked that and the polls registered it.  When giving a State of the Union Address, a smart president plays to their strengths.  Joe didn't.  And no one cared.  The phony talk of how he landed a home room or accomplished anything were revealed, within 24 hours, as hollow lies.  The rating weren't there, the people just didn't care enough to tune in the way they had the year before.  


That's on Joe.  He had a home run with the legislation and he failed to capitalize on it.


Newsflash to THE NATION, I don't need to hear from mental midgets in their sophomore years of college about LGBTQ+ history.  You damn well better believe that I had lived and I had read before I started weighing in on feminism.  The ahistorical approach doesn't cut it for me.  Nor does having to put in the work by myself.  Yes, after we hit over and over for two weeks here on the reality that the ludicrous 'grooming' charges were a revival of Anita Bryant's hate mongering in the 70s, we did see some people begin to work that into their own writing.  But honestly, as always, I'm still thinking, "If I was smart enough to bring it up -- me, the dumb one -- how stupid is everyone else?"


I do not understand why this issue is being farmed out to glorified interns.  I do understand, at this moment and time, when we need to grasp history and roots, THE NATION employees useless (and elderly) writers like Joan Walsh and Kattha Pollitt but can't find anyone 30 or over to write about LGBTQ+ issues?


Because those are our issues.  I say "our."  I'm not a lesbian.  But these issues impact my life, impactmy understanding of democracy and equality. 


And I don't some little simp who thinks they're being brave by knocking something like marriage equality and claiming its only for the rich.  You stupid idiot, you deeply stupid idiot.


Rights are fought for and won and it allows other rights to emerge.  


I shouldn't keep calling these children stupid.  Clearly the stupid people are the one who waived these juvenile pieces of writing into print and online publication.


The article that I linked to by Pope is less stupid than the one he cites by Theia.  But it's still deeply stupid.  He wants to talk about how gay voters can't or won't go anywhere else with their votes.  That's not really the issue even if we're talking solely campaign politics -- which is all the young and stupid can conceptualize because that's all the left media offers as action (voting). 


Even if you're going to stay on his tiny island of a topic, the reality is that the Dems don't fear losing the votes.  What they fear is losing the money.  And they do lose money.


In 1988, a Dukakis staffer was speaking to me and two other women -- all of us donors.  She elected to tell us about this 'ridiculous' woman she met the other day and how that woman wanted to help and how that woman volunteered to do this and that and this and that and . . .


It was all so ridiculous, we were told, because the woman was clearly a d**e.  


And the staffer (also a woman) then paused for the laugh.


None was forthcoming.  As I again introduced the staffer to the woman on my left, I added, "You may have missed it but she's an out lesbian."


Yeah, the party's learned over time that they can't get away with that.  


Because lesbians like my friend won't let them and because allies like myself won't let them.

THE NATION needs to stop farming out serious work to interns.  If they have no other choice, they need to ensure that they are editing the pieces.  The ones that THE NATION have aren't smart enough -- not informed enough, not analytical enough -- to write for a national magazine not named SASSY.  That I have to point that out, is really sad.  Then again, I may be the only one who bothered to read their work.

Zachary B. Wolf (CNN) notes:

       

Democratic Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia, after trying for 10 years, is on the cusp of getting Congress to repeal the authorizations that led the US into war against Iraq in the early ’90s and again in the early ‘00s.

Along with a Republican, Sen. Todd Young of Indiana, Kaine has support from the White House and a bipartisan coalition. He and Young told CNN’s Jake Tapper about their proposal on “The Lead” on Thursday.    


Ten years.  Ten years and they can't end the authorization.  Let alone bring US troops back home.  


Kat's "Kat's Korner: Carly Simon LIVE AT GRAND CENTRAL" went up Sunday.  The following sites updated: