Towse: views from the hill

September 20, 2007

Who knew? Brian Hyland

Filed under: life,music,people,video — Towse @ 5:46 am

I was reading someone’s blog tonight and they mentioned Brian Hyland and Gypsy Woman.

Gypsy Woman? What? I knew Gypsy Woman, of course, but had never associated it with Hyland. Why would I? I knew Hyland because of his big hit in the summer of 1962, Sealed With A Kiss. I know it was 1962 because that was the summer after fifth grade, the school year when I’d swooned over Phil Johnston, whose sister Sheila was in my older sister’s class. When school ended in June, Phil’d up and moved away. Sealed With A Kiss, was my anthem that summer as I mooned about. Sealed with a kiss, if only.

Same Brian Hyland? How many Brian Hyland’s singing in that time frame could there be?

So, I popped /”brian hyland” “gypsy woman” “sealed with a kiss”/ into Google and found out Hyland wasn’t a one hit wonder. He was indeed the same dude and, furthermore, his first and biggest hit (recorded in 1960 when he was a sophomore in high school) was Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polka-Dot Bikini, written by Paul Vance and Lee Pockriss.

Who knew?

Last, but not least, my Web searching scored me a vid of Hyland lip-synching Sealed With A Kiss on some bandstand show, probably Dick Clark’s.

Check out the dancers! There’s a classic nerd with black rimmed glasses and plaid jacket and a girl doing what looks like the Frug. (No, not those on the stage behind him. Later in the video. Watch! The guy she’s dancing with is dressed in a buttoned cardigan sweater. No lie!)

Nostalgia hits hard tonight.

We are children of the stars

Filed under: music,people — Towse @ 1:13 am

Love Kristofferson’s voice.

Video of a song from last year’s album: In the News

June 16, 2007

Eric Burdon, remember him?

Filed under: history,life,music — Towse @ 4:39 am

I’m just like so bummed.

His nibs sez, “Hey. Look at this!”

Eric Burdon and the Animals are playing at the Chukchansi Gold Resort And Casino in Coarsegold, CA.

Oh.

[heart sinks]

Those were the days, my friend.

[/heart sinks]

June 11, 2007

On a Sunday …

Filed under: life,music,restaurants — Tags: — Towse @ 6:07 pm

Mellow day yesterday.

I’d been planning to sort books but we couldn’t figure out timing what with our evening plans. By the time I started thinking about how to spend my Sunday, it was almost midday and I’d have to get back here before 5 p.m. … and was it worth the going and returning … so we just continued on doing what we were doing: we hung out, French toast for breakfast, Sunday papers, picked up the figs dropped on the walking path, sat out on the wall talking with the downstairs neighbors about the roofers and repair projects, read, watered, the usual.

We left about 5 p.m., walked down to Washington Square Park and took the 30 to Market and then the 71 up Haight to Divisadero. 6 p.m. reservation at Le Metro Cafe (Divisadero and Page) and we were only five minutes or so late. The guy seating us said, “You’ve been here before, haven’t you?”

“Yes, we had a long conversation about Nepal.”

“Oh. Yes. I remember. I have news then for you. Tonight is our last night serving French food. After tonight we will close for remodeling and reopen serving Nepalese food. Small plates. The plates will be $10 or less.”

“Exciting times,” we said.

So we chatted about the change and how long the restaurant would be closed (“Two weeks, we hope…” We all laughed … “Well, good luck with that,” we said.) and what the new restaurant would be called (“Kathmandu”).

I mentioned that my nephew had just got back from a trip to Kathmandu and Maratika and other places. (He’d spent most of his time with Rinpoche. After he got back, he sent us a very entertaining travelogue about his trip adventures with scenery shots and a shot of him with Rinpoche and street scenes and photographs of the ubiquitous Kathmandu monkeys and roosters and other folk.)

Most of the diners last night were neighbors, stopping in for a last Sunday night meal before the restaurant closed for a bit. We had a nice dinner, which I won’t detail mouthful by mouthful because the next time we’re there the food will be entirely different. Suffice to say, the meal was tasty. He brought us each a glass of port to go with dessert. Must’ve had some in the back and I suppose they won’t be pouring much port in a Nepalese restaurant, but what do I know?

We finished dinner about 7:30 p.m. and walked a few blocks north and across the street to the Independent (Divisadero & Hayes) for the show, and an entertaining show it was, after some initial confusion with “doors open 7:30 p.m.” on the tickets and “doors open 8:30 p.m.” on the Web site …

Opening act was Red Meat, a really good honky tonk band that started out in the Mission District going on fourteen years ago now. Red Meat has a new album due out next month. I plan to get one.

The lead act was Johnny Cash’s Legendary Tennessee Three. Amazing voice the lead singer, Bob Wootton, has. The remaining two of the Tennessee Three — guitarist Bob Wootton on vocals and the legendary (really) WS Holland on drums — are joined by Vicky Wootton (vocals and rhythm guitar)(Bob’s wife), Scarlett Wootton (guitar and vocals)(Bob’s daughter. Scarlett sang a couple solo tunes and has a solo CD coming out momentarily) and Lisa Horngren (upright bass). Wootton joined the Tennessee Three back in 1968 soon after original lead guitarist Luther Perkins died in a house fire.

Last night’s show opened with “Folsom Prison” and closed with “Ring of Fire” and the band and the audience had a good time in between. We had an excellent time. We is just cultured people. I bought a CD. Had the guys sign it after the show.

A numskull next to us was dancing around making twirls and dips with a beer in his hand. I moved a little away from him. He spilt beer on the jacket of the guy sitting at the bar table in front of us. Guy took his jacket off the back of the chair and told the guy to back off. Guy with the beer kept dancing. Kept spilling beer. Guy at the bar table got up to do him bodily harm and security was there before the two connected. Calmed down the guy at the bar table. Told the dancing fool to cool it. And he did for a while and then he just couldn’t not dance. Security kept him away from the guy at the bar table. The evening ended without a fight on the floor. (Did I mention the guy at the bar table was BIG and had TATTOOS and had been drinking beer and looked like he worked out with some serious weights? The dancing fool would’ve been pulverized before he knew that he’d dropped his beer. …)

Waited for maybe fifteen minutes at the bus stop outside NOPA and caught the 21 back to Market and then the 45 back to Washington Square Park. Home again, home again, riggety jig.

The theater in the buses was the usual both coming and going. On the way out we had cross dressers griping because the Haight Street Fair was closing down at 5:30 and they weren’t going to make it in time. Grousing along next to them was a grey, long-haired, paunchy biker type who didn’t like the City shutting down street fairs early and curtailing alcohol … What a buncha mean-spirited types the folks down at City Hall are, they all agreed.

Coming back things were quieter, a bit. No happy drunks like those we had coming back from dinner at our friends’ place a week ago Friday. Seems last night we’d hit the sweet spot (12:30 a.m. or so) and the buses weren’t very full and were relatively quiet. Tucked in soon after 1 a.m.

All in all a mellow day. Another Sunday.

June 2, 2007

They were younger then …

Filed under: music,video — Towse @ 11:27 pm

… and so were we.

This video leaves me feeling … almost a feeling of saudade except that you can’t go home again. You can never go back.

For all you nostalgia freaks, myself included, which of the couples in this video are still a pair?

Or even would be if all the principals were still alive?

John and Yoko? John died.
Paul and Linda? Linda died.
George and Patti? Divorced. George married Olivia. Patti married Clapton. Patti divorced Clapton. George died.
Ringo and Maureen? Divorced. Maureen died.

sigh

May 14, 2007

KFOG KaBoom! 2007 Highlights

Filed under: life,music,San Francisco,URL — Towse @ 6:22 pm

KFOG KaBoom! 2007 Highlights

The video and soundtrack for the 2007 KFOG KaBoom! are up! Twenty minutes worth of fireworks with music.

Enjoy.

February 21, 2007

KFOG Kaboom! 2007

Filed under: music,San Francisco,video — Towse @ 8:26 pm

This post is for the someone who came by this site earlier with a Yahoo! search for /2007 kfog kaboom, piers 30 & 32/

According to the Port Authority Web site (KFOG Kaboom “Hold for Event”), mark May 12th on the calendar for this year’s Kaboom!

a link to the 2006 Kaboom! page with a click to video of the fireworks set to a rock music soundscript.

… and ditto for 2005.

[coinkadinkly: KFOG sent out an e-mail to Fogheads late yesterday telling us that the date this year for Kaboom! is May 12th! Hah.]

January 31, 2007

[URL] midomi

Filed under: media,music,URL — Towse @ 6:26 am

midomi

Oh, my. Whither next, Web 2.0?

“Our mission is to build the most comprehensive database of searchable music. You can contribute to the database by singing in midomi’s online recording studio in any language or genre. The next time anyone searches for that song, your performance might be the top result!”

Oh, my.

[a nod, I suppose, is due the Tech Chronicles at sfgate.com.]

Thanks a lot, guys.

Really!

January 29, 2007

Mash-ups: Jefferson Airplane mashed with Star Trek

Filed under: media,music — Towse @ 11:19 pm

We had some discussion about mash-ups a while back.

Came across a good example today: Jefferson Airplane mashed with Star Trek.

Feed your head.

[repurposed from a post earlier today at sfist]

December 26, 2006

The Godfather of Soul: James Brown

Filed under: music — Tags: — Towse @ 2:49 am

Who would’ve thought after all the years and all that living that James Brown would die on Christmas Day of congestive heart failure/pneumonia in a hospital at age 73?

This was certainly not the way I would’ve ever figured he’d leave this earthly realm. He always seemed more a “bang!” than a whimper-exit sort of guy.

Spin your copy of “I Feel Good” and wish the man a speedy journey. I think he would’ve been amused to see the news reports and obits pour in: Siberian News Online, Virgin.net, Sky News Australia, the Telegraph, BET, PBS, Newsday, Bostonist, Irish Times and fourteen hundred plus others.

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »

Powered by WordPress