Root Boy Slim and the Sex Change Band, 180

ALBUM: Zoom (1979)

MVC Rating: 3.5/$$$

A demented party record.

I remember in college the song ‘Do the Gator’ with lyrics:

There’s a dance you can do, if your drunk like me, get down and boogie horizontally … the hell with later, do the Gator, don’t be a hesitator, do the Gator

Root Boy falls in that odd-ball, country blues comedy space next to Mojo Nixon and Skid Roper and the Beat Farmers. While the ‘Gator’ and ‘World War III’ rock out with apocalyptic fervor, none of these bands have a song that burns up the world like ‘Funky Western Civilization‘ by Tonio K.

A Group Called Smith, Gayle McCormick 184, 183, 182, 181

ALBUMS: A Group Called Smith (1969); Minus-Plus (1970; Gayle McCormick (Self-entitled solo by Smith vocalist 1972); Flesh and Blood (1972, solo).

MVC Ratings: Group 4.5/$$$; Minus-Plus 4.0/$$$; Gayle McCormick 4.0/$$$$; Flesh and Blood 4.0/$$$$$.

NOTE: This group is not connected in any way to the British 80’s group ‘The Smiths.’

This group, and notably Gayle McCormick, are a great bargain bin find. Although it appears over the past year that prices for these are going up. I have them all except McCormick’s last album.

When I was about 10 or 11, I first heard the song ‘Take a Look Around.’ It was on an 8-track tape player that came with the used car we had bought, a Pontiac which I later wrecked as a 16-year-old.

Years go by and I hear the song again. I track down the band’s name and started a little mini-collection. ‘Take a Look Around You,’ was a minor hit in 1970, off the Minus-Plus album. That album was solid straight ahead rock and roll with a secret weapon. That weapon being McCormick, who stands on a front porch with band mates on the cover their first album, blond hair over her shoulders, hip-hugger jeans and a psychedelic belt-tie shirt. Stereotypes aside, she didn’t look like she sang. Her voice had reach and volume.

Quentin Tarantino used the song ‘Baby It’s You,’ in his Grindhouse movies. It was Smith’s biggest hit with more than a million copies sold — beating out the Beatles’ version and the original version by the Shirelles. McCormick’s first two solo albums are different. The first is a slick, highly produced collection of pop and soul.

. Her second solo outing, was Flesh and Blood and it is harder rock, hearkening back to some of the Smith’s album sides.

McCormick died in Florida of cancer at age 67. Critic Robert Christgau called them Three Dog Night with a girl singer. I suspect it was intended as an insult, but Three Dog Night was not too shabby at reinterpreting others’ songs. Harry Nillson’s ‘One’ and Randy Newman’s ‘Mama Told Me Not to Come’ to name a couple.

Carly Simon — 187, 186, 185

ALBUMS: No Secrets (1972); Hotcakes (1974); The Best of Carly Simon (1975).

MVC Ratings: No Secrets: 4.5/$$$$; Hotcakes: 4.0/$$$; Best of: $4.0/$$$.

My exposure to Simon and other soft rock, sensitive singer-songwriters such as Carole King, the Carpenters, James Taylor and John Denver came from two places. 1) Radio.

These were the good old days before the Top 40 started weeding out the good stuff. And 2) My wife, Catherine; she turned up the volume on the radio when these songs came on and had no aversion to playing an album side over and over again. Looking at these artists anew, I was struck by the songwriting. Since this is about Simon, we’ll focus on her.

First off, ‘You’re So Vain is arguably the best put-down of a former lover you’ll ever hear. That’s a qualifier because H-A-T-R-E-D by Tonio K. is likely the best on the venom scale of measuring and, Tonio’s song hasn’t received playtime due to its profanities.)

‘You’re So Vain’ became a favorite guessing game centered on whom she was talking about. Warren Beatty? James Taylor, whom she was married for a few years? Mick Jagger? David Geffin?

You gave away the things you loved and one of them was me, I had some dreams, they were clouds in my coffee, clouds in my coffee and, you’re so vain, you probably think this song is about you

In a game of cat-and-mouse, Simon has teased the world for years about whom it might be, although confirmed that one of the verses was about Beatty.

This was a worldwide No. 1 song and she was no one-hit wonder, putting out great hits like ‘Haven’t Got Time for the Pain,’ ‘Anticipation,’ ‘That’s the Way I’ve Always Heard it Should Be,’ and ‘No Secrets’ to name just a few.

As a songwriter, she may never approach her contemporary Carole King, one of the all-time best songwriters, but that’s she’s close enough to be used as a comparison puts her in an elite group.

How I stopped the horrific hallucinations that threatened my sanity, my family, and my life

NOTE: This is an account of a particularly difficult time in my battle against Lewy body dementia when I lived for months hallucinating around the clock. Much of this occurred May, 2020 through November 2020 ending in December . I will tell you more about escaping the clutches of my hallucinations but first I’m going to describe one of my hallucinations, a serial hallucination involving a lot of the same people or beings. Addendum, June 23, 2021: See this for updated information.

———————–

I didn’t really know where we were sleeping, my wife, Catherine, and I.

It was like a laboratory with lots of stainless steel and glass walls so we could be observed. I hated going to bed every night because I knew that was when the attacks would come.

In this ‘place’ which was actually my home, I felt like I was being studied, to see how well I performed under pressure as a Lewy body patient.

There were Beauty and the Beast style anamorphic scenes where lamps would talk to stuffed animals, where bed time was dreaded because I knew I’d be attacked by my ongoing nemesis Red John – a name I gave him because of his hair color. I also realized, after I had named him, that it was the same name of a fictional serial killer in the TV drama ‘The Mentalist.’

My Red John had no legs and could swim like a dolphin.    

Oddly as this hallucination unfurls, he said he loved me and practically sexually assaulted me in our first encounter. I was so flummoxed by his maneuvering and my confusion as to where I was — I told people, family and friends, about Red John but was told he didn’t exist — that he was a hallucination. Nevertheless, I took to wearing several pairs of underwear in addition to athletic pants with the drawstring tied tight.

Red John put big eel-like creatures under the sheets at the foot of the bed and they’d slide up toward me — I could see them moving under the bed covers. I knew somehow that one, or all of them, was Red John.

I built blockades with towels and pillows. My wife sleeping next to me seemed oblivious until I’d jump up and pull all the covers off the bed. Sometimes there’d be a platter of raw fish in a part of the sheet. That was freaky but my wife showed me how to make it disappear if you shook the sheets. She never saw the fish so I was amazed at her knowledge of the world I was living in. She’d shake the sheets and I’d watch them disappear in mid-air.
“There, all gone she’d say,” And I’d go back to sleep until I’d look over and see some ghostly white old man with hawk like features and talons for hands appearing to be trying to molest my wife. ‘I’d rip the covers off again to the increasing dismay of my wife, now agitated from the sleeping interruptions. This continued for days. Maybe months.

During that time my wife said she sometimes feared I was trying to assault her, after all she never saw Red John or the other people I saw.

I was furious every night at Red John who I know was watching with a group of younger (teen-aged) kids who seemed to idolize him. And then there were people in lab coats with their pens and notebooks. And cameras, both hidden and not hidden, were aimed at me.

My anger was beginning to override my fear.

One night when Red John came rolling around, I leaped out of bed and hit him two times in the face, stuffed him in a burlap bag, from I don’t know where, and started swinging him around over my head singing the theme song to the Beverly Hillbilly’s television show. My strategy was to act like a lunatic to keep them off guard, and I was succeeding.

I told Red John they wouldn’t put me in the other hospital because I was just a little too ‘nuts’ for them. I said it in my crazy voice. Loud. Remember I’m still swinging Red John around in a bag telling him I was going to throw him down the stairs.

I didn’t. Throw him down the stairs, that is.

But his attitude toward me thereafter was one of wary respect.

My middle daughter Emily was in the bedroom next door (somehow this all morphed back to my house) and she came out and saw me swinging around a pillow and yelling at it. I let out a string of profanities and let the world know that I wasn’t going to take any more abuse. Emily said she never saw Red John just me, screaming with the pillows and sheets.

I never really knew where I was.

At one point in my hallucinations I was positive it was a rehab center for people who had lost limbs and by night it was a sort-of pick-up bar for these amputees.

My other working theory that it was a university research team investigating how Lewy body patients react to stress. But I couldn’t understand how they did the special effects — the disappearing and the telepathy and animated furniture. They have some of the best special effects this side of Hollywood, I told my brother.

I asked Red John, who looked a little like Sean Penn: ‘Where are you from, or where is this place? The 7th dimension or another universe or what?

He smiled, I think, and began whispering as these beings did. But sometimes they would yell talk. It seemed extremely fast – this talking, kind of like saying the word ‘onomatopoeia’ over and over again as fast as you can. As they did, their bodies would vibrate, sometimes disappearing altogether.

They can see each other and they could see me. I could  see them which kind of freaked them out.

As soon as they  looked at me they’d lock eyes and I knew they knew I could see them.  I  used this as an advantage. They seemed to tolerate the human who could actually see them. I took this to mean they were usually the unseen.

My goal was to get out and back to this normal life I once  had. I was beginning to grow stronger and less stressed living in the hallucinated state. I got better at knowing I was in a hallucination. I learned to avoid eye contact lest I get pulled down a rabbit hole, or the lair of a creature scarier than a rabbit.

Scientists tell us these hallucinations come from our brains — that brain uses its memories to create this other world. I learned if I told them they did not exist many would disappear — poof. (Red John was resistant to this kind of tactic.

So they may not be real in a traditional measurement detection but I say if you have a full immersion hallucination like I did, it will shake your science beliefs to the core.

You can say hallucinations are not real but they changed my life, forever.

NO MORE RECORD SKIPPING

By all rights I should be dead by now. I feel. But like the reporter I was trained to be, I went in, walked up to the edge of what seemed to be the biggest story of my life. And I came back with notes.

I was diagnosed with Lewy body dementia in 2016, after having been earlier that year diagnosed with Parkinson’s. For Lewy body, death on average comes about 4 –8 years after diagnosis. But some of us live 10 or more years longer.

Thousands have followed my record countdown (myvinylcountdown.com) until it went silent last July. It’s back up and running, I’m happy to report.

Some wondered if I had reneged on my promise of finishing all 678 reviews before I die. I haven’t and I won’t. I have renewed life. I have 188 reviews to go.

The big question is: How did I break free from this disorienting, dark – but interesting world?

The big answer is: A new medication and a reorganization of my medications.

The new med is called pimavanserin, or its commercial name, Nuplazid. I am in a project in which I receive doses, free of charge, for one year. I am a happy Guinea pig. It has given my real life back again.

Now anti-psychotic drugs are a powerful and sometimes dangerous tool. Nuplazid has been approved for Parkinson’s psychosis but not ‘dementia-related psychosis.’ So what about Lewy body?

My take is that Parkinson’s psychosis and Lewy body dementia are basically the same thing.

My doctor, Dr. Kasia Rothenberg, MD, PhD, at the esteemed Cleveland Clinic, found out about this study and had to fight the drug overseers, to get it prescribed to me because I had this Lewy diagnosis.

Lewy and Parkinson’s have the same oversupply of the protein alpha-synuclein killing the brain cells. In Parkinson’s the proteins are concentrated in one place whereas Lewy body, the proteins accumulate and kill brain cells in different regions, according to my understanding of the diseases. In the end in some cases Parkinson’s hits the brain in a way that Lewy does — causing hallucinations.

Yet the box says for use with Parkinson’s psychosis only in big bold letters. Dr. Rothenberg, like all good doctors, saw an opportunity to switch things up for the good health of the patient. It has worked.

But remember always, always, consult your doctor or multiple doctors when faced with an illness, especially one as serious and misunderstood as Lewy body dementia. We have seen a total of six doctors, all of them helping push us on the right path. It’s a journey.

I’ve spent the last five years or more trying to get more attention from drugmakers, doctors, and ordinary people who need to know more. As this shows, Lewy body dementia is left out of the conversation.

One of these days, I hope Lewy will receive some attention and publicity about how it is different but very much like Parkinson’s.

Do I worry these major hallucinations will come back. Of course. I still see what I call remnants of the old hallucinations: Red John winking at me. Faces in windows. And drop-in visits by a character from one of my many hallucinations. I usually smile and say, ‘How is it going?’

END NOTE: It should be emphasized here that I wasn’t asked to write this by the drug company or anyone else. Other than free doses as part of the study group, I received no compensation.

Soft Machine, Robert Wyatt — 190, 189

ALBUMS: Soft Machine II (1969); Robert Wyatt Old Rottenhat (1985)

MVC Ratings: Soft Machine II 4.0/$$$$; Wyatt 4.0/$$$$

While Pink Floyd began searching the universe in the late 1960s, The Soft Machine was already in another universe. I’m not saying the Soft Machine was better, but the band was certainly an exploratory pioneer with its use of different song structures (suites, e.g.) and odd time signatures. Their first album with it’s longer songs and more traditional presentations was widely praised by critics if not record buyers.

The avant-garde jazz-rock wasn’t for everybody. Just .glance at the cover photo (which is featured in a Ramsey Archibald photo collage on the homepage of my blog myvinylcountdown.com). That, and the names of the songs will tell you this isn’t a teeny-bop band.

Here’s the line-up of songs for the second album, which I have (a WUXTRY 1978 used record purchase):

1. Pataphysical Introduction, Pt. I 2. A Concise British Alphabet, Pt. 1 3. Hibou Anemone And Bear 4. A Concise British Alphabet, Pt. II 5. Hullo der 6. Dada Was Here 7. Thank You Pierrot Lunaire 8. Have You Ever Bean Grean? 9. Pataphysical Introduction, Pt. II 10. Out Of Tunes 11. As Long As He Lies Perfectly Still 12. Dedicated To You But You Weren’t Listening 13. Fire Engine Passing With Bells Clanging 14. Pig 15. Orange Skin Food 16. A Door Opens And Closes 17. 10: 30 Returns To The Bedroom

Wow. Just wow. (That ‘wow’ was me not another song title).

These song titles probably give you a hint on what kind of sonic vibrations this band produced.

Also in my possession is former Soft Machine drummer Robert Wyatt’s solo album which is easier to listen to in a concentrated listening session or pushed more toward the background. The Wyatt album is a stripped down sound that’s mostly all Wyatt on keyboard and studio wizardry. Wyatt lost use of his legs following a fall from a 4th-floor window of a friend’s house in 1973. That injury motivated him to become a player of multiple instruments.

My Vinyl Countdown: I have ‘only’ 190 records to go

When I started this countdown of the 678 records in my collection, I vowed I would finish before my degenerative brain disease — Lewy body dementia — killed me or rendered me too incapacitated to finish.

Well, that was six years ago. I won’t lie, it has been a bumpy road. I didn’t post for more than six months starting at the end of last Juy (2020) because hallucinations were, shall we say, keeping me occupied. (Post on how we handled my hallucinations later.)

So, I just re-started a few months ago in January as a new medication knocked back most of the hallucinating.

I have 190 to go.

Sounds like a lot, and it is. But I have already under my belt 487 mini-profiles of vinyl records I started collecting in my teens.

That’s a lot of rock and roll (and jazz and blues). It’s all available free at www.myvinylcountdown.com. Also included on the blog but not part of the countdown are more than 100 essays, poems and ranking lists, many centered on Lewy and me.

In the music reviews, the numbers in the headline where the artist is identified there should be a number representing its place in the countdown. (There’s a plus/minus error rate of three I would estimate.)

And as a side bet, I think I’ll break the lifespan averages on this disease. Depending on the source, the average lifespan after diagnosis is anywhere from four to eight years. I’ve got six. I just hope I don’t end up like the poor runner in one of the Carolinas a few years ago, he finished a grueling marathon only to be struck by lightning at the finish line.

For more information see the About Me button on the website. Also check out the Lewy Body Dementia Association site www.lbda.org

Squeeze — 193, 192, 191,

ALBUMS: Argybargy ( 1980); East Side Story ( 1981); Squeeze Singles (1982).

MVC Rating: 4.0/$$$; East 4.0/$$$; Singles 4.0/$$$

I found Argybargy in the cut-out bin in Auburn in about 1980. I remember this for some reason because I was debating whether I should plunk down $2 for this band I only knew from a small write-up in Rolling Stone.

I was a struggling college student for goodness sake. I sold my blood plasma for record money ($15 but you could only do it twice a month, I believe.) So it stands to reason. I didn’t want to spend this blood money on just any record.

Turns out it was a good buy and led me later to buy two other Squeeze albums. The band filled a gap between punk music and softer indie/alternative that was coming out late 1970s and early 80s. Think Elvis Costello or the Housemartins. It was intelligent music with smart lyrics and Beatlesque harmonies.

In fact two members of the band who did most of the writing — Difford and Tillbrook — were likened to McCartney and Lennon, a comparison that was flattering but also a big balloon of expectations on the verge of over-inflation.

Of the three albums I have, I’d have to recommend as a first purchase, Argybargy, for sentimental reasons and it is good. They had several low level hits, ‘Tempted,’ ‘Pulling Mussels from a Shell,’ and If I Didn’t Love You.’

Lyric sample from ‘Mussels: ‘But behind the chalet, a holiday’s complete and I feel like William Tell … pulling mussels from a shell.’

I didn’t say I knew what the lyrics meant.

George Strait 194

ALBUM: Does Fort Worth Ever Cross Your Mind (1985)

MVC Rating: 4.0/$$$$$

On such a wide-ranging project as this one, I had anticipated we would run into some obscure acts like this feller I pulled from my ‘S’ section. Well I could see from the beginning that this would be a country album on account of the fact he had a cowboy hat on.

George Strait. Good name for a cowboy singer. Let me look for some articles on him to let readers know I do my homework. Hmmmmm, here we go Wikipedia has a long write-up. Most No. 1 hits in country, In fact, he has the most No. 1 hits of any one in any genre.

George Strait is known as the “King of Country“and is considered one of the most influential and popular recording artists of all time. (From Wikipedia).

Picture here my head exploding

I received this album free so maybe played it a couple times. I exaggerated my ignorance for effect but I really had no idea Strait was that big and influential. As I’ve said before this exercise of reviewing all of my records sometimes ‘learns’ me. I already have listened to it and have a new favorite song: ‘Any Old TIme.’ The going back to the roots thing really worked for Strait.

And that’s the strait, er, straight scoop.

Jules Shears, 195

ALBUM: The Eternal Return (1985)

MVC Rating; 3.0/$$$

This is a solo album from a guy who used to front a band called the Polar Bears. I see.

His claim to fame as far as I can tell is he wrote the song, ‘If She Knew what She Wants. ‘

The Bangles turned Shear’s bouncy synth laden

original into a jangly radio hit in the mid-1980s. Lyric sample: ‘If she knew what she wants, I’d be giving it to her.’

Shear also had a minor hit with ‘Here He Comes.’

‘Here he comes, he’s so square. I dig him anyway.’

This is one of those albums that the real jaunty gems are counter pointed by too much that is forgettable.

Sade 196,

ALBUM: Diamond Life (1985)

MVC Rating: 4.0/$$$

Light as a feather this is. But it’s not fluffy (like a feather pillow).

It’s more a single feather floating to the ground:

Falling down.

Torch. Cool Jazz. Soft Pillow. Whatever you want to call it.

It is what it is. Lighter than air. Well played.