What existed before the Big Bang

NOTE: I wrote this humor piece on Monday March 12, 2018, and published it on my website www.myvinylcountdown.com Tuesday morning. Hawking died Wednesday, March 14  (on Albert Einstein’s birthday. Wink wink.) RIP Stephen. I hope you now know the answers to the  questions you’ve been seeking. 

My blog post:

Perusing my news sources on the Internet, I came across this headline.

Stephen Hawking reveals what existed before the Big Bang

Finally, I thought.

Reading …Oops wow, there it is in the second sentence. The answer the headline promised us. What existed  before the Big Bang:

Stephen Hawking says: Nothing.

Nothing? Nothing existed before the Big Bang. Really?

Clickbait headline for sure.

Physicist Stephen Hawking

What is nothing? Nothing is something, right? At least in my mind. If nothing was not something, why would there be a name for it? And why would we say ‘nothing’ is what was there before something? To ‘be there’, one would surmise that it’s something.

The story  on Inhabitat.com was short but did offer the famed quantum physicist Hawking explaining a bit further. So Hawking goes on to explain that “The Euclidean space-time is a closed surface without end like the surface of the Earth.”

He was, of course,  referring to the four-dimensional conceptual model that incorporates the three dimensions of space with time. He goes through a few more quantum physics hijinx like ‘imaginary’ and ‘real’ time before concluding that:

“There is nothing south of the South Pole so there was nothing around before the Big Bang.”

Apparently this was a widely reported interview. Did you hear the collective expression:  ‘Oh, now I get it.’

Neither did I.

Come on Hawking. Use your words to explain — not alienate.  (Which literally means communicate with aliens).

What if I wrote a story about the news business and  how social platforms are shaping the future of social engagement including virtual reality and messaging apps in order to better monetize content. Don’t like that I bet.

So back to your answer. Nothing.

And your follow-up explanation which I boil down to that last sentence: There is nothing south of the South Pole so there was nothing around before the Big Bang.

Ok, I don’t want to mess your theory up but did it surprise you there is nothing south of the South Pole?

Stephen, it’s cold.

I’m sure there’s not much north of the North Pole either, no?

Confused? Me, too.

Albert Einstein

So that’s why I decided to call Bert Einstein, third cousin, twice removed from Albert, the world famous scientist who discovered the equation for the theory of relativity, E=MC squared.

Bert, an accomplished scientist in his own right, discovered the equation for the theory of relatives at Thanksgiving:  E=MYaSS, which asserts that the mass of any given relative’s rear end will grow proportional to the  length of  the buffet line, number of desserts, energy not expended and length of stay  (LOS).

(It’s a complicated formula that also incorporates family squabble intensity and gravy.)

So, here’s how my conversation with Bert Einstein went.

ME: Good morning Dr. Einstein. We were hoping today you would sit down and talk about some big physics like your relative Albert pioneered.

BERT: Yes, yes,  Albert had some good ideas. But he was dumber than  a box full of hammers when it came to common sense. Never owned a hairbrush you know.

ME:  OK, Bert, what about this whole Big Bang and what existed before the Big Bang. Scientist Hawking says there was nothing before the big bang, indicating a beginning and end to our universe. But we wanted to see if perhaps you heard Albert discussing this particular question at any time.

BERT: Oh Albert knew all about what existed before the Big Bang. He just never really got around to putting it on paper. You know Albert had 300 socks and none of them matched? He’d spend hours looking for a  matching sock.

ME: Really?  Forget the  socks. Are you saying he knew about what preceded the Big Bang but never wrote it down? This is a big deal. What did he say was there before the Big Bang?

BERT: Well, let me see if I can remember exactly. He said that before the Big Bang there was ‘nothing’ and ‘something’ and ‘everything.’

ME: Wait, wait a minute. He said there was nothing AND something AND everything? How can that be?

BERT: Well it’s a pretty goddamn big universe. Whaddya expect there to be, a  mustard seed?

ME: Well, I guess I still don’t see how something can come from nothing or how there can be everything and nothing.

BERT: That’s why they were all there before the Big Bang, something, nothing and everything.

ME: All where? Where were they?

BERT: Here. And elsewhere.

ME: Your not helping. I got nothing here.

BERT: Well that’s something.

ME: I want everything. I want to know.

BERT: Well, I’ll leave you with this. It’s a circle. God or the universe or the cosmos, it’s a circle. There’s no beginning or end.

ME: Oh. Well,  now that makes some sense. Did Albert say that?

BERT: No I did, after watching Albert all the years doing laundry. No beginning, no ending. Laundry’s never done.

ME:  Well, Bert, you’ve been a big help.

BERT: De Nada

-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

Cream –560, 559

ALBUMS: Wheel of Fire (1968);  Disraeli  Gears (1967)

MVC Rating: Wheels 4.0/$$$$;l Disraeli, 4.5/$$$$$

Listening to these now after all these years, they sound to my ears  like historical archives.

It’s like finding old Da Vinci sketches that were mind blowing at the time. But now while those flying machines are fun, they don’t really take you anywhere.

Hearing and evaluating these albums properly would be to project yourself to the late 1960s and so you could hear it for the first time. That electrified blues rock  must have been mind blowing upon first and early listens.

But it’s a little bit like when I was around 9 or 10  hearing Wilson Pickett and James Brown for the first time. This was so foreign from the bubblegum music of the day such as the Partridge Family, the Osmonds and Bobby Sherman. (I put the Jackson 5 in a category by themselves, beyond bubblegum.)

Still, you will notice, I give these records high grades because, well, they deserve them. Disraeli being my favorite gets 4.5.

‘Strange Brew,’ and ‘Sunshine of your Love’ were the two hit songs off of Disraeli Gears. ‘White Room’ off of Wheels of Fire was their second biggest selling single after Sunshine.

Listening to them as historic artifacts doesn’t mean they can’t be loved, but for me it’s more that I admire and wonder about some of these. Less blues on Disraeli and more of the  psychedelic tinge that for better or worse would go on to influence groups like Deep Purple, Sabbath and, even, Jimi Hendrix. Or was it  Hendrix, with a 3-piece band as  well , influencing Cream?

But no matter  the song, there was always the expectation Eric Clapton’s stinging guitar would come slip and lash. Jack Bruce on bass, Ginger Baker on drums and Clapton could surely make some noise for a three piece. I remember one of the Beatles responding to the question about how the Beatles got to be the best rock band in the world.

And one of the Beatles said Cream might  be doing some thing better or more progressive than the Beatles. Nice political humble answer.

Based on what I hear here?

Nah.

 

Words, don’t fail me now

Words fail me.

Or should I say: I fail words.

You know that feeling you get when you lean back on two legs of a four-legged chair and suddenly you realize you’ve gone too far? You know that feeling? A split second of feeling totally out of control?

I feel like that all the time.

That joke reformulated by me from deadpan comedian Steven Wright is essentially about words.

There is not  a word for that feeling.

Sure you can say ‘out of control’ or you can say ‘scared’ but none of that matches or encompasses the specific instance of leaning back in a chair and nearly losing it. There’s no one word for that.  In fact, it takes several sentences to explain.

My own word for that? Yikes!

But that doesn’t exactly capture everything. And that’s also the word that describes the feeling you have as the roller coaster begins its descent.

There is a word (or phrase) for a feeling that people report to have that they feel like they have been in a place they had never been or are in a situation that they feel  like they have already lived through.

English speakers  appropriated  the word from France: deja vu. 

(Technically that’s two words but those two words, six letters total, go together to represent a complex idea. See how long it took me to explain it.)

Words are symbols formed by assembling letters. What are they symbolic of? Thoughts?  Are we not thinking in words, already? Take away the words, what do we have?

A frustrated person.

Catherine told me the story of a 100-plus year old nursing home  resident, barely 5-feet-tall, who attacked the staff. I mean she hit and kicked the staff. She had a urinary tract infection and that hurt. But she  could not communicate that. Getting physical at a century old was all she had to fall back on. The need to communicate is a strong one. One wonders if our world leaders could better communicate, we might avoid the violence that stains humanity.

Someone asked my daughter what her biggest fear was. And she couldn’t think right away what it was,  but eventually hit on one that is  a big one for many: Fear of failure.

That  used to be my biggest fear, and I think a lot of people live with that.

My greatest fear now? It’s  losing my words.

Unfortunately with Lewy body dementia that’s a key symptom. I already find myself struggling to come up with some words. This occurs mostly during speaking and not as much when I write.

In conversation with my colleagues and friends it is subtle but I realize it is there: my struggle for words. It’s like in my brain I am searching a cavernous warehouse for one little item, one little word.

It’s  an Amazon.com warehouse only when they push a button to  have a robot/machine fetch the item from among a million things, the robot sighs. Like the robot  in Lost in Space with its plug pulled. I’m left rummaging through this warehouse. I find a ladder, go up to the top shelf and there it is. My word.

I’ve done this before, it’s deja vu.

Actually, my word is ‘restorative.’

“The ocean’s waters are really …., um, really …) I start this sentence in a conversation about the beach, but I can’t finish because I can’t think of the word. Amazon warehouse thing kicks in. I’m on my ladder looking. Why is it always on the top shelf, I mumble to myself.

Cold? someone offers, you mean the ocean is cold?

RESTORATIVE, I finally answer a little too loudly. Everyone sighs with relief.

I have an aunt who has brain damage from unknown origin. Could have been a high fever as a young child, we don’t  know. But she’s been this way as long as anyone remembers and currently lives in a group home.

She can  talk but does so only if you ask her questions and typically they must be yes or no questions. She’s now in her 70s but seems like a child. She, now and again, will  have a little crying jag, clearly out of frustration that she can’t communicate. She’s got  so much to say, she just can’t find the words.

Painting by Jean Gill.

She’s  a voracious painter. She has won awards. Here’s one of her paintings.

You may remember my stories about Porter Heatherly the little boy who died at 4 of a rare genetic disease. He never uttered a word in his short life but he was loved by many and spurred fund raising and research to find a cure for GM1.

And you may remember me writing about my former boss, now in a memory care unit. I hadn’t seen him in decades, he recognized me and wanted to talk newspapers. But what came out was word salad. He couldn’t string the right words together. And he knew it. And his eyes showed the frustration.

I don’t want that.

But with me, realistically, it will happen. Hopefully some years from  now. But some cases I have read about say it can escalate quickly.

So now, while I can, I want to express myself as I have done all my life through the written word. To those who have cared for me, family, friends, colleagues, parents, cousins. Those I never met or haven’t seen in forever who have offered prayers, contributed to my bucket list trip, my Mike Madness tournament. To all those who have put up with my sometimes morbid sense of humor (to Hannah, Emily, Claire and Catherine.)

I give you these three words:

I love you.

\

Jim Croce — 561

The little sticker says “Time In A Bottle” from the ABC TV Movie starring Desi Arnaz Jr. “She Lives”

ALBUMS:  You Don’t Mess Around with Jim (1972).

MVC Rating: 4.0/$$$

The title cut, not to be confused with his hit, Bad Bad Leroy Brown, who if  you will remember is the ‘baddest man in the whole damn town’ (and we are talking Chicago here.)

These two well-done novelty-like tunes are very similar in tone and plot. But funny as they are, they don’t really reflect the bulk of his life’s work. It was a life crammed into a very short time. He was 30 when a small plane he was on crashed in Natchitoches, La., Sept. 30, 1973 upon take off. It clipped a pecan tree in darkness. He was headed for a show in Austin, Texas.

According to bio info, in no certain order, born in South Philly of Italian-American parents in 1934, married wife Ingrid, converted to Judaism, worked as a welder and contruction worker in  college, attended Villanova, enlisted in Army National Guard to avoid being drafted, had to go  through basic training twice due to his “authority’ problem.

He once said, the nation will be prepared, “If ever there was a war where we have to defend ourseles with mops.”

The table-turning bravado in his two ‘mess around’ songs notwithstanding, the body of Croce’s songs was bittersweet and nostalgic and tear inducing, especially when falling on  the  right person’s ears at the right  time. OK, Croce almost made me cry here with a couple of his sad songs on this, his third album.  He was a deft writer.

If I could make days last forever

If words could make wishes come true

I’d save every day like a treasure and then,

Again, I would spend them with you

Tears.  And then there’s this from Photographs and Memories:

Photographs and memories

All the love you gave to me

Somehow it  just can’t be true

That’s all I  have left of you

Gulp. And that’s not even including the song about asking his Mamma and Daddy to send him some money to Sunday Mission, Box Number 10. Or asking the operator to help place the call.

Maybe  all that heartbreak was behind why he had to write lines like:

You don’t tug on Superman’s cape

You don’t spit into the wind

You don’t pull the mask off the old  Lone Ranger

And you don’t mess around with Jim

Jim Croce never got to see his full success.

Many of his songs were released or went big after his death. He’s one of those artists where we say (sadly) if only they had lived, what music we would have.

Well, we were lucky that we got some very good music.

P.S. (Local note) Big Jim met his match in Croce’s song from Slim, a country boy from Alabama.  

Counting down my 678 vinyl records before I die of brain disease.

The Cramps — 562

ALBUM: A Date with Elvis (1986)

MVC Rating: 3.5/$$$$

OK so it’s spicy rockabilly.  Extra spicy. Hot sauce, dirty rice.

It’s actually an Elvis parody record. Except for the fact that there is some good music on here, it’s a novelty record. With Howard Stern humor that was funny as heck in the 6th grade. Only thing that saves it is some searing rockabilly guitar and some artless Elvis vocal ticks.

From the song ‘Aloha from Hell.’

Gonna take a week off
Gonna go to hell
Send ya a postcard
Hey I'm doin' swell
Wish you were here
Aloha from Hell.

That song is one of the tamer songs. I hope I didn’t really think record was all that funny even when I was 25 or so. But there is some demented rockabilly, for sure.

Counting down my 678 vinyl records before I die of brain disease.

Elvis Costello — 566, 565, 564, 563

ALBUMS:  KIng of America (1986); Imperial Bedroom (1982); Get Happy (1980);  Armed Forces (1978)

MVC RATING: King 4.0/$$$$; Imperial 4.5/$$$$; Get Happy 4.0/$$$$; Armed Forces, 4.5/$$$$

I may have mentioned this before but Elvis Costello substantially opened my world to another kind of  music. The Beatles first moved something inside and paved the way for this growing interest, or  love, of music.

Because of the Beatles I found the Rolling Stones, the Who, CCR, Clapton, etc. Other paths, including my Dad’s records,  led me to Louis Armstrong, jazz, and later different paths led me to  Motown, Stax, Johnny Cash, the 11-year-old Michael Jackson, and  so on. My Mom, I remember liked folk music, such as Peter Paul and Mary, and some Top 40  off the car radio in the 1970s. I actually remember singing along with mom and siblings to How Do You Do as we were driving. That song you may remember is one I have declared the Best Worst Song of all time.

By high school I was listening to mixed-tape cassettes I made, painstakingly, often on a theme. “Soft Rock” or “Hard Rock” or Best of Southern Rock” or, and this is true, I had one mixed tape called “Eclectic Mix.”  As  you can see my imagination was boundless. Not. My  Eclectic Mix probably consisted of country rock and folk, a Rolling Stones song and a Dylan cover. With maybe an Al Green song. (No, that would be saved for my “Love songs” tape.)

But when I was in my last year of high school — “78 is great”– I somehow came across Costello. I actually had a store-bought tape of Costello’s debut and arguably his best — but that’s a big argument. “My Aim Is True’ was not radical in that it was busting new barriers, like the Beatles or the Clash for that matter.

This is melodic, angry, catchy and highly literate pop and rock coming out at a time when punk was making a lot of noise. I didn’t really get the Sex Pistols’ appeal  beyond screaming about being pissed off.  Now Costello was pissed in a literate and often amusing way.

While we, HS seniors, were playing air guitar to Stairway to Heaven,  Dream On, Free Bird and Frampton Comes Alive, along comes a guy bold enough to steal the King’s name. Wearing thick black ugly glasses, mind you. Damn.

As a songwriter he’s near genius.

But it was like nothing I had heard; I couldn’t get enough. Besides the cassette, I  bought five albums over time of Costello. One, This  Year’s Model, is missing from my collection, and it may have been the best. But the four (above) that I still have are excellent. And they are all different, even though marked with his distinctive vocals and artful lyrics. (Last thing, whomever I lent This Year’s Model to, just leave it on my porch, no questions asked. Come to think of it I’m missing a number of albums over the years, such as Bob Marley’s Natty Dread, and Deep Purple Made in Japan which had Highway Star and a scorching performance by Ritchie Blackmore. As usual, I digress).

Back to Costello, listen to  these songs in video. The ‘Detectives’ video is, if you hang with it through the opening loud distortion, a pretty remarkable live performance of a clever song.

Memorable line:  ‘I don’t know how much more of this I can take;

She’s filing her nails while they are dragging the lake.’

Counting down my 678 vinyl records before I die of brain disease.

My Vinyl Countdown’s Top 12 posts

So,  I’ve learned how to see how many clicks each of my posts are getting. The results are somewhat surprising.  See my Top 12 lists below.

I’ve been doing this blog now since September but I’ve never really done a lot of exploration of its capabilities. I specifically got the WordPress dot org version with a Blue Host, er, hosting thingy. It was supposed to be much more versatile the way I set it up but I haven’t really been one, yet, to explore its many hidden powers.

Meanwhile, as regular readers know, this is a stealthy, healthy way to raise awareness of a not -so rare brain disease I have.

I have Lewy body dementia, which  is the second leading cause of dementia after Alzheimer.

And my deal here is that I’ve vowed to count down, reviewing sort of (or reminiscing about), the 678 vinyl record albums I’ve been lugging around since the 1970s and 1980s.

Somewhat surprisingly my essays, meanderings and stories are consistently more popular than my music posts — part of that is the sheer number of music posts, it sort  of thins out the flock. But also, maybe you like what I write and not so much what I listen to. No worries fans of the music posts, they are what I call the backbone of this blog. Keeps me and it going.

Okay, here are my Top 12 posts of all time (since September). I  am taking out my top 2 which are my Home Page and About Me page.

  1.  Another hugging, this has got to stop
  2.  Some People are Mean
  3. How the heck am I doing
  4. Porter and Me
  5. Me and My Old Boss
  6. I Have to Laugh (To Keep from Crying)
  7. Yellow Bird sighting. Is it a sign?
  8. My Rx for Dementia
  9. Are You Random Orientation or Straight Playlist
  10. Is there time?
  11. The Best Worst Song Ever (Winner)
  12. Rules of ‘street’ ball

 

Alphabetically speaking, I’m still in the C’s but I’ll be in the D’s soon.  (BTW, I’m adding numbers from 678 to 1 in the headlines so you’ll know where I stand in the countdown, but it is going to take a while for me to catch up on that right now.)

Steadily I’ve been rolling my albums out from the very first one King Sunne Ade’ to my latest posted Wednesday morning on the band Crack the Sky.

Here are my Top 12 music posts/ vinyl countdown. Like the above Top 12, you can click on the title and it will take you there.

  1. The Allman Brothers Band
  2. When Particles Collide
  3. Dickey Betts
  4. T Bone Burnett
  5. Athens, Ga. –Inside/Out Various artists
  6. Peter Case
  7. Joe Cocker
  8. Eric Clapton (Do I have too much?
  9. Paul Anka
  10. Van Cliburn
  11. The B-52’s
  12. Jackson Browne

A few observations. Interesting that the Allman Brothers and  Dickey Betts are among my most popular record posts. Guess, we’re back in the South(where I grew up.) So in that vein, here’s a video that captures Greg Allman and DIckey Betts playing acoustic. That’s Betts in cowboy hat who has a nice interchange with Warren Haynes near the end.

Crack the Sky — 568, 567

ALBUMS: Safety in Numbers:  (1978); Animal Notes (1976)

MVC Rating  Safety 4.0/$$$; Animal 4.0/$$$

What is progressive rock?

I’m having this discussion with myself as I listen to my Crack the Sky albums, which have elements of prog-rock but also  traditional rock (without the roll).

Some might even say progressive rock is an oxymoron.

Rock n’ roll was music that boiled up in the 1950s as white musicians appropriated black rhythm and blues.

Mega bands like the Rolling Stones and Led Zeppelin made gadzillions by stealing the music, giving it a makeover (turning up the guitar and winking as they over emoted vocals to great effect). I’m being a little flip here but not untrue. Groups like the Beatles and Stones took the songs to another place; they weren’t just note-by-note renditions.  But by using the old R&B as a base, they moved forward with their own sound. Besides Stones and Zep, think ZZ Top, Allman Brothers, Cream and Eric Clapton as examples.

But what about groups like King Crimson, Emerson Lake, and Palmer and the Moody Blues? Or, Queen, Soft Machine, Yes, and Electric Light Orchestra. And Pink Floyd, and Crack the Sky? These were groups that used jazz and classical concepts such as orchestral interludes, odd time signatures,  and virtuoso musicianship. Some pushed  it into avant-garde Dadaist music  like Frank Zappa and Beefheart.

These bands either were influenced more by jazz and classical or had moved so far away from an R&B base, that it was not heard in the songs.

Of course, lots of these bands crossed over. Led Zeppelin with its fantasy themes, multi-layered guitars and psychedelia, might be deemed progressive in some contexts, like ‘Stairway to Heaven’ for example.

But I’m leaving out some key influencers: the Who with their rock operas ‘Tommy’ and ‘Quadrophenia;’ the Beach Boys’ ‘Good Vibrations’ and the Beatles who were pioneers on all of it.

From their Buddy Holly and Chuck Berry chops out of the chute in early early 1960 to ‘A Day in the Life’ in 1967 which I would consider the classic example of a progressive rock song. It’s not only complex, lyrically and musically but it also is cohesive, despite many shifting parts.

So this may be a long way of saying, it’s those Beatles again. Yet they didn’t ignore their early American influenced rock n’ roll either, or ever.  In their last apearance on the top of a building in London they plaed ‘Get Back’ which is about as rock’n roll as you can get.

Crack the Sky is no Beatles. But the band’s song Safety in Numbers works well with it’s  opening guitar strum and catchy chorus even if that chorus is two cliche’ s bound together: “Cause there’s safety in numbers and numbers don’t lie.’

I like it.

Animal Notes is a little meatier. Invaders from Mars  sounds like a 10cc or Squeeze song. Strong progressive rock instrumentation.

There’s an interesting  song about Canadian Mounties, not kidding, which apparently at one point was supposed to be worked up into a concept album. Probably good decision to abandon that idea..

Counting down my 678 records before I die of brain disease.

The Cowsills — They should be in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame — 569

ALBUM: “The Cowsills in Concert (1969):

MVC Rating: 3.5/$

I’m serious here.

The Cowsills deserve to be in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland, alongside other family acts like Sly and the Family Stone, the Allman Brothers, the Staple  Sisters, the Jackson 5 and others. They could be in the family band section, if there was one.

I have to admit I just recently bought this record for $2 at Birmingham’s  Seasick Records, one of several great pre-owned record dealers in the area. Nice prices and nice selection for folks like me trying to do a blog on this stuff.. Although I have 678 of my own records to count down,

On a Cowsills fan website, there is a case made to put the ‘real Partridge Family’ in the Hall of Fame. (They are already in the Rhode Island  Music Hall of Fame, for goodness sakes.)

Among the myriad reasons they should be in the Hall, the  website post argues is that they wrote and performed the theme song for the TV show Love American Style. I loved that song and watched that show every Friday night,  as a youngster. It came on some time after the Partridge Family, I believe.?

This record was a nostalgia purchase. I couldn’t resist buying it. Because it tweaked early early rock and roll memories.

I remember in 5th grade coming over to a friends house in Athens, Ga., and my friend’s brother was dancing on the coffee table with ‘Hair’ going full blast. I think it also fueled my dislike of haircuts in the late 1960s, early 1970s.

Kind of strange that this appealed so much to young kids. The song came from the Broadway musical of the same name, notorious for its nude scenes.  The song was also a #2 national hit for the Cowsills.  Not surprising as they turned it  into a silly but arresting pop single –which is the correct interpretation of such a goofy song — as opposed to the more serious take from the musical.

And, i’m not kidding you here: They could really sing and play as this live album shows. They were the model for TV’s popular  Partridge Family, and musically, they would have blown most of the Partridges back to their high school drama classes. Some were amazed at the Cowsills pulling off the  Beach Boys” Good Vibrations.’ live in concert — a difficult task as the Beach Boys themselves learned  because of the degree of difficulty playing Brian Wilson’s masterpiece. 

The Cowsills consisted of the mother, three brothers) and sister (Susan). The live album had lots of well-played covers and introduced me to tunes I would love later like Walk Away Renee, Monday Monday, Please  Mr.Postman and Good Vibrations. Devil with a Blue Dress.

This website has has  a dissertation’s worth of arguments for why the Cowsills should be in the HOF.

I see that others don’t find the value in the Cowsill’s concert disc that I, in my 40 years of record collecting say it warrants. Excellent music, family band cute, lots of drama  over the years and nearly virtuoso playing and, get  this, Discogs is listing this record at $1 plus shipping. What? Did they make 5 million of these things?

They should be as rare as a Bobby Sherman Remembering You record, I say.

I’m serious here. Sort of.

Counting down my 678 vinyl records before I die of brain disease.

What is more fragile than a relationship?

What is more fragile than a relationship?

A day too  old rose waiting for one touch to send petals spinning to the ground.

The stability of a family facing a future with too many ifs.

The conviction that doing right  is always right.  Or always doing right is  right.

The profundity of a well educated person.

The joy of sleeping when really really worn  out.

The reality you see right now.

The love you can’t define but know it’s true.

The knowledge that the straight trail  is better than the switchback.

The theory that a theory is not truth.

The laugh between old friends you may not see again.

The idea that your decisions don’t affect the world.

The notion that there are things that are impossible.

Caring, love as I rearrange everything

What is rare as a loving relationship?

DId you find that yellow bird?