All About English

Ask And You Shall Recieve

All About English

Ask And You Shall Recieve

News & news 006

Healing The Soul Through Rock And Roll

by Hector Diego



TWS visitor Laura S. Faeth has authored I Found All The Parts: Healing The Soul Through Rock And Roll. Haven't you ever heard God speaking to you through your speakers or headphones? It happens to me almost every day.

I haven't read Faeth's book yet, but I will publish a review for any visitor who has. Meanwhile, there's this.
“Have Faeth in the process! The Magical Mystery Tour of life is real and is brought to the surface in this fascinating glimpse into one person's determination to put the pieces together from the universal river of flow.”—M. Joyce McMenamin, author, The Integrity Channel and editor of NoNiche and Network Abundance magazines

by Hector Diego



Paul McCartney's new album Electronic Arguments has some really good stuff on it. For people who have given up on Paul because his work in recent years has not impressed them, they owe it to themselves to hear Electronic Arguments. Really!

Check it out.

For some strange reason, Paul is now calling himself The Fireman. 

 

Woody Guthrie, Tom Joad Part II

by Hector Diego

Henry Fonda as Tom Joad

Tom Joad, of course, is the main character in John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath. Certainly one of the greatest films ever made.

by Hector Diego


I had this wacky idea the other day and I can't get it out of my head...what if President Barack Obama was the reincarnation of President Abraham Lincoln? Call me crazy and I will admit to that, but it is an intriguing idea.

Check out some Lincoln and Obama facts on Blue Oregon.

by Hector Diego



Rodgers' "railroad bum" songs inspired the great Woody Guthrie and his songs of social conscience during the Great Depression.

Heat Star Alonzo Morning Retires From Basketball

by The Station Agent

My favorite basketball player, Alonzo Morning, retired today from the Miami Heat. Beyond being one of the finest defensive centers ever to play the game, Morning is also one of the nation's most generous professional athletes.

After playing at an All-Star level for many years in search of an elusive NBA title, frustration had clearly set in for Morning and his seemingly cursed teammates. Then Morning was diagnosed with a life-threatening kidney ailment that knocked him out of the game twice. After a kidney transplant, Mourning eventually returned to the Heat where he played an integral part in the team's 2006 NBA championship. His offensive skills were diminished, but he was still the greatest shot blocker of his generation, despite being an inch or two shorter than most elite centers.

In the middle of the 2007-2008 season, Mourning sustained a devastating knee injury and has been in rehab until today when he announced he would not return to the league. The sport will miss him, but Miami will not, because there is no doubt that Morning will continue to play a big part in the life of the city to which he has given so much. Congrats, Zo. If there's any justice, we'll see you in the Hall of Fame.

by Hector Diego

Johnny Cash, God's Gonna Cut You Down

by Hector Diego



The Man in Black was The Man.

Nine Inch Nails, Something I Can Never Have

by Hector Diego


 

Bob Dylan, Man Of Constant Sorrow

by Hector Diego


Very early Dylan.

Radiohead, Go To Sleep

by Hector Diego

Smashing Pumpkins, Set The Ray To Jerry

by Hector Diego


News & news 005

Obama And Arnold See Eye To Eye

by Hector Diego


Los Angeles smog

The Obama Administration on Monday moved the country in the direction of cleaner air by rolling back Bush era restrictions on the rights of states to govern their own environments. This especially makes sense because air does not stay in one place--the air in California today becomes the air in New York tomorrow.

You could count on the Rocky Mountains to contain all of that smog in California, but I wouldn't. What about acid rain? The Obama Administration is reversing eight years of Bush nonsense.

A Biblical Case For Vegetarianism

by Hector Diego



From what I can tell (Bible scholars please correct me) everyone in the Garden was a vegetarian--Adam and Eve, all the animals, even the snake--before the Fall. So what does that tell us?

Obviously, a vegetarian diet is superior to a non-vegetarian diet. A rabbi and a Catholic priest agree with me.  

 

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Krishna Das, Om Namah Shivaya

by Hector Diego



by Hector Diego


RMS Titanic in dock, 1912

My daughter is in the next room gagging for this one, but I like it. And no, I am not a Celine Dion fan! Don't even think that!

Jenny Lewis, Godspeed



I think this one is a little gem. I'll have it unpolished, thank you.

Discover Simple, Private Sharing at Drop.io
 
 

Vas, At Siva's Feet

by Hector Diego


Hardwar, India
 

Beatles Worst To Best Countdown

by Hector Diego


That's the late Neil Aspinall next to John

Playing The Beatles Backwards?

A guy--admittedly not a bad reviewer--has made a list of all the Beatles' songs from worst to best, just his opinion. I do not consider him a real Beatles person because a real Beatles person would not trash any Beatles song in public. But you might find some of his insights interesting.

I read the first five or so at the beginning and quickly burnt out on his observations, but when I skipped forward to the best song and went backwards it worked a lot better for me. I wonder why. I guess I'm just a real Beatles person.

Here's the article.

by Hector Diego



by Hector Diego



I wish this one too, had different lyrics, although I love Johnny Cash's voice and I respect him as a person and a great American artist. I just do not respect, however, cowboy culture--eating cows.

by Hector Diego

White Stripes, Effect And Cause

by Hector Diego

Paul McCartney, No More Lonely Nights

by Hector Diego



I wish he had kept the tune and put different lyrics, something socially conscious...

by Hector Diego



News & news 004

Limbaugh Censored

by Hector Diego


Broadcasting excellence?

When the Republican leadership tells Rush Limbaugh to shut up, you gotta know that we have a popular Democrat President in the White House. Oh yeah.

Marianne Faithfull, Beware Of Darkness

by Hector Diego



Faithfull's rendition of George Harrison's classic song is worth listening to.

by The Station Agent

After recording his last album, Bruce Springsteen still had momentum so his longtime producer, the great Brendan O'Brien, encouraged him to keep right on going. The result, Working on a Dream, is a moving, often nostalgic record, every bit as strong, if not stronger than 2007's Magic.

On his website Springsteen says that he hopes "Working on a Dream has caught the energy of the band fresh off the road from some of the most exciting shows we've ever done." It does. The songs, for the most part, are straightforward, yet lush, rockers with just enough nuance and surprises to keep a seasoned group like the E-Street Band engaged.

The album opens with "Outlaw Pete," a gorgeous Western epic that serves notice from the beginning that this is going to be a different kind of Springsteen record. The song ends with the signature melodic E-street jam. The title track, "Working on a dream," is vintage Springsteen. If you don't get the album, you will hear this song anyway in a bar, on the radio, in a movie or on a TV show. The production works expressly for the purpose of framing Bruce's vocals in this song. The song, complete with a whistling solo and doo-wop-style background vocals, feels like it could be a b-side from "Born in the U.S.A." The album peaks with the scorching "Good Eye". The song's dirty harmonica darts in and out between Springsteen's distorted preacher blues vocals.

The last two songs, "The Last Carnival" and "The Wrestler" wind down the record with a couple of intense ballads. On "Carnival" Springsteen recreates his Nebraska sound briefly before turning the song over to a lush choir. Again both songs are packed with themes of mortality and endings.

In the pantheon of aging superstars, Bruce Springsteen still gets the highest resale value and this album is every bit the classic that Rolling Stone says it is. The tour starts in April, if the recession isn't hitting you too hard, you should get out to an arena near you and catch this tour.

Iceland's Economic Collapse Brings Down Government

by The Station Agent

In the wake of their economic meltdown and the dissolution of their government, Iceland likely has a new Prime Minister--Jóhanna Sigurdardóttir. If she assumes office, she will be the first openly gay prime minister in the world. That accomplishment was buried in the seventh paragraph of the article linked above on Iceland Review Online. They have more important things to worry about.

So what happened to Iceland's economy? This should sound familiar:

[A] small group of aggressive businessmen whose high-risk investing bloated the island’s economy to 10 times its GDP, buying up chunks of the British and Continental European high streets in the process. French Connection, Debenhams, Karen Millen, Oasis, Warehouse, Mappin & Webb, Hamleys and many more fell into Icelandic ownership. So did West Ham United football club. When Icelanders visited Copenhagen, they would strut into its smartest department store to buy expensive fashions from “their” shop. Like many British chains, it too was owned by the “Viking” Jon Asgeir Johannesson’s Baugur group: one in the eye for the mother country. Few stopped to consider, let alone fret over, whether their swift financial ascent would end in an equally steep plunge into oblivion.

Since it wouldn't be a post about Iceland without mentioning Bjork--Bjork, has started a green venture capital firm that will help rebuild her country by investing in environmentally sustainable businesses. Ecorazzi has more.

Lila Downs, La Llorona

by Hector Diego



If you don't know about Lila Downs, you should.

by Hector Diego



Degrassi Jr. High And Next Generation

by Hector Diego