Light/Breezes

Light/Breezes
SUNRISE AT DEATH VALLEY-Photo by Tom Cochrun
Showing posts with label Paul Simon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paul Simon. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 28, 2017

TO THE RESCUE

   "...these are the days of miracle and wonder, this is the long distance call..."
     Those Paul Simon lyrics meander across the mind a lot these days.
      Washington is to blame. Here we are in bucolic beauty while dream killers, planet killers and child killers conspire their ways. We'll return to that thought after first we witness a rescue. There are still plenty of good gals and guys riding this blue marble.
   One look into his eye tells you quickly this poor fellow is in deep trouble. He's miles from the colony and his mother who probably has already departed for hunting grounds. He's left on his own in the primordial drama of learning to swim, survive and orient to where he must navigate to find life sustaining food. Presently he is beached and frightened. 
   Discovered by the citizen on the left who stood guard protectively until help arrived.
   The marine mammal rescue crew traveled up from Morro Bay headquarters to the Lampton Cliff access in Cambria. 
    After consideration the experts decided the best course of action was to post a kind of "please stay away" warning while they logged his location. On this day the tide was extraordinarily low and the best hope is that when the Pacific reclaimed this rocky reef, the little fellow will be revived by the big blue and resume his seaward journey.



inhumane humanity
   The Trump toll mounts as he presses the idea the US can bomb anywhere. 
  •     As many as 200 Iraqi civilians were killed in air strikes in Mosul
  •     Dozens of Syrian Civilians were killed when we targeted a school in Raqqa
  •     Dozens were killed when we targeted a mosque in Allepo
  •     30 Yemenis were killed in the SEAL raid gone bad that also cost the life of a US combatant
    War is hell and innocents die but the toll of civilian deaths in less than two months of the new administration is appalling and worth remembering because as a candidate the President vowed to kill families of terrorists. As Commander in Chief women, children and other non combatant innocents have died, under his orders.


full speed nowhere
     the republican speedwagon
    People I know who are traditional, establishment or legacy Republicans are just sick. Their nominal party controls the House, Senate and White House and they can't spit straight.
    The embarrassment of the failure to pass health care reform exposes the bankruptcy of what has been leadership and Republican philosophy the last 6 years.
     This President didn't need Mitch McConnell's vow to put a wrench into government gears as he did to Obama. The Republican regime failed so miserably by self destruction. Do they have no capacity to govern? The failure reveals their obstructionism in the last 8 years as the betrayal of the American people it was.
    One has to wonder if the ideologues, egoists and zealots have eaten traditional and practical Republicans. 
is redemption possible?
      This is not something Democrats, liberals or progressives want to hear, nor do regressives, or that strange breed of Trump supporter-be they the angry, the betrayed, easily fooled or the true deplorable-but there is a way the Republicans can recover their decency. In fact they could do more than that, they could engineer an American power grab almost without precedent. 
     There are actually two ways forward to power. 

  • Someone like James Baker could gather former Senators, Cabinet Secretaries, Senators and other Republican apparatchik, storm the Oval Office, sit the buffoon president down, kick Steve Bannon off the grounds, fumigating behind him and preform a kind of cultural/political lobotomy and soul graft onto the "first fool." Hold him for 6 months if that's what it takes to see the first evidence of competence. In all seriousness, Trump is most influenced by the last thing he saw, heard or person he talked to. Republican adults should make a policy house call.
  • The other is to play the 25th Amendment clause 4 card and declare him as the deplorable incompetent bully child he is. (Read the 25th Amendment.)  Mike Pence could govern as an adult. Further, he could bench his own evangelical right wing ooga booga and he could act like a pragmatic Republican conservative. The GOP could then cobble together a mainstream, fully adult, political strategy. 
when republicans had ideas
       Democrats won't want to hear this either, but if Republicans behaved as rational politicians and statesmen, a post intervention Trump or a post-Trump Republican consensus could advance an agenda especially if they authored a jobs bill and an infrastructure repair road map. Before the current crop of self identifying Republicans get all worked up, consider these facts.

  • Eisenhower built the interstate system, a huge project employing many and costing much for years. 
  • The Reagan Administration fostered the Jobs Training Partnership and later a Jobs program. 
  • George HW Bush Signed a Fair Labor Standards Act that raised the minimum wage, even though Democrats had pushed for more. Signed the Americans with Disabilities Act. Signed the Clean Air Act. Signed a Civil Rights Act. Extended unemployment benefits.
      That sort of Presidential mindset is in the Republican DNA, despite the Roger Ailes Fox News era republican pea brains. 
       Is it fantasy land to think Republicans and Democrats
 could:

  • retool our economy, seeing it as a matter of national security?
  • prepare for a future with increasing automation? 
  • rebuild roads, sewers, bridges, water plants, schools and other public facilities
  • streamline and modernize our military profile?
  • fix a health care plan? No one might be fully satisfied but could both camps get a little of what they want, both sides leaving something on the table? It used to work that way.

republican house cleaning 
     Republicans could do this. They are sitting the edge of chance to control government for a long run. But they probably won't because they "souled out." How else do you explain Trump/Bannon and the nut squeezing power of the so called Freedom Caucus of politically brain dead or Paul Ryan trying to sell his Randian approach to politics. 
     Does Ryan not realize Ayn Rand, really Alisa Zinov'yevna Rosenbaum was a fiction writer of moderate talents. Her Objectivism is not a sacred text, it was the stuff of a novelist's creative mind. It is no more valid nor sacred than Sci-fi writer L. Ron Hubbard's Dianetics that followers turned into Scientology. Maybe his own party sent Speaker Ryan a loud message about the validity of his stingy political assumptions based on his allegiance to a fictional fabrication of a worthless "pseudo philosophy."
      There is more, any Republican quoting Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity or Alex Jones should be drummed out of the party and into the corner where they await deportation to Syria. These guys are not political gurus, they are bull shit artists who got rich pretending they know something, loudly. 
      In the meantime we've moved from the gridlock and partisan warfare of the last several years to Republican intra party warfare, ideological thuggery and knife fights, while the Democrats look for a compass and a soul.

       
       Staccato signals of constant information
       A loose affiliation of millionaires
       And billionaires and baby
       These are the days of miracle and wonder
       This is the long distance call
       The way the camera follows us in slo-mo
       The way we look to us all, oh yea
                  The Boy In The Bubble--Paul Simon



            
        Yep kids, the good old days happen this way.
     


     See you down the trail.
     

     

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

LIFE SPAN OF A LYRIC

IS THERE A SHELF LIFE?
      An especially placid and expansive blue Pacific rolled by as Paul Simon's I Am A Rock jarred a stream of memories awake.
       Then I began to wonder what Paul Simon thinks of the lyrics today. What do they mean to him now?  There are some wonderful lines beginning with the "Deep and dark December" and "the freshly fallen silent shroud of snow."
"Don't talk of love…it is sleeping in my memory"…"I won't disturb the slumber of feelings that have died"…"I have my books and poetry to protect me." What does the current Mr. Simon think of that 1965 version songwriter?
      Paul McCartney, Bob Dylan and Peter Gabriel tunes followed and I wondered again, how do songwriters think about earlier work, especially those that were hits and choreographed seminal moments in the life of a generation?
      We've changed and our perspective on those passages of life that played against the music of our era have morphed as well. Some lyrics no doubt mean the same today as they did then and as they will tomorrow, but some seem more fragile, or wed to an ethos that existed then. Is it a matter of sensitivity, emotion, a breakthrough or insight? Or perhaps it is all in the ear of the beholder.  Still, I wonder  how Simon, Dylan, Lennon, McCartney et al regard some of their early work and their labors at being profound.
      Then I hit a button and was enveloped in a Stones set and cruised up the coast in a slip stream of Wild Horses, Jumping Jack Flash and Street Fighting Man. Pretty sure there's been no slippage of meaning in those and the boys can still bang them out. Maybe somethings don't change, they only age. Cheers to the vintages.

TWIN BAMBIS
     Birthing season in Cambria brings a somewhat rare set of twins.
   Double the munch, a reason gardeners resort to fences.

SIMPLE AMUSEMENTS
    John is one of the village's most active citizens. At 90 he's learned a few amusements here between the Santa Lucia Mountains and the Pacific.
   His co-star is "Jay" as John has dubbed him.


    Our buddy Reg also gets into the act.
    Jay looks right
 looks left
   And he scores….
   Coming back for seconds.

   See you down the trail.

Monday, October 24, 2011

SIMON UPDATE-THE BAND

WHAT AN INCREDIBLE SOUND
We are still buzzed by the incredible Paul Simon
concert at the Santa Barbara Bowl.  I know
Phil Spector created the so called "wall of sound" but 
Simon's touring band creates a wall that wraps around you
and then boogies its way into your spine.
The playbill did not list the players and Paul's
introduction came at the end of the third encore and I didn't get the names.  Music News Net to the rescue-
His touring band for the run includes Cameroonian guitarist Vincent Nguini, pianist Mick Rossi, drummer Jim Oblon, saxophonist & keyboardist Andrew Snitzer, bassist Bakithi Kumalo, guitarist Mark Stewart, master percussionist Jamey Haddad and multi-instrumentalist Tony Cedras.

A STROLL AND PAUL SIMON IN SANTA BARBARA

CENTRAL COAST CLASSIC
Nature provided one of those great California October days. Perfect for an afternoon of people watching in Santa Barbara as a prelude to an evening with Paul Simon.
 A sun kissed day watched over by the surrounding mountains.


 The principal reason for the trip to Santa Barbara was to see Paul Simon at the Santa Barbara Bowl. A trip to the bowl is a great outing.
Once you park you begin a bit of climb, with the option of a ride in a Santa Barbara Bowl pedicab.


 The historic bowl is a beautiful venue.
I'm sorry for the poor quality of the photos. It was twilight,
we were walking up, as in climbing, and the shots are rushed.
 The landscape settings at the Bowl are beautiful
and unique.



 The walk into the Bowl is a good cardio workout.

 In this case, the cliche is true-there is not a bad seat in the house.
 The opening act, the Secret Sisters from Muscle Shoals
were outstanding.  They have a great future.
 Then the newly 70 year old Paul Simon rocked the house.
 He is an extraordinary artist and performer.  The audience
was in rapt attention and in motion as Simon and his 
superb ban moved through a play list that chronicled his hit laden career.  
 With the exception of Sounds of Silence which came in 
the third encore, everything they played had you either
seat dancing or up and moving.  
 I've been lucky to see many major acts
in a variety of venues.  Paul Simon at the 
Santa Barbara Bowl is one of the highlights.
There was a great California vibe between
artists and audience and it was a special night.
Three encores that were as good as some
full shows.
Still Crazy after all of these years. 
See you down the trail.