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Music Bob

Dragging the Abandoned Trailer online

It’s finally happened. Abandoned Trailer, one of the most frightening developments in modern American music, has stumbled onto the Internet. As their sole North American fan, I urge you to get over there and download a few of their tunes. I recommend just about anything from “Under the Giant,” particularly Western Sky, Bellwood Reel and Fish Bowl. But download ’em all and immerse yourself in the Trailer. Their second CD, Nighty Nite, is due for imminent release.

If you’re really cruising for a bruising, crawl into the Trailer’s attic and check out the Vinegar Brothers’ Nick Drake Phone Home.

Ok then.

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Books Music Bob

An ode to nonagenarians

Lawrence Ferlinghetti, perhaps my favorite Beat poet after Gary Snyder, turns 90 today. And Pete Seger hits 90 on May 3. Literary Kicks has a nice tribute to these American icons. I hope we get to enjoy their genius for many years to come.

One of my few “brushes with greatness,” as David Letterman calls them, came at the Chautauqua Institution in New York back in the mid-’80s, where I had the “privilege” of urinating next to Pete Seger. If I’m not mistaken, he and Arlo Guthrie played that night, and Arlo resurrected Alice’s Restaurant after a long hiatus. I think there was a candlelight vigil against U.S. actions in

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Music Bob

Jorma, the Syncopated Taint, Bruce and a Mule

It’s been a while since I posted a note about the music I’m stumbling across, so here’s a quick rundown of some stuff that’s worth checking out. Some of it’s new. Some of it’s just new to me. But it’s all stuff that I have on heavy rotation …

Jorma Kaukonen, “River of Time — Love this CD and it’s now in heavy rotation on my iPod. WNCW in North Carolina started playing it almost as soon as it was released, and I downloaded it as soon as I heard it. I’ve been a fan of Jorma for a long time and, as a member of Jefferson Airplane, he was a catalyst for the great False Class Consciousness debate of 1983 (ask Joanne for the gory details). Jorma’s fingerpickin’ is as fresh as ever, and there’s a nice cover of the Dead’s “Operator” on here. What are you waiting for? Snap it up.

Bruce Springsteen, “Working on a Dream — Generally speaking, I’m not a big Springsteen fan. I definitely appreciate his talent, but for some reason he never really resonated with me. I’m ashamed to admit I passed on several opportunities to see him live in the late ’70s. He just wasn’t metal enough for my taste at the time. But in watching the Steelers’ glorious sixth Super Bowl victory, I was blown away by Springsteen’s halftime performance. In fact, there were tears in my eyes. There was just something beautiful there. Something intrinsically American that roared through the TV in high-def splendor. I heard an interview with Springsteen on Fresh Air not too long ago where he talked about how Republicans had latched on to his songs to promote their causes, and Terry Gross seemed perplexed by it. But Springsteen explained it beautifully. While the choruses in his music are full of hope and optimism, the verses contain the darker, more turbulent ideas. It’s easy to latch on to “Born in the U.S.A.” as a great American anthem. But when you start to dissect the verses, it’s not really the flag waving, feel-good exercise the casual listener would think. Got in a little hometown jam/ So they put a rifle in my hand/ Sent me off to a foreign land/ To go and kill the yellow man/ Born in the USA … “Working on a