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______ Passed Away Today, RIP (3 Viewers)

oh man ...Sly ... :cry:


Brian Wilson :cry:
Rough two days.

It would be really hard to overstate the quality of their music and the influence they had on what came after.

In a lot of ways, these two guys were the same person. Both were perfectionists who couldn't stand the fact that they couldn't make the perfect record (both were wrong, because they made a lot of them). Both struggled with mental/emotional/addiction issues.

This is a big gut-punch for me.
 
Brian Wilson :cry:
On the one hand, I always thought the lyrics were a little weird (a love song that starts "I may not always love you" and then repeatedly raises the possibility of his love interest leaving him). But "God Only Knows" may be one of the most musically gorgeous songs ever written. I'd say it's a close call between that and "Bridge Over Troubled Water".

The other thing that always stuck out to me about Wilson's songwriting: It's conventional wisdom that the Beatles/Beach Boys rivalry developed as both bands evolved from teeny boppers to brilliant, complex songwriters over the course of the '60s. But "Surfer Girl", which was the first song Wilson ever wrote (give or take), is way more advanced musically than anything the Beatles were doing in the early '60s
 
The other thing that always stuck out to me about Wilson's songwriting: It's conventional wisdom that the Beatles/Beach Boys rivalry developed as both bands evolved from teeny boppers to brilliant, complex songwriters over the course of the '60s. But "Surfer Girl", which was the first song Wilson ever wrote (give or take), is way more advanced musically than anything the Beatles were doing in the early '60s
Thinking about this some more. I didn't. mean my comment as a shot at Lennon and McCartney. I still think, at the peak of their powers, they were the GOAT songwriters (probably because they pushed each other to new heights). My point was that the conventional wisdom on them is pretty accurate; they really were teeny boppers who evolved into greatness. But with Wilson, the greatness was there from the beginning.

Imagine you found someone who had never heard of either group. If you played them "Love Me Do" they would never believe that the same songwriters eventually wrote Sgt. Peppers. But if you played "Surfer Girl" and told them the same guy wrote "Good Vibrations", they would immediately spot the through-line
 
UCLA All-American David Greenwood 68, cancer. He was the 2nd pick in the 1980 draft, after Magic.
If I remember correctly, I think this was the UCLA (or may have already been in the NBA) player I saw on a plane going somewhere with my Dad when I was maybe 6-7 years old. My Dad told me to go say hello and I don't know exactly what he said but the player (again, I'm pretty sure this was the guy) and his boys just started laughing at me, kind of in a dickish way, at least that was the sense I got as a wee tyke. :shrug:
 
UCLA All-American David Greenwood 68, cancer. He was the 2nd pick in the 1980 draft, after Magic.
If I remember correctly, I think this was the UCLA (or may have already been in the NBA) player I saw on a plane going somewhere with my Dad when I was maybe 6-7 years old. My Dad told me to go say hello and I don't know exactly what he said but the player (again, I'm pretty sure this was the guy) and his boys just started laughing at me, kind of in a dickish way, at least that was the sense I got as a wee tyke. :shrug:
You sure that wasn’t Kareem Abdul-Jabbar?
 
UCLA All-American David Greenwood 68, cancer. He was the 2nd pick in the 1980 draft, after Magic.
If I remember correctly, I think this was the UCLA (or may have already been in the NBA) player I saw on a plane going somewhere with my Dad when I was maybe 6-7 years old. My Dad told me to go say hello and I don't know exactly what he said but the player (again, I'm pretty sure this was the guy) and his boys just started laughing at me, kind of in a dickish way, at least that was the sense I got as a wee tyke. :shrug:
You sure that wasn’t Kareem Abdul-Jabbar?
No, you're thinking of Roger Murdock.
 
UCLA All-American David Greenwood 68, cancer. He was the 2nd pick in the 1980 draft, after Magic.
If I remember correctly, I think this was the UCLA (or may have already been in the NBA) player I saw on a plane going somewhere with my Dad when I was maybe 6-7 years old. My Dad told me to go say hello and I don't know exactly what he said but the player (again, I'm pretty sure this was the guy) and his boys just started laughing at me, kind of in a dickish way, at least that was the sense I got as a wee tyke. :shrug:
You sure that wasn’t Kareem Abdul-Jabbar?
No, you're thinking of Roger Murdock.
you try dragging lanier and walton up and down the court for 48 minutes.
 
UCLA All-American David Greenwood 68, cancer. He was the 2nd pick in the 1980 draft, after Magic.
If I remember correctly, I think this was the UCLA (or may have already been in the NBA) player I saw on a plane going somewhere with my Dad when I was maybe 6-7 years old. My Dad told me to go say hello and I don't know exactly what he said but the player (again, I'm pretty sure this was the guy) and his boys just started laughing at me, kind of in a dickish way, at least that was the sense I got as a wee tyke. :shrug:
You sure that wasn’t Kareem Abdul-Jabbar?
Nice job. :)

and no I'm like 83.3333% sure it was Greenwood. I still don't know why he and his boys were laughing at me. Silly little white boy asking for an autograph on a plane and all.
 
Mick Ralphs, guitarist and founder of Mott the Hoople and Bad Company.


"Ready For Love" was such a great tune he recorded it with both groups.


 
Bobby Sherman, teen idol in the 60s and 70s, dead @ 81


I remember having one of his cereal box records of 'Easy Come, Easy Go'

Also, he was in the 'Here Comes the Brides' TV show that little me watched
I remember having a couple of cereal box records. They usually sounded pretty bad but it was still pretty cool to save.

I can remember having the Archies 'Sugar, Sugar' record.

Seems like it might have been from a Honeycomb cereal box

Or Sugar Smacks....that bear guy
 
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Brian Wilson was the soundtrack to a particularly joyous part of my life that I won't soon forget.

So was Sly Stone.

RIP to two geniuses who made my District of Columbia summers a little bit more breezy and cool. I can still remember driving to a lacrosse game in Maryland listening to the Endless Summer album by the Beach Boys in '98, which was an album that had reintroduced them to public fanfare back in '74 when it came out, with my girlfriend and I looking up at these canopy-like trees on our way to where was it again? Who cares?

I can also remember driving downtown in D.C. listening to "Stand!" by Sly and the Family Stone in the summer afternoons of what had to be '99. I had my little smoke with me and would roll down the street upon which sat the building where I once worked (a brutalist-looking, twelve-story, indestructible-type structure) that is now demolished, actually; which is something I did not know before a month or two ago.

Both artists were universal, but I remember them in (and they were appropriate for) those two settings especially.

RIP to both men. I don't think it's an exaggeration to call them two of the (if not the two) most talented, American-born artists to crossover into American popular culture since rock n' roll music came to dominate the musical landscape. They filled in the gaps where pure rock n' roll couldn't tread and did it in their own unique way. God bless them and godspeed to them.
 
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I can also remember driving downtown in D.C. listening to "Stand!" by Sly and the Family Stone in the summer afternoons of what had to be '99.
My older sister had a nice collection of 45's that dated back to the late 60's. One that I especially remember was the 2 sided single "Stand!/I Want to Take You Higher". And of course for this time of year, "Hot Fun in the Summertime".
 
I can also remember driving downtown in D.C. listening to "Stand!" by Sly and the Family Stone in the summer afternoons of what had to be '99.

oh man, this album because of this song is on is scheduled to appear on my top 70 albums if I get my sheet together.

I can't think of Sly without thinking of Pee-Wee's original stage performance of "The Pee-Wee Herman Show" on HBO in "81. He and a couple perform a Sly vignette that starts with "Stand" and it's pretty damn good - LOL. I recognize the guy/girl but can't find their names.

The Pee-Wee Herman Show - HBO 1981

The Sly piece is only a couple of minutes and starts around the 34 minute mark - but the entire show is awesome and worth the full view if you like Pee-Wee. Think his Saturday morning show that would be rated PG-13 or maybe a very soft R.
 
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I can also remember driving downtown in D.C. listening to "Stand!" by Sly and the Family Stone in the summer afternoons of what had to be '99.

oh man, this album this song is on is scheduled to appear on my top 70 albums if I get my sheet together.

I can't think of Sly without thinking of Pee-Wee's original stage performance of "The Pee-Wee Herman Show" on HBO in "81. He and a couple perform a Sly vignette that starts with "Stand" and it's pretty damn good - LOL. I recognize the guy/girl but can't find their names.

The Pee-Wee Herman Show - HBO 1981

The Sly piece is only a couple of minutes and starts around the 34 minute mark - but the entire show is awesome and worth the full view if you like Pee-Wee. Think his Saturday morning show that would be rated PG-13 or maybe a very soft R.

Somebody posted this to Steve Hoffman's forums, and I took the time to check it out. It was very cool.
 
I can also remember driving downtown in D.C. listening to "Stand!" by Sly and the Family Stone in the summer afternoons of what had to be '99.

oh man, this album this song is on is scheduled to appear on my top 70 albums if I get my sheet together.

I can't think of Sly without thinking of Pee-Wee's original stage performance of "The Pee-Wee Herman Show" on HBO in "81. He and a couple perform a Sly vignette that starts with "Stand" and it's pretty damn good - LOL. I recognize the guy/girl but can't find their names.

The Pee-Wee Herman Show - HBO 1981

The Sly piece is only a couple of minutes and starts around the 34 minute mark - but the entire show is awesome and worth the full view if you like Pee-Wee. Think his Saturday morning show that would be rated PG-13 or maybe a very soft R.
Based on IMDB, I think it’s Monica Ganas and Brian Seff.
 
I can also remember driving downtown in D.C. listening to "Stand!" by Sly and the Family Stone in the summer afternoons of what had to be '99.

oh man, this album this song is on is scheduled to appear on my top 70 albums if I get my sheet together.

I can't think of Sly without thinking of Pee-Wee's original stage performance of "The Pee-Wee Herman Show" on HBO in "81. He and a couple perform a Sly vignette that starts with "Stand" and it's pretty damn good - LOL. I recognize the guy/girl but can't find their names.

The Pee-Wee Herman Show - HBO 1981

The Sly piece is only a couple of minutes and starts around the 34 minute mark - but the entire show is awesome and worth the full view if you like Pee-Wee. Think his Saturday morning show that would be rated PG-13 or maybe a very soft R.
Based on IMDB, I think it’s Monica Ganas and Brian Seff.

you nailed it ...Rick and Ruby!!!
 

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