Glen Campbell’s Heartbreaking Final Song: “I’m Not Gonna Miss You”

Campbell Not Going to Miss You
After singer Glen Campbell was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease in 2011, he worked to make the best of the time he had left, including a farewell tour for his fans. In 2013, he recorded his final song “I’m Not Gonna Miss You” with producer Julian Raymond. In the song, Campbell, who now lives in a special care facility in Nashville, tells us, “I’m still here but yet I’m gone.”

The song sadly reminds us of the loss, and you may want to have some tissues ready when you watch the video, which begins with images of a brain scan. But, the video and its scenes of Campbell’s life also constitute a celebration. Check out the video for “I’m Not Gonna Miss You.”

Glen Campbell’s most recent album was 2011’s Ghost On The Canvas.

Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Willie Nelson and Engelbert Humperdinck: “Make You Feel My Love”

    Engelbert Humperdinck recently released a new album of duets, Engelbert Calling (2014). On one of the tracks, Willie Nelson joins Humperdinck on “Make You Feel My Love,” a song that Chimesfreedom has discussed as one of Bob Dylan’s Late Career Classics.

    This collaboration is somewhat unusual. I am guessing this recording is one of those duets you are either going to love or hate, so check it out and judge for yourself.

    Other artists that appear on Engelbert Calling include Elton John, Cliff Richards, Shelby Lynne, Dionne Warwick, and Il Divo.

    What do you think of the combination of Nelson and Humperdinck on a Dylan song? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Mingo Sanders and Teddy Roosevelt’s Dishonorable Discharge

    While recently enjoying Ken Burns’s excellent documentary episodes The Roosevelts (2014), one of the stories about Theodore Roosevelt made me want to find out more. The narrator mentioned President Teddy Roosevelt’s handling of a black regiment in Brownsville, Texas.

    Roosevelt gave a dishonorable discharge to a black sergeant who had once shared his food rations with Roosevelt in Cuba. I became curious to find out more about this unnamed man who was treated so poorly.  And with a little research I soon found his name was Mingo Sanders.

    Sanders’ Early Service

    Teddy Roosevelt Soldier Discharge Mingo Sanders, who had been born in March 1858 in Marion, S.C., enlisted in the Army on May 16, 1881. In 1888, he went to Missoula, Montana (there are conflicting stories whether or not he was married yet, in which case he brought his wife Luella).  There, he served with Company B of the 25th Infantry.

    In 1897, the 39-year-old Sergeant Sanders played an important role in helping Lt. James A. Moss test the military use of bicycles on a trip between Missoula and St. Louis. Sanders was older than the other men and was partially blind from an explosion during his long military service. But he earned the admiration of his men on the difficult 41-day journey.

    Sanders Encounters Theodore Roosevelt in Cuba

    Not long after the trip, the Spanish-American War broke out and the 25th Infantry’s commission in Missoula ended.  Many of the men, including Sanders, were sent to Cuba.

    Sanders and his colleagues would play a brave and important role in the capture of San Juan Hill, the battle that made Teddy Roosevelt and his Rough Riders famous. Despite all the credit given to Roosevelt and his Rough Riders, black soldiers made up about 25% of the U.S. forces in Cuba and played an important role in the battles.

    It was in Cuba where Sanders first crossed paths with Roosevelt. On one occasion, Roosevelt went to Sanders and asked Sanders to give some of his unit’s hardtack rations to the Rough Riders.

    Sanders continued to have a distinguished career. Eight years after his efforts in Cuba, he rescued five white prisoners during a conflict between the United States and the First Philippine Republic. For his work, he received a medal of honor.

    The Dishonorable Discharge

    Mingo Sanders Harpers Weekly

    Unfortunately for Sanders, his life would cross paths with Roosevelt’s responsibilities once again. In 1906, Sanders had served in the military for 26 years and was near retirement. That year, the 25th Infantry was stationed in Brownsville, Texas, where the town was not welcoming of the black soldiers. After some arguments in the town, on Aug. 13, 1906, someone or some people fired shots, killing a white bartender and wounding a police officer.

    Some of the townspeople blamed the black soldiers.  But their white officers insisted the men were all at the barracks at Fort Brown at the time of the shooting.

    At this time Theodore Roosevelt was president.  Amid rising racial tensions in the Brownsville area, he sent officers to conduct an inquiry. Through interviews with the men of the 25th Infantry, they found no witnesses.

    Without any type of trial, President Roosevelt ordered the men to be given dishonorable discharges.  Among the men was Mingo Sanders, the man who had once shared his food with Roosevelt. President Roosevelt waited until after Congressional elections in November 1906 to order the discharge, so that black voters would not abandon the party.

    After the Discharge

    But that was not the end of the story for Sanders or for Roosevelt.  Helped by the work of African-American activist Mary Church Terrell, the military eventually allowed Sgt. Sanders (along with Pvt. Elmer Brown, also of the Twenty-fifth US Infantry) to reenlist into the military on December 12, 1906. (Thanks to commenter T. Fazzini below for information on the reenlistment and link to archives of the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley).

    In a later election, some used the Brownsville decision against Roosevelt. Subsequently, President Taft had even appointed Sanders to a federal position as sort of an anti-Roosevelt reminder. Taft, who had been Roosevelt’s Secretary of War in 1906 and had executed the original discharge, in 1909 ordered Sanders be employed as a messenger in the Interior Department. Sanders continued in that job until Taft left the Presidency in 1913.

    Sanders had settled in Washington, D.C. with his wife, eventually dying on August 23, 1929.  He was buried at Arlington Cemetery, where his wife Luella was also buried in 1942.

    In 1972, Congress would reopen the case of the Brownsville shooting.  It absolved Mingo Sanders and his fellow soldiers of the shooting. President Richard M. Nixon signed a bill giving the men honorable discharges.

    The following video from Montana PBS recounts the story of Sanders’s Montana unit that tested out the use of bicycles for soldiers.  It also tells about Roosevelt’s order discharging Sanders and the other men. Check out The Bicycle Corps: America’s Black Army On Wheels (2000).

    Screenshot via YouTube. Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Lucinda Williams: “Down Where the Spirit Meets the Bone” (Short Review)

    Down Where the Spirit Meets the Bone Critics and fans love the new double-CD from Lucinda Williams, Down Where the Spirit Meets the Bone (2014). I do too.

    The new album is Williams’s first release on her own label, Highway 20 Records, following her departure from Lost Highway Records, which released her albums from 2001 through 2011. Perhaps the move inspired some of her best work, or maybe her long career as a professional just means she continues to get better.

    The Independent calls Down Where the Spirit Meets the Bone a “magnificent, career-defining piece of work.” AllMusic claims “this music is taut and soulful, but also a document of one woman baring her spirit and mind to the world.” Blurt Magazine gives the album five stars. Meanwhile, the reviewers debate whether the new album is her best since Essence (2001), her best since Car Wheels on a Gravel Road (1998), or simply her best ever.

    Having seen Car Wheels on a Gravel Road as one of the best alt-country albums of all time for more than a decade and a half, I cannot yet proclaim Down Where the Spirit Meets the Bone as better. But I can say that the new album reminds me of the joy I felt upon hearing the 1998 album. And similarly, the new album is on constant repeat play in my home (although now the repeated playing comes through an iPod instead of through a CD player).

    The topics of the songs include broader social issues, like poverty on “East Side of Town,” while other songs are personal, such as “Compassion,” which incorporates the words of a poem written by Williams’s father, Miller Williams. I cannot say which song is my favorite, but one of the standouts is the confessional “When I Look at This World,” below performed live in Kaufleuten, Zürich in August 2013. “And it’s a different story/ Each time I look at the world.”

    The album includes a range of styles, from rock to blues to country shuffle, etc. But it all fits together seamlessly. Down Where the Spirit Meets the Bone is one of those rare albums in this digital age that takes you back to a time where you had to listen to the album all the way through with every track in order. Whether or not the new album is the greatest Lucinda Williams album of all time doesn’t matter. It’s one of the greatest of this time.

    What is your favorite track on Down Where the Spirit Meets the Bone? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    George Clooney Invites Us to “Tomorrowland” (Teaser Trailer)

    Disney has released a teaser trailer for the upcoming futuristic film, Tomorrowland (2015). The movie stars George Clooney and Britt Robertson who, according to the movie’s website, “embark on a danger-filled mission to unearth the secrets of an enigmatic place somewhere in time and space known only as ‘Tomorrowland.’” Brad Bird, who directed Mission: Impossible: Ghost Protocol (2011), directs the new movie. Check out the teaser trailer.

    Tomorrowland arrives in theaters May 22, 2015.

    Are you interested? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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