And Then There Was One (Magician on AGT)

AGT Magicians

This week on America’s Got Talent, three magicians performed in the top twelve, but after America voted, only one magic man was left standing. The comedy-magic team of David and Leeman left everyone amazed with their giant lottery ticket trick, while Mike Super put Nick Cannon in a money machine and revealed a secret message he had given Howard Stern earlier in the week. But it was Mat Franco, featured in a previous Chimesfreedom post, who wowed America with his card tricks to advance to the finals.

This season of America’s Got Talent found some excellent magicians, so it was sad to see it narrowed down to one. On the other hand, it is likely that having so many magicians split the vote for magic fans, making it harder for any of them to win with the other ones around. Franco should benefit from the elimination of the other two magic acts when he goes to the finals.

Did America get it right? David and Leeman amazed everyone by using random numbers selected by the judges. (UPDATE:  Unfortunately, the videos are no longer available.)

Mike Super gave a prominent role to Nick Cannon and some one-dollar bills to match a prediction made with cards and a special message he revealed with a (malfunctioning) small butane torch.

Finally, Matt Franco incorporated several card tricks into his act, even involving the audience at home. The next night, he would learn that this performance was sending him to the finals while the other two magicians went home.

Was Franco the best of the magicians? All three acts did a great job this week, although none of them probably had their best performance of the season. Franco’s act seemed a little small and scattered compared to the cell phone trick he did last time he appeared, so I suspect his prior work played a role in the vote. Looking just at the night, I liked David and Leeman’s act the best, but on overall strength through the season, the audience probably got it right in picking Franco if only one act could proceed to the finals.

In the finals, Franco will have some tough competition, even though one of our favorite acts, Blue Journey, was sent home. The six remaining acts also include excellent singers like Emily West, Sons of Serendip, and the amazing 12-year-old Quintavious Johnson. So we will have to wait and see whether Franco can pull a million-dollar win out of his hat. (September 17, 2014 Update: He did. Mat Franco won this season’s America’s Got Talent competition.)

Which magic act did you like best on this season’s America’s Got Talent? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    New Music: “East Side of Town” from Lucinda Williams

    Lucinda East Side of Town

    A new album from singer-songwriter Lucinda Williams is always a cause for celebration, and she will be releasing the double album Down Where the Spirit Meets the Bone on September 30. Below is “East Side of Town” from the new album.

    The song sounds great, with lyrics influenced by the recent problems with the economy: “You wanna see what it means to be down / Then why don’t you come over to the east side of town?”

    The album features a range of talented musicians, including guitarist Bill Frisell. A No Depression review calls the upcoming album the best one from Williams in more than a decade, while the Village Voice calls it “the best work of Lucinda Williams’s career.” After hearing “East Side of Town,” I can see where they might be right about the album. I can’t wait.

    What is your favorite Lucinda Williams album? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Reunited Replacements on “The Tonight Show”

    replacements fallon
    Last night, The Replacements appeared on The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon and performed the song “Alex Chilton” from their classic album Pleased To Meet Me (1987). The band features featuring founding members Paul Westerberg and Tommy Stinson with Josh Freese (drums) and David Minehan (guitar).

    The Replacements, who recently launched a reunion tour, have not toured since 1991 so it was cool to see the great band playing together again. The performance on NBC on a show hosted by a Saturday Night Live alum is especially sweet considering that the band had been banned from the network’s Saturday Night Live show in 1986 after appearing drunk and destroying a dressing room.

    Reportedly, Fallon’s late-night show had been working for nearly a year to get “The Mats” to appear. [2024 Update: Unfortunately, the video is currently not available.]

    The song “Alex Chilton” is a tribute to the leader of the band Big Star. To listen to a whole concert from the reunited Replacements, check out this story.

    What is your favorite song by The Replacements? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    “Just a Few Takes”: Ray Liotta Discusses Classic “Goodfellas” Scene

    Goodfellas Liotta
    Huffington Post recently interviewed actor Ray Liotta and brought up the classic tracking shot into the Copacabana. In the long shot director Martin Scorsese followed Liotta (playing Henry Hill) and actress Lorraine Bracco (playing Karen Friedman) as they enter and go through the nightclub to their seats.

    In the interview by Ricky Camilleri, Liotta talks about how smoothly everything went and his memories of making Goodfellas. [2024 Update: Unfortunately, the video of the interview is no longer available.]

    Liotta, of course, is giving the actor’s perspective, so of course he did not see all of the work that went into making everything so perfect. Cinematographer Michael Ballhaus has recounted how it took many days to set up the lighting, more days to shoot it, and more days to put together the edit.

    If you want to see the scene again. check it out below. As “Then He Kissed Me” by the Crystals plays in the background, the long shot reveals Hill opening up a new world to his girlfriend Friedman. It remains one of the great scenes in cinema history.



    For more of the Liotta interview head over to HuffPost Live. What is your favorite part of the famous Copa scene from Goodfellas? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    “Peggy Sue Got Married”: The Record That Buddy Holly Never Heard

    Buddy Holly Peggy Sue Got Married

    On September 7, 1936, Charles Harden Holley was born in Lubbock, Texas.  Through various circumstances, though, young Charles would drop the “e” in his last name and become known as “Buddy Holly.”

    Regarding the first name, after the baby was born, the family soon began calling the child “Buddy.” And the name stuck.

    Regarding the spelling of his last name, while young Buddy was a rising musician, Decca Records mistakenly spelled his last name as “Holly.” The singer decided to keep the new spelling, thus completing the final piece of the name of one of the greatest rock and roll talents in history.

    The Original Release of “Peggy Sue Got Married”

    In a previous post, Chimesfreedom examined the circumstances of Buddy Holly’s death, but the world did not hear some of his great songs until after his death. For example, “Peggy Sue Got Married,” was released after he died at the young age of 22 on February 3, 1959.

    A little more than five months after Holly’s death, Coral Records on July 20, 1959 released “Peggy Sue Got Married.” It appeared as a B-side to Buddy Holly’s “Crying, Waiting, Hoping.”

    “Peggy Sue Got Married” was a the sequel to Holly’s hit “Peggy Sue.” The original hit was named after the girlfriend of Crickets drummer Jerry Allison.

    You probably have heard this recording of the sequel song.  The recording of “Peggy Sue Got Married” that most of us know features backup vocals and instrumentals recorded in June 1959 after Holly’s death.

    The Version Buddy Holly Knew (as a Demo)

    Because Buddy Holly had died in February of 1959, however, he never heard this version that we know so well.

    The record company created the record using a demo that Holly had recorded himself.  The demo features Holly with his guitar in his New York apartment in December 1958 before Holly left for his final tour.  Below, you may hear the recorded version that Holly knew below.

    I love the song in both versions, despite the fact that the original release was not completely the work of Holly. I have always wondered what Holly might have done with the finished product of the song, although the record company did try to stay true to his “sound.”

    The Crickets Version

    Buddy Holly’s band, The Crickets, later made their own version of the song. They sped up the song in their recording, which features David Box on vocals.

    The Crickets version is not bad, but of course it pales in comparison to the Holly versions.  Check it out.

    The Tribute Version with The Hollies and Holly

    Finally, for a 1993 Buddy Holly tribute album, Not Fade Away: Remembering Buddy Holly, the English rock group The Hollies re-recorded “Peggy Sue Got Married.” Instead of adding new vocals, though, they used Buddy Holly’s original vocals.

    While some may be critical of the re-use of Holly’s vocals, remember that the original record did the same thing. And what better tribute than a re-working of the song by a band that named itself after Buddy Holly? Check it out.

    Rarely has one set of vocals created so many versions. And that is not even mentioning that the song also inspired a 1986 movie of the same name.  The movie Peggy Sue Got Married used the demo version of the song over the opening.

    In case you are wondering about whether the real “Peggy Sue” got married, the original “Peggy Sue” song helped Jerry Allison get back together with his girlfriend who had inspired the song’s name.  And Peggy Sue Gerron did get married to Allison.

    But, unlike like Holly’s song, the marriage did not last, as Peggy Sue and Jerry divorced in 1967 after eight years of marriage.

    What is your favorite version of “Peggy Sue Got Married”? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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