Merle Haggard: Working in Tennessee

Merle Haggard Working in Tennessee

The 74-year-old Merle Haggard has a new CD coming out on October 4. The CD includes some new Haggard originals, a couple of Johnny Cash classics, and a new recording of Haggard’s song “Working Man’s Blues,” featuring Willie Nelson and Hag’s son Ben Haggard.

You may listen to the stream of the album, Working in Tennessee, through September 30 courtesy of Vanguard Records.  [Update 2020: Now that the link is no longer available for the whole album, below is Hag performing the title track “Working in Tennessee.”]

What are your favorite Merle Haggard songs? Leave a comment.

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    Sly Stone is Homeless

    Sly Stone The New York Post reported this week that music legend Sly Stone has fallen on hard times and is homeless and living out of a van. Stone blames his money problems on his former manager and has sued him. The article implies that Stone may be suffering from some mental illness, perhaps related to his history of drug abuse, noting he is disheveled and paranoid, believing the FBI is after him.

    It is sad to hear that someone so talented who was on top of the world is living this unfortunate life. Stone says he has new songs, and he did release an album of his songs re-recorded by other artists earlier this year. But even at a Grammy performance in 2007, one could see he was not in top form. At that tribute performance with other artists playing his songs, he came out onstage, played briefly, and then walked off before the song was over. (He appears at around the 6:30 mark in the video at the link.) Similarly, check out this April 2010 performance of “Dance to the Music.”

    In the 1960s and into the 1970s, Sly and the Family Stone made some great music. In the book Mystery Train (1975), Greil Marcus focuses one of his essays on Sly Stone, connecting his career to the ancient folk song “Stagger Lee,” to race, and to the changing culture and music of the early 1970s. Noting the impact of Stone’s There’s a Riot Goin on (1971), Marcus calls it “a quiet, bitter, open act of rebellion.”

    In the essay, Marcus writes about the war and the lack of trust in political leaders in the days leading up to Watergate, and how such a time may lead to either a culture of cynicism or one that is fake and safe. But Stone “was clearing away the cultural and political debris that seemed piled up in mounds on the streets, in the papers, in the record stores; for all the darkness of what he had to say and how he said it, his music had the kind of strength and the naked honesty that could make you want to start over.”

    I wonder how much Stone’s sense of the insanity of those times led to his own personal madness. His current condition is unfortunate for us as well as for him. During these times featuring worldwide fears when we are still too often faced with a choice between cynicism and make-believe, we need artists with strength and naked honesty.

    What do you think led to Stone’s current situation? What is your favorite Sly and the Family Stone song? Leave a comment.

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    Shannon Hoon & Blind Melon

    Blind Melon Bee Girl Shannon Hoon, the former lead singer of Blind Melon was born on September 26, 1967. Hoon was a great talent, but he was haunted by drug problems throughout his life.

    Unfortunately, he died at the young age of 28 on October 21, 1995, unable to defeat his addiction, dying of a drug overdose. He was found dead on the tour bus when a roadie went to wake him for a sound check for a performance at Tipitina’s in New Orleans.

    Most of us remember Hoon fondly, partly because of his great and unique voice. But I think we connect to him in a special way because we associate him with the themes of the video for his band’s biggest hit, “No Rain,” off the band’s 1992 self-titled debut CD.

    That video features “the Bee Girl,” who is an outcast struggling in a world where she does not fit in, and then she eventually finds a welcoming crowd where she fits. The story is so sweet, we cannot help but love the hippie-looking guy with the odd voice singing the song. Of course, the band and Hoon were much more than this song and video, but it reminds us that it is too bad that he did not get to make a lot more music.

    Heather DeLoach appeared as the “Bee Girl” in the above Blind Melon music video for “No Rain.” She became an actress but does not hide from her early fame as the “Bee Girl,” even having a Facebook page devoted to the striped little girl.

    The album cover, however, features someone who is not DeLoach. The girl on the album cover is Georgia Graham, the sister of Blind Melon drummer Glen Graham. In 2006, Blind Melon reformed with a new lead singer, Travis Warren.

    Be sure to celebrate Hoon’s birthday by being kind to all the Bee Girls and Bee Boys out there. Of course, that includes you too.

    What are your memories of Blind Melon and “No Rain”? Leave a comment.


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    First Day of Autumn: Eva Cassidy & “Autumn Leaves”

    The late Eva Cassidy singing “Autumn Leaves” is a perfect way to start the new season.

    autumn leaves

    Fall begins here in the Northern Hemisphere when the autumnal equinox occurs. The word “equinox” comes from the Latin word for “equal night,” because the night and day today are equal in length as we go toward winter and the days shorten. One sad reminder of summer’s end is that here in the Northeast U.S., I have probably eaten my last good peach, sweet corn on the cob, and flavorful red tomato for the year.

    But, as we move on, we can look forward to fresh flavorful crisp apples and everything pumpkin. And of course, there are those beautiful autumn leaves and some beautiful music of autumn. Speaking of which, below is Eva Cassidy’s recording of the classic “Autumn Leaves,” which was originally a French song with music by Joseph Kosma. English lyrics were added by Johnny Mercer.

    Eva Cassidy grew up in Maryland and was well known in the Washington, D.C. area for her outstanding interpretations of music ranging from folk to blues to jazz. She died at the young age of 33 from melanoma, but her fame has continued to grow since her death. Awhile ago, there even were rumors that a movie would be made about her life.

    Cassidy suffered from Seasonal Affective Disorder, and once stated that she had difficulty enjoying autumn knowing that winter was around the corner.  One may only speculate how she used that feeling to bring more emotion and compassion to singing “Autumn Leaves.”

    One should check out the entirety of her Live at Blues Alley CD, which includes “Autumn Leaves.”  The band, including  Lenny Williams playing a piano solo, knows how to complement Cassidy’s voice while staying mostly in the background.

    So, as the nights get cooler and the leaves begin to fall, watch the video below of Cassidy singing “Autumn Leaves” at the Blues Alley jazz club in Georgetown, DC, on January 3, 1996. And think of the end of the summer and the loss of a great artist.

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    Troy Davis & Clint Eastwood’s True Crime

    Georgia executed Troy Davis tonight, as his supporters claimed he was innocent of the murder for which he was executed. Davis was convicted of shooting and killing a young police officer who intervened in an altercation involving a homeless man and one of Davis’s friends. In the years since the 1989 crime, several witnesses who testified at trial have recanted their identification of Davis, and other witnesses have come forward to claim that someone else did the shooting. People from around the world fought to prevent the execution because of the questions about Davis’s guilt. Yesterday, the Georgia pardons board denied clemency, but through today, Davis’s attorneys were requesting the opportunity to have Davis take a lie detector test.

    Clint Eastwood True Crime

    With the discovery of a number of innocent people on death row in recent years, there have also been questions about the guilt of some people who were executed. A number of media sources, including The New Yorker, raised questions about whether Texas executed an innocent man when it executed Cameron Todd Willingham. That case was based on questionable scientific evidence and has been prominent in the news because the governor who oversaw the execution, Rick Perry, is now running for president. At one point there was a commission that was reviewing the case, but the governor’s office instituted changes that limited the inquiry into the case.

    A number of movies focus on the death penalty and executions, perhaps because the time leading up to an execution permits a large amount of drama on the screen. One movie that focused on questions about the innocence of a death row inmate is True Crime (1999). That movie, directed by and starring Clint Eastwood, focused on a journalist covering an upcoming execution who eventually comes to believe the condemned is innocent. The movie did not do well commercially or critically, but it has some good moments.

    {Contains spoilers, so stop reading here if you do not want to know about the ending of True Crime!}

    Most of the movie is fairly traditional, so I understand why most critics and viewers did not get too excited about the movie. But if True Crime happens to be on television and it is near the end, I will watch it every time. The coda to the film, like the coda of the Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford (2007) and unlike the coda of Wyatt Earp (1994) (discussed previously), is quite beautiful and exceeds everything else in the film.

    The movie follows its somewhat predictable route of having newspaper writer Clint Eastwood racing to try to stop the execution with the newly discovered evidence of innocence. The camera flashes between Eastwood and the execution as it begins. We see the lethal injection begin, and then the phone rings. The warden rushes to stop the execution but the injection has already started. The condemned is unconscious when they pull out the needle. But is he dead or alive?

    Most movies would let us know right then what happened, with a tragic ending or a feel-good rescue. Instead, the beautiful coda to the film then begins. It is Christmas, and we see the grumpy Eastwood doing some Christmas shopping, exchanging some conversation with the sales person, where we learn that good things have happened to the character’s career. As Eastwood leaves the store, he looks across the way and sees the formerly condemned man, alive with his family. The two acknowledge each other across the way without words, showing respect for each other, and then go on with their lives. Diana Krall sings the haunting “Why Should I Care” and the movie ends. Below is the song’s video, which includes scenes from True Crime.

    Unlike most films, and even the rest of True Crime, the coda is so subtle and unusual that it grabs your attention. Like the jazz song that plays, it conveys something complex, revealing more than words. I wish more movies had at least a few minutes of such intelligence.

    A clip of the ending used to be on YouTube but it is no longer available, so below is the trailer for the film. Overall, although the movie is not great, it is a decent movie and worth renting at least just to watch the full ending.

    But sometimes life does not come out like in the movies, as Tim Robbins’s character discovered while trying to make a death penalty movie in The Player (1992). Tonight, for Troy Davis, there was no Clint Eastwood rescue.

    What do you think about Eastwood’s True Crime? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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