Arquivo da categoria: fazendo história
“o planeta lamma é sete palmos debaixo do chão”…
aconteceu em 10maio e publicado em 12maio1993 pelo glorioso pedro só…
colômbia…
40 mil colombianos lotaram o estádio atanasio girardot, em medelim, para exibir o maior ato de solidariedade que se tem notícia sobre a face da terra… em todos os tempos.
acontece, que fora do estádio havia tantas pessoas quanto dentro… que, por três horas, se esgoelaram para celebrar um time e uma cidade de outra galáxia (em todos os sentidos).
inacreditável o comportamento dos colombianos.
aí, vem a perguntinha marota que se faz necessária:
por exemplo (que serve para qualquer clube daqui), você acha que a torcida do fluminense lotaria o maracanã para se solidarizar com a equipe do colo colo, de santiago do chile, que se espatifou ao entrar em solo brazuka às vésperas de uma final de sulamericana?
ou a torcida do corinthians encheria o itaquerão para passar três horas gritando “dá-lhe boca, dá-lhe boca” no dia seguinte da rapaziada da bombonera dar um tibum no rio da prata?
agora, é um tremendo dever de casa imaginar as razões que levaram os cidadãos de medelim (eu disse medelim) darem esse exemplo absolutamente inoxidável à humanidade… simples assim!
social club…
reparou quem passou por aqui, ontem, na foto que o luiz mandou?
dessas coisas que acontecem no nosso poleiro.
vazou (2)…
Bob Dylan’s Most Mysterious Recording
Perhaps the most mythical of all Dylan’s unreleased gems, “I’m Not There” is an absolute mystery. A long, extended meditation built around a four-chord acoustic-guitar strum, it was recorded only once by Dylan and never finished or revisited. Lyrics and lines float by, some discernible, others elusive. Among Dylan fanatics, it’s a kind of Rosetta stone because it seems to capture the artist in the midst of his creative process. The magic of “I’m Not There” is its lack of definition. Critic Greil Marcus devotes five pages of The Old, Weird America to the song, writing that “?‘I’m Not There’ is barely written at all. Words are floated together in a dyslexia that is music itself, a dyslexia that seems meant to prove the claims of music over words, to see just how little words can do.”
True, but what’s most engaging about the song is the revelation it provides about Dylan’s creative process. Unlike many outtakes and bootlegged tracks, “I’m Not There” feels like someone channeling, speaking in tongues, handling snakes, conjuring out of the mist the blueprint of a song. In The Old, Weird America, Marcus quotes Band guitarist Robbie Robertson’s wonder at Dylan’s method: “He would pull these songs out of nowhere. We didn’t know if he wrote them or if he remembered them. When he sang them, you couldn’t tell.” No recording better illustrates Robertson’s point than “I’m Not There.” There’s something going on inside the song, but you’re not sure what it is. The narrator might be dead, and contemplating his relationship with an unnamed lover. He might have abandoned her. He seems sorry for something. Or angry.
Bootleg copies of the song have long been available, but until the arrival of the soundtrack to I’m Not There this month, it had remained undergound. For that reason alone, Dylan fans have reason to applaud Haynes and his music supervisors, Jim Dunbar and Randall Poster. With the release, a better picture of the circuitous route the song took from basement to film title is revealing itself. The widely bootlegged version has been tainted by engineers attempting — and failing — to liven the song. The true recording has been buried. “So it’s never been heard — except by a rarefied few folks, obviously — in its pure form, as it was straight to tape,” says Dunbar. “It’s like a field recording, almost.”
Among those rarefied few who heard the original recording was Neil Young, who, it turns out, possessed the most pristine and unadulterated copy of the so-called Basement Tapes, which he received from his longtime engineer Elliot Mazur. Mazur was assigned by Dylan’s manager, Albert Grossman, to transfer the original tapes for storage, and ended up dubbing a copy for himself. A few years later, Mazur duplicated them again with the intention of giving Young a copy, but accidentally gave him the original transfers, which sat in Young’s archives until they were unearthed a few years ago. With the song’s release on the fantastic I’m Not There soundtrack, those not exposed to the bootleg can finally attempt to discern meaning for themselves — if they dare.
Randall Poster would rather not. “I don’t approach it that literally, really,” he says. “To me it’s about a kinetic feeling, a song that brings me into the realm of ‘Positively Fourth Street.’ As a kid, the first time I heard that song, it taught me that there’s something that goes on between men and women that I hadn’t experienced yet, but that I was so hungry to experience. I sort of get that same feeling from ‘I’m Not There.’ In a sense, it speaks to a potential intimacy between people — it clearly exists in a sort of divine realm.”
“The song subtly builds,” adds Dunbar. “For me, it’s very intense. It starts off and you think, ‘Aw, there’s not much going on here.’ But by the end of it, it feels like an epic.” Asked what he thinks the song means, Dunbar pauses. “Uh, I don’t know. It’s, uh, definitely someone with . . . uh . . . uh . . . great regret.” Exactly.
vazou…
– I’m Not There
She cried both day and night
I know it because it was there.
It’s a milestone, but she’s down on her luck
And she daily salooning, but to me too hot to book
I would then.
I believe where she’d stop in if she wants time to care
I believe that she’d look upon beside him to care
And I go by the Lord and where she’s on my way, but I don’t belong there.
No I don’t belong to her, I don’t belong to every choir
She’s my prize forsaken angel, but she don’t hear me cry
She’s a long hearted mystic and she can’t carry on
When I’m there she’s alright, but when she’s not when I’m gone.
Heaven knows that the answers she’s don’t calling no one
She’s the way for sailing beautiful
She’s mine for the one
And I lost her attention by tempation as it runs
But she don’t bother me
But I’m not there I’m gone.
Now I’ve cried tonight like I cried the night before
And I’m leased on the high some
But I dream about the door
It’s so long she’s forsaken by a fate with the tale
It don’t hang approximation
She smiled Fare Thee Well.
Now when I’ll treat the way we all was born to love her
But she knows that the kingdom weighs so high above her
And I run but I wait
And it’s not too fast or slam
But I’ll not perceive her
I’m not there I’m gone.
Well it’s all about division
And I cry for a bail
I don’t need anybody now beside me to tell
And it’s all affirmation I received but it’s not
She’s a long haunting beauty
But she’s gone like the spark
And she’s gone.
Yes she’s gone like the rainbow that shined in yesterday
But now she’s home beside me
And I’d like to hear to stay
She’s a bone forsaking beauty and it don’t trust anyone
Now I wish I was beside her but I’m not there I’m gone.
Well it’s too hard to stake in
And I don’t far believe
It’s a bag full it’s amusing
That she’s hard too hard to lead.
It’s a load, it’s a crime
The way she mauled me around
Was she told for to hate me, but just don’t forethink in clown.
Yes I believe that it’s rightful
Oh I believe it in my mind
I been told like I said one night before
Carry on the grind.
And this song gypsy told her like I said carry on
I wish I was there to help her
But I’m not there I’m gone.
weller+wyatt+thompson (ou the outsider)…
Paul Weller forms supergroup with Robert Wyatt, Danny Thompson to play concert for Jeremy Corbyn
Paul Weller is to take part in a series of concerts in support of Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn.
Weller will front a one-off group also featuring Robert Wyatt, Pentangle’s Danny Thompson and Weller’s drummers Steve Pilgrim and Ben Gordelier.
The show, People Powered: Concert For Corbyn, will be held at Brighton Dome on December 16. It’s the first in a planned series of gigs celebrating Corbyn’s policies.
lso playing the show are Temples, Kathryn Williams, Stealing Sheep, The Farm, Jim Jones And The Righteous Mind, Edgar Summertyme and Ghetto Priest. Tickets are £25, on sale on Friday (October 14).
The show is the first time that former Wyatt has played live since he curated Meltdown Festival in 2001. In 2014, Wyatt had retired from making music.
“I’m doing the gig because I like what Corbyn says and stands for,” says Weller. “I think its time to take the power out of the hands of the elite and hand it back to the people of this country. I want to see a government that has some integrity and compassion.”
zezé joNes, eterna (ou tempestade de soNs JAH)…
em 3junho1985…
a máquina magiar…
nesses dias de eurocopa, o HD do poleiro reverbera lembranças de times que iluminam a existência dos terrestres. por exemplo, a seleção húngara do início dos anos 50 deveria ser exibida, diariamente, à rapaziada que conta os segundos para fazer um selfie ou marcar visita ao cabelereiro.
a História destes homens é a parte funda da piscina.
roma1980…
não foram muitas as vezes que o ser humano circulou por aqui…