Monday, June 23, 2008

Sazi Riot: A Match-strike Against the Darkness

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Note to Readers: This review was written for a U.K. rocker I met through the Internet. She is talented and very energetic. Read on...

The darkness.

No one seems certain of when it began. But nearly everyone has an opinion. A foundation of logic, however slippery in nature… some intellectual nudge toward comprehension of a sort. Pure insight… or delusion? Both seem possible. One explanation is no better than another. Yet the happening is clear.

The light dimmed somewhere between Elvis and Britney Spears.

One school of thought postulates that cultural darkness in the West began when Buddy Holly met the dirt of an Iowa cornfield with rude effect. Or through the domino-falls when John F. Kennedy, Dr. Martin Luther King, and Bobby Kennedy were assassinated. Maybe, after The Beatles self-destructed at the end of a whirlwind tour through the 1960’s. Perhaps… even as a result of the failed conflict in Vietnam. Or the OPEC oil embargo. Causes are not difficult to find.

Some reckon MTV was the culprit, hand-in-lacy glove with Michael Jackson and Madonna. Or that commercialistic excess was responsible, personified by cliched Heavy Metal acts, Urban Cowboys, and the street-hype of wannabe Gangsta Rappers.

Technology is a suspect as well, with the iPod overwhelming every previous paradigm in a new age where vinyl records, cassette tapes, and compact discs have careened uselessly into oblivion.

For this writer, one truism remains clear. There was a spiritual shift as the final decade of Twentieth-Century life drew to a close. After Kurt Cobain died, and Nirvana with him, something touched the global creative consciousness with sheer damnation. It wrenched-out an awful price: Rock ‘n’ Roll stumbled on the path toward eternity.

The soulless, tone-deaf result muted hope and blurred the guideposts of reason. Our identity, this bastard form of popular music called Rock, seemed to sink into the abyss. A hero’s roster of young performers disappeared with the sweeping hands of chronological motion. Sid Vicious, Malcolm Owen, Joe Strummer, Joey, Johnny, and Dee Dee Ramone, with more on the cusp of eternity… joining the throng of Jimi Hendrix, Jim Morrison, Brian Jones, and Janis Joplin. Rockers, rebels, and raconteurs.

But then… there was a murmur from the tomb.

One might’ve rightly exclaimed: “It’s alive!”

Poetic whispers of Lou Reed, Exene Cervenka, and Richard Hell. Flashbulb bursts of electric grunge from Davie Allan. Leather frills from Chrissie Hynde, and Joan Jett. Brainstorming madness from The White Stripes and Guitar Wolf. Their voices reverberated lovingly toward the cosmos, like a prayer.

In their stead came the next generation – a tribe empowered by Internet openness, and able to move without succor from corporate entertainment moguls. Artists once again directed by a single-minded passion for music, in the forgotten tradition of wandering troubadours.

A match-strike against the darkness… like Sazi Riot.

“There’s a drunk / there’s a habit / there’s some drugs / there’s the addict / but there’s a light…”

Sazi first caught my notice on the Yahoo! 360 network. Her page made me pause with curiosity, amid the clutter of personal journals, and blog-speak. Hungering for more, I discovered that she was also an avid participant on MySpace. There, in the growing community of cutting-edge composers, she had posted some of her original recordings. I clicked on a track, and became spellbound by her gentle fury:

“Sazi Riot / won’t be quiet / she’s got something to say / about your soul today / a punk rock princess / she has an interest / in letting people know / about the ‘end show’ / she’ll use the music / hey, hey, hey!”

I marveled at her persona. She carried the high-energy spark of a poetic, U.K. femme-on-the-loose, yet delivered her message with vocal poise reminiscent of an Old World siren. As a guitar-slinger, she seemed skillfully able to rekindle the energy once wielded by axemen like Mick Jones and Billy Zoom. Her breath, and faith, were strong:

“We are born into this life / a living trial where pain is rife / it gives us wrongs and gives us rights / to choose which side we want to fight / it penetrates our earthly minds / to hate and to make us feel dark inside…We gotta breakthrough / but sins that bind us begin to blind us / gotta breakthrough / we’ll get even and make that push / so breakthrough / don’t let those iron bars defeat us.”

We began to converse, through e-messages sent speedily across the Atlantic Ocean, via cyberspace. Sazi spoke of drawing on the support of friends and family to fashion the ‘Riot’ sound. Keith Harrop, her father, contributed harmonica work and inspiration. Others provided graphics for her Internet page. Soon, I learned that she not only had talent as a writer and performer, but additionally as a visual artist. Her colorful drawings depicted scenes around Great Britain and Europe with an impressionistic flair.

Sazi’s match-strike had paled a spot in the darkness. Daylight peeked above the horizon with a playful wink… and I became a believer.

Months passed between us, with other work come and gone in the interim. I listened, and pondered. She found a home on Byte Me Radio. Her tunes were available on Raw Rip. Yet generationally-inherited habits made me want a ‘hard’ copy of Sazi’s work. An album, or CD. Something tangible. Organized. Defined. A treasure I could collect… an artifact for future eyes and ears to behold. Finally, I wondered out loud. And in response, this songstress did indeed ‘use the music’ – to send a disc worthy of note in any listening library:

SAZI RIOT

1. Dark Days, Bad Ways
2. Breakthrough
3. There’s A Light
4. What D’Ya know
5. Never Get Me (remix ’08)
6. Laughing On The Other Side Of Your Face
7. My Cup Of Tea
8. Sazi Riot The Anthem
9. Young And Stupid
10. I Fought The Law
11. My Eyes Are Open (bonus track)

It was a revelation. I spun the platter again and again… while enjoying a day in the home office. Then, on the road to town, where I visited a local bookstore. And in the evening, with coffee and a blackberry dessert. My soundtrack for the day continued to echo, long after sundown:

“I see you there with a smile on your face / you say you’re open minded, but you’re a disgrace / you’re a cynic and an unbeliever / you’re the one they call a deceiver / all I can say is / you’re fooling only you.”

The darkness, I decided at last, was an illusion. A crafty deception used to dishearten those bearing candles. Though potent, it was not immune to the force of positive emotions:

“He’ll try to stop me doing good all over town / took the wind, the seeds of compassion he’s blown / with all the darkness there’s a weakness / in our souls and eyes / but you’ll never get me no / you’ll never get me down.”

Sazi’s match-strike had been a joyful beginning. It pierced the black void with a sharp steel of goodness. Now, only one task lay ahead… to build on that tuneful foundation.

And to believe.

6-23-08

CAR SPOTTER: Vintage 50's Ford pickup

This workhorse paused at the US Post Office in Thompson as I was sending out copies of the newest Icehouse publication, 'Popcorn Season.' It appears to be a 1951 or 1952 Ford F-series pickup truck. Even in the 21st Century, such sightings are more common than you might imagine. These wheeled mules were built to last, and last they did!




All across the Midwest, old Ford trucks like this are still hauling grain, lumber, and soil. As Toby Keith boasts in the Ford commercials, this is the truck that helped build America!

CAR SPOTTER: 1957 Ford Fairlane Sedan Delivery

Here's a beauty in the rough. A 1957 Ford Fairlane Sedan Delivery. In primer and waiting to be completely restored. This jewel appeared recently at a service depot on Magnolia Drive, off of Route 20, in Euclid. Note the cool whitewall tires, already in place for stylish summer cruising. Unstrap that beast, and set it free! This ride was made to roll!!




Thursday, June 19, 2008

“Loser’s Club”



c. 2008 Rod Ice
All rights reserved
(6-08)


Note to Readers: What follows is a one-act play, based on the life-experiences of a dubious, yet well-known group of celebrities: Jim Kelly, former NFL Quarterback and four-time Superbowl loser; Hillary Clinton and Rudy Giuliani, both failed presidential candidates; Marc Dann, disgraced former Ohio Attorney General; and New England Patriots Coach Bill Belichick, loser of Superbowl XLII.

SETTING: A secret warehouse in downtown Cleveland. The venue has been remodeled to serve as a clandestine meeting place for visiting dignitaries. They are members of a national organization called ‘The Loser’s Club.’

THE PLAYERS: Notable public figures, politicians, athletes, and professional coaches.

JIM KELLY: (Banging his ceremonial Buffalo Bills gavel) “Please take your seats, everyone. On behalf of our exalted trustees, I’d like to open this meeting of the Loser’s Club!”

HILLARY CLINTON: “Loser? I must be in the wrong room!”

RUDY GIULIANI: (Laughing) “Trust me. You’re in good company here.”

MARC DANN: “Come on Hillary. Sit down. Make yourself at home.”

J. KELLY: (Gesturing for attention) “We are thrilled to be meeting in Cleveland, Ohio. This city has inspired all of us, by consistently failing to win a championship in football, baseball, or basketball…”

HILLARY: “That’s it! I’m leaving!!”

M. DANN: “Settle down, sister!”

BILL BELICHICK: “Yeah, don’t get your panties in a bunch, Ms. Rodham!”

HILLARY: (Pointing her finger) “Watch your mouth, Belly-choke!”

B. BELICHICK: (Angrily) “Hey, back off, Donkey Queen! You’ve got a big attitude for someone who got whipped by a political novice!”

HILLARY: “I should’ve spy-taped Obama like you did opponents in the NFL. Then I might’ve had a chance in the primaries!”

B. BELICHICK: (Red faced) “How dare you! No wait… that’s your husband’s line…”

R. GIULIANI: “Hey, the bar opens after we finish our meeting. Can we get through this, already??”

J. KELLY: (Again banging his gavel) “We’ve gathered here today to honor someone who has taken ‘losing’ to a new extreme. Someone who has exemplified the very essence of what it means to go down in flames, with dignity…”

M. DANN: “Bill deserves the trash-can trophy. I might be a loser, but I still wouldn’t have taken the Giants for granted, in front of a national audience!”

B. BELICHICK: “It’s easy to run your mouth on Monday morning, especially after chasing skirts all weekend…”

R. GIULIANI: “Sorry, Bill. Marc is right. You get to the Super Bowl, then let a rookie quarterback like Eli Manning pick apart your top-of-the-league defense? Nice job. Just like your days here on Lake Erie with the Browns.”

HILLARY: (Cackling) “Who’s wearing the skirt now, Bill?”

B. BELICHICK: “Back on your broom, witch!”

J. KELLY: “People! Please!”

HILLARY: “I won more votes, with more delegates, and the party leadership took it all away! I don’t belong in this club! Do you hear me??”

M. DANN: “Ms. Rodham, give it up. Judgement has been passed. You’re in a big boat with the rest of us… sailing out to oblivion…”

R. GIULIANI: (Singing out loud) “Ride Captain, ride…”

J. KELLY: “Let’s have a round of applause for the newest recipient of our Edsel Ford Trash-Can Trophy… Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton!”

(Applause and cheers fill the room.)

B. BELICHICK: “Well, give that lady a cigar!”

M. DANN: (With a grin) “Idiot! Don’t say ‘cigar’ around Mrs. C!”

R. GIULIANI: “Nice faux pas, Bill. Pull Monica’s foot out of your mouth and shut up.”

HILLARY: “Coach, I’ll bet you’re an Obama supporter, besides being a football cheater!”

J. KELLY: “People! Settle down. I want to say a few words…”

(Everyone raises their champagne glasses)

J. KELLY: “On behalf of the Loser’s Club, I make this toast… to a woman gifted with greatness. A vibrant spirit offering illumination in the darkness. A tireless warrior for the downtrodden people of our nation… a passionate, unselfish champion of truth, justice, and the American way…”

B. BELICHICK: (Whispering) “Hillary must’ve written that herself.”

M. DANN: (Snorting with amusement) “Geez, this sounds like something out of an old ‘Superman’ rerun!”

R. GIULIANI: “I think Jim got sacked one time too many in that Superbowl against the Redskins.”

B. BELICHICK: “These meetings are really boring. Next time, I’m going to bring my iPod and a bag of Doritos.”

HILLARY: “Shut up! The Chairman is talking!”

J. KELLY: (With his glass held high) “To you, Mrs. Clinton…Loser of the Year!”

(The toast is echoed with cheers and loud celebration.)

HILLARY: (Frowning) “I deserve the Democrat nomination for President! Not your stinky trash-can prize!”

R. GIULIANI: “Go with what you’ve got, Ms. Rodham.”

M. DANN: “Don’t complain! The Edsel Trophy comes with gift cards to Wal-Mart and Outback Steakhouse. It beats walking away with nothing!”

B. BELICHICK: “Like you did, leaving Columbus?”

J. KELLY: (Frustrated) “Is anybody listening to me??”

(The room falls silent)

HILLARY: “This is an outrage! I deserve to break through the glass ceiling! This was my turn to win the White House!”

J. KELLY: “Sorry, Hill. Obama may be short on experience and savvy, but he’s camera-friendly. That counts in the Information Age.”

R. GIULIANI: “You can still go for Supreme Court Justice, or Senate Majority Leader. Or perhaps… Ambassador to Dubai or China! Your hubby is cozy with both of them. Life goes on…”

M. DANN: “At least you’ve still got the support of your party! I’d kill for some of that!”

HILLARY: (With disgust) “Hah! You’d be glad for a bus ticket back to Youngstown!”

B. BELICHICK: “I’d be glad for a bag of Doritos!”

J. KELLY: “Okay! As I was saying… Hillary Clinton deserves our loyalty, and love, and gratitude, as a loser of great distinction…”

R. GIULIANI: “Hip. Hip, hooray!”

HILLARY: “Stop saying that! I am not a loser!”

M. DANN: “That’s what I told Governor Strickland. But it didn’t wash.”

B. BELICHICK: “Once you’ve got the tag, it’s yours for life…”

HILLARY: “I am not a loser!”

J. KELLY: “Of course not. Neither was Jose Mesa, or Fran Tarkenton, or Adlai Stevenson, or George McGovern.”

R. GIULIANI: “Yes, we’re all winners here, actually. That goes without saying.”

M. DANN: “But circumstances and misunderstandings made us fail…”

B. BELICHICK: “And meddling by the league!”

J. KELLY: “Do you see? Being a loser only means you’ve been a victim, Mrs. Clinton. Not a failure.”

HILLARY: “Yes… I’m a victim! Of prejudice and vast conspiracies!”

R. GIULIANI: “Now you’ve got it!”

M. DANN: “We’re all victims. The establishment shot us down!”

B. BELICHICK: “Amen, brother! And… sister!”

J. KELLY: “Join us, Mrs. C. Together, we are stronger than the rest.”

HILLARY: “Yes… stronger. Not… a loser!”

M. DANN: “You are one of us.”

R. GIULIANI: “One of us…”

HILLARY: “Yes, I am. Yes I am! Yes I am!!!”

POSTSCRIPT: The club concluded its regular meeting by singing the Johnny Paycheck hymn ‘Loser of the Year’ in unison.”

Comments about Thoughts At Large may be sent to: icewritesforyou@gmail.com
Visit us at: www.thoughtsatlarge.com

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

MORE TAL PROMO PICS

Here are two more TAL promo pictures, taken when a recent storm passed over our home in Thompson. The display was intense and furious. It brought out the entire neighborhood!


THE CRUSHER IN PERSON



Here he is - the real CRUSHER! Professional wrestler Reggie Lisowski, who passed away in 2005. His story is incredible, including workouts that consisted of running along the shoreline of Lake Michigan with a beer keg on each shoulder!

His obituary from The Washington Post is posted at: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/10/27/AR2005102702293_pf.html

Read on, you turkey necks!!

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

THE NOVAS

Thank you, Norton Records.

I've sought a copy of this 45 for years, after first hearing the song courtesy of 'Doctor Demento' in the early 70's. At the time, it was barely eight or ten years old... a novelty recording from the recent past. Yet even then, mystery had fortified their legend. WHO WERE THE NOVAS?

All we knew was that they came from Minnesota. Information on the band was tantalizingly scarce. The track ended up on a couple of vinyl collections throughout the years. But an actual copy of the single eluded my grasp.


Hard to find, but oh so desirable - the original Novas 45


Then, I stumbled across an ad for the Norton Records catalog. Yes, true believers, an honest-to-goodness newsprint catalog on paper! Just like in the Hippie-Era that preceded technology's overwhelming information tide.

There, amid the small-type entries was... a NOVAS EP! (Okay, I actually saw it first on their website, but the 'feel' of their printed literature still evoked many pleasant memories of those bygone days.)

I was spellbound. Soon enough, I had ordered the 7-inch, vinyl platter. It was a revelation to receive!


The Norton Records 'Crusher' reissue EP


The Novas history as provided by Norton Records


Norton - Your place for Turban Contemporary Music!


Norton Records catalog - just like in the days of yore!


The Novas being inducted into the Minnesota Rock 'n' Roll Hall of Fame

In the process of locating this record, I learned that the group had only been together for a couple of years. And other bits of Novas trivia:

1.) Their inspiration was - Reggie 'The Crusher' Lisowski, a real pro wrestler
2.) Their historic anthem was recorded in the summer of 1964
3.) They were high school kids from Edina, Minnesota
4.) Drummer Jeff Raymond was only 13 at the time!
5.) The tune made Billboard's Hot 100 for three weeks in a row, selling around 250,00
copies!
6.) They were inducted into the Minnesota R & R Hall of Fame on April 28, 2007

My vinyl thrill-ride had been completed, at last.

Thank you, Norton Records!

Friday, June 13, 2008

“Last Dance For A Diddley Daddy – Part One”


c. 2008 Rod Ice
All rights reserved
(6-08)


It was a humid morning on the Northcoast. A Monday full of promise for dreamers, and anguish for those on a schedule. My stance was pedal-down, and rolling – I had traded the home-office desk chair for a spot on the highway. The motor in my pickup defiantly gulped air and fuel as if gasoline hadn’t climbed to four dollars per gallon. But the need to escape couldn’t be denied. It came like a miraculous thunderclap of resurrection.

Voice-mail handled my personal business.

I was gone…

On the road, news crackled from my radio. Politics, business, hometown athletic woes, and the wayward acts of pop-culture figures. Then, something more… a multi-second soundbite that started my muscles twitching to the rhythm of an unseen guitar.

Bo Diddley had passed away.

My heel kicked the floor mat. I tapped out a syncopated rhythm on the steering wheel, while watching the telephone poles zip by with abandon. Silent music reverberated from door to door. Salty moisture burned in my eyes. All I could do was drive, and listen to the poetry of this working-class composer:

“I walked 47 miles of barbed wire,
Used a cobra snake for a necktie.
Got a brand new house on the roadside,
Made out of rattlesnake hide.
I got a brand new chimney made on top,
Made out of human skulls.
Now come on darling let's take a little walk, tell me,
Who do you love,
Who do you love, Who do you love, Who do you love…”


Afterward came a greater flood of memories, and tears. ‘Mona’ and ‘Diddley Daddy.’ ‘You Can’t Judge A Book by the Cover’ and ‘Road Runner.’ ‘Bo Diddley’s A Gunslinger’ and ‘I’m A Man.’ These songs communicated the gritty, African-American experience to legions of developing young Rockers who were hungry for the kind of authenticity not heard from polished white performers of the age.

Yet in my own life, they were a sort of spiritual fuel. Such songs gave cause to breathe, and love… and hope.

I drove on, and reflected, with the city fading in my rear-view mirror. Diddley was magic in motion. But… how could I embrace his legend in a useful way for readers of this newspaper? It was humbling to consider.

Then, the answer struck like plucked note charged with tuneful, electric energy – Diddley’s legacy was accessible through The Edu-tainer, Dennis Chandler!
I’d written about this Cleveland icon before. Yet much remained for future days when those stories were finished. Now, I recalled that Chandler had bonded with Bo, during his formative, bygone days.

With purpose, I steered toward home.

That… was the connection I needed. A plug-in to the cosmic energy that exuded from this bluesy son of Mississippi by way of Chicago.

On the household computer, a cyber-trip to the Chandler website began to reveal clues about their relationship:

“The Kid Who Wouldn't Take No From The Man Who Knows - When as a teenager Dennis first heard Bo Diddley, little did he know that he would not only meet Bo but also that Bo would become his first guitar teacher. That unique lead-and-rhythm timing technique Bo based on a hambone rhyme ‘shave and a haircut...two bits’ (Da Da Da Da Da pause Da Da) intrigued Dennis-the-pianist. Wanting to play that syncopated style; he wanted to learn guitar. But, how? While attending Miami University, Dennis would steal away nightly to catch Bo's act at Spatz Show Bar in Hamilton, Ohio. Bo noticed him (the only person not of color) sitting front and center studying Bo’s hands. After a few nights he invited him backstage. He challenged Dennis saying, ‘Figured it out yet? I'll show you but once. Learn it right!’ Bo'd even loan him that famous ‘square’ Gretsch guitar for overnight practice.”

I was rocking in the chair. Hours after learning that Bo had graduated to eternity, the patented Diddley beat still echoed in my head. Every strum touched my soul with purpose. I continued reading from DC’s biography, for greater understanding:

“It was many years after those first days together at Spatz Showbar that Dennis had the opportunity to be ‘tested’ by this ‘teacher.’ It happened when he and his band backed Bo for a concert in Cleveland (1985). He ‘graded’ him an A+. With paternal-like pride, Bo said, ‘Dennis is the best exponent yet of the Diddley style (besides my daughter) and Bo knows!’”

Urgency swelled my heart. We had traded stories of vintage guitars, amplifiers, and vinyl records. Our shared heroes were many – Les Paul, Lonnie Mack, B. B. King, and Link Wray. Now, the sad moment of loss brought us closer, again. I sent him a query, then started working on my own improvised obituary for Bo:

“So much has already been written about this incredible icon of popular music. Along with Chuck Berry, he took the bedrock of blues guitar and forged it into something new. Something irresistible. Something kids in the 1950's couldn't embrace quickly enough.

Rock 'n' Roll.

Rock music was the soundtrack for a generational revolution. It helped spur masses of talented young people across the world to think beyond the strict paradigms that had bound their parents.

Diddley (Ellas Otha Bates / McDaniel) came from Mississippi to the hard streets of Chicago. There, like so many others, he ingested the culture of 'electrified blues' as it was reinterpreted in a northern setting.

The result was something familiar, but new. A chunky, syncopated beat rhythmically strummed on the amplified guitar.

The album 'Two Great Guitars' featured Diddley chopping out two-chord compositions, while Berry offered his own three-chord visions.

Together, the pair laid a foundation built upon by The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, The Who, and generations that followed.

Much can be said of this rebellious hero-with-a-supercharged-plectrum. But perhaps the best way to remember Diddley's prolific and enduring career is through remembering the man in his own, colorful words.”

Shortly afterward, Chandler left a voice-mail message on my phone.

“Hey Rod… I’d be glad to help you because Dennis knows Diddley. I have pictures (and) I have every album he made, and every one of them is autographed…”

Now, I could be the pupil, once more. Chandler was my edu-tutor, in all things Diddley… school days were back in session!

Comments about Thoughts At Large may be sent to: icewritesforyou@gmail.com
Visit us at: www.thoughtsatlarge.com

Sunday, June 08, 2008

THOUGHTS FOR OUR SOLDIERS

After interviewing Paul Hickman of 'Guitars for Grunts' I was inspired to reach out to our soldiers serving overseas as he had done by donating musical instruments. But I needed a different slant on this idea - something uniquely personal. Eventually, I realized that the best gift would be a bit of Geauga County, as represented by copies of 'Thoughts At Large.'

That alone wasn't enough, however. I wanted the project to be more inclusive. More completely full of love and respect from the folks at home. Liz provided the answer with her own twist on the idea of sending books to out troops: Let people write their own 'thoughts' inside each copy.

We presented the idea at a meeting of the Thompson United Methodist Church Council. Support from members was immediate, and overwhelming. The result touched our hearts and gladdened our spirits!




(Above: TUMC Pastor Harley Wheeler with the 'Thoughts' display.)



The first 'Signing Sunday' happened on June 8th. It will be repeated again on Father's Day, June 15th. After that, these inscribed volumes will be carefully packaged and shipped with help from Wine Country Books of Geneva.

Those interested in participating may contact:

Thompson United Methodist Church:
P.O. Box 29 Thompson, OH 44086
Phone: 440-298-3033
Tumc29@alltel.net

Wine Country Books
24 North Broadway
Geneva, Ohio 44041
440-466-1925
info@winecountrybooks.com

Saturday, June 07, 2008

CAR SPOTTER: 1957 Chevrolet Bel Air

Here's a beauty sighted recently in Geauga County. It's a California-aged 1957 Chevrolet Bel Air 4-door. Revamped inside and out, with much attention to deatil. Under the hood is a modern Chevy 350 V-8 motor...











This classic charmer is available for $12,500 according to its owner. For more information, call 440-298-9732.

Tuesday, June 03, 2008

BO DIDDLEY R.I.P.


(Above: Bo in concert with 'The Twang Machine')

by ROD ICE

Bo Diddley
December 30, 1928 – June 2, 2008


So much has already been written about this incredible icon of popular music. Along with Chuck Berry, he took the bedrock of blues guitar and forged it into something new. Something irresistible. Something kids in the 1950's couldn't embrace quickly enough.

Rock 'n' Roll.

Rock music was the soundtrack for a generational revolution. It helped spur masses of talented young people across the world to think beyond the strict paradigms that had bound their parents.

Diddley (Ellas Otha Bates / McDaniel) came from Mississippi to the hard streets of Chicago. There, like so many others, he ingested the culture of 'electrified blues' as it was reinterpreted in a northern setting.

The result was something familiar, but new. A chunky, syncopated beat rhythmically strummed on the amplified guitar.

The album 'Two Great Guitars' featured Diddley chopping out two-chord compositions, while Berry offered his own three-chord visions.

Together, the pair laid a foundation built upon by The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, The Who, and generations that followed.


(Above, right: Legendary Clevelander Dennis Chandler's 'Bo' guitar, backstage at Jefferson Days in 2007. Chandler was a student of Bo Diddley, acquiring inspiration and skill from the venerable bluesmaster. And - this 'Twang Machine' of his own.)

Much can be said of this rebellious hero-with-a-supercharged-plectrum. But perhaps the best way to remember Diddley's prolific and enduring career is through remembering the man in his own, colorful words:

I walk 47 miles of barbed wire,
I use a cobra-snake for a necktie,
I got a brand new house on the roadside,
Made from rattlesnake hide,
I got a brand new chimney made on top,
Made out of a human skull,
Now come on take a walk with me, Arlene,
And tell me, who do you love?


Rest in peace, Brother D.