3.19.2010

LA Gov. Earl Long 38DD-24-37 Stripper Mistress Blaze Starr! What they're saying about Limbs Andthings Facebook Videos: 'I'LL never be able to leave FB as long as you keep posting...!'


My dead girlfriend, Lisa DeLeeuw
 


LA Gov. Earl Long Stripper Mistress

 

Blaze Starr Strips

 

CLASSY!

2:21


'I'LL never be able to leave FB as long as you keep posting all this great stuff!!!'--Luanna Anders

'I think i know what you're saying. i used to think it was stupid too when i didn't use it, but then i got involved and started doing this and realized it was just another website you show your pimp-hand. if not, it'll walk the streets on you and hold out...just like everything else'--Limbs Andthings

 
 Old Chinese proverb on Orig. Chinese Facebook,
 
Soochal Dynasty by Limsanting


 

 

STARR POWER: LIFE AND TIMES OF A STRIPTEASE QUEEN
http://www.123video.nl/playvideos.asp?MovieID=140587

STARR POWER: LIFE AND TIMES OF A STRIPTEASE QUEEN

The real Blaze was a real star. Gypsy Rose Lee, Sally Rand, Ann Corio, Blaze Starr — these were the MVPs and VIPs of the strip-joint runways. In her prime in '59, when she met and fell in love with Louisiana Gov. Earl K. Long, Blaze Starr was commanding a then-queenly $1,500 a week. "That was a lot more money," she recalls, "than Gov. Long was making on the up and up with his salary." Starr, still disconcertingly sexy at 57, still possessed of measurements she gives — cueing no debate — as 38DD-24-37, gave up stripping six years ago to become a gemologist and make and sell jewelry. Each holiday season, at the Carrolltowne Mall here in the Baltimore suburbs, she is a local celebrity selling earrings, bracelets and necklaces fashioned from the gemstones and crystals she collects the rest of the year. In the Touchstone film based on her affair with Long, Starr, herself is a shooting Starr. She says Playboy is about to publish a photo spread of her, and Las Vegas wants her to strip again. She even appears in the movie, doing a cameo as one of the strippers backstage when Long goes hunting for Starr ("Hello, Governor," she says when Paul Newman plants a familiar kiss on her shoulder.) Starr hasn't ridden such a whirlwind of publicity since her autobiography — "Blaze Starr: My Life as Told to Huey Perry" — was published in 1974. In that book, her romance with Long takes up only a couple of chapters. "Blaze" writer-director Ron Shelton, who optioned the biography in 1983, "told me I had 20 movies in there," Starr proudly announces in her thick, magnolia-scented accent. She says that there had even been talk once of doing a full-length stage musical about her. But now, there is the movie, and it's a big one — done by a major studio with a major star (Newman as Long) and a highly touted newcomer (Lolita Davidovich) portraying her. The movie takes Starr from her midteens at home in the hills of West Virginia to about age 30, when Long died. By her account, Starr was born Fannie Belle Fleming in the tiny southwest West Virginia community of Twelvepole Creek. "We lived two miles from the car road," Starr says. "There was the car road, and the horse road and the cattle path. And this was a dirt road; it was like 15 miles to the hardtop road, where there was a bus." At 15, Starr left home to start a career as a country singer, getting as far as a strip joint called the Quonset Hut in the nation's capital. In the movie, she is a sweet young thing who goes on stage meaning to sing, then discovers the audience is there to see her strip. In real life, the club's owner had first taken her to a club where the well-known stripper Pat Amber Halliday performed. Starr was star-struck. "I liked what I saw. And I thought, 'My God, to be on stage! And you're not naked.' Back then, you wore a thick, net bra with great big beaded parts on the end. Today, you see more on the beach! So I looked in the mirror and checked out my measurements." She was still underage, but, she says, matter-of-factly, "I had these boobs when I was 14. That's how I could pass for 18 so easy." Her assets made her a natural, but when the owner put the moves on her, she made a dramatic escape that the movie fairly accurately depicts. Other events were dramatized, of course; though with Starr, some of the more unbelievable things turn out to be true. "I wanted to be a star," Starr says, "and I wanted something different undressing me. Everything was used by then: snakes, birds, monkeys. I figured, 'What hasn't been done?' " Answer: panthers. So, for a while, Starr worked with a big jungle cat, which was trained to undo a ribbon tied behind her and allow her costume to fall to the floor. (Years later, she says, one of the cats turned on her and she realized "why nobody used 'em.") Curiously, one of the most visual and exciting moments of her life became much less dramatic in the movie: Her first meeting with Earl Long. In the film, as in reality, Long is smitten at the first sight of Starr performing in a New Orleans club. The first thing Long saw her do on stage was her trademark "exploding couch" number. "I had finally got my gimmick, a comedy thing," she says, "where I'm supposed to be getting so worked up that I stretch out on the couch, and — when I push a secret button — smoke starts coming out from like between my legs. Then a fan and a floodlight come on, and you see all these red silk streamers blowing, shaped just like flames, so it looked like the couch had just burst into fire." Long was impressed and began pursuing the stripper. The 62-year-old politician and the 20-something stripper had little in common, except heartache. She was divorcing her husband, club owner Carroll Glorioso, and Long was reportedly living alone in a separate wing of the governor's mansion, away from his wife, "Miz Blanche." Blanche Long was a very public figure at the time, but she did not want her name and likeness used in the movie, so the film makers did not include her. Starr refuses to even utter the former Louisiana First Lady's name. "There was an agreement," Starr says when pressed. "Disney don't need any flak about being sued and all that, even though she couldn't get nothin', 'cause it's the truth." The absence of a wife waters down the scandal in the film. In 1950s Louisiana, it was one thing for a politician to cavort with a striptease star, but to do it with a wife at home was even more disconcerting to constituents. "Blaze" is much more a straight-ahead love story than the story of an affair that rocked the South. And what of that romance? Was it Long's power that attracted Starr? "No, that didn't faze me," she says. "Because I had my own power in my own little world. Earl was sweet, he was nice. I dated him, we'd go to dinner, to the race track — all this for about three months before he even kissed me. And then I just started kind of leaning on him and depending on him." Their relationship was physical, but not right away, she says. "At first, when I met him I was grieving because I was goin' through a divorce. But he was very protective of me when the news media started hounding me. He would put his arm around me and stand right there and say, 'I love her and that's that.' I'm like, 'Gee nobody's ever done this for me.' "So, here's this older man who wants to marry me. I'd only been intimate with him two or three times, when my divorce was gonna be final. But then he started talkin' divorce to Miz . . . to his wife. And she didn't wanna hear it. She blew her mind: 'You're throwing away everything the Longs have fought for!' " It turned out not to matter. After a few months out of politics, Earl won the 1960 Democratic nomination for his district's congressional seat, and died a few days later.

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Deborah Harry and Blondie Heart-Shaped Valentine Promo 1978 (Face and Verso) PLUS Deborah and Joey Ramone

Blondie WE THREE KINGS VID - Chris Stein Site

Never Mind the Bullock's Nazi Fetish: Here's the Adultery Sex Pictures (#video) TMZ + Daily News (my title)

Michelle 'Bombshell' McGee Nazi pics: Fetish photos of gal in eye of Bullock-James storm emerge

Friday, March 19th 2010, 9:48 AM

INF/TMZ.com
Tmz.com has obtained photos of the model claiming an affair with Jesse James -- in Nazi gear.

It gets worse.

The tattoo model claiming a torrid affair with Jesse James, husband of Oscar-winning actress Sandra Bullock, once posed for a photo shoot clad in Nazi regalia and showing off what appears to be white supremacist ink.

A bikini-clad Michelle McGee, inked from head to toe, sports an SS hat and swastika armband as she suggestively brandishes a death's head dagger in a racy photo shoot laid bare Friday on TMZ.com.

In one photo, the letter "W" is inked on McGee's left leg, and the letter "P" on her right. "We're told Michelle tells people it stands for "white power," TMZ reported.

The gossip website said the snapshots were taken almost a year ago by a photographer who is unnamed in the report. 

In child custody documents filed in January, Michelle's ex-husband says she "makes the Nazi salute," and has a swastika tattooed on her stomach.

Bullock was blind-sided Wednesday after McGee made public sleazy text messages she says the Oscar-winner's husband, Jesse James, sent to her during a torrid 11-month affair.

The sleazy pics depict a woman who's a 180 from "Miss Congeniality," who's ridden her clean-cut All-American image to box office superstardom, and an Oscar for "The Blind Side" just weeks ago.

Jesse James yesterday moved to quell the damage from the sordid scandal shrapnel raining down, as further lurid allegations were aired.

"There is only one person to blame for this whole situation, and that is me," James said Thursday in a public mea culpa. "It's because of my poor judgment that I deserve everything bad that is coming my way."

The reality star didn't come straight out and admit the affair, insisting instead that the "vast majority of the allegations reported are untrue and unfounded."

Shortly before James' public apology, the tattooed brunette sent texts to In Touch that she said were exchanged during the 11-month romance - much of which took place while Bullock was away filming "The Blind Side."

Some of the texts were sent as recently as March 14, McGee said - just days after Bullock won her Best Actress Oscar with her proud husband by her side.

"Just think'n bout u this morning," James wrote to McGee, who says in an online profile she's 24 years old.

"You need it?" he asks in another message.

"Yup," McGee replied, the texts say.

On Wednesday, Bullock canceled her planned appearance next week at the London premiere of "The Blind Side" due to "unforeseen personal reasons."

Never Mind the Bullock's Nazi Fetish: Here's the Adultery Sex Pictures (#video) TMZ + Daily News (my title)

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Ramones Sculpture by Artur Ramone Campinas, Sao Paulo Brazil - CBGB

CBGB Omfug - CBGB on The Simpsons

CBGB Omfug - CBGB on The Simpsons - February 2008

Please Kill Me w/Iggy Pop, Richard Hell, Johnny Thunders and More Uncensored Punk (NY Rock)

Please Kill Me w/Iggy Pop, Richard Hell, Johnny Thunders and More

October 1996

Please Kill Me, by Legs McNeil and Gillian McCain, is aptly subtitled The Uncensored Oral History of Punk. That’s basically what it is, no less, no more. In fact, if the material were condensed into one single sentence it might read as follows: In the beginning there was the MC5; the MC5 begat Iggy Pop and the Stooges; the Stooges begat the Ramones; the Ramones begat the Sex Pistols, etc.

McNeil, as cofounder of the trailblazing publication Punk Magazine, serves well as a legitimate authority on the genre. His book consists of first-hand accounts from some of punk’s most influential players. The dizzying excesses of a parade of celebrities are all there for the taking, including Iggy Pop’s many tumbles on a stage full of broken glass; Jayne County’s bone-crushing lurch, with a stage microphone, at the Dictator’s Handsome Dick Manitoba; Stiv Bator’s famous performance at CBGB’s, during which he was fellated by an aspiring cocktail waitress.

It’s much to the authors’ credit that they choose the quasi-documentary style – otherwise one might have found it hard to believe the material contained within. The irony is that while the book is quite obviously a labor of love, it often reveals an indulgent, at times downright pathetic, squadron of characters. At key moments, you don’t know whether to laugh or get your stomach pumped. Dee Dee Ramone’s account of Sid Vicious using soiled water from a public toilet bowl to shoot up with is one such occasion. "I’d seen it all by then," says Dee Dee.

Of course, Dee Dee’s closet rattles pretty heavily with his own collection of skeletons. During an aborted attempt at forging a new band with Stiv Bators in Paris, Dee Dee grew ever more disenchanted with Johnny Thunders, who was slated to be included in the lineup. Upon discovering his overcoat in Thunders’ suitcase, Dee Dee became enraged and subsequently smashed Thunders’ guitar to pieces and destroyed his entire wardrobe with a little help from Drano and a few other household corrosives.

Obliging Fans

The book borrows its title from a T-shirt designed by Richard Hell, who was then the bass player for Television. Hell is perhaps one of the most unsung heroes of the punk movement. His groundbreaking work with the Voidiods – and his debut album, containing the cut "Blank Generation" – clearly paved the way for others to follow. In fact, it’s widely speculated that Malcom Maclaren exported Hell’s entire image, spiked hair and ripped clothing, to England for use on his favorite clients, the Sex Pistols.

Hell had written the words "Please Kill Me" on a shirt and included a graphic of a bulls-eye below it. He then decided it was against his better judgment to actually wear it – the duty was somehow assumed by Television guitarist Richard Lloyd. According to Lloyd, "Richard... wouldn’t wear it. So I [did]. These fans gave me this really psychotic look... Then they said, ‘If that’s what you want, we’ll be glad to oblige because we’re such big fans!’... and I thought, I’m not wearing this shirt again."

The History of Rock & Roll

Some of the more outlandish behavior in the book comes by way of Iggy Pop. Among other things, Iggy was fond of wearing women’s evening gowns or nothing at all in public. His love for substances is well documented, including his tendency to consume enough Quaaludes to kill a horse and then crawl around uselessly on-stage before thousands of adoring fans. On one occasion, Iggy nearly got runover while sprawled out on the parking lot outside a local truck stop. According to James Grauerholz, Iggy leapt to his feet and screamed, "You asshole, you almost killed me... you could’ve stopped the history of rock & roll."

As mentioned, the book’s use of straight quotes work well. Not only does it lend authenticity to the material but it allows its characters to display some of their more positive sides. For example, it’s no surprise that as the author of some of the greatest rock & roll material ever, such as "Lust For Life," Iggy Pop proves to be an intelligent, eloquent fellow. However, it’s nice to read his words verbatim to confirm the fact. Otherwise we could walk away with nothing but the picture of him crawling around in a stupor, covered with blood, bare-assed naked – or clad in the latest evening wear from the Gloria Vanderbilt collection.

Please Kill Me w/Iggy Pop, Richard Hell, Johnny Thunders and More Uncensored Punk (NY Rock)

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Suicide: No Compromise

Alex Chilton Pays Own Airfare to Record on Alan Vega Ben Vaughn Cubist Blues "Suicide: No Compromise"

Alex Chilton Pays Own Airfare to Record on Alan Vega Ben Vaughn Cubist Blues "Suicide: No Compromise"

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Alex Chilton: Overrated - Milk it! Google Books

James Brown Drove Six Miles on Wheel Rims

James Brown: The Godfather of Soul - Google Books

James Brown: The Godfather of Soul - Google Books

Free James Brown #MP3 What Gets Me Hot via WFMU Beware of the Blog

Free James Brown #MP3 via Greg Cartwright ? WFMU Beware of the Blog

Free James Brown (MP3)

Free_james_brown_45rpm
Robert Lusson & Some Cast Of Characters  -  Free James Brown  (3:41)
On September 24, 1988 James Brown went kinda nuts in Augusta, Georgia resulting in a total of 11 charges, including assault and battery with intent to kill, drunken driving, and a host of traffic offenses.  According to JET magazine, the incident began when Brown dropped in on an insurance seminar in an office building he owned and demanded to know who had been using his restroom. 
Brandishing a shotgun, Brown emphatically made clear his displeasure at the idea of the public using the bathroom in his office building and ordered the seminar attendees outside.  One of them called the police and when they arrived, Brown fled in his 1987 Ford pickup truck.  The police pursued him into South Carolina, where they shot out the truck's back tires.  Despite this, the chase continued for another six miles and back into Georgia at which point Brown, driving on his rims, finally steered his truck into a ditch.
In December 1988, the Godfather Of Soul was sentenced to 6 years in the State Park Correctional Institution near Columbia, South Carolina.  The groundswell of love and support from writers, DJs, fans, and his peers came to be known as the "Free James Brown" movement.
Brown was released on February 27, 1991 after serving approximately 26 months.

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FBI James Brown-Side Of Police Chase

FBI File Recounts James Brown's Side Of '88 Police Chase

By Joe Stephens
Washington Post staff writer
Tuesday, April 3, 2007

FBI agents are known for targeting godfathers. But when it comes to the Godfather of Soul, it turns out they can be a bit more understanding.

That revelation comes courtesy of a secret FBI file on soul legend James Brown, who died in December at age 73. The FBI released the file to The Washington Post last week under the Freedom of Information Act.

Brown was known to occasionally run afoul of the law, most notably in 1988 during a bizarre, PCP-fueled police chase from South Carolina to Georgia. So you might assume Brown's 34-page dossier would recount tales of G-men sifting through capes and jumpsuits in pursuit of incriminating evidence. Instead, the file describes the day that Soul Brother No. 1 unexpectedly turned to the bureau for help.

It was 1989, and Brown had begun serving a six-year sentence for aggravated assault in connection with the chase. The singer's then-wife, Adrienne, called a bureau official to complain about harassment by local cops and a blood test that had found PCP in Brown's blood. She claimed that her husband had never used PCP -- in fact had campaigned against illegal drugs -- and perhaps had just breathed in some secondhand smoke.

FBI officials didn't scoff. They launched an inquiry into Brown's allegations that the police had violated his civil rights.

The transgressions that James and Adrienne Brown itemized in FBI statements fill pages. They claimed the cops shattered Brown's pickup truck window; punched Brown in the mouth and loosened his dental work; kicked his truck and butted it with a rifle; and shot the vehicle 23 times, including the tires and gas tank.

The report gives perhaps the first full, public account of the September 1988 incident from Brown's point of view, including how the misadventure started when a group of insurance agents invaded his bathroom. (It's a long story.)

Why try to explain? Let's go directly to the just-the-facts FBI report, recounting what Brown told agents who visited him at the state prison at Columbia, S.C.

"Brown stated that . . . on a Saturday, date not recalled, he drove his pick up truck to his office" in Augusta, Ga. "When arriving at his office he observed that his bathroom door was open. Thinking that possibly there had been a break-in he went back to his truck in the parking lot, got his shot gun and took it back to his office.

"He then learned that there was a meeting going on somewhere in the office complex and that the attendees of this meeting had been using the bathroom in his office.

"Brown was extremely upset about this and began questioning those in attendance as to the reason for using his facility. During this time Brown had placed his shot gun in the corner of his office in full view. Brown then asked for the return of his keys, received same and then locked the bathroom door.

"He then left his office with the shot gun, placed it in the pick up truck and began driving his truck on I-20 into South Carolina. . . . He observed that a road block had been set up by two police vehicles in a 'V' shape. Brown seeing this drove around the police road block to avoid hitting the police vehicles and continued on.

"Brown's vehicle was then pulled over . . . At this time six other police vehicles converged on the scene. . . . A policeman began kicking the vehicle door and hitting the vehicle with the butt of his gun. This resulted in a window being broken. Because of this violence Brown decided to remain in his vehicle. He then locked the vehicle. Brown stated that he was in fear for his life.

"A North Augusta [S.C.] policeman then shot and hit Brown's truck at least eight times and another North Augusta policeman shot approximately nine times at the tires and hood. Other shots were also fired. Brown later counted the bullet holes in his truck and these totalled twenty three. Two of these shots hit the gas tank and the tires were flat.

"Brown became very afraid.

"Because of this fear Brown started up his vehicle and drove away on the flat tires. He was followed by numerous police vehicles. . . . The truck became disabled. At this time approximately twenty policemen arrived on the scene. Brown was pulled from his vehicle by the policeman an[d] slammed against the side of his truck causing injury to his face and body. . . .

"While sitting handcuffed at the jail awaiting the booking process, a white male, 5'4" tall, stocky, in plain clothes walked up to Brown while he was still handcuffed and hit him on the left side of his jaw. This blow was totally unprovoked. The blow knocked loose a denture post of Brown's teeth implant and caused much pain to him."

All of that amounted to civil rights violations, Adrienne Brown told the FBI. She also said that the district attorney who handled the trial "used trickery to plant false thoughts in the minds of the jury, and the police told conflicting stories."

The jury convicted Brown anyway. He was released from prison in 1991.

After its jailhouse interview of the soul man, the FBI referred its report to an assistant U.S. attorney in Georgia. He concluded the allegations had "no apparent prosecutive merit."

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Alex Chilton MP3 Treasure Trove - Remembering An Underground 'Big Star' : NPR

Remembering Alex Chilton: An Underground 'Big Star'

Alex Chilton
Enlarge File/AP Images

Alex Chilton re-formed Big Star in the 1990s and toured with the group regularly until his death. He was scheduled to play a show this weekend at the South by Southwest festival in Austin. Alex Chilton re-formed Big Star in the 1990s and toured with the group regularly until his death. He was scheduled to play a show this weekend at the South by Southwest festival in Austin.

From the Fresh Air Archives

Listen to the complete Alex Chilton interview on Fresh Air from May 1, 2000.

text sizeAAA
March 19, 2010

Musician Alex Chilton died Wednesday from an apparent heart attack in New Orleans. He was 59. Chilton's music, with his '60s band the Box Tops, his '70s group Big Star and his solo work later, was fiercely beloved by a small audience. His albums sold relatively few copies, but his influence echoed in many bands that followed.

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(#video) My NPR Comment on 'Barry Hannah: A Southern Literary Force Dies At 67'

Mo Rourk (mrjyn)

Mo Rourk (mrjyn) wrote:

Comment: (only thing that's made me laugh all night)
Bobby Peru (bobby_peru) wrote:

The book of stories is called Airships, not Airstrips. Its phenomenal, by the way.

Friday, March 05, 20

R.I.P. Barry Hannah Author Reads also Jim Dickinson [HQ]
by Mo Rourk (videos)
15:00
R.I.P. Barry Hannah - This Video is about a person who has recently died. Some information, such as that pertaining to the circumstances of the person's death and surrounding events may change as more facts become known.--Mo'RIPedia

R.I.P. Barry Hannah Author Reads also Jim Dickinson
http://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=104639982898687

R.I.P. Barry Hannah - author of "Geronimo Rex, " "High Lonesome" and other titles, died March 2, 2010. Hannah also taught writing at the University of Mississippi for 25 years. He was 67.

Howard Barry Hannah (April 23, 1942 – March 1, 2010) was an American novelist and short story writer from Mississippi.

***Whomever wishes to be tagged on this video either for yourself or to send to a friend, just let me know. Thanks


"Can you hear the pipes groan in this letter?
Tell me something happy.
Did you ever look down the arms of Hannah, Barry?"
MO'R

"Barry could somehow make the English sentence generous and unpredictable, yet still make wonderful sense, which for readers is thrilling. You never knew the source of the next word. But he seemed to command the short story form and the novel form and make those forms up newly for himself."
Richard Ford

http://twitter.com/nichopoulouzo/status/10067244358

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barry_Hannah

- - -

Saturday, March 06, 2010 6:20:32 AM

Bobby  Peru (bobby_peru)

Bobby Peru (bobby_peru) wrote:

The book of stories is called Airships, not Airstrips. Its phenomenal, by the way.

Friday, March 05, 2010 11:39:13 AM

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Review: Charlie Poole Tribute Album From Loudon Wainwright III : NPR

An Irrepressible Tribute To Charlie Poole

Charlie Poole at his home in Spray, North Carolina, in 1925.; courtesy of 2nd Story Sound
courtesy of 2nd Story Sound

Charlie Poole at his home in Spray, N.C., in 1925.

November 4, 2009 - In 1925, North Carolina singer and banjoist Charlie Poole's "Don't Let Your Deal Go Down Blues" sold 102,000 copies, an amazing figure for a so-called hillbilly artist. Poole was a hard-living rounder who died at 39 in 1931, after a binge that lasted 13 weeks. Songs he made famous were kept alive by Bill Monroe, whose bluegrass innovations owed plenty to Poole's North Carolina Ramblers. Harry Smith included him on his now-legendary Anthology of American Folk Music. He's been covered by such moderns as Jerry Garcia, The Chieftains and Tom T. Hall. Nevertheless, Poole remains obscure. Singer-songwriter Loudon Wainwright III means to change that with a two-CD tribute to Poole called High Wide & Handsome: The Charlie Poole Project.

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I Produced Linda Gail Lewis - International Affair [New Rose, 1991] (A-) Robert Christgau Review

Linda Gail Lewis

  • International Affair [New Rose, 1991] A-

See Also:

Consumer Guide Reviews:

International Affair [New Rose, 1991]
The long-ago costar of the lowbrow gem Together registers more twang per syllable than prime Duane Eddy, belting and screeching like a flat-out hillbilly--Jeannie C. Riley, say. But though I'd love to hear her "Harper Valley P.T.A." (or "Fist City," or "9 to 5"), she's Jerry Lee's sister, wild-ass before she's anything else. She doesn't ignore country on this band-centered studio job, but except for Billy Swan's "I Can Help" ("If your child needs a mama we can discuss that too"), the standouts are from Wolf-Justman, Dave Edmunds, Bob Dylan, all of whom should be damn proud. Covering "They Called It Rock," she gets up to "Someone in the newspaper said it was shit," and instead of rushing discreetly on to the next line she draws out that last word with the relish of a gal who's waited to sing it all her life. A-

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(Facebook Video) Alex Chilton Paradise Connection: Alan Vega - Ben Vaughn - Limbs Andthings (YouWeirdTube)



Alex Chilton Suicide?

2:40

Alan Vega and Alex Chilton and contributed a cover, (Paradise) to an Alex Chilton tribute album

  
    Alan Vega is the vocalist for 1970s and 80s no wave duo Suicide. Bermowitz graduated with a degree in art from Brooklyn College and began his artistic career doing light sculptures...

 
    Alex Chilton is an American songwriter, guitarist, singer and producer best known for his work with the pop-music bands the Box Tops and Big Star...

 

Cubist Blues, with Ben Vaughn and Alan Vega - (Discovery, 1997, reissued by Last Call in 2006 with an extra disc recorded live)


Alex Chilton Suicide?
http://whatgetsmehot.blogspot.com/2010/03/alex-chilton-suicide-video.html
http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/topics/Alex_Chilton

    Ben Vaughn is an American musician, music producer and a longtime Rambler (automobile) enthusiast.

    Born in Collingswood, New Jersey, Vaughn's interest in music began at age 6 when his uncle gave him a Duane Eddy record. The "Ben Vaughn Combo" released two albums and toured the US from 1983 to 1988. Vaughn then had a solo career, 1988-1994, recording four albums and touring Europe and the United States. As a musician, he is perhaps best known for his "Rambler '65" album recorded entirely in his car.

As a producer, Vaughn made albums for artists such as Charlie Feathers and Los Straitjackets.

       In 1996, Vaughn produced Ween's cult classic, a ten track exploration of country music - 12 Golden Country Greats
 
    Ween is an alternative rock group formed in 1984 in New Hope, Pennsylvania when Aaron Freeman and Mickey Melchiondo met in an eighth grade typing class. The pair became known respectively as Gene Ween and Dean Ween...

 
  

    12 Golden Country Greats is Ween's fifth album, and third for Elektra Records.This album marked the first time Ween limited themselves to a specific genre of music... Musically, 12 Golden Country Greats was, more or less, classic country sounds. Ween and Vaughn went so far as to enlist the services of veteran Nashville session musicians. However, while even the vocal performances where an exquisite mimic of country singing, the album's lyrics were decidedly twisted.
 

    Rambler was an automobile brand name used by the Thomas B. Jeffery Company between 1900 and 1914, then by its successor, Nash Motors from 1950 to 1954, and finally by Nash's successor, American Motors Corporation from 1954 to 1969...


    Charles Feathers, , was an influential rockabilly and country music performer.Charles Arthur Feathers was born in Holly Springs, Mississippi, and recorded a string of popular singles like "Peepin' Eyes," "Defrost Your Heart," "Tongue-Tied Jill," and "Bottle to the Baby" on Sun Records, Meteor and...

 
Vaughn also re-recorded "I Found Her Telephone Number Written on the Boy's Bathroom Wall" for the Mad Magazine-inspired song compilation Mad Grooves.
 
    That '70s Show

    That '70s Show is an American television sitcom that centered on the lives of a group of teenagers living in the fictional suburban town of Point Place, Wisconsin, from May 1976 to January 1, 1980. It debuted on the FOX television network on August 23, 1998.


    "That 70s Show" has another Alex Chilton connection, with the title song being a re-worked version of In The Street


 

    In The Street is an album by the Village People. It features both original cop, Victor Willis and the cop currently in the group, Ray Simpson as lead singers. The G.I., Alex Briley also sings the lead for one song, and the re-release in 1999 featured the bonus track America with Miles J. Davis singing a Big Star song.

        Discography

            * The Many Moods Of Ben Vaughn (1986)(Restless – USA) (Making Waves – UK)
            * Beautiful Thing
              Beautiful Thing
              Beautiful Thing is a play written and first performed in 1993 by Jonathan Harvey. A screen adaptation of the play was released in 1996 by Channel 4 Films, with a revised screenplay also by Harvey. Initially, the film was only intended for television broadcast but it was so well-received that it was...

              (1987)(Restless – USA) (EMI – UK, Europe)
            * Ben Vaughn Blows Your Mind (1988)(Restless – USA) (Virgin – UK, Europe) (DRO – Spain)
            * Dressed In Black (1990)(Enigma – USA) (Demon – UK, Europe)
            * Mood Swings
              Mood Swings
              Mood Swings is a 1993 album by the Canadian hard rock band Harem Scarem. A music video was shot for the song "No Justice". The album charted at #85 on the Canadian charts.- Track listing :-Album:-Singles:- Band :...

              (1991)(Restless – USA) (Demon – UK, Europe)
            * Mono USA (1992)(Bar None - USA) (Club De Musique – Italy) (Sky Ranch – France)
            * Instrumental Stylings (1995)(Bar None – USA)
            * Rambler '65 (1997)(Rhino - USA) (Munster – Spain)
            * The Prehistoric Ben Vaughn (1998)(Munster – Spain)
            * A Date With Ben Vaughn (1999)(Shoeshine – UK)
            * Glasgow Time (2002)(Shoeshine – UK)
            * Designs In Music (2006)(Soundstage 15 – USA)

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Alex Chilton Suicide? (#video)

Ricky Vaughn 1989 HomeImage by BaseballBacks via Flickr

Ben Vaughn is an American musician,
music producer and a longtime Rambler (automobile) enthusiast.

Born in Collingswood, New Jersey, Vaughn's interest in music began at age 6 when his uncle gave him a Duane Eddy record. The "Ben Vaughn Combo" released two albums and toured the US from 1983 to 1988. Vaughn then had a solo career, 1988-1994, recording four albums and touring Europe and the United States. As a musician, he is perhaps best known for his "Rambler '65" album recorded entirely in his car.


As a producer, Vaughn made albums for artists such as Charlie Feathers and Los Straitjackets.

He also collaborated with Alan Vega and Alex Chilton and contributed a cover, (Paradise) to an Alex Chilton tribute album released by Munster Records based in Madrid, Spain.

In 1996, Vaughn produced Ween's cult classic, a ten track exploration of country music - 12 Golden Country Greats. Musically, 12 Golden Country Greats was, more or less, classic country sounds. Ween and Vaughn went so far as to enlist the services of veteran Nashville session musicians. However, while even the vocal performances where an exquisite mimic of country singing, the album's lyrics were decidedly twisted.


Vaughn also re-recorded
"I Found Her Telephone Number Written on the Boy's Bathroom Wall" for the Mad Magazine-inspired song compilation Mad Grooves.


Now living in California, Vaughn works in film and television. Notable for his work on That '70s Show

That '70s Show is an American television sitcom that centered on the lives of a group of teenagers living in the fictional suburban town of Point Place, Wisconsin, from May 1976 to January 1, 1980. It debuted on the FOX television network on August 23, 1998.

"That 70s Show" has another Alex Chilton connection, with the title song being a re-worked version of In The Street

In The Street is an album by the Village People. It features both original cop, Victor Willis and the cop currently in the group, Ray Simpson as lead singers. The G.I., Alex Briley also sings the lead for one song, and the re-release in 1999 featured the bonus track America with Miles J. Davis singing a Big Star song.

Discography

  • The Many Moods Of Ben Vaughn (1986)(Restless – USA) (Making Waves – UK)
  • Beautiful Thing (1987)(Restless – USA) (EMI – UK, Europe)
  • Ben Vaughn Blows Your Mind (1988)(Restless – USA) (Virgin – UK, Europe) (DRO – Spain)
  • Dressed In Black (1990)(Enigma – USA) (Demon – UK, Europe)
  • Mood Swings (1991)(Restless – USA) (Demon – UK, Europe)
  • Mono USA (1992)(Bar None - USA) (Club De Musique – Italy) (Sky Ranch – France)
  • Instrumental Stylings (1995)(Bar None – USA)
  • Rambler '65 (1997)(Rhino - USA) (Munster – Spain)
  • The Prehistoric Ben Vaughn (1998)(Munster – Spain)
  • A Date With Ben Vaughn (1999)(Shoeshine – UK)
  • Glasgow Time (2002)(Shoeshine – UK)
  • Designs In Music (2006)(Soundstage 15 – USA)

External links




Limbs Andthings (YouWeirdTube) on Facebook


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