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Alvin LeeSunday morning and I’m up late.  Tired.  Not much working upstairs yet.

Since it is the 40th anniversary weekend for Woodstock I’m going to simply cruise today and show yet another clip of one of my favorite performances from that weekend back in 1969.  There were so many performances that stand out in thecollective memory that it’s hard to choose.  But this was my favorite when I was ten and I still snap to when I hear it.  It’s Goin’ Home from Alvin Lee of Ten Years After fame.  They were famous for I’d Love to Change the World, a great song that I’m still surprised to not hear as a remake, but never had the huge fame of many of the other acts from that show.

But on that August night they played this they really lit up the night…

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woodstock  It’s been forty years.

Woodstock.

Saying the word Woodstock only means one thing to most people.  Three days in August that came to be a symbol of an era.

I can only imagine what an 18 year old kid today thinks when he hears the word Woodstock.  For today’s youth hearing someone talk about being at Woodstock would be like a kid in 1969 hearing their grandparents talk about something that happened in 1929.  It would seem like ancient history.

But Woodstock still has mythic appeal.  The musicians and performances were legendary, many like Jimi Hendrix’s Star Spangled Banner becoming cultural touchstones.  The sensation it caused in the media and throughout the country was huge and subsequent festivals to this day aspire for the effect that Woodstock produced, always coming up short.

I was too young for Woodstock, being only ten at the time.  But I remember the weekend and the news reports of the thruway being closed.  It really struck later when the film came out and for Christmas my brother got a new 8-track player (cutting edge at the time!) with the Woodstock soundtrack.  Christmas day was filled with Country Joe screaming  Give me an F! and my mother yelling at my brother to turn it off.  I must’ve listened to those big, clunky tapes a thousand times.

I don’t think they’ll ever replicate the way everything seemed to come together at Woodstock.  It’s almost like a piece of art in its entirety.  It could only be produced by that perfect blend of participants and the perfect moment.  A synchronicity of time and events.

It’s easy to make too much of something like Woodstock but for today I’ll just think about how the music from those three days still reverberate today.

It was hard to pick out something, one performance, that could singularly define this event .  There were so many.  So I went with this because every time I hear it vivid memories of those times pop up for me.  Here the aforementioned Country Joe McDonald singing his I Feel Like I’m Fixing to Die Rag.

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Angry Mob

angry-mobOh, my mistake.  They’re a group of concerned citizens raising valid, well thought out points in civil public debates about changes to our health care system.

At least that’s what they’re screaming at the top of their lungs.

It’s hard to watch these town hall debacles.  I have yet to hear one cogent point raised by any of the screaming mass of citizens.  Haven’t heard anything based on what has truly been put forth yet.

I hear “death panels” and “socialism” and “euthanasia.”   I hear a lot of fear, many even saying outright that they fear Obama.  

Baracknaphobia.

Now, some of those who prod this mob forward use the Thomas Jefferson quote- When the people fear the government, it is tyranny.  When the government fears the people it is liberty- as proof that indeed this government is tyrannical and will kill your Granny, your baby and all your houseplants.  It must be- the people fear it.

The problem is that this is misguided fear fed by misinformation that plays to the most basal, instinctual fears of the sheep in this flock.  They are not afraid of the government, they’re afraid of the unknown and that is a powerful fear.  Unfortunately, it the one that is easiest to stir by those who wish to maintain the status quo.  They play to the weaknesses of those who will join the flock, sometimes using a clouded racism to vilify Obama then screaming that the other side always plays the race card.  It is an easily fed, gullible mob.

I haven’t seen enough of anything yet proposed to get too worked up over.  I voted on the premise that there would be fundamental changes to some of the systems that run our country and I’m eager to see these changes.  I have no fear of the unknown in this case.  Rather, I am more afraid of maintaining things as they now are.

And that includes the mob of the dull-witted and unreasoning.

 

Addenda:  My friend David Terrenoire had a great link in his Dark Planet blog today, to a rant from someone who has faced the currently existing  death panels.  It says everything.  Check it out.

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Gallery TalkWell, today’s my annual Gallery Talk at the West End Gallery in Corning in conjunction with my show, Dispatches, which is hanging there until the end of August.  I’ve done quite a few of these talks over the years, probably 11 or 12, so I know what to expect.  But there’s always a little anxiety anytime you have to speak in front of any group of people.

My gallery talks are always pretty much off the top of my head which, when it works and the audience is receptive and interacting, is good.  When it doesn’t work, it’s pretty ugly.  A lot of blank stares and awkward silences.  Luckily, that’s only happened once or twice.

The first talk I did at the West End was back in 1997 and I had put everything I wanted to get across into a short speech that I wrote out and memorized.  Well, the talk began and I reeled off my little speech.  It was pretty good until I came to the end of it and glimpsed the clock.  It had lasted about 4 minutes and my mind was a totally blank slate.  

Tom Gardner, then co-owner of the gallery and a well known painter, had told me a little trick before the talk.  He told me to always have a glass of water and when I came to a spot where I was stuck with nothing to say to simply walk back and forth in front of the audience and take a very slow sip of the water.  Look thoughtful.  I thought it was pretty good advice until I realized I would be pacing back and forth, sipping water, for 56 minutes.

Luckily, Tom rescued me with a question and from there it snowballed with the rest of the crowd asking questions, one subject leading to another. Phew!  Over the years I’ve gotten more comfortable with the whole thing and have an assortment of anecdotes to fall back on when things start to falter.

Another reason I don’t go in with a prepared speech is that each group of people is different.  Some groups are more interested in talking technique, wanting to know how each piece is painted.  What type of paint I use and how I achieve certain aspects in the paintings.  That kind of thing.  But others are not so interested in the how but in the why.  They prefer to hear what the stories are behind the paintings.  So, there’s a moment at the beginning of each talk  when I have to gauge what approach suits this particular group best.  I really try to stay away from the technical side for the most part because sometimes, when I’m droning on about such things, I can see the non-painters’ eyes glazing over.  I try to get off the subject as soon as possible when I spot this and try to engage their interest.

It usually goes pretty well and we all have a few laughs.  I’m hoping today is no different.  If you’re in the area today, the talk takes place at noon at the West End Gallery in Corning, NY.

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michael phelpsThere were a couple of events in the world of athletics and beyond this past weekend that really caught my eye.  First, there was swimmer Michael Phelps’ victory Saturday versus Milorad Cavic in the 100m butterfly at the World Championships.  Cavic was the swimmer who was on the short end of the stick at the Olympics when Phelps made his miraculous lunge in this same event that kept alive his hopes for the medal sweep that he eventually accomplished.  Cavic sparkled in the semi-finals, breaking Phelps’ existing world record.

But he made the mistake of not keeping his mouth shut and just doing his job.  He was everywhere talking about he was still positive he had won in Beijing.  Even crowing  that Phelps was missing the boat by not using the soon-to-be outlawed plastic swimsuits and would be left behind.  It wasn’t a lot but it was enough.  Phelps came out angry and beat Cavic without any doubts, regaining his world record.  His glares and gestures afterward said it all:

Don’t poke the tiger.

Which brings us to Tiger Woods‘ victory at the Buick Open, where he started slowly then methodically dominated the field.  It was a thing of beauty to see how he managed his rounds and how he could recover from even the worst of shots.  It’s a testimony to his dominance that on a day when he was beating the field by several shots, the television commentator remarked after a good drive off the tee that he had finally hit a good shot.  Even on a day when he wasn’t at his best, he still could prevail.

It’s a remarkable thing to watch on a single weekend two athletes who may easily go down as the most dominant ever in their respective fields.  We’re lucky, those of us who care about such things, to be witnesses to these performances.

Another performance I saw was by Orly Taitz, the crazy Russian-born attorney/ real estate agent/ dentist who is the figurehead for this insane birther movement on MSNBC.  She almost froths at the mouth, she’s so rabid.  I began to wonder about all this fuss and I pulled out my own birth certificate.  The original had been lost years ago and this replacement was from around 1973 or 1974.  It doesn’t list my doctor, doesn’t list the time of birth.  But it’s worked fine for me throughout my life and there has never been any question of my citizenship when dealing with the government.  I wonder how many of us have just such birth certificates and if to nutjobs like Orly Taitz this raises questions of our legitimacy as citizens.  This stuff has got to just stop.

One thing I didn’t see was any glimpse of Dick Cheney.  Where has he gone?  I mean, for a while I thought he was trying to fill the void left by television pitchman Billy Mays’ death.  He was everywhere, all the time.  Then suddenly silence.  I guess the disclosure of a few incriminating documents and the screamed pleas of his legal team that he just shut up finally got through to him.  Back to his subterranean lair.

It’s a shame though- I think he could have done a hell of an ad for Oxy-Clean…

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milwaukee fireLast night on the NBC Nightly News, there was a segment, part of their Making a Difference series of feel good stories about people helping out others, that was a follow-up to the story from a week or so ago where the off-duty Milwaukee firefighters rescued a family trapped in an overturned and burning minivan. 

It was the story of how the firefighters’ wives went on the offensive to raise funds for the victims of the crash, one of which was a young boy who suffered burns over 30% of his body.  It seems they were uninsured and going through financial difficulties, so the costs of the intensive therapies and surgery needed for their son’s care would inevitably overwhelm them.

I was thrilled and heartened to see such unity in the way the community came together to raise money for this family’s hardships, just as I’m sure NBC hoped I would be.  But after a moment I was angry.  This was the face of the debate that’s currently going on in this country concerning healthcare.  Sure, I’m glad that there are good people out there who are willing to step up and help out those who need it but what happens when there is nobody stepping up, nobody taking the time to look out for those in trouble?  This family would have been put into a financial hole out of which they may have never been able to escape.

I know from personal experience how this works.  When I had the accident that enabled my painting career to bloom, where I fell from the peak of my home and shattered my wrist and knocked out my front teeth, I was uninsured.  My very first thought on hitting the ground and getting to my feet, as blood poured out of my nose and mouth and I saw my wrist with two 90 degree bends in it, was, “Oh, shit.  I won’t be able to work.  How can I pay for this?”  I remember that moment from seventeen years ago as though it were this morning and I remember that sense of dread and worry more than I remember the pain.

I also remember the doctor who set my wrist saying that normally he would perform surgery on such an injury then looked at the paperwork and asked again if I was insured.  He kind of frowned when I said no and said he would simply manipulate the shards with his fingers and shape them, putting them back into place.  It should be okay , he said, and so far it has.  It is rough with more bumps and edges than my other wrist and there is occasional discomfort but it’s been okay.  I ran into another orthopedic surgeon in a gallery years later and told him of  my story.  He felt my wrist and said that it probably should have had surgery but that my doctor had done a pretty fair job.  Said I was lucky.

Now, mine is a story with a fairly happy ending though it was a huge burden to pay off the several thousand dollars of medical bills even without the surgery.  My wrist is relatively good.  But what if it was not?  It always bothers me that, at that moment, when a decision needed to be made that could affect the rest of my life, it came down to the matter of whether or not I had insurance.  I can’t imagine being the parents of the kid in the minivan and wanting only the best for their boy but knowing it would hamstring them financially , maybe forever.  The dread and worry I felt in those seconds after I fell would be nothing to what they must feel.

And that’s just not right…

Now I don’t have answers.  I don’t have data and facts to spew out and this is simply a couple of anecdotes.  But to say that we should maintain the status quo or that we can’t do a better job is just wrong.

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jon-stewartI normally don’t have two posts in the same day but I had to comment on a story I just read where, in an online poll taken by Time  (click on to see the results and map), Jon Stewart prevailed as the most trusted newsman in America.  And not by a small margin.  He topped the closest newsman, NBC’s Brian Williams, by a whopping 15%.  

I had written in an earlier post how sad it was that with the passing of Walter Cronkite went the idea of having a newsman who acted as our conscience, who tried to give us the news in a way that best served our needs as a country.  After writing that, I realized that sadly, the only person who might fit this niche was Jon Stewart.  He skewers hypocrisy from both sides and doesn’t seem beholden to any group or ideology.  Oh, there’s a liberal bias but it is tempered with common sense and an idea of right and wrong.  

He also brings a sense of respect for each side to the debate at hand.  It’s not unusual to have representatives from either side of any debate and never does it devolve into a screechfest.  But at the same time there is often real info and real commentary passed along.

While I don’t know if this a good or thing, it should serve as an example to those who finished below Stewart.  I think somewhere right now, Walt is smiling.

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barack-obama-birth-certificate_You know, I must have not been paying attention in the last few months because I thought  everything that needed to be said about Obama’s birth certificate had been said a year ago.  Now the media is filled with these birthers, people who cling to their misguided beliefs that Obama is indeed  the product of some long range conspiracy to overthrow their country.

It’s insanity.

I almost feel sympathy for these people because it seems that they are reeling out of control.  The election of Obama turned everything in their world upside down and they just can’t come to grips with the reality before them, that their country is being led by a black man.  

The latest example is the lady  who stood up at a Delaware Republican’s town hall meeting and ranted that Obama was not a citizen, that her father was part of the greatest generation that fought in WW II and that she wanted her country back.  A good portion of the conservative crowd cheered her on as she waved her birth certificate and a small flag.  It was all pretty sad that this remains such an  emotional trigger for this group of people.  But sadder still was how feebly the speaker at the dais tried to convince them that Obama was indeed a citizen.

Watching it, it became evident that the crisis was not the question of where someone was born.  No, the crisis is that there are very few  politicians with real guts, willing to step forward and tell these people to get over this deluded idea, to take this energy and put it to better use in working to make our  country better.  Instead we get the media and gutless politicos who only serve their own self-interest by stroking this sad lot, allowing this to grow into a diversion that takes away focus from real problems.  

It’s this same gutlessness that will prolong our country’s problems.  The first priority of too many politicians is an allegiance to themselves and their party, not the best interest of the country.  And that’s just wrong on so many levels…

Anyway, as much as I dislike talking about this stuff, it must be said: Get over it.

Here’s a clip that shows the incident I spoke about along with some commentary that pretty much echos mine:

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Apollo 11 MoonwalkToday is the 40 year anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon landing, back in the turbulent world of 1969.  It was an incredible testimony to our ability as humans to create a huge goal and come together to achieve that goal, facing and overcoming obstacles.  At a time when our country appeared to be tearing apart at the seams, the moon landing, for a moment, brought us together in a unified spirit.

There’s a certain symmetry in this anniversary and the passing this past week of Walter Cronkite, the legendary CBS broadcaster.  Cronkite, unanimously hailed  as the Most Trusted Man in America, was the very symbol and voice of this collective American spirit.  A sort of arbiter of conscience for the country.  You had the feeling that when Walter spoke, it was as the voice of America as we wanted our country to be.  There was never a feeling of him pressing his own agenda, his own partisanship.  It was never bitter and judgmental.  He gave us the information we had to hear and when he did speak editorially, it was only in our best interest.

I’m sure many would call this naive, that we have so much more access to information and news today with all the technology at our disposal.  There’s no disputing that.  We are inundated with every bit of data available to the point that we are floundering in minutiae.  We have so much more information and so many differing, partisan outlets for this info.   But where is our filter, our collective conscience?  Are we better served by our access to so much data or are we constantly splintered and misdirected by those who pass on their versions of the truth of this info? 

Last night, on a tribute to Cronkite, somebody said that there will never again be a person who could be called the Most Trusted Man in America and that perhaps that was a good thing because it would be such a dangerous thing to have someone with so much power over the viewpoint of so many.  For a moment I agreed then a sort of sadness swept over me from the realization that we have come to such a point where we have been so often deceived and taken advantage of that we now cynically believe that no one could possibly serve our best interest collectively.  It made me realize that perhaps in 1969, even as our country seemed in the death throes of turmoil, that we were closer to being a united nation than we now are today.

cbs_cronkite69moonwalkSo, it is with a wistful nostalgia that I look back to that day in 1969 and that look of sheer delight and childlike wonder on Walter Cronkite’s face when that space ship landed because, although I consider myself often naively optimistic, I don’t really want to look forward today.

It’ll have to wait until tomorrow…

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valvanoThere is a telethon of sorts today on ESPN.  Every year they take a day of broadcasting and devote it to raising money for the Jimmy V Foundation which raises money for cancer research.  The foundation is named after Jim Valvano, the college basketball coach who died from cancer back in 1993.

For those not familiar with Valvano, he was a pretty good coach but a great personality.  He is best known for his mad dash across the court looking for anyone to hug when his North Carolina State team improbably won the NCAA championship on a miraculous last second play.  His thick New York accent and fast, humorous banter were trademarks.

Well, every year during this day ESPN repeatedly plays Valvano’s final speech at the 1993 ESPY Awards, made mere weeks before he died.  I’ve seen and heard this speech probably a hundred times and am always moved by its power, humor and message.  It is a tour de force of speechmaking.  He makes you laugh.  He makes you cry.  But at the end, he makes you think about how you’re living your own life.  His words make you want to be better.

That’s real inspiration.

Here’s the speech.  It’s about 11 minutes long but trust me, if you haven’t seen it , it won’t be time wasted.  If you want to learn more about his foundation, click on the Coach’s picture above.

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