The way I became familiar with the piece is a sort of a shaggy dog story of lonely young people leveraging what social assets they had, and making do with what was available.
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1972,
1973,
Abaddon,
Abaddon's Bolero,
apocalyptic rock,
Apollyon,
Archibald Macleish,
aristocracy,
Bach;,
Baltimore,
Bennett Hall,
Beowulf,
Bizet,
Blue Hairs,
bolero,
Chastain,
Chopin,
Church of the Open Door,
Cuban bolero,
Damned,
Debussy,
Elect,
Elon College,
Emerson Lake & Palmer,
Emory University,
Grateful Dead,
ham lamb & strawberry jam,
Homewood Campus,
Hopkins Press,
In-a-Gadda-da-Vida,
Inez Malone,
Iron Butterfly,
Johann Sebastian Bach,
Johns HOpkins Univeristy,
Keith Emerson,
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Kindle,
Last Judgment,
libraries,
Light My Fire,
Mateus,
Modern Language Association,
Muir Matheson,
nature magazines,
northern European languages,
Old English,
Old Norse,
over-the-top rock,
plain brown wrapper,
Playboy,
Prelude in C Major,
Procol Harum,
Repent Walpurgis,
Richmond,
Seven Tin Soldiers,
Shakeseare Suite,
Sherry,
Southern aristocracy,
Spanish bolero,
the Animals,
the Doors,
The Girl I Left Behind Me,
Trilogy,
U-Haul,
University of Pennsylvania,
University Parkway,
up north,
war,
We Love You Lil,
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And there is much melody in this ditty, especially as contributed by a deceptively simple ukelele. Hearing that plangent instrument obsessing over a C# minor 7th chord with McCartney’s sweet falsetto crooning the leading tone at the top and then swooping down through the chord to the tonic, lifts you into a sublime, solitary, and calm place.
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1971,
1972,
Baltimore,
C# minor 7th,
George Gordon Lord Byron,
George Harrison,
John Lennon,
Lord Byron,
misunderstood lyrics,
Paul McCaqrtney,
Percy Bysshe Shelley,
Peter Bell,
Philadelphia,
Ram,
Ram On,
Sgt. Pepper,
structuralism,
The Beatles,
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Lennon’s voice comes across as exhausted by sadness. And it speaks to me because that’s how I feel after this close encounter. I could have been a war casualty; I’m not, thank God. But I tell myself I must never forget what it felt like nearly to have been one. And I never do.
Tags:
1-H classification,
1969,
1971,
1972,
Adolph Hitler,
Allen Ginsberg,
back problems,
Baltimore,
Catholic War Theory,
College Hall Green,
conscientious objection,
Draft,
Draft Board,
draft deferments,
Draft Lottery,
Dulce et decorum,
flight to Canada,
Ho Chi Minh,
Horace,
How Do You Sleep?,
Hunger Games,
Imagine,
Jealous Guy,
John Lennon,
John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band,
Just War Theory,
Light Street,
President Richard Nixon,
Richard Nixon,
Second World War,
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Of course there’s nothing original to be said about Joni Mitchell these days, but that stunning voice and those original chords and those poetic confessional lyrics were like nothing most of us had heard then. I can picture sitting in Steve’s parents’ front room and playing it when I probably should have been finishing that Philosophy paper. I must have played it enough so that two weeks later, writing Steve, the first thing I did is mention the album in a way I would only have done if I had known him to be as familiar with the order of the tracks as I was.
Tags:
1968,
A Streetcar Named Desire,
Baltimore,
Baltimore riots,
bass,
beards,
Beaux Arts,
Belvedere Hotel,
Blanche Dubois,
civic decline,
dentists,
Jason Ankney,
Joni Mitchell,
Martin Luther King Jr.,
Night in the City,
overdue papers,
Penn Players,
philosophy,
race riots,
Railway Express,
Robert C. Solomon,
Robert Solomon,
Sheraton Belvedere,
Song to a Seagull,
Stanley Kowalski,
Steve Stills,
the Johns Hopkins University,
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Posted on January 2, 2011, 10:58 am, by Jack L. B. Gohn, under
The Big Picture.
To me, proof exists that the future can be different. The Emancipation Proclamation, Brown, the Civil Rights Acts, and the creation of a society that could elect a mixed-race president are not just American achievements; they are major human achievements. They themselves embody but also point further down the path we as a species are following: gradually reconfiguring our psyches to recognize but one race and one tribe: human.
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abusive mortgages,
adolescent identity,
adolescent identity formation,
Antero Pietila,
Baltimore,
Beverly Tatum,
biological significance of race,
black table,
blockbusters,
Brown v. Board of Education,
Civil Rights Acts,
color bar,
demographics,
dirt roads,
Emancipation Proclamation,
future demographics of United States,
ghettos,
Grat Migration,
Great African American Migration,
Isabel Wilkerson,
lynching,
manse,
mixed-race president,
mortgage redlining,
nonwhites,
Not In My Neighborhood,
ordinances,
overcrowding,
paved streets,
prevalence of lynching,
race relations,
redlining,
residential segregation,
restrictive covenants,
segregated neighborhoods,
segregated trains,
segregation,
slave quarters,
Spelman College,
The Tragedy of Lynching,
the warmth of other sunds,
tribalism,
white privilege,
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