Dan Fogelberg
(1951- 2007)
The Official Website of Dan Fogelberg
Note: He was one of my favorite singers/ songwriters way, way back in time; when the acoustic guitar was my best friend; his songs were the staple in those endless drinking sessions with some old friends under the moonlight along the shores of Albay Gulf in Rawis, Legaspi City, Philippines.
Sunday, December 16, 2007
The Leader of the Band
Posted by mitsuru at 6:47 PM 2 comments
Labels: Dan Fogelberg
Monday, December 10, 2007
The Silver Beatle
I was supposed to re-post this here last December 8, the 27th Anniversary of the death of the Working Class Hero. This article was my very first entry in my regular blog, Bill Blahs and was originally published December 8, 2005.
I considered this piece important since this marked my return to writing after years of self-imposed hiatus. Now, please indulge me and bear with me while I take you on my very own Strawberry Fields experience.
So, read on...
Yesterday
John Lennon...
the prolific singer-songwriter, the war-activist, the Peacenik, the former Beatle, the Dreamer, the Working Class Hero -- was shot and killed on the evening of December 8, 1980 by Mark David Chapman just outside the Dakota Building near Central Park, NYC.
The music died twenty- five years ago today?
Let me take you down to Strawberry Fields…
I remember watching him lying in an open casket on black & white TV half a world away in the Philippines. I was ten and my attention was caught when a playmate blurted out what he heard on TV: “John Lemon is dead!”, which her aunt, a certified member of the flower-power generation promptly corrected him that it was “John Lennon, not John Lemon, who was killed by a deranged fan,” which elicited laughter among us.
In my young mind then, I only knew him to be the leader of the Fab Four, The Beatles, whose vinyl records dominated my Dad’s Radiowealth Stereo Phonograph's playing time, and I couldn’t comprehend the extent of his death to music fans around the world. It was only years later, as I grew older, when I was exposed to a lot of Beatles’ articles and materials, that I began to understand the man.
When I was thirteen, I purchased a cassette tape of his album "The JOHN LENNON COLLECTION" for PHP 35.00 (which was part of the prize money I won in an essay writing contest sponsored by the Mayon (Albay) Chapter of the Boy Scouts of the Philippines (BSP) during a Provincial Jamboree that I attended in the summer of 1983) from a local record store. It reigned on my Sony Cassette players for years until the time when a CD of his songs finally replaced it. I began to study the guitar and the first songs I learned were his signature songs -- Imagine, followed by the other Beatles Classics like Revolution, In My Life, Across the Universe and A Day in the Life, just to name a few.
As I went further into my journey into the deep recesses of the Beatleslandia and the Kaleidoscopic Lennonscape, I was transformed into a certified Lennon Fanatic, that finally culminated to a visit to Strawberry Fields this year, the Garden of Peace in New York City’s Central Park named in honor of John in 1981, which was said to be his favorite oasis in the park.
John Lennon, so much has been written and said about him: critics tried to paint him in a different light. Chapman tried to silence him forever but failed miserably.
His songs are easy to understand and people can relate easily to his lyrics. His voice is one-of-a-kind; it has a distinct sound that people could feel all his angst and feelings. He sang from the bottom of his heart and bared his soul in his music.
Most of all, he is his own Man.
No Virginia, the music did not die that day…
IN MEMORIAM: John Winston Lennon (Oct. 9, 1940- Dec. 8, 1980)
Listen to John Lennon in his last interview talking about his Double Fantasy Album just hours before he was murdered by Chapman--
Posted by mitsuru at 11:40 AM 0 comments
Labels: John Lennon
Friday, December 7, 2007
Don't Stop Believin'
I first heard of the rumor that he will be Journey’s new lead singer several months ago. I was skeptical at first not because of his talent but because I never thought not even in my wildest dream that one of my favorite rock bands, Journey will pick somebody outside of the Continental United States much less a Filipino as their new lead singer.
It was the stuff of urban legends but it turned out to be true, in fact too good to be true--that it was guitarist Neal Schon who found him through YouTube and contacted him and invited him to audition for the band.
Here’s Neal Schon in his own words,
“I was frustrated about not having a singer,” explains guitarist Neal Schon, “so I went on YouTube for a couple of days and just sat on it for hours. I was starting to think I was never going to find anybody. But then I found The Zoo and I watched a bunch of different video clips that they had posted. After watching the videos over and over again, I had to walk away from the computer and let what I heard sink in because it sounded too good to be true. I thought, ‘he can’t be that good.’ But he is that good, he’s the real deal and so tremendously talented. Arnel doesn’t sound synthetic and he’s not emulating anyone. I tried to get a hold of him through YouTube and I finally heard from him that night, but it took some convincing to get him to believe that it really was me and not an impostor.”
And so Arnel Pineda, the lead singer of the Philippines' band The Zoo was named by Journey as their new lead singer on their website dated December 5, 2007.
He replaces Jeff Scott Sotto who parted ways with the band this year. Actually, from what I read in various online forums, Journey fans never really embraced him with Open Arms.
Although the band’s original lead singer, Steve Perry will never be equaled both in voice and in talent, let’s hope that Arnel can be at least up to par if not close enough to the standards that Mr. Perry had set for all the singers that will follow in his big, big footsteps.
The dawn of Arnel Pineda's journey to rock stardom begins…
Here's Arnel Pineda's cover of some of Journey's best with his band The ZOO--
Visit the Official Journey Website
Posted by mitsuru at 6:25 PM 0 comments
Labels: Arnel Pineda, Journey, Rock Report
Thursday, December 6, 2007
Guitar Pick
As Bob Dylan once said, “The Times They’re a-Changin’ and once again a new device is bound to change the musical landscape in years to come.
Well in this particular case, thanks to the latest robotic technology, make that “Powertune System” which was developed by Tronical Gmbh in partnership with Gibson Guitar Corp and was incorporated in its latest Les Paul model with Blue Silverburst’s finish can tune itself in about two seconds.
According to the gospel of Gibson or the people behind it, it is the world’s first self- tuning technology that eliminates the challenges of fine tuning your guitar which is a constant source of headache for beginners and musicians alike thereby getting rid of the extra guitars set with different tunings that is often seen in most gigs and concerts.
Here’s more from Powertune--
Powertune is also listed online for about $800, and Tronical says it can be installed on many different models of electric guitars without leaving a mark.
Gibson guitars with the technology come preset with six types of tuning to play different kinds of music. They also can remember a player's additional original tuning styles, by listening with a microphone to the sounds of the strings.
To set the instrument to a particular tuning, the user pulls a knob, turns it to the desired style, indicated with a blue light, and then pushes the knob back in. An electric signal travels up the strings to the motors on the tuning pegs. The system is powered by a rechargeable lithium-ion battery.
By the way, the Les Paul Silverburst model will sell for around $2,780 in Japan and $2,499 in the U.S., with an extra $900 extra for the self-tuning device.
Whoa, that’s a lot of moolah for a guitar if you ask me but not really that much for the ones who can afford it. But in this age of computers, digital music and instruments, anything is a welcome addition in the music world, revolutionary or not.
Still, I’ll take my old less high- tech electric guitar anytime…
For now, at least.
Posted by mitsuru at 9:42 AM 0 comments
Labels: Bob Dylan, Gibson, Guitar, Les Paul, Rock Report