It Was 30 Years Ago Today...
Wednesday, May 14, 2008

In 1976 I went away to college-- Clark University  in Worcester Mass-- where I met a girl who became my first serious long term  girlfriend.  We were buddies for a good 8 months first.  It was during the buddy  phase that she introduced me to the music of Todd Rundgren, who was her  favorite.  At the time I was listening to Yes, ELP, Pink Floyd, Tull-- you know,  music to get high for the first time to.  The swirling synths of her favorite  Todd records, Todd and Initiation, were right up my alley, and I instantly "got"  the Beatles/Beach Boys appeal of Something/Anything.  After 2 years we both  transferred out of Clark to NYU, and that last semester at Clark (spring '78)  Todd put out Hermit of Mink Hollow, the first release of his since I'd become a  fan.  It was brilliant and I played it to death.
 Meanwhile, I was already hanging out at NYU, my  best friend went there.  On Sunday, May 14-- it was Mother's Day-- the  girlfriend and I scored tickets to the late show at the Bottom Line, Todd's Back  to the Bars tour.  I remember visiting the dorm, thinking about how cool it  would be to actually be going there in September, going to college in Greenwich  Village, and the Bottom Line right around the corner.  Life was  good.
 And this was my first Todd show.  We sat off to the  side on the right, but of course every seat at the Bottom Line was a great seat  (damn I miss that place.)  I remember he opened with "Real Man," a song I  liked.  "Zen Archer" made an impression on me even though I hadn't heard it  before.  Moogy Klingman, who co-wrote Bette Midler's "Friends," played piano in the band-- besides Todd he was my girlfriend's favorite.   Since the tour was a career retrospective (for the not-yet-30 year-old artist)  they hit a lot of material I knew-- "You Cried Wolf" and "Bread" from the new  record; "Love of the Common Man" (an immediate favorite), "Hello Its Me," "It  Wouldn't Have Made Any Difference"... I remember the segue of "Eastern Intrigue"  and "Initiation" was a blissful set piece;I think we'd listened to side 1 of  Initiation more than any other record.  They played Moogy's "Lady Face," which  I'd never heard but which was instantly likable, and I called my girlfriend that  for a while after.
 For years I'd wished I could hear Todd play  "Determination" live-- when push comes to shove one of my 10 favorite songs of  his, and all the compression on the recording notwithstanding, just a perfect  tune, the way the lyrics just come tumbling out, and the heart-on-sleeve  sentiment, and of course the perfect insistent guitar licks that start the song  off and trail off at the end and drive it throughout.  It wasn't until about  1998, when I finally got a bootleg of the show, that I discovered that I  actually heard "Determination" at my very first Todd concert.
 When you're 19 and still soaking up music like  you're a biscuit and the music is gravy, and your eyes and ears are wide  open, and then you see an artist like this in a tiny little venue, and you were  already really into the music, but then the concert just totally turns your head  around-- well, there's nothing else like that, not at any other time in your  life. Things like that made the 60s happen, made the wall come down in Berlin,  put that kid in front of that tank in China, and I'm not kidding.  Music and  youth never goes out of style.
 For the next 8 years I found my way into over 50  more Todd and Utopia shows.  It was great being a fan around New York in the  late 70s/early 80s; the typical show was, say, up in Poughkeepsie or out at  Stony Brook, and you'd spend 2 hours getting there, and then 8 hours on line  because you had to be up close and it was general admission.  And you knew  everyone else on the line, because that's just the way it was, and eventually  you ended up friends with most of them, and sometimes you'd pass someone in the  city and you'd smile and nod at each other because, well, you knew. Eyes that  have seen and all that.
 
 Then finally the show would happen, and it would  fill your head and your heart with Technicolor joy.  I remember my concert buddy  Fred and I trying to explain to our parents why we wanted to see three shows in  four days when each time the band played the exact same set list...
 
 Hard to believe that was 30 years ago.  Where does  the time go?
Here's "Determination" from that show.
Here's "Determination" from that show.
Labels: The tunes, Todd Rundgren
Posted by: --josh-- @ 11:39 PM  5 comments
 
Insanely Cool Video
By the artist Blu;                              "an ambiguous animation painted on public walls."  You have to see it because it can't be described.  It's stop motion video, a la Gumby, with all the "cels" actually painted on public space.
MUTO a wall-painted animation by BLU from blu on Vimeo.
MUTO a wall-painted animation by BLU from blu on Vimeo.
Labels: blu video, pop culture
Posted by: --josh-- @ 9:23 PM  0 comments
 
Give Her Chocolate, or Give Her Death!
Friday, May 09, 2008
According to a new study by BlogHer, in association with Compass Partners, there are 36.2 million women in the US who participate in the blogosphere each week.  55% of these would give up alcohol before giving up blogging; 50% would give up their PDAs (I asume that means their blackberry, not making out in public), 43% would give up newspapers and magazines.But only 20% would give up chocolate.
Apparently they didn't ask anything about shoes...
Labels: pop culture
Posted by: --josh-- @ 9:10 AM  1 comments
 



