Posted by David Webster on November 15, 2009 · 2 Comments
(Nov.15, 2009) Friday at the movies "The Boat that Rocked" sailed back to the 60's. This was the second time in as many months a big screen cinema release has embraced the era we grew up in. Also, in another similarity to "Taking Woodstock", "The Boat that Rocked" is loosely based on history . . . with more emphasis on the loosely than history. ALso in this video we take a taxi ride with Harry Chapin to 16 Parkside Lane. In between Manny the Movie Guy and Harry I stuffed some balogna so come on in and have lunch. Today it's on me.
Just as we did two months ago we went to the little guy that wishes he could have been a hippie for to see how he rates the pirate boat
Posted by David Webster on October 30, 2009 · 2 Comments
(Oct. 30, 2009) In the summer of 1965 The Doors formed amid the turbulence of the era with music that was as intense and complex as the times that spawned them. They derived their name from references to “the doors of perception” in works by William Blake and Aldous Huxley.
The Doors had a dark, brooding personality that came largely from singer Jim Morrison. Musically, other members of the Doors combined a jazzy improv style that allowed Morrison to sometimes write poetic lyrics on the spot coming across to audiences as quit profound and deep. Morrison, like several other influential artists of the sixties, died at the age of 27 and left behind a musical legacy from a tragic time in rock and roll history.
Filed under Music, People, Video Features · Tagged with 1960's, 1960's music, 1965, 1969, 1971, aldous huxley, died, doors of perception, ed sullivan show, elektra records, guitarist robby krieger, heroin overdose, jazzy improv style, jim morrison, john lee hooker, Light My Fire, Music, ray manzarek, rock, singer, singer jim morrison, Success, the doors, willie dixon