Another big part of New York’s long music legacy was lost to the history books this past weekend when
CBGB OMFUG (
Country
Blue
Grass
Blues and
Other
Music
For
Uplifting
Gormandizers is the long version of the name) unceremoniously closed its doors. And now, NYC is one big step closer to being a homogeneous plastic concrete Mall of America. I’m not going to claim to be anything close to a punk rocker, and I sadly never even set foot in the place. But I am aware of its place in music history, the legends it helped create, and the legend the venue itself became. In recent years, CBGB fell into some level of disrepair and the level of music innovation never did rival that time in the mid-to-late 1970′s when acts like the Talking Heads, The Ramones, Blondie, and others established themselves there. But you always knew that it
was there as a living, breathing piece of NY and American music history. And now, its not there. Rumors are that they will try to take it apart and rebuild it in (gasp) Las Vegas, but obviously it will never be the same. What are they going to do next, close
McSorley’s?
Fans of a Groundbreaking Club Mourn and Then Move On – NY Times (10/16/2006)
October 16th, 2006 •
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Music
Former Negro League player Buck O’Neil died this evening. A grat loss for baseball and beyond. If you have never heard of Mr. O’Neil, rent/buy Ken Burns’ documentary Baseball and watch it. He was the star of the film. Its a crime that he was not inducted into the Hall of Fame this past summer.
This is just so amazingly simple and obvious, its brilliant. Call-in-Sick.com enables you to call in sick to your boss/employer at any time and assign when it should be delivered and to who/what phone number. So you can record your message on Thursday evening and then have it delivered at 6AM Friday morning while you are sleeping the morning away.
October 4th, 2006 •
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funny