Re: I Wanna Be Sedated...


Subject: Re: I Wanna Be Sedated...
From: Scottie Bowman (rbowman@indigo.ie)
Date: Wed Apr 18 2001 - 03:49:52 GMT


    I remember ... I remember ...

    In the days when we were locked in a true - but,
    for some, really rather enjoyable - life & death
    struggle with another evil empire; & when the occasional
    Ju 88 would pass over the back garden trailing smoke
    on its final descent towards the Comeragh Mountains
    where we would all presently scramble off our bikes
    to retrieve bits of twisted & scorched duralamin as
    momenti of its recent encounter with No.10 Group,
    RAF Fighter Command; in those days, I remember,
    I was deeply in love with Dinah Shore.

    Now Dinah is, of course, as remote & unrecognisable
    a figure for you little ones as Joey or Patti will, one day,
    be for your own grandchildren. But then, she was
    known as the Memphis Nightingale & lit the hearts
    of many young men longing desperately for their girls
    & homes during the short space of time left to them
    before being made, in sudden & brutal ways, to relinquish
    this earthly existence. Dinah herself died not so long ago
    & had in later years, I understand, become something
    of an icon for lesbian golfers. (She was a practitioner
    of one activity - though possibly not both.)

    Then in my younger teens, I spent much of my pocket
    money on whatever of her records (10’’, 78rpm shellac)
    had finally made their way - through the U-boat infested
    Irish Sea - to Howard’s Music & Gramophones, No 27,
    The Quay, Waterford. You cannot imagine the eagerness
    & finicky discrimination with which I studied her rendition
    of those heart-breaking songs: the St Louis Blues, the Memphis
    Blues, Chloe, Sophisticated Lady, I’ll walk alone, Give me
    something to remember you by ... my God, the list goes on
    forever.

    It soon became evident there was an Early Shore (raw &
    vibrant with hungry, uninhibited feeling), a Middle Shore
    (confident & masterful as she became more established
    - rather like Middle Sinatra) & a Late Shore (rather too
    smooth, with swoony backings & all the implicit corruption
    that came with her selling-out to the big studio, Columbia.)
    There were a number of small, tentative shoots within each
    main group - & I could date & assign each newly encountered
    number to its appropriate slot. I spent many, many hours
    doing just that: listening, savouring, pondering & allotting.

    With that recollection, how could I be so crabbed &
    dismissive of all you tiny folk who treat the current ephemera
    with the same solemnity that I once treated Dinah? What we
    are all doing, of course, is not so much celebrating an artist
    as what that artist represents of ourselves at a time when he
    or she meant so much to us.

    So, easy up, now, Bowman. Tout lasse, tout casse, tout passe.
    Sic transit gloria mundi. (Or, as those who knew her naughty
    little ways insist: Sick transit Gloria Mundy.)

    Scottie B.

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