Sunday, February 13, 2011

Retro: Kimmer

Retro: Kimmer

Link to Retro: Kimmer

2nd SUNDAY SOUL WITH SCOTT MORGAN!

Posted: 13 Feb 2011 06:22 PM PST


Kimmer and Scott on his birthday 2-11-11

Round 2 of Sunday Soul from Scott Morgan:

Ok Nina Simone was a classically trained pianist and her instructors told she could never play classical music because was black. Bless their souls. This song "Do I Move You?" from the album Nina Simone sings the blues. Read it and weep.



From the all star film Jackie Brown, starring Pam Grier, in the Quentin Tarantino film and of course the title track by Bobby Womack. Bobby played with Sam Cooke and married his wife after Sam was killed. his band the Valentinos did the original it's all over now which was covered the Rolling Stones.



The Valentinos song "I'm Lookin for a Love" was covered by J geils.. Bobby Womack's song "That's The Way I Feel About Cha" was a huge hit. I couldn't get shut out of this game... so I went to the urban barber shop and bought "Put Something Down on it". Never covered it but just dug it.

This one makes the hair stand up on my neck. I call this wicked good. Donny recorded "Where is the Love" with Roberta Flack who I believe was a classically trained pianist.



Won't belabor this point any more. consider this your last piece of chocolate and now we'll retire to the smoking lounge. I think Frank Zappa said it best. I'm not black but there's a whole lottsa times I was wishing I wasn't white. but I've spent 40 years proving.... anyone can have the blues. Scott.....

[New post] Kolchak the Night Stalker- 'The Ripper'

Kolchak the Night Stalker- 'The Ripper'

dailypop | February 13, 2011 at 8:25 pm | Tags: Cult TV, kolchak mcgavin, matheson vampires | Categories: Cult TV | URL: http://wp.me/p4kUt-2ko


Created by Jeff Rice and adapted for the screen by Richard Matheson (of I Am Legend, Duel and numerous Twilight Zone episodes fame), Kolchak the Night Stalker is really brought to life thanks to the lead actor Darren McGavin. A veteran character actor who is so instantly recognizable that you just accept him at face value rather than wracking your brain trying to remember where you had seen him before, McGavin brings so much life and vitality to the porkpie-hat wearing hero.

The series began as a TV movie simply called Night Stalker in which a Chicago-based reporter investigate what appears to be a simple murder case only to discover that there are supernatural powers at work. It was such a success that two sequel TV movies were planned but the third transformed into an ongoing series with McGavin earning some power in front of and behind the camera (and rightly so).

The pilot of the series proper involves a time honored mystery with a twist. Kolchak is investigating a series of seemingly unrelated murders that are plaguing women who are being found mangled on the city streets. The police are baffled and due to Kolchak's irascible behavior and attempt to impersonate a police chief, he is cut out of the story and given a seemingly endless supply of agony aunt letters to answer. In his place, the queasy and nervous Updike gets the story but refuses to cover any of the gory details.

Kolchak takes it upon himself to investigate further and finds that a letter written complaining of a creepy neighbor may be the key to it all. The entire affair hinges on some camp moments, contrived situations and stock characters but it's also brilliant. The killer's superhuman ability to repel an entire tactical squad, survive a fall that should have pulped his bones and dent the hood of a car barely phase the police who refuse to view the suspect as anything but another perp. But Kolchak knows better and after generous research at the library and a trip to late night hardware store, he's prepared to go toe-to-toe with an inhuman killer.

Kolchak: The Night Stalker was a major part of pulp horror/adventure in the 1970's and even had a strong influence years later on the X-Files. A one of a kind program combining elements of film noir, crime fiction, humor and the fantastic, it's a rarity that earned a special place in the annals of cult TV.

Intro

After a promising start, Kolchak the Night Stalker only lasted for a single year, but more recently it has found renewed interest thanks to reruns, DVD releases and comic books. Currently, the entire series is available on DVD and an ongoing comic book with many luminaries on hand to write new adventures of the famous reporter of the strange including Peter David (Aquaman, the Hulk, X-Factor), Mike W. Barr (The Crow), and mystery writer Max Allan Collins to name but a few. Rice and Matheson's Kolchak continues to find new fans to this day. Even with a market full to bursting with vampires, werewolves and other monsters, it appears that a quirky character battling the forces of darkness with little more than a beat-up Mustang, an unreliable camera and a tape recorder wins out.

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