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BRAND NEW JAMES WILLIAMSON ALBUM OF ALL NEW MATERIAL!

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Fantastic new album of ALL NEW MATERIAL arrives soon by Rock and Roll Hall of Famer, Stooges' guitarist James Williamson, who chose some fascinating Los Angeles locals with whom to collaborate: Frank Meyer, head howler/crooner of the Street Walkin' Cheetahs, and perfect pitched Petra Haden (the one who sang the complete album a capella of The Who Sell Out, inclusive of all the instrument parts.) Entitled James Williamson and the Pink Hearts Behind the Shade, it will be released June 22, 2018. Here are more pertinent and fun details, via the Rolling Stone Magazine feature published today LINK*

(album cover design by yours truly and Joel Pelletier)

And here's where to pre-order it from Cobraside: LINK**
and a taste of its music, promo film directed by Amy D'Allessandro, 
cinematography by James Stolz:


*https://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/former-stooges-guitarist-james-williamson-details-new-album-w518089
** http://bit.ly/2FZVZFM

GUSTAV KLIMT/AUGUSTE RODIN EXHIBIT at Legion of Honor Museum, San Francisco

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"Klimt...a great destroyer of traditions and a creator of terrifying beauty."
-Jonathan Jones, The Guardian, 2008.
Guest photographer © 2018 Kurt Ingham, first three photographs. Above, yours truly spellbound at Klimt's Die Jungfrau, 1913, oil on canvas, on loan from the National Gallery of Prague. Object of day trip excursion to San Francisco: one of the last three days of the Gustav Klimt exhibit at the Legion of Honor Museum, KLIMT & RODIN: An Artistic Encounter, October 14, 2017 to January 28, 2018.
 
Above, your humble photojournalist in front of Klimt's Portrait of Sonja Knips, 1898; also, in our living room, my copy of the same painted during my tenure at UCLA Art School. The subject was undercoats, and the class assignment was to copy any painting that the student thought demonstrated this as an important element (copying teaches one to duplicate whatever the original artist did, stroke by stroke. It is valid art education.) The background is dark green undercoat with red on top to make a warm, organic brown. I messed up the facial likeness but thought that I portrayed an actual body existing under all that white organza of the dress rather well.

Well done, particularly given the limitations of source material and space. The exhibit marked the first time that a retrospective with over two dozen works by Klimt ever has been seen on the West Coast of the U.S. in the one hundred years since the artist's death. It also marked the first time I ever had seen a Klimt painting in person. The Belvedere had been closed for renovation the one time Mr. Twister and I were in Vienna, and the pop up show of the five paintings owned by Maria Altmann (see LINK*) at the L.A. Art Museum was a sold-out sardine-fest of wall to wall people, which never would have let me see them up close had I squeezed in.

While appreciating all greatness in fine art, my true art obsessions have been restricted to the Pre-Raphaelite movement, Whistler and Klimt. Why Klimt? It remains gratingly problematic to describe anything which one truly, madly, deeply loves. This is why we distinguish between writers and poets. Klimt has been a personal favorite since a UCLA art teacher of mine in 1970 showed us his line drawings, and pointed out that this artist's very realistic understanding of human physiognomy anchored all the wild stuff. I didn't even see the color extravaganzas in books until later (source of my art class copy.) Add his myriad phases from classical to metallic to fauve amidst the intrigue of Fin du Siecle Vienna, his combo of decorative, art nouveau symbolism to spankin' new unknown territories, plus his visual assertion that we women had fun during sex as well.

Detail, Portrait of Gertrud Loew, 1902                                   Portrait of Ria Munk, 1918
 
The showpiece work Jungfrau normally lives in Prague at their National Museum. 
Another seminal work like the Portrait of Gertrud Loew, the teenager painted Whistler-style white on white from a single photograph (one of five such works ever, since Klimt preferred live sitters, the others being three posthumous portraits of Ria Munk, one of which adorns this exhibit, and the last was lost after Nazi confiscation) has the normal checkered history of many Austrian masterpieces- confiscated by the Nazis when Gertrud (who then owned and ran the hospital where Klimt had died in 1918) fled for her life in 1938. This painting eventually was claimed by Klimt's bastard son Gustav Uckicky the Nazi filmmaker, whose widow honorably gave it back to Gertud's survivors after the war. The widow, Ursula Uckicky, had established a non-profit cultural foundation to house this and the other Klimt paintings of theirs, and research the work and provenance of the various pictures. 

These Gertrud Loew survivors, being unequipped to provide security for a $40 million dollar painting, sold it at Sotheby's to British billionaire Joe Lewis. I truly wish Lewis would loan this amazing work indefinitely to a worthy museum, as the painting otherwise lives on his yacht! (rather less secure than most metropolitan museums.) Lewis also owns the gorgeous if unfinished Portrait of Ria Munk 3, 1917 exhibited here, which helps show us Klimt's processes for decoration within portraiture. Another late work The Baby normally lives in Washington D.C.'s National Gallery, and Vienna's The Belvedere and Leopold Museums even loaned three gorgeous Klimt landscapes. Ronald Lauder's Neue Galerie, NYC loaned the famous "he Black Hat, 1910 (which has adorned many an art book cover) and the Vienna Theatre Museum loaned the equally famous Nuda Veritas of the full frontal redhead with early stylings of Klimt's gold fixations... 

   Nuda Veritas, 1897                                                         The Black Hat, 1910

A surprise to me in the Legion of Honor Klimt exhibit: a life-sized (14ft. x 17ft.) reproduction of Medicine by Klimt, 1904 via its only known source, an old black and white of this lost colorful work, above with humanoid fragment for scale. This startling painting was incinerated by the Nazis, along with the majority of his most radical work. Please read this short article by Jonathan Jones that explains all, see (no shortcut, please cut and paste, worth it!): https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2008/may/07/art A key paragraph states "...For every person who finds his work gorgeous, seductive, sexy, there is a 'sophisticate' who will point out that his art is surely a bit vulgar, with all that gold; a bit slavish in its ostentatious celebration of rich women; and a bit, well, soft-centred. It's a negative view that is an accident of history, of what has survived of his work and what hasn't. Behind the Klimt everyone knows, the opulent artist of desire, stands another Klimt - a painter who was years ahead of Picasso and Matisse, a great destroyer of traditions and a creator of terrifying beauty."

Similar 14ft. x 17ft. photographic reproduction of the lost, colorful mural Philosophy from the same series, next to Rodin bronze.
                        

Above, Mr. Twister and his Twin-lens Reflex cell phone camera in front of life-sized reproduction of a detail of Klimt's Beethoven Frieze. The original of this restored mural now is housed in the similarly restored Secession building in Vienna, Austria, Klimt's stomping grounds. He was the first president of the breakaway Vienna Secession of artists and applied artists.
Two Girls with Oleander, 1890, primo example of Klimt's earlier proto-photorealism, the popularity of which led to many commissions with his brother for murals on Vienna civic buildings and theatres. The controversies over the Medicine, Philosophy and Jurisprudence murals ended those commissions, freeing Klimt to take off in whatever new directions he chose.  Painting and "interacting" with beautiful, rich Jewish society ladies suited this Austrian Casanova's personality better, anyway.


←cover of the catalog for the very first exhibition by the Vienna Secession, 1897, drawing by Klimt, its first President.

Below, various antiquities that are part of the Legion of Honor Museum's permanent collection.
 

 

At the airport on our way home from the Klimt exhibit; and below, actually dining al fresco at the museum earlier. Mr. Twister brought some unprognosticated good weather with him...


Mr. Twister at the Legion of Honor collonade, with a Rodin bronze, and at its park with a Golden Gate behind in the distance...


(photo © 2018 Kurt Ingham) Happy traveler...




*http://fastfilm1.blogspot.com/2015/07/woman-in-gold-klimts-masterpieces-in.html


RICHARD DUQUAY and FAME WHORE, CRAZY SQUEEZE live at Maui Sugar Mill 12.2.17

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  A band I had been wanting to photograph for some time, the incomparable Richard Duguay (ex-Guns'N'Roses, bonafide Canadian popstar) and Fame Whore, last December 2nd at Maui Sugar Mill in Tarzana, Calif.  Note The Dogs' beatmeister Tony Matteucci on drums, with the rest of of the band featuring Johnny Dzubak, Gary Martin, Eric Schrader, and Joe Bear. A great mix of edgy, original hardest rock, Canadian punk, covers and singalongs!  Richard, with wife Paula Tiberius on back up vocals, surprised all with a poignant cover of the late Warren Zevon's ballad "Carmelita" with heartfelt warmth and implied regrets...

Opening act Crazy Squeeze's Johnny Wittmer and Dat Ngo, off camera Frankie Delmane and Shauny Clark. Fun, basic hard rock the way connoisseurs fondly remember same.

DAVE DAVIES TRIUMPH LIVE at the ROXY, Valentine's Day 2018

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Valentine's Day at the Roxy, West Hollywood CA with the Dave Davies band triumphant gig for its rabidly appreciative audience. From his first "hallo!" they remained right there squarely in the palm of his hand.
Above, acoustic guitar for pensive ballads like "Young And Innocent Days,""See My Friends"

Below, backup singer/Dave's inamorata Rebecca G. Wilson gets the singalongs rolling...
 
 Above, the start of another tale by a master raconteur
 
 
Above left: Dennis Diken on drums, right: David Nolte on bass. 

 Dave led a power trio of former Smithereens' drummer Dennis Diken and nimble bassist David Nolte because, well, because he could, with  his chops and charisma solidly in place. Those familiar with his history know that tiffs with his fellow Kink brother Ray weren't the only battles in his life. Recovering from a stroke in the '90s, Dave's first career steps back to professional normalcy were solo album releases, then touring 2013 - 15 with acclaimed group The Jigsaw Seen as his backing band. On Valentine's Day night , a completely packed, appreciative Roxy Theatre crowd cheered this first night of Davies' first 2018 American Tour...

 Below, happy, enraptured Kinks fans

Anyone familiar with the set list below knows that the canon of Dave Davies' solo work coupled with Kinks' material dating from the mid-1960s onward guarantees a full evening of ridiculously memorial songs and ear worms.  Dave after all is one of hard rock's actual progenitors who, along with James Williamson in the early 1970s, insured the very persistence of the genre by giving it its initial form and fun in from the first five notes blasted on 1965's "You Really Got Me."

SET LIST:
1. I Need You   2. She's Got Everything  3. Creeping Jean   4. Tired Of Waiting For You  
5. Susannah's Still Alive  6. Love Me 'Til The Sun Shines  7. See My Friends  8. Path Is Long
9. Strangers  10. Too Much On My Mind  11. Young And Innocent Days  12. This Man He Weeps Tonight  13. I Am Free 14. Death Of A Clown  15. Dead End Street  16. Living On A Thin Line  17. Wicked Annabella  18. Where Have All The Good Times Gone  19. All Day And All Of The Night  (encore) 20. I'm Not Like Everybody Else  21.  You Really Got Me

 PHOTO OPS:
Yours truly meeting up with Rebecca G. Wilson for coffee, 
photo taken by one her sons, Desmond (a young working actor with Martin Scorsese films to his credit...)

'VINYL' RECONSIDERED

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 Above, fair use screen captures of the HBO cable television series 'Vinyl,' produced by Martin Scorsese who also directed the pilot, created by Mick Jagger and Martin Scorsese, written by thirteen screenwriters throughout its 2016 ten episode story arc, including personal fave Terence Winter who authored "The Wolf of Wall Street" for Scorsese and "The Sopranos" for the rest of the world.

Despite this pedigree, most viewers seem to have loathed it. My subjective tally includes: 
Phyllis who was right there among the major players; Anita and Wendy who knew the subject matters backwards and forwards;  Mark, who like me, worked for a major record company in the mid-1970s which had all the stereotypes depicted (but a different one than the one for which I worked.  'Didn't matter, same stereotypes come to life.)

And add the factor that Martin Scorsese has always liked the challenge of tentpole-ing his films with incredibly unlikable protagonists. That said, who else has tried to make a well-funded, researched fictional series about our youth amidst the music biz? They usually get it ALL wrong, instead of somewhat wrong with lots of juicy insider jokes. For instance, the aspect I loved about the film "The Runaways" was that this was the first depiction of the SoCal '70s music scene with OUR music, not whatever chart hits they could license (and the premiere featured our locals cheering Michael Shannon's dead-one depiction of Kim Fowley.) 

So taking on the flexibility of the writers' apologia in the dvd Special Features that they knew they were taking a chance to bend facts and factors to fit their stories, I find myself enjoying the ambience the second time around rather than just sputtering "wwhhhaaattt?!?!" at every scene. Also commendable on second glance were excellent parts for female actors in a difficult to depict era: Olivia Wilde as the trophy wife who had given up her own wild child/party girl life to provide stability for the protagonist and of course missed same as well, but with different outcomes; Juno Temple as an ambitious, cute young adept in a Troglodyte era of kneejerk-dismissing talents of those with XX chromosomes; and Annie Parisse as the executive with more music biz know-how than anyone else in any room. 

And lastly, I wrote my second (now long out of print) book "Punk Rock 'N'Roll" for a major record company as the same battle cry of the few 'Vinyl'  characters who really loved music per se, let real talent rip! And sure enough, 'Vinyl' featured a Greek chorus of this:
ghosts of past (dead) rockers haunting the Richie Finestra character, with each episode depicting lookalikes of well known R&B and RocknRoll legends performing, which in essence mocked his once genuine love of quality music...

STARCRAWLER LIVE AND "INSANELY GOOD" at the Lodge Room 3.31.18

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You want the best young band currently hailing from Los Angeles? Go no further  than STARCRAWLER. You've read the hype, now grok the reality.  Strange teenagers from another planet come to entertain and enthrall us all...STARCRAWLERperform like seasoned rockers, don't imitate anyone (these days a rarity within itself,) and despite most of the attention falling on their unusual lead singer, they have an up and coming major guitarist in their ranks. Fun, loud, memorable punkesque whatnot replete with humorous ironies.
  The band has been alive as such for only one year, with seventeen-year old hardcore adept guitarist Henri Cash, 19-year-old lead vocalist Arrow de Wilde whose 6 ft.plus svelte frame brings to mind Classic depictions of famine, drummer Austin Smith and bassist Tim Franco. Claimed FOXES Magazine editor Tina de la Celle, one who is always in the know, "I have seen them many times, but they were insanely good at this show..."
...this show being March 31, 2018 at (Northeast L.A.) Highland Park's packed the Lodge Room. Too bad there was NO light on the performers. My pics were taken when the revolving spotlights shone on them indirectly a bit. (And double too bad, because it's a cool Art Deco ballroom venue with good sound in a neighborhood with copious free nighttime parking...)
 



(Above and below): in her theatrical blood-spattered "Carrie" ballgown trussed with vintage girdle, singer Arrow de Wilde invited a somewhat puzzled fan (who was nonetheless sufficiently hip to wear a t-shirt with one their song titles on it) onstage to "participate" in their song "Pussy Tower" with it's rousing chorus of "...she gives me head." The devilish smirk on Arrow's face below betrays whether it was or whether it was not all in good fun. You be the judge. Guitarist Henri Cash responded by playfully handing his still plugged in guitar to a stage invader, presumably to serenade in his place. Private, unintentional humor came when at least two concert-goers separately asked if I were the singer's mother. We both are music photographers, but the latter is a good twenty years younger and blessed with obvious genetics capable of spawning the beauteous if weird young Arrow.




PHOTO OPS:

 Colleague, photographer Michael Eivaz, far right, cavorts with gig promoter of Sid the Cat Presents Brandon Gonzalez and Christina Gonzalez


SIGHTHOUND PLAYDATES APR.1,8, 2018

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Playdates on Apr.1 + 8, 2018 with Scottish Deerhounds Gia, Eroica, Fain and Borzois Livia, Diego, Quinn,  Dixie and Mila with Golden Retriever Sarabelle supervising, plus humans Mr. Twister, Sherry, Ian, Paul and Mary, Katrina and yours truly. Beautiful spring weather still cool enough for running hounds to enjoy going their 35mph top speed with every run. Above, Ian risks life and limb photographing charging sighthounds, as do we all. Below, sighthounds running every which way in different pursuits, then representative pics, the two bottom shots with yours truly in them by guest photographer © 2018 Kurt Ingham ...

                                                            

THE DOGS, GILT LILY, GLITTERTRASH live, Benefit for Carrie Hamilton Foundation, Molly Malone's 12.5.17

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THE DOGS, great legendary Detroit band that began in 1968 with singer/songwriter/guitarist Loren Molinare, bassist Mary Kay and continuing with drummer Tony Mattueucci (see LINK*) played a rare gig for a benefit for The Carrie Hamilton Foundation** 12.5.17 

The significance of Loren's participation proved as poignant as his duties were multifold: he also played in two other bands that evening, GLITTERTRASH and GILT LILY. This was a special one-off reunion of GILT LILY minus its late, highly charismatic singer, Carole Burnett's daughter Carrie Hamilton (in pic herein with Leslie Knauer [center] who also performed at this gig, and Mary Kay [right] of THE DOGS)  who died of lung cancer in 2002. However, Carrie's sister Jody Hamilton helmed the band this time around, with a her own special insouciance, mood-wrangling and strip teasing. She even invited drag queens and GLITTERTRASH' singer Jenna Talia (blonde below in Gilt Lily shot, not the pink- bewigged one) onstage to join in Gilt Lily anthem "I Am A Boy." Also in Gilt Lily with Jody and Loren were original members Danny "de Muff" Isaacs and Paul Ill, with the addition of Ken Mundy.


Above, beautiful and spirited in both looks and manner, Leslie Knauer offered a great acoustic set with Al Teman on stand up bass showcasing her catchy songwriting as well as gymnastic vocals. Family-wise, Leslie once played in the band Kanary with Mary and Tony of THE DOGS for 12 years as well as her current reunion incarnation of 1990s and beyond favorites PRECIOUS METAL. Paul Ill's Disreputable Few fusion band also shared the bill.

Then we get to GLITTERTRASH... another Loren band with fellow Detroit to L.A. transplant, singer/provocateur Jenna Talia, seen below, plus Cuch Rauda on bass and a temporary Tony Dog. Motor City seasoned and tough belying the image one encounters, Jenna is a great frontperson who, as with many fun soirees one has attended, ended up on the floor wrestling a chair. And this a fun act but with some serious undertones, as with her songs like "Something To Believe In..." co-written with Loren Molinare.

*http://fastfilm1.blogspot.com/2016/02/the-dogs-their-history-from-1960s.html
** The Carrie Louise Hamilton Foundation, 5900 Wilshire Blvd., ste. 2300, Los Angeles CA 90036

CHEETAH CHROME/JOHNNY BLITZ THE DEAD BOYS with kindred STREET WALKIN' CHEETAHS IGNITE HOLLYWOOD: Passion Part 2

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2017's most memorable gig, 11.11.17 at Hollywood's the Viper Room-- the 40th Anniversary of The Dead Boys featuring original members their own bad selves, guitarist Cheetah Chrome and drummer Johnny Blitz. The audience went apeshit berserk, with singer Jake Hout coaxing and cajoling them into the palm of his hand a la Stiv Bators, whom he frequently praised.  

For further details, I am passing the virtual microphone over to the headliner's genial road technician, Ames Flames, as his perspective and enthusiasm are uniquely palpable:
"Last nights Dead Boys show was off the hook! WOW! I literally had to fight my way through the crowd just to get the guitars on stage. Once the show started the crowd went nuts and stayed that way through the entire set. The stage monitors were being pushed, thrashed, and unplugged. I was cornered on the stage steps and couldn't move. It was hot and I was drenched. The sound was thunderous. It was like the old days. It was the 3rd time in LA this year, and it was the charm. This is the show we all hope to see when we go out to see a band. The kind of show where you have to pinch yourself to make sure you are actually awake and seeing it. It was a pleasure helping these guys out, I see them as family. J Blitz was totally killing it on drums. He was amazing to watch. He did some stuff so fast I couldn't see the sticks. As they continue (to tour) I doubt you will be seeing them in clubs. I see festivals in their future."
 







and openers: The Street Walkin' Cheetahs--
 Cheetah's onetime almost eponymous backing band The Street Walkin' Cheetahs opened for The Dead Boys with their usual hi-speed, hi-energy clever punk rock. Angelo Moore of Fishbone jammed sax on a cover of the Stooges'"Fun House," dexterous singer Frank Meyer got fresh with bassist Dino Everett and guitarist Bruce Duff debuted his Errol Flynn/Captain Hook look.
 
 

MUSINGS ON SUBJECTIVE ACADEMIA, IN MY CASE ART SCHOOL

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 Four examples of my fine art and photojournalism completed while I attended UCLA: Rod Stewart in Faces,1972; my 6' x6' painting that was stolen right after this documentation; Alice Cooper at the beginning of their career; my copy of Gustav Klimt's Portrait of Sonja Knipps, assigned to teach students how to utilize undercoats, as currently displayed in our home.



Last night my friend Lisa Davidson inspired me to muse on subjective academia experiences. Actually, in the late '60s/early 70s the art instruction at UCLA's Dept. of Fine Art was pretty cool, with the gamut from learning hardcore systems like 3 point perspective to no less than Ed Ruscha telling us to paint whatever we wanted or no less than R.B. Kitaj requiring us to make a line drawing from a nude model for all 6 weeks of the class*, asking us to "make it perfect. Erasure is allowed." 

In contrast, I've been told the current emphasis is on "cultural development" and "contemporary issues" rather than honing one's art to the best of one's abilities to present it to anyone and everyone. Also, my very first week at UCLA I figured out that A) if 19 out of 20 professors concurred, that was probably close to the truth and B) out of any given class of 20 art students, only 5 had any art expertise, 1 was probably a future success as visuals genius, and 15 were there to goof or were bereft of any real visual talent. I always endeavored to be at least one of those 5... 

My most important accomplishment at UCLA was meeting the writers and journalists of its newpaper entertainment sections. We dealt with our company town's actual record companies and studios, which forged the directions of my life's work in photography, art direction, writing and photojournalism. Life lessons indeed... 


 * "It's all true. I stood next to you in Kitaj's class." - Phil Savenick

R.I.P. TOM WOLFE, MARGOT KIDDER

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 Fair usage photograph © 1967 Marie Cosindas. Tom Wolfe for her series 
on modern Dandies.
 The Right Stuff might also be a generalized epitaph, as Tom Wolfe always got his research dead right. Marie Cosindas, who passed away a year ago, worked exclusively with large format Polaroids for her commercial and fine art photgraphy.
 
                                  Fair usage photograph © 1979 Patrick Jarnoux.
Hollywood chronicler Alison Martino found the above stunning and cool pic. Rest in peace actress Margot Kidder, who reportedly was last heard from yesterday morning, raspy-voiced on the phone to friends complaining that she was throwing up every hour. It sounds as if our wretched 2017-18 flu season has claimed another poor soul...

REESI ROCCA BRAND NEW VIDEO- BIZARRE YET SO ACCESSIBLE !

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Full frontal disclosure: 
I shot stills for this production (some herein.) That said (or written) I always have liked the 'a girl and her dog" angle of stories, and this video's star Reesi Rocca also shares a nice quality with the current actress who plays Wonder Woman, Gal Godot. Both emote a sincerity in their facial expressions to do good as a superhero. Lastly, think of all the bizarre disparate elements in this. Reesi not only thought them up, she arranged to make them all happen...

Click Video:LINK  

 ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GnnDlUHgqUE&app=desktop )

R.I.P. ANTHONY BOURDAIN

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I am forwarding the assessment of Little Caesar's intelligent soulster/hard rock singer Ron Young, as it seems to be the most accurate while still being heartfelt...

The man admits he was a cocaine and heroin addict for a long time and then we spend years watching him travel all over the world getting drunk as fuck. Don’t be shocked folks. We all enjoyed watching him slowly kill himself every week. It’s one of the reasons we loved him. He was punk rock. He wanted to punch Guy Fieri in the face. We tuned in hoping we would get to see it.
 

Don’t be so naive. We love watching a car crash in slow motion and having it poetically narrated by the driver.
 

RIP Mr Bourdain. I will deeply miss you buying tacos off a truck in a dangerous neighborhood. I saw it coming and wish people in places of power did too.


 Below, (photographer unknown, fair usage) shot of Anthony Bourdain
 and Iggy Pop at the latter's Florida residence; plus one of Bourdain's favorite objects ever,
 the Raw Power by Iggy and The Stooges Deluxe re-issue, as was featured in an article
 in the Wall Street Journal about Bourdain's favorite things ever in his life.
 

R.I.P. KOKO

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Rest in peace Koko, shown here with her pet kitten All Ball (photographer unknown, fair usage.) She was perhaps the most successful species ambassador ever due to her command of ASL English, and her easily understandable sense of humor. When young, she made a mistake in her housetraining, to which her handler signed "Bad gorilla!" to which Koko immediately replied, "No. Funny gorilla!" She later was seen to be signing to herself "hurry! hurry!" thereafter when running to her restroom...

JAMES WILLIAMSON and the PINK HEARTS LIVE! Change of venue

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July 29, 2018, change of venue for live show by Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Stooges' guitarist JAMES WILLIAMSON and the band featured on his latest solo album of all new original material "Behind The Shade," featuring vocalists Frank Meyer of the Street Walkin' Cheetahs and Petra Haden of her all a capella "The Who Sell Out," plus many of his Re-Licked live gig musicians. New venue is Alex's Bar Long Beach, 2913 E. Anaheim Blvd.

JAMES WILLIAMSON and the PINK HEARTS, Change of venue 2.0 July 1, 2018

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July 1, 2018, another change of venue for live show by Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Stooges' guitarist JAMES WILLIAMSON and the band featured on his latest solo album of all new original material "Behind The Shade," featuring vocalists Frank Meyer of the Street Walkin' Cheetahs and Petra Haden of her all a capella "The Who Sell Out," plus many of his Re-Licked live gig musicians. New venue is the Monty Bar, downtown Los Angeles, 
1222 W. 7th St.


R.I.P. EARL HAMNER, JR. (two years ago)

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 fair use screen capture from The Twilight Zone episode "The Hunt"

Let me summarize an incredibly poignant Twilight Zone episode written by a screenwriter who passed away two years ago, called "The Hunt." A rural gentleman and his dog encounter a gatekeeper alongside the road, and come to realize his dog and he have passed away. The gatekeeper welcomes the man but says his dog can't come in, there's a separate place for dogs. The alternative is to wander eternity with his dog outside the gates, which the man chooses, and ambles off with his dog. Soon he comes upon another gatekeeper who joyously welcomes them both inside. Who was that who said my dog couldn't join me, asks the man. The answer: that was Hell. 

R.I.P. Earl Hamner Jr., who hopefully met up with his past dogs...

Best known for creating "The Waltons" tv series, Earl Hamner Jr.'s obituary proper: LINK  *



*http://www.tampabay.com/news/obituaries/the-real-life-john-boy-earl-hamner-jr-who-created-the-waltons-dies-at-age/2270739

R.I.P. JOHN McCAIN

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R.E. the book Character Is Destiny: Inspiring Stories Every Young Person Should Know and Every Adult Should Remember by John McCain with Mark Salter. It is a book like Profiles in Courage by John F. Kennedy, also co-written and for younger readers, about people who battled THEIR OWN SIDE or PARTY as well as obstacle forces, which takes courage and character to do the right thing when all others oppose. 

Peruse this list, and remember John McCain as a politician (which means "flawed" to me, all of 'em) consistently on board for all Americans. Rest in peace, America's ethical maverick.

Part One: Honor 
HONESTY -- Thomas More 
RESPECT -- Mohandas Gandhi 
AUTHENTICITY -- Joan of Arc 
LOYALTY -- Sir Ernest Shackleton 
DIGNITY -- Viktor Frankl 
Part Two: Purpose 
IDEALISM -- Sojourner Truth 
RIGHTEOUSNESS -- Roméo Dallaire 
CITIZENSHIP -- Pat Tillman 
DILIGENCE -- Winston Churchill 
RESPONSIBILITY -- Lord Nelson and His Lieutenants 
COOPERATION -- John Wooden 
Part Three: Strength 
COURAGE -- Edith Cavell 
SELF-CONTROL -- George Washington 
CONFIDENCE -- Elizabeth I 
RESILIENCE -- Abraham Lincoln 
INDUSTRY -- Eric Hoffer 
HOPEFULNESS -- John Winthrop 
Part Four: Understanding
 FAITH -- Christian Guard at Hua Lo Prison 
COMPASSION -- Maximillian Kolbe 
MERCY -- Mother Antonia 
TOLERANCE—The Four Chaplains 
FORGIVENESS -- Nelson Mandela 
GENEROSITY -- Oseola McCarty 
Part Five: Judgment 
FAIRNESS—Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. 
HUMILITY -- Dwight D. Eisenhower 
GRATITUDE -- Tecumseh 
HUMOR -- Mark Twain 
COURTESY -- Aung San Suu Kyi 
Part Six: Creativity 
ASPIRATION -- Ferdinand Magellan 
DISCERNMENT -- Leonardo da Vinci 
CURIOSITY -- Charles Darwin 
ENTHUSIASM -- Theodore Roosevelt 
EXCELLENCE -- Wilma Rudolph  
Part Seven: Love 
SELFLESSNESS AND CONTENTMENT -- Mother Teresa

REST IN PEACE SARABELLE

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REST IN PEACE SARABELLE, Sept. 5, 2018
Rest in peace Sarabelle. For ten years she was Kurt's and my loving best friend. A rescue, we've guessed that she was probably fifteen years old today Sept. 5, 2018, her last day. Like Game of Thrones mother of dragons Daenerys, she was the "mother of sighthounds" to Deerhounds Karis, Gia and Borzoi Livia, running with, comforting and snuggling these giant creatures. We all loved her so much...
 
photo above © 2018 Kurt Ingham.

Now Sarabelle can join Barbaro, Karis, her various puppies, and any and all canine and equine friends, and once again be at peace.

DENNIS DAVISON AND JONATHAN LEA, "the Half Seen" at private showcase 3.16.18

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VERY rare treat earlier this year in March. Dennis Davison and Jonathan Lea of The Jigsaw Seen in a Hollywood Hills home performing a showcase that really emphasized the high quality of their songwriting. 

Mr. Twister taking photos and a disruptive purse can also be seen in this small but enraptured crowd...
 
















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