Musician Malcolm Kogut has been tickling the ivories since he was 14 and won the NPM DMMD Musician of the Year award in 99. He has CDs along with many published books. Malcolm played in the pit for many Broadway touring shows. When away from the keyboard, he loves exploring the nooks, crannies and arresting beauty of the Adirondack Mountains, battling gravity on the ski slopes and roller coasters.
Monday, June 22, 2015
Monday, June 15, 2015
The Little Mustard Seed by The Mascots
The Little Mustard Seed by The Mascots
This is a song my mother used to sing to me all the time. While sorting through her old record collection of 45's and 78's, I found this. It was in really bad physical shape but armed with a mangyfying glass, pin and toothpick I managed to get most of the crud off however, there are a few gouges I don't know how to get around and consequently the record skips in a few places. Lo siento. If I can figure out a way to resolve the gouges, I will re-record it and upload it.
http://youtu.be/X5S4fRvf4yA
November 12, 1955
The Billboard Music Review of New Pop Records
"Tender song with an inspirational message. Okay job." Number 72
Nobody's Arms / The Little Mustard Seed (7") MGM Records K12107 US 1955
A Nobody's Arms
B The Little Mustard Seed
Conductor – LeRoy Holmes
Vocals – Harry Bell, Jerry Lloyd, Joe Toland, Larry Hovis
This is a song my mother used to sing to me all the time. While sorting through her old record collection of 45's and 78's, I found this. It was in really bad physical shape but armed with a mangyfying glass, pin and toothpick I managed to get most of the crud off however, there are a few gouges I don't know how to get around and consequently the record skips in a few places. Lo siento. If I can figure out a way to resolve the gouges, I will re-record it and upload it.
http://youtu.be/X5S4fRvf4yA
November 12, 1955
The Billboard Music Review of New Pop Records
"Tender song with an inspirational message. Okay job." Number 72
Nobody's Arms / The Little Mustard Seed (7") MGM Records K12107 US 1955
A Nobody's Arms
B The Little Mustard Seed
Conductor – LeRoy Holmes
Vocals – Harry Bell, Jerry Lloyd, Joe Toland, Larry Hovis
MGM, Published by Robbins Music Corp
Wednesday, June 10, 2015
Bring Back "Stop Look and Listen"
Almost every day you can read online about a pedestrian somewhere being hit by a car. Today's offering is an eight year old boy. The police are not releasing information yet, the driver was neither arrested nor ticketed so, I'm willing to bet that the boy didn't stop, look and listen.
The "pedestrian has the right of way" law is costing lives as more and more people are being stupefied into blindly walking into moving traffic. I was walking with a friend and as we approached the curb she neither stopped nor looked. She just stepped off of the curb and I grabbed her as cars from both directions were giving no indication of stopping.
If you watch people coming out of grocery stores or places such as WalMart, most of those people are not looking either. They just walk out with blind faith that the world will stop for them. The law does force drivers to be more cognizant of pedestrians since all the blame will be on the driver and their insurance company but it is also making pedestrians oblivious to the danger of 4,000 pounds of steel coming at them at thirty or fifty miles per hour. Regardless of the law, my money is on the 4,000 pounds of steel.
Just because the pedestrian has the right of way does not mean that the driver is not eating fast food, putting on makeup, on the phone, fiddling with the radio, setting the GPS or nodding off. We can make laws against those (Schumer, get on it) or we can give pedestrians a foolproof way to not get hit by cars: Stop, Look and Listen. It works every time. Go to your local highway and try it.
Maybe we should take all the politicians who voted for that law to a busy highway and see which method they choose to cross the street. Our eight year old little boy didn't get that choice because he somehow learned that cars will always stop for him. Always.
When I was a kid there was a deluge of commercials on TV on the topic of Stop, Look and Listen. Yielding to a car will keep you alive 100% of the time. Stepping in front of one, not so much. I think I'd rather be alive than to brainwashed into thinking I have super human powers to stop traffic.
Maybe if politicians created harsher punishments for drivers who hit human lemmings - yes, that will save lives - But, really, we don't need more laws, we need one less law. Rescind the pedestrian right of way law. If we have to keep it so we can place the blame, at least couple it with the admonishment to stop, look and listen, too.
Labels:
accident,
arrest,
law,
listen,
look,
malcolm kogut,
pedestrian,
stop,
ticket
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