Sunday, April 23, 2006


June Pointer, RIP -- June Pointer died April 12, from cancer, at age 52. I can not begin to tell you how many hours of pleasure she and her sisters Ruth, Anita and Bonnie have given me over the past 33 years, since the release of their first album, "The Pointer Sisters," on Blue Thumb Records. I remember so well the first time I heard them, and how it made me feel. It was the summer of 1973, and I was "down the shore" with some friends at someone's parents' summer home, and we were sitting around chatting, with WNEW-FM playing in the background. All of a sudden I started hearing these amazing sounds coming out of the radio. A solo piano intro, followed by the sounds of a soft electric guitar, then vocals, all of which kept building to a near-frenetic, gospel-tinged finish. I'd never heard anything like it before. Part rock, part gospel, large part heaven. The jock announced afterwards that the song was "River Boulevard," and that the group singing it was The Pointer Sisters. I stored this info in my head, for my next trip to the record department at Korvette's in Paramus. :) I bought the self-titled album, took it home, and from the opening percussion of "Yes, We Can Can" to the closing refrains of "Wang Dang Doodle," I was in love. And I still am, with that first release, as well as the four releases that followed - essentially comprising their entire body of work for Blue Thumb - "That's A Plenty," "Live at the San Francisco Opera House," "Steppin'" and "Having a Party" - each of which were gems in their own right, having given me, as I've said, countless hours of listening pleasure, as recently as the day before June died, in the case of "Opera House" and "That's A Plenty" (as a matter of fact, the name and tag line of my blog, "A Passable Ear," are taken from the lyrics to "Little Pony," from "That's A Plenty.") In an era of acid rock and seminal disco, they dared to do something completely different - '40s style rock and roll was the best way to describe their music although their versatility and individuality defied categorization - and they did it well. Every Pointer Sisters concert I went to in the mid-to-late 70s - and I probably saw about 40 of their shows in all - was sheer delight.

In 1977, Bonnie left the group and created a masterpiece of her very own, the self-titled "Bonnie Pointer," featuring "When I'm Gone," "Free Me From My Freedom" and "Heaven Must Have Sent You."

Ruth, June and Anita signed with Richard Perry and Planet Records and turned to a more soft pop-oriented sound, which garnered them their greatest commercial success, starting with a cover of Bruce Springsteen's "Fire" and continuing with “He’s So Shy,” “Slow Hand” and “I’m So Excited,” and on through 1984's smash dance/funk release, "Break Out." After "Break Out," however, the Sisters (and Perry) either got lazy or had difficulty finding good material to record; everything after that point became generic and formulaic, and towards the end of the 80s they faded from the pop charts and essentially turned into caricatures of themselves. Pity. But what they offered us from 1973 - 1977 was unparalleled in its quality and uniqueness, and I am forever grateful for having their music around to listen to (again, as recently as just yesterday).

In addition to her work with her sisters, June, in addition, released a solo album) her first of two, but the only one worth mentioning), "Baby Sister," in 1982. "Baby Sister" was, at best, uneven, but one track stood out among the others and has always been in heavy rotation in the soundtrack of my life - a fabulous cover of "I'm Ready For Love," originally recorded in 1964 by Martha Reeves and the Vandellas.

RIP, June; may your memory always be for a blessing, and thank you for so much joy you brought to my life.

Thanks for listening, have a great day,

KA

Friday, April 07, 2006

Better Than Prozac*

Go to your Cowsills collection and put on "Hair." Go about two minutes and thirty seconds in, where they get to the part "no, never have to cut it 'cause it stops by itself." If those four seconds of heavenly harmony and double-time clapping don't make you happy, nothing will!

As always, contact me if you'd like an MP3 file, thanks for listening, have a great day and a great Shabbat,

KA

*Please be advised that I am not a doctor and I am not dispensing medical advice. Please check with your medical provider about the proper use of prescription medication.

Wednesday, April 05, 2006

Aretha Franklin and the "Kosher for Passover" dairy case at Mollie Stone's on California Street (yes, there is a connection...)

Dear Friends,

Please be advised that the “Kosher for Passover” dairy case at Mollie Stone’s on California Street (San Francisco) contains several items that are marked kosher, but not kosher for Passover. I noticed it on the yogurts in that case; yogurt, according to Jewish law, must have a "kosher for Passover" label on it if purchased before or during Passover. http://www.uscj.org/metny/huntinhh/guide.html

And now, on the subject of Aretha Franklin - if you’re looking for some good music to put you into Pesach cleaning mode, or at the very least into a great post-workday mood, may I suggest you listen to “Respect” or “Think” or, really, just about anything Aretha Franklin recorded during her tenure with Atlantic Records. If you’d like me to send you an MP3 file, just contact me with either “Think” or “Respect” in the subject line of your e-mail message. I've been listening to Aretha almost non-stop for the past week and a half - what an amazing, enduring body of work she (along with producer Jerry Wexler) created for us back then. She achieves more, and goes more places, in the first 60 seconds of "Think" than most artists could dream of achieving in an entire lifetime. She hits a note at 2:35 into "You're All I Need To Get By" that most other artists could only dream of hitting. You go, Aretha, thanks!

Chag sameach,

KA