Song I to side B
totally different album in its own right
Song I to side B
totally different album in its own right
This is the partner song of Mojo Pin for me.
And I think there’s an accordian playing!
electric comes in like thunder rolling
Super fun.
Hey Gents: How do you shut up a guitarist? Ask ’em to play from sheet music!
How do you shut up a pianist? Take away the sheet music!
Favorite quote: bring me the disco king!
Harmony not unison.
Steve Winwood (sp?) Back in the High Life, anyone?
Here’s to the long breakdowns; let’s take the Good Times and try to hop on it..
Hey,
Oh, 1982 Bowie: quite! Very interesting indeed.
Paying homage (double homage!)
Can l kick it?
yes you can!
doesn’t matter if you’re minor or major
Thank you Blackalicious. These guys are poets and musicians. Rare combo. Chills.
Classic in my family’s house.
We are from LA originally.
This album taught me what a National Guitar is.
tyight! Thanks for sharing and making
Thanks CBC and Q.
Upcoming book, Born Into It, by Jay Baruchel sounds great.
Really thoughtful interview.
Cheers.
No rights, just homage
Live version of a song (if memory served) was not her fave.
A little corny? maybe.
Not here.
Just wait til she sings harmony with the guitar lead.
Wild!
Conviviality: C17 from Latin convivialis “a feast”
“fit for a feast”
(of an atmosphere or event) friendly, lively, enjoyable
potential. hy/Poten/use
potentiate
potent. pot. Portia (circa Antigone)
portent (n) ; portend (vb)
– portentious
port
porter
Deceit…. disgust
Conceit…. disguise. (dis/g -)
Receipt… despise
(- cei/P/t)
DISAMBIGUATION
Pretext: ostensible reason (false) used to justify an action.
Pretense: act of pretending, false ambitions / claim
Pretend: imaginative same / fantasy
Pretension: claim of aspiration to something pretentious
Pretentious: attempting to impress with falsehood
Prevaricate: act or speak in an evasive way
Prima facie: (law) at first sight [ / site / cite]; accepted as so until proven otherwise
The Old English spelling of pretty = prættig, meaning
‘cunning or crafty’ coming as it did from a West Germanic base meaning
‘trick’.
By the Middle Ages, pretty had come to mean ‘clever, skilful, or ingenuious’.
The sense development [ deceitful, cunning, clever, skilful, admirable, pleasing, attractive ] has parallels in adjectives such as nice.
PRETTY
1. attractive in a delicate way, without being truly* (common) * beautiful. *author’s change*
2. used ironically to express displeasure: fairly ; trinket ; (used condescendingly) attractive person.
Pretty is to prevericate in order to increase Prestige?
A pretty face is a prentious face?
Pretty is pretension?
Beauty is.
Is being pretty pretentious? or prestigous?
The pretension of the face being ‘pretty’ was pretentious?
Pretty is prevarication to gain? [Prevaricate and procrastinate have similar but not identical meanings.
Prevaricate means ‘act or speak in an evasive way’.
Procrastinate, on the other hand, means ‘put off doing something’.
Prestigious.
A face being pretty is a pretension.
That’s beautiful, that is, Pretty!
PRESTIGE entered English in the mid 17th century (tricksy, cuz it means the 1600’s) from French, and ultimately derives from the Latin plural noun praestigiae ‘conjuring tricks’.
It took on its modern meaning in the 19th century (the 1800’s) by way of the sense ‘dazzling influence, glamo/u/r’, which at first [only] had a derogatory implication.
Aren’t we beautiful, Pretties?!
Extra Credit: speak the 17 words below aloud. Wild right? They kinda stopped making sense after a while. Lovesome.
Pretty ; Prettify ; Prettifies ; Prettifying
Prettified ; Prettification ; Prettifier ;
Prettier ; Prettiest ; Prettyish. . . . . Prettyboy.
Prettily ; Prettiness ; Prettyish ;
Pretties.
Prettied.
Prettying.
* Knock Knock…Orange… Orange you glad the other (stars) astericks didn’t make you scroll all the effing way down here? Hyuck.
I. All words cited from OED Concise (pic below-citations take forever)
II. All 17 “Pretty” derivations were taken from 3 dictionaries.

I did not know about James Brown.
Ha! I believed it was sexy-good-time music: good beat; easy to dance to.
It is.
It is also so much more.
Powerful medicine. I compiled a list of tracks to hike to.
Thought I’d share. Will continue to update as I find more.
It’s all good for productivity.
So take a walk, guys.
or destress and jam this when you carry wood (work).
Because like a ball on the bound,
you’ve got to get down, down, down!
Talking Loud and Saying Nothing. 1972. There It Is.
Blind Man Can See It. extended cut. bonus track. Jungle Groove.
Soul Power. 1971. “12 inch long version”
The Good Foot. Pts I & II.Mind Power. 1973Cold Sweat. 1967
Bonus points:
The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars.
16 June 1972 (released).
8 November 1971 to 4 February 1972 (recorded)
Side 1
2nd track
cheers.
Too true
what a song is this one. a live version cuz I feel good.
I could drink a case of you, darling and I would still be on my feet.
Genius! What a perfect thing to say.
It sounds like a compliment and then you realize it’s a backhanded compliment.
She can drink a freaking case and still stand? He must not be that strong or intoxicating. Bit of a light weight really.
Of course, maybe she just handles her booze more adeptly than most and can ‘hang’ like a tender tent pulled in tension on tenter hooks takes the dimension of volume whereas before it only had two: length and height.
Don’t own rights, paying homage.
PJ Harvey always seems to nail it.
Love the big sloppy bass line on this one.
A hot number, for sure.
A real American hero!
Don’t own rights.
Get on the good on the good foot.
Dancing on the good foot.
Unh!
“Wanna get up and jive; wreck my stockings in some jukebox dive.”
Great first track for an album.
Favorite bluesman.