my Snark

Pop Culture . . . whatever

When you don’t know what to do — DANCE!!!

Thank you, “Hot Sauce”

August 15, 2009 Posted by | Humor? | | Comments Off on When you don’t know what to do — DANCE!!!

R.I.P. Les Paul & Snarky’s First Love

I didn’t know if I should post on this or not. I never played guitar. I had to look up Les Paul to see what he looked like. For some reason, I felt compelled to post about him. Is it this picture with Sir Paul? Yes, that’s part of it. I will use any excuse to use a picture of any Beatle. No, there’s more to it.

My first love. He was my high school sweetheart and our  relationship was real and intense. We were best friends. He was an awesome guitar player and he played a Les Paul. G thought he was a young Jimmy Page and if you saw him play guitar, you’d think so too. He never read music, in fact, he barely read at all. He wasn’t the brightest bulb on the tree but he learned to play every Led Zeppelin song, note-for-note (especially proficient at the solos) and his hand made a blur up and down the guitar neck. When I think of Les Paul, I think of my first love.

R.I.P. Mr. Paul.

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. — Les Paul, the guitarist and inventor who changed the course of music with the electric guitar and multitrack recording and had a string of hits, many with wife Mary Ford, died on Thursday. He was 94.

According to Gibson Guitar, Paul died of complications from pneumonia at White Plains Hospital. His family and friends were by his side.

He had been hospitalized in February 2006 when he learned he won two Grammys for an album he released after his 90th birthday, “Les Paul & Friends: American Made, World Played.”

Over the years, the Les Paul series has become one of the most widely used guitars in the music industry. In 2005, Christie’s auction house sold a 1955 Gibson Les Paul for $45,600.

I felt like a condemned building with a new flagpole on it,” he joked.

As an inventor, Paul helped bring about the rise of rock ‘n’ roll and multitrack recording, which enables artists to record different instruments at different times, sing harmony with themselves, and then carefully balance the “tracks” in the finished recording.

With Ford, his wife from 1949 to 1962, he earned 36 gold records and 11 No. 1 pop hits, including “Vaya Con Dios,” “How High the Moon,” “Nola” and “Lover.” Many of their songs used overdubbing techniques that Paul the inventor had helped develop.

“I could take my Mary and make her three, six, nine, 12, as many voices as I wished,” he recalled. “This is quite an asset.” The overdubbing technique was highly influential on later recording artists such as the Carpenters.

The use of electric guitar gained popularity in the mid-to-late 1940s, and then exploded with the advent of rock the 1950s.

“Suddenly, it was recognized that power was a very important part of music,” Paul once said. “To have the dynamics, to have the way of expressing yourself beyond the normal limits of an unamplified instrument, was incredible. Today a guy wouldn’t think of singing a song on a stage without a microphone and a sound system.”

A tinkerer and musician since childhood, he experimented with guitar amplification for years before coming up in 1941 with what he called “The Log,” a four-by-four piece of wood strung with steel strings.

“I went into a nightclub and played it. Of course, everybody had me labeled as a nut.” He later put the wooden wings onto the body to give it a tradition guitar shape.

In 1952, Gibson Guitars began production on the Les Paul guitar.

Pete Townsend of The Who, Steve Howe of Yes, jazz great Al DiMeola and Led Zeppelin’s Jimmy Page all made the Gibson Les Paul their trademark six-string.

August 15, 2009 Posted by | Death, Paul McCartney | , | Comments Off on R.I.P. Les Paul & Snarky’s First Love

Blast from the past: Paradise by the Dashboard Light


August 15, 2009 Posted by | Meatloaf, Reality TV | | Comments Off on Blast from the past: Paradise by the Dashboard Light