Archive for January, 2010
TURN ON TO ‘ORANGE SUNSHINE’

If you’re looking for a good book about the late ’60s – one that I didn’t even write – check out Orange Sunshine: The Brotherhood of Love and Its Quest to Spread Peace, Love, and Acid to the World by O.C. journalist Nick Schou:
http://us.macmillan.com/orangesunshine
Schou’s book just received a “four cannabis review” from High Times, author Mike Davis says this true story reads “like classic Thomas Pynchon,” and yours truly blurbed it by saying it’s a “wild ride of a story that seems straight out of Easy Rider or Zabriskie Point.”
Orange Sunshine is available now for pre-order on Amazon.
JIMI HENDRIX 1969 STUDIO ALBUM SET FOR MARCH RELEASE
Valleys of Neptune, an album of a dozen previously unreleased studio tracks from Jimi Hendrix, is set for release in March from Sony/Legacy. Here’s Edna Gundersen’s piece for USA Today:
http://www.usatoday.com/life/music/news/2010-01-11-jimialbum11_ST_N.htm?csp=34
I spoke to Gundersen in October 2008 for an article she did on Mark Oliver Everett’s memoir, Things the Grandchildren Should Know, which I published at my day job:
http://www.usatoday.com/life/books/news/2008-10-20-mark-everett_N.htm
THE ONION ON BRUCE, OBAMA
OBAMA TO WAIT FOR NEXT SPRINGSTEEN ALBUM FOR WORD ON ECONOMY
WASHINGTON—Faced with the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, the White House announced Tuesday that a cautious President Obama is awaiting the release of the next Bruce Springsteen album before moving forward with additional economic stimulus initiatives. “If Mr. Springsteen puts out an E-Street Band project with one rave-up and several tracks containing an overarching theme of redemption, the president will certainly take that as a strong indicator of economic recovery,” said press secretary Robert Gibbs, adding that an album cover featuring an American flag would be “extremely promising.” “However, if he records a stark, haunting, Nebraska-esque exploration of blue-collar life, then it is time to lower interest rates and take immediate steps toward drastically reevaluating our current strategy.” The president has reportedly eschewed the supplementary Mellencamp Little Pink Housing Index used during the Reagan administration, as economists now widely believe it conveys a derivative, shallow view of the American fiscal landscape.
Link to article: http://www.theonion.com/content/news_briefs/obama_to_wait_for_next
BUT THE OTHER 3 PERCENT…
Magic in the Night got a mention in a blog called Madmen, Drummers, Bummers and Indians in the Summer. As far as back-handed compliments go, it’s one of the best ones you can get:
I have finished Rob Kirkpatrick’s “Magic in the Night”, which is one of the better Springsteen related books I’ve yet read. Kirkpatrick is about 97% less full of crap than most music critics, so kudos to him.
Here’s the link: http://coxrox.wordpress.com/2010/01/04/three-more-that-snuck-into-2009/
AN OPEN LETTER TO THE WASHINGTON POST
(…with apologies to Public Enemy.)
I intended this to be a letter appearing in the Washington Post, but it doesn’t appear that they’ll be printing it, so I’m posting it here…
1969 vs. 1968?
In response to Carlos Lozada’s comments on my book in his article “2009 is over. But is it history?”, I want to clarify that I did not say I “might have called the book ‘1969: The Year After the Important Year.’” As I explain in my introduction, this was a joke made by a colleague, which I recalled to note the glut of books on 1968 and the gap that I sought to fill with mine.
Mr. Lozada argued that I “must outdo 1968” and incidents such as the Democratic Convention and the election of Richard Nixon. I take it, then, he does not see the significance of a year that witnessed People’s Park, the Stonewall Riots, the Manson Family killings, the War Moratorium, the Days of Rage, the occupation of Alcatraz, the public’s discovery of the My Lai massacre, and the killing of Fred Hampton? Or the importance of Nixon’s inaugural year, in which he escalated the war in Southeast Asia with covert bombings in Cambodia and drew lines in the sand with his famous “Silent Majority” address to the nation?
“When you need the Miracle Mets and the first modern ATM to boost your case, you know you’re in trouble,” writes Mr. Lozada. If he disagrees that the Miracle Mets (which he can reference 40 years later without needing to explain who they were) transcended the sports world, would he also question the importance of another event from baseball that year: Curt Flood’s announcement that he was challenging baseball’s reserve clause, thus signaling the onset of free agency?
If Mr. Lozada isn’t impressed with how the invention of the ATM changed the ways in which he conducts his financial transactions today, does he not believe that the maiden Boeing 747 flight, the first artificial heart implant, and the first computer network connection introduced major changes into modern life? (Without that last item, I would not have found myself 40 years later reading Mr. Lozada’s article at home on my laptop.) And, of course, there was a small technological achievement called Apollo 11.
While Mr. Lozada maintains I was applying the “Groundwork Argument” to substitute for a supposed lack of “historical moments,” I would suggest that recent History channel documentaries such as Woodstock: Now & Then and Sex in ’69: The Sexual Revolution in America (for which I was interviewed), as well as NPR’s humor piece on 40th anniversary “burnout,” seem to indicate others agree with my opinion that 1969 was indeed an important year with a unique legacy in America society.
Rob Kirkpatrick
Author of 1969: The Year Everything Changed
Here’s the article to which I’m responding:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/12/11/AR2009121102590.html
BEST WEEK FOR LIVE MUSIC IN NYC HISTORY? DJ FORNATALE SAYS LATE ‘69
For a real treat, check out Mixed Bag with Pete Fornatale, which airs Saturdays 4:00 to 8:00 PM on WFUV 90.7 FM in the New York City area or online at www.wfuv.org. Every week, Fornatale – a veteran DJ who first began spinning tunes back in 1964 on WFUV, moved on to WNEW in 1970, and returned to his “native” station in 2001 - reaches into his Mixed Bag and offers eclectic playlists built around a theme. This weekend, he did a bit of role-playing, pretending he was on the mic 40 years ago and celebrated what he described as the best weekend for live music in the history of New York City. A contentious statement, to be sure – somewhat like someone saying 1969 was “The Year Everything Changed” – but his playlist primarily featuring artists who played the city that week make for a strong case. My favorite: hearing Simon and Garfunkel playing their new song, “Bridge Over Troubled Water,” at Carnegie Hall:
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