High Five

It was 5 years ago that I hit the ‘publish’ button for this post.
Many things have happened since that innocent and ‘so me’ post.
I like to think my writing has matured a bit and that I have taken many of you
on my journey down the road of life.
I want to thank each and every one of you for being a part of my life (good or bad)
for the past 5 years.
You have enlightened me, guided me, made me laugh and have given me solace when I needed it most.
You guys are incredible.
I will pat myself on the back for blatant consistency.
I think I can give me that.
There are several people I need to deeply thank.
Pamela, for believing in me when I no longer believe in myself. (and letting me know about it)
My three girls for keeping me on my  toes. Always.
For Jon, he keeps me cooking. I love cooking,
He is a man that will drive through hell and high water to have a bowl of my Cincinnati Chili,
Thanks, Jon
Last but not least, my family from Australia.
Maureen, Mark, Kelly.Zoe, Mel, Steve, Tash, Stick, Wil, Stella, Lucas, Issac, Max and all!
(who did I miss?)
Thanks to all that have visited and commented.
Read some ”’old”” Murph  . . . .
And watch the video at the end!

 

This is a piece I wrote several years ago but still seems to me to apply to the present day music industry.
I am still a musician at heart but venues to work in are drying up faster than a droplet of water in a bucket of dry sand.
It’s an abysmal state of affairs these days musically and sadly we all saw it coming.
Some say business is cyclical. I wonder.
Hey, Paul McCartney played the halftime show Super Bowl Sunday, right?

Remembering Miss American Pie

The musicians of the 60’s and 70’s had a wealth of powerful and insightful compositions from which to draw their inspiration. The songs had shine and creative musical integrity that would forever set them apart from today’s musical mainstream.
The music spoke of the dynamic of the human experience; from love found and lost to political innuendo shaking hands with world peace.
The older generation frowned upon these freedoms of expression and saw the music created as an irrevocable evil to be stamped out in the hopes of ending the reign of terror that floated over the airwaves.
From the shaking hips of Elvis to the Mop-Tops from England to the androgynous and enigmatic David Bowie, the music written back then made us think and connect; it gave us an up close and personal view of the broken heart.
So what the hell happened to perceptive content?
Music, in its purest form is therapy, a most fundamental discipline of meditation the human race has, but along the way we altered the magic formula, ultimately changing its destiny as well.
It’s supposed to make you feel good.
Just think of a song that truly means something to you, take out a piece of paper, and jot down five things that come to mind immediately.
Chances are you can come up with more than ten.
That’s the miracle of music; when something unexpected touches the heart.
Much of what I hear today is tainted, biased and so musically inept that when I hear one of these prized gems, I can only wildly shake my head and slobber saliva like an angry PBR bull (which tends to make loved ones around me very uncomfortable).
A rule of thumb for future songwriters regarding lyrics: if it rhymes with shucking but has nothing to do with corn, get out a thesaurus and find another word.
The English language is chock full of them. Really.
It seems that few people write real songs anymore; that is a simple and yet sobering fact, not a generality. If it weren’t for artists like John Mayer and Dave Matthews, I’d have lost my mind by now.
Much of the music today is like bad poetry, arranged, set to a groove from the late eighties, and thrown into a 4,000 track, all digital recorder (yes, all the tracks must be used, read the contract).
Recently, while listening to a song on a brand X radio station out of Boston—the exact frequency slips my mind…you’re welcome—I remember thinking to myself, what language is this guy speaking?
I strained to hear anything remotely intelligible.
Musically speaking, the song was as mundane and pedestrian as an arrangement that oozes from a generic portable keyboard purchased at Wal-Mart.
I also thought that somewhere in the midst of this urban cacophony, I could hear the sound of a dog being run over and over, and over again… I’m not positive about that and maybe it’s just me. Somebody call the ASPCA.
The inspiration for this article came to me as I ambled down Main Street a few weeks ago (us old guys don’t walk, we amble…it’s much hipper) when a pulsating sub-compact Toyota Celica loaded with what sounded like two, maybe three 18-inch subwoofers drove past me towards City Hall, emitting music so thunderous it almost knocked down the lady walking next to me.
Initially, I thought it was just wind.
I didn’t get the license plate number because I was too busy bending over to retrieve my own two eyeballs off the sidewalk.
Sound pressure levels that can cause buildings to vibrate precariously…hmm, I wondered if the Slater Building was up to code on that one.
Nope, we are definitely not in Kansas anymore, Toto.
Then there’s the whole debacle surrounding present day artists hiding behind the 5th amendment, and we all can see what a gush of rotting sewage that is, but it doesn’t mean we have to buy a bucketful of it.
When a major proportion of the music available has a “parental advisory” sticker slapped on it, what’s left for those of us who prefer substance in what we listen to?
Maybe we need a special store that caters to people fed up with listening to music and lyrics that insult our intelligence with the glorification of worthless profanity while wasting our hard earned money on garbage that someone in the recording industry somehow deemed fit for human consumption. Bon appétit.
Maybe I’m not meant to understand what all the hype and excitement in the industry is about these days, because I’m no longer a child.
But there’s always that outside chance that as I struggle with my own foreseeable mid-life crisis, I’ll pleasantly discover that perhaps I’ve grown a little bit wiser in the process.
Just watch the Grammy Awards this year for a taste of the ultimate in garishness.
In the end, the music we choose to listen to and support should remain solely in the hands of the listener, but the overall message that it brings should be more of a boon to society as opposed to an outrage against the machine.
Comedian George Carlin hit the proverbial nail on the head when he stated that, “…inside every silver lining, there’s a dark cloud.”
Get out your umbrellas, kids; it looks like rain.

 

Happy 5 To S&M!!!!!!!
See you for the next five years . . .
I hope!

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9 Responses to “High Five”

  1. Poetikat says:

    We’re not in KANSAS anymore, TOTO! Ha! That’s two great ones, right there!
    We are sooo on the same page on this Michael.
    I’d be lost without Paul Simon, Johnny Cash, Leonard Cohen, Kate Bush. Can’t get through 10 minutes of that trashy Grammy Awards. And don’t get me started on expletives in lyrics!

    I had no idea that you’ve been doing this for five years! Wow! It’s going on three for me and I thought that was something.

    I’m glad to have discovered you and your blog and really glad to have recently reconnected. I’ll see you soon on FB.

    Congrats and all that!

    Peace, out.

    Kat


    Thanks so much PK.
    Once again, I missed replying on this comment and I do apologize.
    A little bird told me about my mess up last night!
    The post itself was written long before it ever made it to the page.
    No surprise there.
    I want to thank you dearly for offering your insight and comments here at my blog.
    And yeah, 5 years.
    I’m an old guy!
    No intention of stopping either.
    Thanks again, Kat.
    ~m

  2. anonymum says:

    What a wonderful 5 years they’ve been.
    You’ve made me laugh, cry, shiver, smile, you’ve made the hair on the back of my neck stand up, and given me more goosebumps than could be counted.
    I’ve read every single word you’ve ever posted on here, and many of them more than once because your words talk to me, and always have from day 1.
    When you do “those” posts?
    You reach inside me and touch my soul, then other days you clutch my heart so hard it’s a physical pain.
    As strange as it sounds, I love every minute of it.

    Who knew where it would lead when Kelly sent me your link what seems like a lifetime ago?
    This has become my home away from home the same as your living room and back deck are seen as a home away from home, and I can’t get enough time in either your virtual world or your real world because both are just so comfortable.

    I’ve enjoyed every inch of this journey you started 5 years ago, and I thank you for sharing it.
    I look forward to another 5 years in your magical kingdom with much anticipation my friend.
    {{{hugs}}}

    p.s Caleb and Taylah
    :tongue:


    I’ve still no idea how I missed replying to this comment.
    If you ever knew how many times I’ve told the story of how we met, you would laugh.
    I thank you for being you whenever you stop by.
    That this place brought some very special people into my life is my reward.
    I’m sorry again that I missed this wonderful comment.
    Must have been late . . .
    *mwah!

  3. Pam says:

    For five years,I have watched you labor over this blog that has become an extension of your volumes of notepads and journals.There’s so much more to be written and so many more pieces that may never make it to this blog.

    There is one thing that has remained constant. It is your honesty that comes out in your posts.
    There are so many emotional pieces here.Some are really sad,a lot that are very deep and several that are really comical and yes ,even some great music.

    Through your blog, I have made several new friends and my life has been enriched in a way that I would never have believed.I was very computer shy when you first started this whole “blog” thing. It scared the hell out of me.

    Congratulations on your 5 years of writing here.Your words have touched many people around the world. Your mom would be so proud of you.I know I am . Love you–Pamela

    I am fortunate enough to have a wife that understands her husbands creative needs.
    Many don’t.
    I am truly blessed.
    I know that every single day.
    Thank you, my dear, thank you.
    And my Mom? Yeah, she would dig this too.
    {{{hugz}}}
    ~m

  4. Pam says:

    p.s. :smile: .Your dad would be extra proud of you as well.

    :smile:
    ~m

  5. Deb says:

    Happy 5 years Michael!! Although I have just recently discovered your blog…your writing has touched me deeply and inspired me in many ways. Thank you for sharing your life and your thoughts!
    P.S. Thank you for feeding my son….and thank you even more for welcoming him into your home and your family!
    Good luck and keep writing!

    As far as Jon goes, how does he eat the way he does and weigh 150lbs soaking wet?
    I am just jealous.
    He is now bordering on family as I figure him in to all my recipes.
    We are talking about a man that will drive though a blinding blizzard on the Mass Pike for
    a plate of spaghetti and meatballs with decent grated Parmesan . . .
    How can I not like him?!?
    ~m

    • Deb says:

      If you look up the expression…”the way to a man’s heart is through his stomach”….you will see Jon’s picture!! LOL

      I think you may be right. :happy:
      ~m

  6. Deb says:

    p.s. I LOVE American Pie….it is one of my all time favorite songs!!

    Still yet to see AP
    Will have to put it on the list!!!
    ~m

  7. Burnie says:

    Happy 5 years mate. With out that first post your Australian family wouldn’t know the caring kind man you are. You have made us laugh and cry through this fantastic journey and welcomed us into your wonderful family as well. For this and many more things I thank you from the bottom of my heart brother.
    I agree with you about the music of today. It’s like Steve Wonder on face book most of it.The sixties, seventies and eighties were about trying to change the world for the better. Stop war and bring joy to the world. Stop famine and a lot of other injustices. Today’s music seems to push intolerance and a feeling of fuck you weather I’m ok or not. Go figure.
    Thanks again Brother for 5 great years. May there be 50 more great years to follow.
    Mark

    Can’t wait until July 2010, mate.
    I will thank you personally for this comment!
    ~m

  8. Congrats~m. You are a very special guy. You write beautiful things and made some great friends. You can write, and write, and write but what always shines through is your love for your family, life, and friends. You are a classy guy and I’m really glad to know you! :hat:

    I am more glad (and honored) that you visit me and leave comments.
    I thank you from the bottom of my heart.
    pax,
    ~m

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