Archive for September 2nd, 2011

September 2nd, 2011

Richard Thompson and Liz Longley at Bd Hse Park

by PaulM

Liz Longley (photo by caesar photography)

On her third visit to the Lowell Summer Music Series, Liz Longley appeared to be very comfortable in front of a Lowell crowd. She’s probably at ease on any stage after doing 150 gigs a year while in college. She recently graduated from Berklee School of Music in Boston, a songwriting major who opened for Livingston Taylor the last time he was at Boarding House Park. She has an endearing presence, almost too sincere to believe as she sets up and then delivers break-up songs about bad boyfriends. Moving from guitar to electric piano she offered a song about her grandmother with Alzheimer’s disease. She switched back to guitar and reached a peak with “an angry song” about a young man and his Camaro, the “red-hot” new thing. Series M.C. John Marciano didn’t let her get away without an encore of “Dough for Dough,” a rap song by an admittedly awkward white girl from Pennsylvania who likes Girl Scout cookies too much. It was a funny and clever number spit out with attitude. She’s moving to Nashville in November to pursue stardom, I guess, but she promised to be back in Boston in late winter.

At about 8.30 p.m., Richard Thompson walked on stage to wild applause from the packed house at the John Street pavilion. Behind him, the illuminated, well-crafted Boott Mills clock-and-bell tower, tall smokestack, and curved, lit brick stair-tower made a composition fit for a postage stamp if Lowell’s National Park ever gets commemorated that way. Thompson is a veteran musician whom Rolling Stone magazine ranks as number 20 in the top 100 guitarists, according to Series overseer Peter Aucella. He certainly showed it on “1952 Vincent Black Lightning” and “Crawl Back (Under My Stone).” The virtuoso player filled the park with sound, coaxing gorgeous notes out of his acoustic guitar. The chords rang and chimed, and many a song ended with a sharp strum. I’m always amazed at how a real pro singer-player can saturate a big space with a voice and strings. I remember how McCartney filled Fenway to aural capacity singing “Something” and accompanying himself with a ukelele one summer night two years ago.

Richard Thompson was a bigger presence than I expected. I had heard of his work with Linda Thompson and knew of the Fairport Convention, but he was somebody not on my radar screen. By the second song tonight, I understood the attraction. He’s not a young guy, but retains a powerful voice. He’s an appealing presence with the right amount of between-song patter and witty asides. He’s played Boarding House before, so he thanked the organizers for the return invitation—even after the scandal thing, he joked. Superb musicianship has been a hallmark of the summer series this year. It’s always an entertaining line-up, but each year the musicianship seems to step up a notch. Chris Isaak, Bela Fleck and the Flecktones, the Fab Faux, the Court Yard Hounds, moe., Rickie Lee Jones, Great Big Sea, and the rest kept the bar very high.

 

Richard Thompson (photo by Joe Putrock)

September 2nd, 2011

“GOP Presidential candidate John Huntsman: Obama’s nightmare opponent” by Marjorie Arons-Barron

by DickH

The entry below is being cross posted from Marjorie Arons-Barron’s own blog.

Former ambassador and Utah Governor Jon Huntsman is working New Hampshire hard to win next year’s Republican primary there as a linchpin of his presidential campaign. He still registers a scant two percent in national GOP polls, but he is far and away the most impressive of the Republican field. Were he to capture the nomination, he’d give President Obama a run for his money.

He is informed, articulate, reasonable, practical and, contrary to how he sometimes projects on television, quite forceful and “presidential.” Best, he doesn’t march in lock-step with his party.

Some examples. Had Huntsman been able to, he would have supported unequivocally the debt ceiling compromise. He agrees we may be experiencing global warming. He supports civil unions. He believes in evolution. And still he thinks he can prevail in the Republican primaries because, he says, people are sick and tired of the side show – they want substance.

That’s what he delivered when he spoke yesterday to a packed NH Institute of Politics/New England Council crowd at St. Anselm’s College in Manchester, NH. His plan for the U. S. economy is clearcut. He attacks our debt – equaling 70 percent of GDP – as “a cancer metastasizing in the country.” He calls for a balanced budget amendment, going after all sacred cows, favorably looking to solutions like those offered by the Simpson/Bowles Commission or the Ryan plan, and growing manufacturing. To do the latter, he’d reform the tax code, lowering all rates, eliminating all loopholes and deductions, cutting corporate welfare (while lowering the business tax) and undertaking regulatory reform. His targets there would be outright repeal of Dodd-Frank and “Obamacare,” and serious rollbacks at the EPA and FDA.

No one would ever mistake Huntsman for a Democrat or even a Republican in the Rockefeller-Nixon tradition. I disagree with him on many issues. But he is not blindly locked into the narrow, reflexive, doctrinaire ideology of the other GOP candidates.

And he brings a lot more to the foreign policy table than do his primary opponents. He has served under four U. S. Presidents—under Ronald Reagan, as part of the White House staff; under George H.W. Bush as ambassador to Singapore; under George W. Bush as trade representative; and, with that in his portfolio, as ambassador to China in the Obama administration.

While he is glad that Libya may be throwing off the shackles of Muammar Gaddafi, he doesn’t believe that Libya is or was a core U.S. concern. Nor does he believe we should be doing nation building in Afghanistan or Pakistan. “We need to shore up our own core,” he said, Pakistan and Afghanistan should take care of themselves.

China is probably the nation of greatest concern to the United States, especially in the global economy. As Ambassador to China, Huntsman lived there for two years, speaks fluent Mandarin and interacted with Chinese people from the highest officials to the people in the street. Imagine a president with that facility!

Before he took on that ambassadorial role, he served two terms as Governor of Utah, cutting taxes and earning accolades for his management of government. He left office with an 80 percent approval rating. Somewhere along the line, he was CEO of his family’s company. (And by the way, quite charmingly, he also rides a motorcycle and played keyboard in a band.)

Prevailing in the Republican primary is a stretch for him. Huntsman has already had to temporize on some long-held positions, especially in the area of green energy. He has not performed particularly well jumping through hoops in GOP debate situations, and his campaign is dogged by staff turmoil and reorganizations.

In a reasonable primary environment, he might have a chance. But GOP voters this year are out for raw red meat, or so the candidates believe. Huntsman may not be enough of a feral creature for them. That’s too bad, because a Huntsman-Obama race would be fascinating to watch and could lead to an informative public dialogue. Maybe this is just a national introductory tour, with the expectation that the party will select an unelectable purist, go down to ignominious defeat and leave him to pick up the pieces four years from now.

Please let me know your thoughts in the comments section below.

September 2nd, 2011

Tim Egan on Prohibition & Messing with the Constitution Today

by PaulM

Opinion writer Timothy Egan of the NYT has an eye-opening column online today that makes a connection between Prohibition and some of today’s extreme social behavior regulators. Read his essay here, and get the NYT if you want more.

And watch for the upcoming Ken Burns documentary on Prohibition.

New York City Deputy Police Commissioner John A. Leach

September 2nd, 2011

No U.S. Senate Run for Congressman Capuano

by Marie

Globe Staffer Noah Bierman notes in “Political Intelligence” on boston.com wrangled by political editor Glen Johnson that US Representative Michael E. Capuano will not run for US Senate in 2012 in an already crowded Democratic field – all looking to challenge Republican Scott Brown.

“After serious personal reflection, I have decided not to seek the US Senate seat for Massachusetts at this time,” the Somerville Democrat said in a prepared statement. “There are several good candidates currently in the race and I am fully satisfied that any nominee from this group will represent Massachusetts effectively in the Senate. Thanks to everyone who has encouraged me to seek the Senate seat. I very much appreciate your support and your insight. I look forward to seeking re-election to the House in 2012.”

Read the full article here at boston.com.

September 2nd, 2011

Folksinger Richard Thompson at Bd Hse Park Tonight and Etc.

by PaulM

Folksinger and songwriter Richard Thompson is featured tonight in the Lowell Summer Music Series. There was a long line of people waiting for the opening bell to ring at 7 a.m. so they could get their chairs and blankets in place. The forecast is for mixed sun and clouds, so let’s hope for a clear sky this evening. Central Street was partially blocked due to cobblestone work. UTEC construction crew was already busy on the Hurd Street side. I saw Alex Demas with this fiddle case, who must have been coming from a WCAP appearance to promote the Banjo and Fiddle Contest on Saturday, Sept. 10. The Lowell Summer Music Series management team is looking forward to the Friday, Sept. 9, show with Warren Haynes of Allman Bros., The Dead, and Government Mule fame. Tomorrow night at Bd Hse Park the star is Matisyahu, a Reggae Rapper, and there will be a large contingent of UMass Lowell students thanks to the Student Activities Office. We’re wrapping up another impressive season of the Music Series. Congratulations to all the organizers, sponsors, and ticket-buyers.

Last thought: Can someone explain what the Lowell Connector construction work is about? It’s a huge project, but I don’t know enough about roadwork to be able to figure out what is going on. Shoring up overpasses?