WHAT I’M SPINNING NOW

SpinningBeforetheFloodBaja

This is the live album, Before the Flood, culled from Bob Dylan’s 1974 tour with The Band.  The tour doesn’t have a high reputation among Dylan fans, musically speaking — for some reason Dylan decided to spit out all the lyrics angrily, which bothered many people — but I saw three concerts on the tour and found them electrifying.

Click on the image to enlarge.

WHAT I’M SPINNING NOW

SpinningReturnOfWayneDouglasBaja

Doug Sahm died much too young but he left behind the best border beer joint dance music of all time.

This album, The Return Of Wayne Douglas, a mix of covers and original songs, was his last.  The lyrics of the originals are not always as sharp as Sahm at his best but the music, country-tinged Tejano, is uniformly wonderful.

Click on the image to enlarge.

NEW YORK IN THE 1970s

LangdonClayBrickCourtBaja

When we first moved to New York my friend Lang Clay had access to a small courtyard in the building where he lived, where he set up a badminton net.  We wiled away many hours playing badminton there.  Eventually Lang and another friend, Cotty Chubb, got so good at the game that I couldn’t keep up with them.  The elegance of my style, captured in the photo above, just wasn’t enough anymore.  Then Lang moved to another apartment and our badminton days in Gotham were over.

Photograph © Langdon Clay

Click on the image to enlarge.

GEORGE WASHINGTON

ChernowWashingtonCoverBaja

America’s first President is usually seen as man easy to admire but hard to love.  In his public life, and to a great degree in his personal life, he mastered a kind of cordiality without warmth, a modest reserve mixed with a forbidding austerity.  He had a genius for silence, for withholding his true feelings, yet when he made up his mind to something he acted with unflinching resolve.

He was a man you underestimated at your own peril.

StuartWashingtonPortraitBaja

If you read Ron Chernow’s brilliant recent biography of the man, however,you will find it hard not to love George Washington — and not just for his services to his country.  Beneath the artfully crafted facade he presented to the world was a man of deep sentiment and emotion and sensuality, sacrificed over and over again to his sense of honor and duty.

YoungWashington

He was not a natural stoic, not a cold self-satisfied prig — he chose service over inclination as a matter of principle, and endured the sacrifices this entailed fully sensible of the pain and personal loss this choice cost him.

Towards the end of his life, after leading the Continental Army to victory over the British Empire, presiding over the creation of the American Constitution, serving wisely and indispensably as the first American President, he wrote a letter to a woman named Sally Fairfax, the wife of a good friend, with whom he’d had an intense and passionate if platonic flirtation in his younger days.

SallyFairfax

He said that the times he’d spent with her were the happiest of his life.  She must have represented all he could have had in this world if he’d been willing to overstep the bounds of propriety, violate his honor, and hers, given up his notions of civic and personal probity, the record of integrity that enabled him to spearhead the creation a new country and bind it into a workable union.

He was not the sort of man to second guess the course he chose, but he was human enough to hold on to a longing for something simpler and sweeter and more enchanting.  You have to love him, if only for that.

BIG MEN

Houdon-George-Washington

Reading Ron Chernow’s magnificent biography of George Washington, I find myself getting emotional over the example of the men who led The American Revolution.

They weren’t perfect by any means.  They were motivated by economic self-interest as much as by idealism, and they were hypocrites.  They took the field in their great war for liberty accompanied by slaves.  They allowed blacks to fight beside them in the Continental Army without the slightest intention of allowing those blacks to share fully in the fruits of the victory they might win together.

Houdon-George-Washington-Profile

But when push came to shove, time and time again they transcended themselves.  They got caught up and swept along by the idea of liberty and it changed them, moved them to do fine and noble and courageous things, things virtually unprecedented in history and in their own lives.

They were big men, capable of rising to big occasions, big challenges.  In American politics today there are no men or women as big as they were.  We are squandering the great gift they left to posterity.