Some songs just have a lot of legs. Summer Wages is one of those…
Too Close Together
I’ve been making occasional posts at a place called Open Salon. I went over there a while back to visit Steve. In order to comment on his posts, I had to register, and registration, which is free, comes with a blog space, and well, put a blog space in front of me and I’ll fill it. I must be wired that way. I first posted over there in mid-September, but I’ve neglected to mention this to my regular readers here at 27th Street. I don’t know why. My posts over there aren’t that much different than my posts over here, except that they’re dominated by text. How strange that I’ve kept this from you, gentle readers. It reminds me of the old joke about the guy who has two girlfriends, Kate and Edith. They each find out and get together to beat him up. The moral of the story is that you can’t have your Kate and Edith too.
My occasional posts over there don’t get a lot of play. There are a few people who read them and fewer people who comment. Open Salon allows readers to indicate their approval of individual posts by pressing a “rate” button. I have scant few of those under my belt.
One thing I like about Open Salon is that the front page is put together like a newspaper featuring various posts on the system. There are opportunities to answer “calls for submissions” as well. I don’t know how long I’ll continue to post over there or how frequently, but you’re all welcome to pop over and check the place out.
Although I don’t mention it very often, regular readers know that I’m also an occasional contributor to the blues blog, SqueezeMyLemon. Check it out sometime.
Here’s Sonny Boy Williamson performing Too Close Together…embedding is disabled, so you’ll have to click a second time to watch it on YouTube. Mr. Williamson wrote some of my favourite blues ever.
One Man Bands
just for fun….
Har! I like this guy…Marc Twyman
Last one….
Music for kids…
I’m playing squeezebox for some groups of kids this morning. I’ve also packed my gut-bucket bass and a big bag of various shakers and other percussion instruments like washboards and a “toad” and some guiros and my djembe. I’ll get some volunteers to come up and play along with me, and then we’ll get as many kids as possible on percussion instruments and I’ll lead a call and response percussion session, and finish up with some more squeezebox music. I hope the kids have a great time with the music!
La Bamba Like a Rolling Stone
Embedding is disabled on this first video, but don’t let that slow you down…just click on it a second time and you’ll be watching it at YouTube…it’s worth that extra click.
Construction on 27th Street
No, my blog isn’t under construction, although people have told me it’s a piece of work. Our street has been enjoying periodic construction throughout the summer and fall.
First they did the water pipes. They replaced all the old pipes up to the City shut-off in the middle of our lawns. We were able to arrange for the same outfit to torpedo new pipes into the house at the same time, and I’m glad to have that work done. The crew did a nice job all around. It created a messy situation on the street for a while but they cleaned up well, and they even sodded my lawn. Where they had broken through cement sidewalks or pavement they simply patched it.
Some time later, a crew came to redo those sidewalks that were patched, taking the patch off and cementing them properly.
Next a crew showed up with some heavy equipment that ripped a few inches of paving off our street, leaving the manholes and sewers to stick up and turning the road into a bit of an obstacle course. It only took a day or two for this phase, after which they did nothing for weeks. Finally, the guys came along and did the first level paving. This looked close to being a finished job. It just needed an inch or two more on the surface. They left this for a couple weeks, but it was pretty good all around. I thought, great, a day or two more paving and they’ll be done with our street.
Nope. A new crew showed up and and removed a 4 foot wide trench on our side of the street, new paving and all. They were replacing all the curbs all the way down our street. It’s amazing how quickly they can dig a trench and pour all the curbs. Then they put a paving patch between the curbs and the road.
It turned out this was only part of the job. The yellow front-end loader in the photo is ripping our sidewalks out, all the way down the street, including the sidewalks they poured this year. The configuration of our sidewalks in the past has been curb then two feet of grass then a standard sidewalk. The City has decided to replace that with extra wide sidewalks going right to the curb.
I like the wide sidewalks and the new curbs. It refreshes the street and it will look good for sure. I’m just surprised they did it, given we just had a municipal election that turned on fiscal restraint. I’m also surprised that they went to the trouble of taking patches off sidewalks and re-cementing them, only to replace them again just a couple months later. It seems strange too that they did first level paving then cut a chunk of that away for the curbing and sidewalk job. Why not do the curbs and the sidewalks first, and pave later? I wonder if there are multiple departments involved who don’t talk to one another? Who knows.
They should be finished with the sidewalks in a few days and then it looks like they’re going to recurb the other side of the street, and then there’s paving and then, hopefully it will all be done before the arrival of snow.
Shedding Continues
Running Wild
Here’s polka great Ray Budzilek performing the Running Wild polka…
And since we’re having a polka party, here’s that great band from Buffalo, Scrubby and the Dynatones playing Blondie’s polka…
And one more….The Honky Express playing The Concertina Polka
I love the tiny radio studio they’re playing this one in.
OK, just one more. Here’s the late king of polka, Lil Wally. Here starts off here playing what might be my favourite polka, Zosia. Embedding has been disabled on this one, but if you simply click on the video again you’ll be watching it on YouTube.
Wow. Perfect.
I know, stop already. OK, but one more Lil Wally number first. This one goes out to my pals in Chicago. Chicago is a Polka Town
Plans unveiled for Marie Curtis Park
Regular readers know that this blog is written from Anchovy World Headquarters hidden deep below an ordinary looking abode by the lake in a community known as Long Branch. Long Branch is part of what used to be called South Etobicoke before amalgamation into the City of Toronto. There are three communities beside one another by the lake. To the east, closest to Toronto proper is Mimico. I’m not sure exactly where Mimico starts, but I know where it ends – at a street called Dwight Avenue, which is just west of Royal York Road. West of Dwight, you’re into New Toronto, which stretches to Col. Samuel Smith Park and the Humber College grounds. Long Branch sits between Sam Smith and a second park to the West called Marie Curtis. West of that and you’re out of the former Etobicoke and into the City of Mississauga, the community called Lakeview, and Port Credit just down the road.
Both parks are beautiful. There are several deer living in Marie Curtis and the adjoining Arsenal lands. I saw them once at the foot of Dixie Rd, and I’ve talked to others who have seen them several times west of Etobicoke Creek. Marie Curtis Park, however, has the distinction of being a popular gay cruising spot, which has detracted from it’s draw as a family park. Hardly anyone wants to stumble into what an old friend of mine used to call friggery in the twiggery while out for an evening walk. There’s been some condo development near-by and in general I think there has been some pressure on the City to try to make Marie Curtis a park for everyone by making it a less attractive place for people to meet and have more or less public sex. The other challenge for the City is discouraging the nesting Canada Geese. It may be equally difficult to discourage the geese and the public sex.
So the City has come up with a plan that has just been unveiled. It looks fairly comprehensive. It even includes a dog park, a second for our area. The City is going to spend $8 million on the place. My only worry is the deer. In the short term, I think they’ll be OK on the Arsenal lands property, but eventually that will get developed too. Then where will they go?
Search terms of the day…
1. Nasty mushrooms in grass
2. I’m visiting from another planet
My motto here at 27th street is: Welcome visitors. Please avoid the nasty mushrooms.
