peace be upon you
Wednesday, September 19th, 2012 11:38 pmI've been too busy to feel like posting anything.
This evening, I made Chi-Chi's Sweet Corn Cake. It was simple to make using the mix and a can of creamed corn, and tasted quite good.
I heard the song Cry Me a River (unbeknownst to me, by Justin Timberlake) on the radio, and near the very end, the hauntingly sweet voice sounded so much like Michael Jackson, I thought he must have contributed to the song. But apparently not; that must have been Justin's voice.
While browsing related music on Amazon, I came across a song "Sister Suki" (the one from the "Listen Vision III" album). Then I did a little digging and found the other original version. For some reason that song, especially the title, is sticking in my mind.* I read the liner notes of the original 1959 recording, which also includes a transcription of all the song lyrics.
Intro:
The sounds on this record were made by six 11 to 12 year old Negro boys from the streets, tenements, and housing projects of New York City. Most are members of street gangs and all have passed through social agencies and the juvenile court to the residential training school. ..."
The liner notes, along with some of the transcribed lyrics, were vaguely disturbing to me. 11 and 12 year old gang members. 1959.
*Another strange phrase "...laikum" has been popping up in my head during the last few days, and I couldn't remember where it came from or what it meant. Yesterday, I thought maybe it was the Lyekka character in Lexx. But no, I thought, the phrase in my head was Lai*KUM*, not Lai*KA*. Just now I realized it is from the phrase Salaam Alaikum.
This evening, I made Chi-Chi's Sweet Corn Cake. It was simple to make using the mix and a can of creamed corn, and tasted quite good.
I heard the song Cry Me a River (unbeknownst to me, by Justin Timberlake) on the radio, and near the very end, the hauntingly sweet voice sounded so much like Michael Jackson, I thought he must have contributed to the song. But apparently not; that must have been Justin's voice.
While browsing related music on Amazon, I came across a song "Sister Suki" (the one from the "Listen Vision III" album). Then I did a little digging and found the other original version. For some reason that song, especially the title, is sticking in my mind.* I read the liner notes of the original 1959 recording, which also includes a transcription of all the song lyrics.
Intro:
The sounds on this record were made by six 11 to 12 year old Negro boys from the streets, tenements, and housing projects of New York City. Most are members of street gangs and all have passed through social agencies and the juvenile court to the residential training school. ..."
The liner notes, along with some of the transcribed lyrics, were vaguely disturbing to me. 11 and 12 year old gang members. 1959.
*Another strange phrase "...laikum" has been popping up in my head during the last few days, and I couldn't remember where it came from or what it meant. Yesterday, I thought maybe it was the Lyekka character in Lexx. But no, I thought, the phrase in my head was Lai*KUM*, not Lai*KA*. Just now I realized it is from the phrase Salaam Alaikum.