Thursday, December 30, 2021

THURSDAY BACKTRACK: Music and news from 60 years ago - week ending 30 December 1961

At #4 this week, Sandy Nelson's 'Let There Be Drums':



Some memorable events (via Wikipedia):

24 December: 'Radio Mecca reported a breakthrough in a move toward democracy in Saudi Arabia, with news that Prince Talal bin Abdul-Aziz Al Saud had submitted a proposed new Constitution to King Ibn Saud and his Council of Ministers. The draft, which would have created an elected legislature, was rejected, and three days later, Radio Mecca denied ever broadcasting the news.'

25 December: 'Pope John XXIII issued the papal bull Humanae salutis ("of human salvation") to summon the Second Vatican Council. The announcement surprised everyone, in that the Pope did not consult with advisers beforehand. "Vatican II" would open on October 11, 1962, with participation from Roman Catholic clergy and theologians worldwide.' 
    'The Second Vatican Council, also known as Vatican II, which took place from 1962 to 1965, was one of the most important councils in church history, and it profoundly changed the structures and practices of the church. It sought, in the words of Pope John XXIII, aggiornaménto, “to bring the church up to date,” and many of the council’s decrees did bring the church into the modern world. Although the reforms were welcomed by many, they produced internal disruptions greater than any the church has known since the Protestant Reformation.' https://www.britannica.com/topic/Roman-Catholicism/The-church-since-Vatican-II

26 December: 'The Kingdom of Yemen, which had joined Egypt and Syria in March, 1958, to become part of the United Arab Republic, broke ties with the government of Egypt's Gamel Abdel Nasser. The Imam of Yemen had retained his throne while being linked with the UAR under the collective name "United Arab States".'

29 December: 'France's President, Charles de Gaulle, delivered his annual New Year's address on national television and radio, and announced that in the coming year, his listeners "would see the end of French Algeria 'one way or another'" and that with the withdrawal of French Army forces from Africa, 1962 would be "the year the army will be regrouped in Europe". The declaration was a shock to most of the one million French residents of north Africa who had still hoped that their homes would not become part of an Arab Muslim nation; Algeria would be granted its independence seven months later, on July 5.'

30 December: 'Congolese troops captured Albert Kalonji, who had declared the independence of the Congolese province of South Kasai, with himself as President, and later as the King. With South Kasai reconstituted into the Republic of Congo, Kalonji was imprisoned, but would escape on September 7, 1962, making a final, unsuccessful attempt, to set up a new government.'

UK chart hits, week ending 30 December 1961 (tracks in italics have been played in earlier posts)
Some uncertaintty this week; so we refer to Official Charts Dot Com on this occasion

1

Moon River

Danny Williams

HMV

2

Tower Of Strength

Frankie Vaughan

Philips

3

Midnight In Moscow

Kenny Ball

Pye

4

Let There Be Drums

Sandy Nelson

London

5

Johnny Will

Pat Boone

London

6

Stranger On The Shore

Acker Bilk

Columbia

7

Toy Balloons

Russ Conway

Columbia

8

Take Good Care Of My Baby

Bobby Vee

London

9

My Friend The Sea

Petula Clark

Pye

10

Happy Birthday Sweet Sixteen

Neil Sedaka

RCA

11

Multiplication

Bobby Darin

London

12

Big Bad John

Jimmy Dean

Philips

13

His Latest Flame / Little Sister

Elvis Presley

RCA

14

So Long Baby

Del Shannon

London

15

I'd Never Find Another You

Billy Fury

Decca

16

Walkin' Back To Happiness

Helen Shapiro

Columbia

17

Don't Bring Lulu

Dorothy Provine

Warner Brothers

18

Mrs Mills Medley

Mrs Mills

Parlophone

19

I'll Get By

Shirley Bassey

Columbia

20

I Understand

The G*Clefs

London


Wednesday, December 29, 2021

The Future Is The Past, But Better

Abandoned Railroads Throughout The United States (source: here)
 

I've thought for a long time that the USA has all it needs to build a wonderful country where no-one is in need. It's just a matter of the will to rearrange the pieces.

Take transportation, for example. When fuel prices bring an end to Happy Motoring and cheap air travel, look at the rail lines still there, ready to be refurbished.

If we can just close down the poker championship of investment gambling and obsessive wealth concentration.

Tuesday, December 28, 2021

Education - why ? by Paddington

 I went to school and got my undergraduate degree in England, in the 1960's and 1970's.

The educational system, then and there, was brutal in some ways. It was certainly unforgiving.

We took a test in the last year of primary school (5th grade), which determined which school in the county would accept you the next year, the top level generally being a grammar school, where the tradition was to focus on Latin, Greek and English literature. I actually went to something called a Mathematical school, established to train naval navigators in the 18th century.

Every year after that, most 'grades' were determined by exams taking mid-year and at the end of the year.

In the 5th year (sophomore), and sometimes a few the year before that, we took regional exams to determine competency in the chosen subjects. In my case, it was Astronomy, Chemistry, Mathematics, English, French, German, History, Further Mathematics and Physics. In Mathematics, we took the equivalent of most of the standard first semester college Calculus, plus the material college-level Precalculus. Tha languages exams included taking dictation, translation in both directions, writing essays, and having a conversation.

A poor performance meant that your school career was likely over. The successful (about 40%) then concentrated in 2-4 subjects, with a view to higher education. There was then another set of regional exams at age 18, which determined whether your university of choice would accept you.

At university, you were in the major which you had declared 18 months before, and there was basically no changing that. I took Mathematics, which meant that every class was Mathematics, Statics and Dynamics, Physics, Engineering, Computer Science, or Statistics.

We took exams immediately after Christmas break, merely to see how well we had adapted. At the end of that first year year, we took six 3-hour exams which simply determined whether we would be allowed back the next year, and which of two tiers of courses we would take.

For the second and third (and final) years, there were six 3-hour exams each year, with the level of the degree awarded based only on those exam results. There was no equivalent of GPA or academic transcript, problems which almost prevented me being accepted by a U.S. university for graduate study.

It was designed quite well to produce people who at least had a grasp of the basic content of their majors. It was also basically free of charge to the students and their families.

All of this has, of course, changed, with the U.K. adapting a version of the U.S. system, including having students pay their tuition, and a more liberal arts flavour. It is also much less selective, going from 5-10% in higher education in my generation to 50%  now.

One result is many thousands of students living with their parents into their 30's with crippling debt.

It was a great culture shock to experience the very generous nature of a U.S. university, including many chances to retake courses, change majors, or even transfer between institutions. It is certainly a more generous one than I went through. I have many friends who succeeded in this system who likely would never have been given a chance under the one that I went through. 

I have very mixed feelings after 40+ years as to whether it is better as a whole, given some of the many people that I know with massive college debt and no degree, and others with the illusion that they have been educated.

I have yet to determine what the actual goal of the U.S. system really is.

Sunday, December 26, 2021

Boxing Day smiles, by Wiggia

 Merry Christmas, everyone !






VILLAGE OF THE DAMNED






SAGE finally release the prototype
of how they wish the population to be by 2022.




Puzzled, confused, irritated by the events of the last year,
 like Fanny? It can only get worse.

A happy New Year to all !

Thursday, December 23, 2021

THURSDAY BACKTRACK: Music and news from 60 years ago - week ending 23 December 1961

  At #2 this week, yet another jazz classic: Acker Bilk's 'Stranger On The Shore':



Some memorable events (via Wikipedia):

17 December: 'The Zimbabwe African People's Union (ZAPU) was founded by Robert Mugabe and Joshua Nkomo with the goal of eliminating white colonial rule in Southern Rhodesia (which would become, in 1965, Rhodesia and in 1979, Zimbabwe. The two would later become President and Vice-President of the Republic of Zimbabwe.'

18 December: 'At 5:15 am, Operation Vijay was launched by the Army and Navy of India, as 30,000 troops invaded the Portuguese colonies at Goa, Damao and Diu... collectively known as Portuguese India... By 5:00 in the afternoon, all but the capital had been taken. [19 December]: At 2:30 pm, Portuguese India's Governor-General Vassalo e Silva signed an unconditional surrender in front of Indian Army Brigadier General K.S. Dhillon, bringing an end to the colony to 451 years of Portuguese rule. Goa, Daman and Diu, Dadra and Nagar Haveli were incorporated into India as a single Union Territory. In 1987, Goa would become the 25th State of India.'

19 December: 'Indonesia's President Sukarno announced a military campaign that he called "Trikora" (Tri Komando Rakyat, or "Three Commands to the People"): (1) Take over the Netherlands' territory of West Papua and put an end to creation of a republic there (2) Take over the Netherlands' territory of West Irian; and (3) Mobilize all of Indonesia's resources for those purposes.'

20 December: 'UN General Assembly Resolution 1723 (XVI) was passed, declaring that the large-scale exodus of Tibetan people was linked to a violation of its human rights and the suppression of its culture and religion.'

21 December:  'At the U.N. military base at Kitona, in the Congo, Katangan President Moise Tshombe and Congolese Prime Minister Cyrille Adoula signed an 8-point agreement, bringing an end to Tshombe's attempt to create a separate nation out of the mineral-rich Congolese province.' Tshombe would later (in 1964) become 5th President of the Democratic Republic of Congo.


UK chart hits, week ending 23 December 1961 (tracks in italics have been played in earlier posts)
Htp: Clint's labour-of love compilation https://www.sixtiescity.net/charts/61chart.htm

1

Tower Of Strength

Frankie Vaughan

Philips

2

Stranger On The Shore

Acker Bilk

Columbia

3

Moon River

Danny Williams

HMV

4

Midnight In Moscow

Kenny Ball

Pye

5

Take Good Care Of My Baby

Bobby Vee

London

6

Johnny Will

Pat Boone

London

7

Toy Balloons

Russ Conway

Columbia

8

Let There Be Drums

Sandy Nelson

London

9

Walkin' Back To Happiness

Helen Shapiro

Columbia

10

I'll Get By

Shirley Bassey

Columbia

11

My Friend The Sea

Petula Clark

Pye

12

Take Five

Dave Brubeck

Fontana

13

When The Girl In Your Arms Is The Girl In Your Heart

Cliff Richard and The Shadows

Columbia

14

Big Bad John

Jimmy Dean

Philips

15

His Latest Flame / Little Sister

Elvis Presley

RCA

16

The Time Has Come

Adam Faith

Parlophone

17

I Love How You Love Me

Jimmy Crawford

Columbia

18

Happy Birthday Sweet Sixteen

Neil Sedaka

RCA

19

So Long Baby

Del Shannon

London

20

I Understand

The G*Clefs

London


Sunday, December 19, 2021

Waco's message for our times?

Either Andy McNab was taking unconscionable liberties with the facts, a mere dozen years after Waco (and ten years after the connected Oklahoma Bombing), or the handling of events there was even more brutal than I remembered from the coverage at the time.

According to 'Aggressor' (publ. 2005), the FBI besiegers were not constantly broadcasting 'loud music' at the Christians in their residential complex, but an endless loop of 'horrible, high-pitched noise like baby rabbits being slaughtered.'

In the story, when a five-year-old girl is on the line to a negotiator - critically, not on-site but miles away on an Air Force base, observes McNab's hero - she asks, 'Are you going to kill me?' and the answer is a bland reassurance the adult is in no position to give.

As armoured vehicles crash through the walls, accompanied by the message 'this is not an assault, do not fire any weapons', they inject into the buildings - occupied by many women and children as well as the men - not 'tear gas' but some gas designed to put people into bone-breaking convulsions, lethal in confined spaces. There are no ambulances on hand; this operation is not intended to result in a mass of surrendering survivors. 

In the book, the FBI commander on the ground, Jim D. Bastendorf' aka 'Bastard' is a swaggering, rhino-skinned bullyboy and his men are utter oafs, dropping their trousers at the modest Branch Davidian women and yelling victoriously as the 'compound' is trashed and a massive fire breaks out.

It all sickens the Brits, but when they protest they are brushed off as 'faggots'. 

Police and Delta Force are there, too, together with a mass of rubberneckers and TV outfits come to watch the fun as the 'cult' is tackled in its 'compound.' There is a barrel organ, a fairgound, stalls selling fast food and T-shirts.

McNab's character sees this episode as a PR job for the authorities and a bloody-handed revenge for an earlier, failed attack on the Davidians that resulted in four ATF officers dead and sixteen wounded:

    'The Davidians returned fire, as they were entitled to do under American law. They even called 911 to      tell the police they were being attacked, and begged for help.'

The Posse Comitatus Act of 1878 forbids the use of military force against US citizens; but McNab says, President Clinton had signed a waiver in the case of 'drugs interdiction operations' and despite being invited to see for themselves that there were no drugs on-site the authorities used this excuse to militarise. 

According to a Vox post, Clinton pooh-poohed claims of official culpability the day after the raid, saying, 'I do not think the United States government is responsible for the fact that a bunch of religious fanatics decided to kill themselves.' One could wish that instead of screening louche rubbish about his affair with Monica Lewinsky the BBC would look at more serious aspects of his Presidency - including the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act (which he signed off in 1999) that arguably initiated the process of destroying our financial system.

And now we have the Biden Administration pushing at Russia's borders in the usual ham-fisted way, risking an absolutely dreadful sequence of events. Given enough distance, reality transforms into fantasy and myth; perhaps the chess-players of Washington imagine that the Ukraine is so far away that not one blade of American grass will bend in a Northern-hemisphere-wide nuclear firestorm.

I hope McNab wasn't faking the facts; though on reflection I wish he was. Either way, the crucial element is mindset, and it seems it's not only anarchists and Trump's good ol' boys who are moronic and thuggish. Perhaps the American Establishment depends on a poor education system and cheerleading dross from the mass media to help them get away with their crass and dangerous behaviour at home and abroad.