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Saturday, February 04, 2006

Great Things Come....All In Good Time!

Very few folks know that during the day, I manage the Internet Department at Big Valley Dodge and Subaru in Van Nuys, California. I do this in order to help defray the costs of BluePower.com and also to keep the wolves away from the door.

One of my favorite sayings is something my grandmother used to tell me when I was a kid. "God doesn't make any mistakes", she would say with the wry smile that would cross her face.

Now many folks don't agree with that saying. Maybe they're right.... but as far as I'm concerned, I have always found that saying to be quite true.

Such are the remarkable series of events which led Shawn Jones to arrive at BluePower's door.

About a month ago, my partner at Big Valley, Mark Sellz, asked that I listen to a CD. Now Mark works closely with the officers from the Van Nuys Police Department in various organizations. The CD had been given to Mark from a Captain on the force. The Captain had become friends with Mr. Jones and had purchased the CD from Shawn at one of his gigs. The work of which I'm speaking is the very CD utilized on the show today. Through this entertwined series of events, I listened and loved Shawn's work. As I mentioned...."God doesn't make any mistakes."

All In Good Time is a beautifully crafted series of songs, delivered from the heart by a master guitarist whose powerful vocals conjure up great strength and sensitivity. Shawn has an inner integrity sorely lacking in many of today's "manufactured" artists.

BluePower is proud to have this accomplished musician and performer come to speak of his recent work, his trials and tribulations and his love and respect of his father.

John Rhys-Eddins
BluePower.com

The Music:

1)....Theme...."Hand Clappin'....Red Prysock
2)...."Runnin' Out Of Time To Run"....Shawn Jones
Live Performance...."Glory Bound"....Shawn Jones
3)...."Heaven's Daughter"....Shawn Jones
4)...."Can't Help Myself"....Shawn Jones

5)...."Love's Gonna Find A Way"....Shawn Jones
6)...."Long Goodbyes"....Shawn Jones
7)...."Temptation"....Shawn Jones
8)...."Why"....Danny Walden Jones
9)...."My Best Friend"....Shawn Jones
10)..."Hand Clappin'"....Red Prysock


Click here to listen to....Great Things Come....All In Good Time!

Wednesday, February 01, 2006

Blind Pig Signs John Nemeth!


Blind Pig Records has announced the signing of vocalist and harmonica player John Nemeth to a multi-record recording agreement.

Nemeth, now living in San Francisco, has recently been touring with Anson Funderburgh and the Rockets, filling in for the legendary Sam Meyers.

After witnessing Nemeth give a stellar vocal and dynamic harp presentation at San Francisco's Biscuits and Blues club, label head Jerry Del Giudice expressed "how impressed I was with John's performance the one time I got the chance to see him. In our nearly 30 years in the business we have never before offered a new artist a recording contract on the strength of one performance. We believe John has the drive, intelligence, self discipline and talent to realize his career goals."

Nemeth, a 30 year old native of Boise, Idaho, started singing in church as a child and played in bands as a teenager. In 2002 he began touring with Junior Watson, playing Scandinavia, Canada, and the U.S. In 2005 he worked in Mexico and Thailand. Said Nemeth,
"I feel very fortunate to be the newest member of the Blind Pig family. I am grateful for their support and belief in my abilities."

A Genius Finds Inspiration In The Music Of Another!


Last year, the 100th anniversary of E=mc2 inspired an outburst of symposiums, concerts, essays and merchandise featuring Albert Einstein. This year, the same treatment is being given to another genius, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, born on Jan. 27, 250 years ago.

There is more to the dovetailing of these anniversaries than one might think.

Einstein once said that while Beethoven created his music, Mozart's "was so pure that it seemed to have been ever-present in the universe, waiting to be discovered by the master." Einstein believed much the same of physics, that beyond observations and theory lay the music of the spheres — which, he wrote, revealed a "pre-established harmony" exhibiting stunning symmetries. The laws of nature, such as those of relativity theory, were waiting to be plucked out of the cosmos by someone with a sympathetic ear.

Thus it was less laborious calculation, but "pure thought" to which Einstein attributed his theories.

Einstein was fascinated by Mozart and sensed an affinity between their creative processes, as well as their histories.

As a boy Einstein did poorly in school. Music was an outlet for his emotions. At 5, he began violin lessons but soon found the drills so trying that he threw a chair at his teacher, who ran out of the house in tears. At 13, he discovered Mozart's sonatas.

The result was an almost mystical connection, said Hans Byland, a friend of Einstein's from high school. "When his violin began to sing," Mr. Byland told the biographer Carl Seelig, "the walls of the room seemed to recede — for the first time, Mozart in all his purity appeared before me, bathed in Hellenic beauty with its pure lines, roguishly playful, mightily sublime."

From 1902 to 1909, Einstein was working six days a week at a Swiss patent office and doing physics research — his "mischief" — in his spare time. But he was also nourished by music, particularly Mozart. It was at the core of his creative life.

And just as Mozart's antics shocked his contemporaries, Einstein pursued a notably Bohemian life in his youth. His studied indifference to dress and mane of dark hair, along with his love of music and philosophy, made him seem more poet than scientist.

He played the violin with passion and often performed at musical evenings. He enchanted audiences, particularly women, one of whom gushed that "he had the kind of male beauty that could cause havoc."

He also empathized with Mozart's ability to continue to compose magnificent music even in very difficult and impoverished conditions. In 1905, the year he discovered relativity, Einstein was living in a cramped apartment and dealing with a difficult marriage and money troubles.

That spring he wrote four papers that were destined to change the course of science and nations. His ideas on space and time grew in part from aesthetic discontent. It seemed to him that asymmetries in physics concealed essential beauties of nature; existing theories lacked the "architecture" and "inner unity" he found in the music of Bach and Mozart.

In his struggles with extremely complicated mathematics that led to the general theory of relativity of 1915, Einstein often turned for inspiration to the simple beauty of Mozart's music.

"Whenever he felt that he had come to the end of the road or into a difficult situation in his work, he would take refuge in music," recalled his older son, Hans Albert. "That would usually resolve all his difficulties."

In the end, Einstein felt that in his own field he had, like Mozart, succeeded in unraveling the complexity of the universe.

Scientists often describe general relativity as the most beautiful theory ever formulated. Einstein himself always emphasized the theory's beauty. "Hardly anyone who has truly understood it will be able to escape the charm of this theory," he once said.

The theory is essentially one man's view of how the universe ought to be. And amazingly, the universe turned out to be pretty much as Einstein imagined. Its daunting mathematics revealed spectacular and unexpected phenomena like black holes.

Though a Classical giant, Mozart helped lay groundwork for the Romantic with its less precise structures. Similarly, Einstein's theories of relativity completed the era of classical physics and paved the way for atomic physics and its ambiguities. Like Mozart's music, Einstein's work is a turning point.

At a 1979 concert for the centenary of Einstein's birth, the Juilliard Quartet recalled having played for Einstein at his home in Princeton, N.J. They had taken quartets by Beethoven and Bartok and two Mozart quintets, said the first violinist, Robert Mann, whose remarks were recorded by the scholar Harry Woolf.

After playing the Bartok, Mann turned to Einstein. "It would give us great joy," he said, "to make music with you." Einstein in 1952 no longer had a violin, but the musicians had taken an extra. Einstein chose Mozart's brooding Quintet in G minor.

"Dr. Einstein hardly referred to the notes on the musical score," Mr. Mann recalled, adding, "while his out-of-practice hands were fragile, his coordination, sense of pitch, and concentration were awesome."

He seemed to pluck Mozart's melodies out of the air.

From: The New York Times
By: ARTHUR I. MILLER