Category Archives: Music

Paris By Night

Found another good, melodic duet by a Vietnamese man, Manh Dinh and a woman, Y Phung. I decided to look for a possible YouTube video of them performing. Found it (their love ballad begins at 2:10 here, at the Houston Grand Opera, no less) and I noticed, hey, that guy’s wearing an ARVN uniform with jump (or pilot?) wings.

All these thirty-six years after the ARVN (the Army of the Republic of (South) Viet Nam) fled their Northern cousins, the communists?

Turns out to be a performance of Paris By Night, a video series of variety shows featuring 1960s-era Vietnamese ballads from Saigon nightclubs, and some new material.  Like a Broadway or Las Vegas show. The tapes have been produced and sold throughout the world’s Vietnamese refugee community, particularly the Viet Kieu, the Vietnamese Americans, since 1983.

The communist government of Viet Nam considers them a “reactionary cultural product” and tries to block them from sale in the People’s Republic, but they reportedly still get through to the interested via the black market.

The theme of many of the songs is the lost war, hence Manh Dinh (much too young to have been in the war) wearing full ARVN, including U.S. Army jungle boots. It makes sense. Many of the refugees, at least the initial waves, were middle- and upper-middle class urban South Vietnamese. The intelligentsia. With enough discretionary income to buy videos. And to be sentimental about what was, and was not to be.

I Ask You

Google translations, especially of Vietnamese, can be weird.

This one for Hoi Anh Hoi Em, a beautiful duet by Đặng Thế Luân & Băng Tâm, seems to have acquired a few unintended words. But who knows? The meaning comes through. More or less. The music is worth the struggle with the words.

I asked him how much love or hate brings grief,
Russian team when they are separated each other passionately loved,
together for a day on the way back,
Road to the joys of love in his mind melting

He asked me why I had fun when life also sad,
infantry fire are also divided many people as we live separated,
elderly parents and children to find the bullets,
night night sweet wife and her mother lived in the flat

Oh what is pleasing to each other when mother earth still live happy
do not fire the blood, the moon is not fading off to sleep late
European morning fire on high.

Children in the capital a love him and wait,
I’m in remote border lobe injury on helpless children are living,
Lord God for the rain on the sunny dry fire
two children to love like flowers bloom in the right season

The album is here.

The real Israel (behind the usual headlines)

Time for a little Jerusalem rock. (Getting primed for my trip there in twelve days.) With a sacred lyric, but still tight, guitar rock.

The Serpent

399px-Serpent-bonanniIt’s the mellow sound of this musical instrument that keeps me coming back to it after the initial attraction of the name. (Be sure to click on the recording at the link.)

Today, I believe, the serpent survives in the form of the euphonium, or baby tuba, having gained some tubing and seen it rather drastically compressed into a much smaller space.

What popular number has the mellow tone of the Serpent-Euphonium ever played, you might ask? Try Jean-Joseph Mouret’s (1682-1738) “Rondeau” from his Symphonies and Fanfares for the King’s Supper.

Better known as the theme from Masterpiece Theater.

Anat Cohen: Rule 5

AnatCohen

She’s also a cool musician.

Indeed, she’s the Queen of the Jazz clarinet.

With an insightful interview here.

iPod shuffle meets washing machine

Guess which one lost? I had forgotten it in the pocket of a shirt I washed.

Mrs. C. has buried the iPod in a jar of rice, on the theory that the rice may draw the moisture out of the electronics and Ella, Neshama, and Anat (et al) will be heard again in my ear buds.

I’m not a betting man, generally, so I’ll just keep my fingers crossed. Who knows. She may be right. Update to come. (Says we have to discard the rice. I don’t see why.)

UPDATE:  Didn’t work. The iPod was still DOA. So I ordered a refurbished one from Amazon for a small percent of what the original cost. And, yes, Mrs. C. discarded the rice. Wasteful.

About Texas Scribbler

I used to post some of the following at Technorati:

“Retired Texas newspaperman (politics, crime, science, medicine, technology), remarried widowed father of one child, antique rose gardener, new adult student of the violin, independent publisher, and Vietnam combat veteran (MACV, I Corps, 1969).”

That more or less sums me up, for the purposes of this here blog. I might have added sailor to the list. But I sold the family sloop after twenty-three years of sailing Lake Travis, west of Austin. I faced the fact that I am too old and too slow for it any longer, especially when the child wasn’t interested. And the summer heat was enervating.

But I stopped linking to Technorati when it became obvious the “service” was not updating me. I know they had millions of blogs to deal with but I have to wonder about their software when nine days after the fact they still had not noted that Instapundit, a top blog with many, many thousands of links, had linked me on Dec. 5, 2006.

It was a great honor, of course, but it produced next to nothing in new, unique visits. Only seventeen, in the first two days. One rare reader suggested I may have made blogosphere history getting such a small response from an Instapundit link. Yes, well.

I started the blog a few months after retiring in April, 2006, after thirty-four years of newspaper, television and radio reporting and editing, mostly reporting in the subject areas above–essentially because I didn’t want to stop writing every day, although most of what I had done before wasn’t personal in the least and was, usually, politically constrained to the Democrat point of view.

It was a challenge, at first, to get a personal voice into this, though my choice of subject categories does that to an extent. I’m not after any sort of persona, just to go with my personal (often Libertarian) reaction to the news, ideas and feelings of the day.

I occasionally wrote about my deceased wife, who I disguised as Mrs. Charm so she wouldn’t get mad at me and about our son, my only child, who was newly six when I retired but is a college student now. I refer to him as Mr. Boy to maintain his privacy, and won’t be including too many embarrassing details about his sometimes unruly behavior so that he continues to think kindly of his old man. So old I am already that his teachers sometimes confused me with his grandfather. Although I have found that older men being new fathers is not such an unusual thing anymore. I now write about my new wife Barbara Ellen of Dimmit, Texas, who needs no disguise.

Gardening, of course, is mostly weeding, which isn’t a lot of fun, though it carries a certain satisfaction, and even more when you plant something you like. For me that’s antique roses, particularly hardy Chinese roses, so-called because they entered Western commerce from China in the late 18th through the 19th centuries.

They are bush-like, rather than tall and spindly in the fashion of modern hybrid roses. In truth, they don’t usually require much attention, except judicious (but non-finicky) pruning twice a year to encourage repeat blooming in spring and fall.

But I found them a challenge at Rancho Roly Poly (click on the category and scroll to the bottom to see where that name comes from) because all the oak and elm trees on the lot reduced the amount of sunlight in the yard, of which roses need at least six hours a day, and because of the marauding deer (who think of rose leaves as candy) when they got into the back yard. As the roses bloomed each season, I posted pictures of them from time to time. I must confess that Mrs. Charm did most of the weeding. Since Barbara Ellen and I sold the rancho and bought a mini-rancho perched on the edge of Neely’s Canyon in northwest Austin’s wooded hill country there’s been even less sun for roses and the deer are now creatures to be fed of an evening.

The violin is a new passion of mine, and eleven months into learning it, primarily via the superb http://www.violinlab.com/, I finally found a live teacher in James Anderson, an Austin professional jazz volinist who was instructing me in the fundamentals. I’m an old trumpet player so I already knew how to read music. Alas James moved to South Carolina and I got out of the habit of playing/practicing.

Self-publishing is something I never considered until the advent of print-on-demand and the birth of lulu.com which is free if you do it yourself. Unlike the disreputable vanity presses of old that charged thousands of dollars, and even their more ethical POD offspring such as iUniverse which still charge hundreds. Lulu will get you on Amazon.com and other online sellers (or you can go direct through Amazon now) and the the rest is up to the book and your own efforts to publicize it. You only have to pay for each book as you buy it. They also offer discounts on large quantities.

It’s even easier to do with ebooks at Amazon, which will take them from you directly, but getting them formatted can be a bear if you don’t know HTML (I don’t) or can’t pay for professional formatting which I can and do.

My books so far are four. The first one was a collection of sixteen post-war short stories “Leaving the Alamo, Texas Stories After Vietnam.” There’s also a free preview of one of the sixteen stories if you sample the Kindle edition. Reviewer Marc Leepson in Vietnam Veteran Magazine called the book  “…a first-rate collection…”

Go to Amazon.com to buy it here. The ebook is just 99 cents. And if you’re (understandably with self-published stuff) more cautious, you can download a free pdf version here. Then, if you find value in what you read, you can go back and blow 99 cents, big spender.

My second book was  “Knoxville, 1863,” an historical novel about a little known Civil War battle involving some of the most famous commanders and units of the Union and Confederacy. On February, 2009, I entered its first chapter in Amazon’s Breakthrough Novel Award contest. It made the first cut, to the top twenty percent. Then it went down in flames on the second cut to five percent. Bragging rights, at least, in the hunt for an agent. Or so I thought at the time. Turns out agents are not impressed by such things.

Indeed, after more than a dozen agent rejections (of my query letter, not the manuscript which they never asked to see) I finally got the message (as I also later read at Publishers Weekly) that Civil War fiction is no longer in demand. So I went the POD and DIY route, once again, at Lulu and Amazon. And the finished product is available here. Where it is also available for the Kindle for 99 cents.

Reviewer Robert Redd of the blog Confederate Book Review pronounced it “the Killer Angels of Knoxville.” If you understand the reference.

I recently finished a third book, a Vietnam war novel I titled “The Butterfly Rose,” which I am currently selling only as an ebook for Amazon’s Kindle at the usual 99 cents.

Reviewer Claude Cooper, a retired Army colonel and Vietnam combat veteran, said: “This book is unlike anything else you will read about Vietnam, but it’s well worth the read.”

Meanwhile, I added a fourth book of non-fiction, a regimental history of the Thirteenth Mississippi Infantry Regiment, which has drawn a fair amount of readership by descendants of the men who served the Thirteenth’s guns.

You can contact me at Scribbler (at) TexasScribbler DOT com, if you have any questions or comments that you don’t want to share with the world—as worldwide as my modest blog readership is.

It grew to more than 200 unique visits a day by 2010, but has recently declined for reasons I know not. Thank you to my loyal rare readers who continue to visit and comment. I’m grateful.

I hope you find something in The Texas Scribbler that interests you.

Best regards

Dick Stanley

LAST UPDATED:  October 11, 2019

P.S.

The feds and the pols are doing their best to take over the Web. So far they’re just chipping away at it. Case in point: the Federal Trade Commission requires that I disclose any relationship I have between a product manufacturer or service provider when I write about a product or service.

Other than my books described above (and my Amazon Affiliate shopping link on the lower right of the front page) there is no relationship. I’ve never been paid (alas) for any content I’ve posted on the Scribbler and I don’t expect to be.

I happen to believe that bloggers have all the privileges of journalists, which is to say First Amendment rights, with the proviso of being legally responsible for libel. I try to remember that. If the FTC has any similar “relationship” disclosure rule for newspapers or television or radio news, I’ve never heard of it and I spent more years than I care to remember in all three.