Frumentarious Hot Links

Don’t Drag No More, Susan Lynne (1964) Born in New York, Susan Lynne Koskowitz recorded a handful of singles while still in high school. Record producer and promoter Artie Kornfeld composed Don’t Drag No More in 1964 as an answer song to Jan and Dean’s Dead Man’s Curve. By 1966, Kornfeld had written over 75 Billboard charted songs and participated in over 150 albums. He was also co-creator of the 1969 Woodstock Music & Art Fair.

ijamot.

What if…?

It’s the law.

Redistrickery.

Redneck Trek.

Really old fish.

Die Nachthexen.

Can’t park there.

Winston’s platypus.

An emotional milestone.

Norty Blues Episode 128.

Here he comes [sound up].

Deconstructing Raffaello.

The doors of Mary Procter.

Every blockbuster film trailer.

Do the Spazbot [via Everlasting Blört].

Medieval medicinal recipes [via Thompson, blog].

New Shroud of Turin news [via The Feral Irishman].

The Atmosfär Project is for people with autism [via Memo Of The Air].

[Top image via Bits and Pieces. Batmobile replica crashed on Fathers Day 2006 at some place named Woodside, more about the car here.]


From the Archives: 1 year ago. 5 years ago. 10 years ago. 15 years ago.

Saturday Matinee – Lefthand Freddy, Yates McKendree & Carl Weathersby w/ The Alex Zayas Band

Seasoned Dutch guitarist Lefthand Freddy mixed up a hot bowl of ska-flavored blues at the Nuenen Blues’m Festival.

“Born in Nashville and raised in a recording studio, multi-instrumentalist Yates McKendree grew up hearing and playing with some of Music City’s greatest musicians. […] During Yates’s teenage years, he played on and engineered dozens of recordings in his father’s (Kevin McKendree) studio, The Rock House; most notably for Delbert McClinton and John Hiatt, who told Rolling Stone Magazine, ‘Yates was our secret ingredient.’”

Born in Mississippi but raised in Chicago, Carl Weathersby was a teenager when his father’s friend became his tutor. That man was Albert King. Weathersby played rhythm guitar in King’s band before joining up with Billy Branch & The Sons Of the Blues, aka The SOBs. Weathersby passed away in 2024 at the age of 71.

The Alex Zayas Band: Zayas’ website is down / defunct, so his story is a bit tricky to find. He was born in Barcelona and has been on tour for about 30 years playing classic blues and blues rock; his band often backs other big-name blues performers.

With everything else going on in the world, the biggest news story this week involves fluorescent phalli and women’s basketball. At least the MSM seems to be reporting on it honestly and without obvious bias, and that’s a bit of fresh air.
Speaking of fresh air, stop by tomorrow at porch time and guess what the neighborhood skunk did to the neighbor’s little yappy dog.

The .Gif Friday Post No. 916 – Air Brake Dancing, Fish Scream & Vapin’ Vicky

[Found here, here and here.]

Bicycle

[Functional sculpture by Riccardo Dalisi, found here.]

Stuff I Do When I’m Bored

Death Tater

[Original source unknown, predates July 2018. h/t Justin M.]

Rupestrian Hot Links


Clumsy
, Mudwerks (2025)
Not a spoof.

Camperama.

Possumette.

Spot the rat.

37 years ago

Hopkins & Feifer.

Playing with food.

Scores of animals.

Machete ban in Oz.

Custom Afghani rugs.

Bunkerville dodged one.

Norty Blues Episode 127.

Bees of the 13th Century.

Talking to cats in absentia.

One more thing to deal with.

Shoplifting and progressive empathy.

Song of the Eiders [via Everlasting Blört].

Forensic dollhouses [via Memo Of The Air].

Pollution reduction increases global temperatures.

[Top image: Eureka Tower, Melbourne, AU. Photo by Leanne Cole 2024.]


From the Archives: 1 year ago. 5 years ago. 10 years ago. 15 years ago.

Saturday Matinee – Flaco Jiménez, Big George Brock & Dan Patlansky

Flaco Jiménez (1939-2025) began playing the bajo sexto at the age of seven with his father, Santiago Jiménez Sr., a pioneer of conjunto music. He later adopted the accordion after being influenced by his father as well as zydeco musician Clifton Chenier.

Big George Brock was born in Grenada, Mississippi on May 16, 1932. By the time he was eight, he was working as a sharecropper picking cotton. He moved to Mattson, Mississippin, while in his teens, met and performed with Muddy Waters. In the late 1940s he moved to Walls, Mississippi where Howlin’ Wolf hired him as a roadie and sideman, and while in Walls he jammed with Memphis Minnie at house parties.

Dan Patlansky was voted the #4 Best Guitarist in the world and (besides Joe Bonamassa!) remains the only artist in the world with two worldwide No. 1, and two worldwide No. 2 Best Blues Rock Albums as voted by Blues Rock Review USA.

Got a lotta stuff to think about getting around to planning to do one of these days, but not tomorrow because I’ve got an appointment on the porch around porch time. See you there.

The .Gif Friday Post No. 915 – Gango Catches Some Rays, A Cat Snatch & The Trash Panda Hop

[Found here, here and here. The raccoons may be A.I. generated.]

Porcine Meditation

[Found here.]