Aug 23

Excellent Album – James D Kirk Jr – Culloden,, WV United States

There are a lot of performers sort of incorporating old timey music into their style but I think Adrienne Young is one of the better ones.

While some of this album is singer songwriter stuff the old timey and sort of cajun tinged stuff is very good. For some performers it seems out of place but this album is an excellent blending.
Art of Virtue (Dig): : Fusing past and present in her pop-inflected old time music, Adrienne Young applies a worldly compassion, a poet’s pen and a spirit of independence and self-reliance to her sophomore effort The Art of Virtue, out June 28, 2005, on her own Addiebelle Records (distributed by Virtual Label/Ryko).

Inspired in part by Ben Franklin’s ‘virtues of man’ writings and stories from an older and perhaps wiser America, Young expands upon the themes of cultivation and stewardship so beautifully asserted on her acclaimed debut Plow to the End of the Row. With Virtue, Young makes a statement both personal and universal, both idealistic and constructive.

“There seems to be a growing passion–collectively and individually–to understand the foundation of our American culture and how we’ve turned from that,” states Young. “Personally, it steered me back toward a time when our country was rooted in agrarian ideals and words were powerful enough to begin a new world. Ben Franklin had such a practical approach toward nurturing virtue, the first point being nobody’s perfect!”

The Art of Virtue was produced by Young with able assistance from long-time collaborator Will Kimbrough and acoustic recording genius Gary Paczosa. Besides Young’s accomplished songwriting, the 15 tracks include old-time fiddle tunes reimagined for a new day, the gospel standard “Farther Along,” and the Grateful Dead’s classic anthem of renewal “Brokedown Palace.” The message is consistent: every choice we make, from the food we buy to the channels we watch to the history we do or don’t preserve, has consequences. Our standards can be higher, she says, despite the many forces that seem to corrode them. Few songwriters can negotiate this terrain with ease and assurance, but Young is one who can.

Raised in Florida and influenced by her grandfather (who at age 80 still picks in a bluegrass band), Young evolved from actress to recording artist after moving to Nashville and enrolling in Belmont University’s music business program. Her career accelerated after she took first place in the Chris Austin Songwriting Contest at North Carolina’s Merlefest. Then, working with Nashville pop and alt-country visionary Will Kimbrough, Young made Plow to the End of the Row. Not only was the album acclaimed by critics, it earned a Grammy nomination for album design. Those who bought the album were rewarded by the tiny package of seeds nested in the CD sleeve, an idea of Young’s that made her worldview tangible.

With The Art of Virtue, Young’s singing and songwriting has achieved a new level of lushness and depth. The pop freshness so apparent on Young songs like “Home Remedy” and “I Cannot Justify” is here, though perhaps nestled deeper inside a musical bed chiefly made of Young’s old-time banjo, striking fiddling and silvery, bold acoustic guitar. In songs like “Rastus Russell,” “Walls of Jericho” and “It’s All the Same,” Young articulates a moral vision with stories and allegory. In the title track, she asserts a more direct call for action and accountability, in her own life and indirectly in the rest of ours. Adrienne Young & Little Sadie’s The Art of Virtue is a fun, poppy country-folk album–more folk than country and more either than pop, but nevertheless accessible while remaining true to its roots. (There isn’t a thing wrong with their renditions of the traditional “Farther Along” and “Bonaparte’s Retreat”–this is a string band, featuring Young on clawhammer banjo, that knows what it’s doing.) What really makes the album special, though, is Young’s originals, whose earnestness it’s hard not to get caught up in. Just try listening to the title track or “Jump the Broom” while sitting still. Another highlight is “Hills & Hollers,” Young’s elegy for the built-over American landscape (“There used to be hills and hollers here/Wild turkey and the white-tailed deer/Creeks runnin’ crystal-clear/Water on its way to the Gulf of Mexico”). Like its predecessor, Plow to the End of the Row, the album is coproduced by the multitalented Will Kimbrough, who also lends his instrumental, compositional, and singing talents to many of the tracks. –Benjamin Lukoff
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Aug 14

See Kai Run Sadie Red Mary Jane: See Kai Run: See Kai Run Sadie Shoes – Red Back by popular demand! The Sadie is our ultimate classic red Mary Jane — versatile, and of course, so adorable. A must-have for any girl! With white contrasting zigzag stitching. Hand-stitched sole. Product Features -Handcrafted from butter-soft leather -Flexible rubber sole – healthy for developing feet but sturdy enough for outdoor play! -Generous width and wide toe box for plenty of wiggle room! -Padded collars for extra comfort -Adjustable Velcro closures make shoes easy to get on and ensure a great fit -Breathable leather insole and lining Size Inside Length Age 3 4.5″ 11.5cm 6-9M 4 4.8″ 12.3cm 9-12M 5 5.2″ 13.1cm 12-18M 6 5.5″ 13.9cm 18-24M 7 5.8″ 14.7cm 2Yrs 8 6.1″ 15.5cm 2.5Yrs 9 6.4″ 16.3cm 3Yrs
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Jul 29

The Joan Crawford Collection, Vol. 2 (A Woman’s Face / Flamingo Road / Sadie McKee / Strange Cargo / Torch Song): CRAWFORD,JOAN: TORCH SONG (1953): Musical comedy legend Jenny Stewart, who has been hardened by the worst life has to offer, finds romance when blinded war- veteran Tye Graham becomes her new piano accompanist. STRANGE CARGO (1940): When eight prisoners escape from a New Guinea penal colony, they are picked up by another escapee named Verne and his girl friend Julie. Among the fugitives is Cambreau, a soft-spoken, messianic character who has a profound effect on his comrades. SADIE MCKEE (1934): As working girl Sadie McKee, Joan Crawford wears a maid’s uniform. And as any Crawford fan knows, she’ll shortly swap her white apron for black sable – even (or especially) if it means heartbreak along the way. In this rags-to-riches tale, Sadie wins the affections of the singer (Gene Raymond) she loves, the tycoon (Edward Arnold) she marries and the lawyer (Franchot Tone) she grew up with. That’s a lot of on-screen romantic fire, not all of it may be due to acting ability alone: The year after Sadie McKee was filmed, Crawford became Mrs. Franchot Tone. FLAMINGO ROAD (1949): Life in a small Southern town heats up when a sexy, savvy dancer is stranded there by a traveling carnival. She wins the hearts of two men and gets a taste of local politics when she butts heads with a corrupt sheriff. Apparently Crawford only accepted the role after Jack Warner ordered rewrites and spruced up the production. A WOMAN’S FACE (1941): Anna Holm is scheming con woman and blackmailer, a bitter woman shut off from society because of a disfiguring scar. The opportunity to undergo an operation to remove her scars presents her with a choice: open herself up to a whole new life or return to her old ways and the only life she’s ever known. Those looking for heavy doses of melodrama, good old-fashioned storytelling, and–of course–more Joan, look no further. The Joan Crawford Collection, Vol. 2 offers up a fine assortment of some of Crawford’s popular second-tier titles that helped secure this unstoppable actress’ well-deserved seat in the court of Hollywood royalty. Spanning from 1934 to 1954, the five films take viewers on a journey over peaks and valleys of Miss Crawford’s tumultuous but often spectacular career and permits a glimpse into the star’s adeptness to the changing times of movie making. The first film, 1934’s Sadie McKee, captures a radiant Crawford, still riding high as the queen of MGM, playing the eponymous poor cook’s daughter who struggles to keep her principles intact through her rocky romances and unexpected rise to riches. Nobody plays an unlikely do-gooder like Crawford, and this splendidly entertaining film is one of her finest. 1940’s Strange Cargo features Crawford as a dive-bar singer and frequent co-star Clark Gable as a gritty prison escapee joining forces to flee a remote island. A religious parable, jungle adventure, and prison escape movie in one, Strange Cargo maintains suspense and action surprisingly well. A Woman Face (1941) is beautifully directed by one of cinema’s best, George Cukor, who provides Crawford with one of her most accomplished dramatic roles: Anna Holm, a woman whose face is horribly disfigured as a child. Anna’s physical appearance drastically alters her destiny, and becoming full of spite and bitterness, she turns to a life of crime. When the opportunity to correct her scars presents itself, the story takes a sharp turn into suspense-thriller and courtroom drama territory, eventually making its way to a totally improbable and predictable but equally exciting finale. Flamingo Road (1949), which went on to become a nighttime television soap opera in the ‘80s, sees Crawford as Lane, a hardened carnival dancer who finds herself stranded in a small town facing crooked men and parochial hypocrisy. Lane’s a tough cookie and unsurprisingly manages to cross the bridge from rags to riches while triumphing over her foes in a delicious reversal of fortune. The story may be hackneyed, but Crawford’s histrionics provide a juicy good time. This was her first foray into playing roles that are clearly too young for her, yet her portrayal is so earnest one simply doesn’t dare question the rather enormous leap in realism. Like pieced-together leftovers from much finer musicals, 1953’s Torch Song is the weakest movie of the bunch but still worth a gander. Here, Crawford plays an embittered and aging musical stage star whose unlikely romance with a blind pianist might turn around her lifetime of heartache. The film probably isn’t one of her career highlights but offers up some surprisingly poignant, all-too-real moments.

Joan Crawford Collection, Vol. 2 comes with an abundance of extras including several interesting featurettes covering her career at Warner Brothers and her work with Clark Gable as well as several entertaining old-fashioned cartoons. There’s also some amusing Torch Song outtakes of Crawford aspiring to sing. (Once you’ve heard them you may understand why her voice was dubbed.) Many of Crawford’s characters have been described as being only slight manipulations of the real Joan; a tough woman looking for a little respect and trying to make it in a man’s world. This collection should help vindicate her efforts. — Matt Wold
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Jul 22

L’il Abner

Little Sadie Comments Off

L’il Abner: : America’s favorite comic strip comes to life! The gang from Dogpatch is all here: Abner, Daisy May, Mammy Yokum, Earthquake McGoon and Lonesome Polecat. What’ll happen when the Sadie Hawkins dance turns things upside down? Surely it’ll be stupefying! – read more.

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Jun 30

Liked the boots! – S. Bean – Iowa
My daughter, who is very picky about her wardrobe, instantly liked the boots and wears them all the time. The only complaint I have is the black marks it leaves on linoleum. However, they are easy to clean up.
Hush Puppies Little Kid/Big Kid Sadie Boot,Black,1 M Little Kid: Hush Puppies: A trendy stretch boot for the resident fashionista. – read more.

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