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Yearly Archives: 2012

Levon Helm, 1940-2012

20 Friday Apr 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Those we remember

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Levon Helm, September 2011

The other night I was sitting on the sofa when the voice of Levon Helm wafted from the other room. The Hayfoot was watching a video clip of “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down.” Instinctively I got up and went into the bedroom, where we watched it lying down. Like so many other songs sung by Helm–“Up on Cripple Weight,” “Don’t Do It,” The Weight”–it never fails to move. Sadly, the voice has been silenced; Helm died of throat cancer in New York City on Thursday. The drummer was born in the Mississippi Delta town of Elaine, Arkansas and grew up in nearby Helena. When he was a teenager Helm became the percussionist for Ronnie Hawkins. The two Arkansans eventually ended up north of the border and playing in a unit known as Ronnie Hawkins and the Hawks. After breaking off from Hawkins, the unit morphed into Levon Helm and the Hawks. Soon they were backing Bob Dylan just as the Hawks. Eventually the five members of the group–Helm, Robbie Robertson, Rick Danko, Richard Manuel, Garth Hudson–went out on their own as simply…The Band.

The group released its first album, Music From Big Pink, in July 1968. Big Pink was the group’s rented communal house in upstate New York. The album is notable for many reasons. First, it was a fully realized piece of work, created by musicians who had already woodshedded for a number of years. Released during the worst excesses of the Age of Aquarius, Big Pink manages to avoid the indulgences of the era. The reason for this, I believe, is because Helm especially was so grounded the American Songbook. You can’t have been a musician growing up in the Mississippi Delta in the 1940s and 1950s and not absorb its traditions. The first music group Helm saw in person was Bill Monroe and the Blue Grass Boys in 1946, the incarnation of that band that included Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs. He was six years old. Helm later saw Elvis play in person several times–Memphis being less than an hour’s drive from Helena–before the man who would be King was a cultural phenomenon.

Tradition meant a great deal to Helm and to everyone in The Band. 1968 was a year of turmoil throughout the world. A short list of incidents include: the Tet Offensive, the assassination of Martin Luther King Junior and subsequent rioting in hundreds of American cities, the Events of May in Paris that almost overthrew the French government, and the assassination of Bobby Kennedy in June. And that is just the first six months of the year. At a time when the battle cry for many baby boomers was “Don’t trust anyone over 30,” the group members pointedly posed with their extended family wearing their finest for what would be a widely disseminated group photo. Roots.

The Band’s original incarnation dissolved in 1976 after the famous Winterland concert filmed by Martin Scorsese and released as The Last Waltz in 1978. The breakup was probably inevitable given the tension, creative and otherwise, between Mr. Helm and Mr. Robertson. Helm later went on the road with other iterations of the lineup but to less effect. He was first diagnosed with cancer in the late 1990s and fought the disease, with periods of remission, up until the end. Helm was always an active musician, but in part to pay his medical expenses he was especially productive over the last several years of his life. Two of his finest efforts came during this period: Dirt Farmer (2007) and Electric Dirt (2009). He was proof positive that a rock star can age gracefully if he acts his age and stays himself.

With some artists it is just a lifelong thing. Thankfully for us.

(image/Parker JH)

First branches

18 Wednesday Apr 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Genealogy

≈ 5 Comments

Boston’s Copley Square and Trinity Church, June 1920

In July 1999, a few weeks before I made my annual August visit to my dad and step-mother in Arkansas, I asked the old man to write out as much of our family history as he could. I asked a few weeks in advance because I wanted him to think hard and reach back. He took the project seriously and sure enough when I showed up in August he had a legal pad full of notes. Over a period of nights (My first ever visit to Shiloh was squeezed in between.) we sat down and looked at what he came up with. When I returned to New York City I photocopied the results and mailed them to various extended family. My uncle–my father’s younger brother–told me that there were some mistakes and gaps, which is inevitable in a first go-around on something like this. My father’s health was already declining, and though he lived another ten years before dying in 2009 (three  weeks after I, his youngest, married), he had put a lot of his past behind him by that time in his life. It is amazing what he was able to come up with.

The notes sat in a drawer for years, as I started a new job, went back to graduate school, met my wife, went to ballgames, and just went on with living. Last year I signed up for Ancestry, but didn’t do a whole lot with it. The main reason I did not was because I had started this blog and, well, there are only so many hours in the day. With a week to go in my subscription I finally pulled out the notes and began the process. Like many Americans, I really only knew my family heritage back through my grandparents, all of whom were born in Boston in the early twentieth century and have now been gone for decades. I now have solid, incontrovetible record of all eight of my great-parents and two gr-, gr-grandparents. None of this would have been possible without the input my father gave me all those years ago. It was the information he provided about the extended family that allowed my to add or eliminate potential candidates. When your dad gives you the names of all seven of the children borne by his grandmother and you then look at the 1920 census record with said names right there on the card, including his mother’s, you know you have the right clan. Yesterday, April 17, would have been my grandparent’s 75th wedding anniversary.

I have been doing my mother’s side as well, and spent a good deal of my time off last week texting her with information about the family that she never knew. At the same time, she filled in some blanks that made the people real, not just names on a sheet of paper. I laughed out loud more than once listening to mother’s acid comments about this or that mother-in-law who was universally disliked, and the family skeletons that are now buried forever with the people who lived lives very much like ours today. There is a family legend on my mother’s side of the family that we are the descendants of a particular Civil War general. I crunched the data a dozen ways and have not been able to corroborate this. I even emailed a particular historical society in Connecticut and received a response from a librarian who had conscientiously searched, but with no result. As much as I would love this one to be true, it may not. So it goes. I know from my time at Ellis Island, and working at a small history museum in Texas, that what people believe about their family history is often incorrect.

Things get a little trickier from here because all my ancestors from this point on are from overseas, primarily Sweden, Italy, and Poland. The art of cooking galumpkis made its way down to my dad, who prepared them for us when we were little. My mom knows all the Italian dirty words. Needless to say, I renewed my subscription to Ancestry and have been spending a fair amount of time online. My only regret is that I did not begin sooner. If you have not asked your family where they came from and how they got here, trust me, begin now before it is too late.

(image/Leon H. Abdalian)

Museum of the Confederacy: #18

15 Sunday Apr 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Museums

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It is not clear if the editors are being ironic in that way that hipsters always seem to be striving for, but Complex magazine has listed the Museum of the Confederacy at number eighteen on its list of the fifty coolest museums in the world. Other listees were the Tate Modern, Imperial War Museum, and MFA, Boston.

In all seriousness, it should not be a surprise given the museum’s extensive collection of artifacts and the shift of the museums’s narrative in recent years.

(image/Ad Meskens)

65 years ago today . . .

15 Sunday Apr 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Baseball

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…Jackie Robinson made his debut for the Brooklyn Dodgers. Near where I work in Brooklyn is the building where Robinson signed his first contract with the team. He lived in East Flatbush near where I used to work. The one thing I am not is a baseball romantic, but the city tore down Ebbets Field with such casual disregard all those years ago.

One of the most perplexing phenomena in baseball in recent decades has been the steady decline of African-Americans into the game. Some have attributed the trend to the rise of football and basketball. Another factor people point to is how difficult it can be, for reasons of space, to play the game in the city; the game needs considerable more space than other sports. These reasons all have merit. Still, Orlando Hudson of the Padres puts his finger on probably the biggest cause. In general, MLB has always done a poor job reaching out to younger fans, regardless of their race or ethnic background. It’s one of the reasons the game is less culturally relevant than it used to be for many Americans.

(image/Fawcett Publications)

The home opener

13 Friday Apr 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Baseball

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It is a little anti-climactic when your favorite baseball team has its home opener after beginning the season 1-5 on the road. Nonetheless, today is the Red Sox first home game of the 2012 season. They began playing in Fenway in 1912, the same week the Titanic sank and seven months before Woodrow Wilson was elected to his first term. We do not have a television set, but I signed up for MLB TV this year and have been watching and listening to ball on my computer and iPad. I enjoy listening on the radio more than watching on tv; thankfully, MLB TV gives you both options.

As I said the other day, I have been taking some time off this week. I visited the Skyscraper Museum on Wednesday and yesterday went to Mercantile Library before meeting the Hayfoot for lunch. She is off today after coordinating consecutive nights of public events at the UN. It is a beautiful spring day. In a while I’ll probably go sit on our patio, listen to the Sox and Rays, and finish River of Grass.

Enjoy your weekend.

The human toll, update

12 Thursday Apr 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Museums

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My friend Susan Ingram sent me the above video.

The human toll

11 Wednesday Apr 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Museums

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Antietam dead and debris

This might sounds strange to some, but I firmly believe that many Americans have a hard time fathoming the reality of the American Civil War. It is one thing to say that 750,000 Americans were killed right here on the North American continent. It is another to grasp it. Even our nomenclature supports this tendency. To be a Civil War “buff” implies that the war is something one “does” for fun. How many times have you heard someone say that they “love” the Civil War? You can love jazz, or baseball, or impressionist art. Can you really love the American Civil War? To many Americans wars are something that happen someplace else, over there. That ours was as terrible as anything we might see on the evening news today is literally incomprehensible. I can’t say I have not succumbed to it myself, especially when I was younger. Ironically, visiting battlefields can reinforce this notion. Antietam, Gettysburg, Shiloh, and other places are so tranquil, so beautiful, so verdant and peaceful that it is difficult to believe when you are there that horrific events occurred there. Sometimes things happen that remind us of the war’s reality. In 2009 the remains of a soldier from New York State were found by a visitor at Antietam and returned to the Empire State for a proper burial, nearly a century and a half after the still unknown soldier was killed so far from home and left behind in a shallow grave. Now, an extraordinarily well-preserved arm that had been in a private museum for decades, has been donated to the National Museum of Civil War Medicine in Frederick, Maryland. I hope this is on display when my wife and I visit Antietam in June. For me, these are the most poignant reminders of the war’s cost.

(image/Library of Congress)

Bucket list reading

10 Tuesday Apr 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Florida

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It is spring break at the college where I work and I am taking the next few days off to visit some museums, catch up on some things around the house, and just relax in general. Tonight I started a book I have wanted to read for years, decades actually: Marjory Stoneman Douglas’s The Everglades: River of Grass. I was raised in South Florida and my mother still lives there. Growing up, my friends and I went to the Everglades on an almost weekly basis, taking long hikes on the fire roads built by the Army Corps of Engineers in the middle part of the twentieth century. The Everglades have some of the most beautiful sunsets one could imagine.

I didn’t read Stoneman’s classic during my high school year because, well, I was too busy being a kid. I am not sure what I was expecting but the book offers a surprising amount of historical background on both the state and national level. I checked the book out of the library where I work because I recently agreed to write an encyclopedia article about the Miami Hurricane of 1926. Stoneman touches on it briefly. I thought writing the hurricane piece would help me learn more about Florida during the Reconstruction and Jim Crow eras, which it has. The Hayfoot and I have it on the 2-3 year plan to take a Civil War road trip through the Sunshine State. It is something I started thinking about more and more after visiting Gettysburg the first time and seeing the Florida monument on West Confederate Avenue. Maybe if I had grown up in the northern part of the state, which is ironically more “Southern” than south Florida, I would have had a better sense of these things. For whatever reason, it is something we never heard about growing up. It is funny how when we reach a certain age we go back and try to fill in the blanks we missed the first time around.

If ever in Ames . . .

09 Monday Apr 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Museums, The lighter side

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Some people dream of living on a plantation. Jerry Litzel of Ames, Iowa made it a reality. My favorite part are the pillars imported from Georgia.

I love stuff like this, where people take their passion and turn it into something unique and quirky and wonderful. I’m the guy who once made his not-yet-wife drive 1 1/2 hours out of the way, back and forth, to visit Graceland Too in Mississippi.

The National Park Service’s Civil War

06 Friday Apr 2012

Posted by Keith Muchowski in Media and Web 2.0, National Park Service

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The National Park Service has had an active web presence for quite awhile now. This week the organization has taken it up a notch by unveiling its official site for the 150th anniversary. There are many worthwhile blogs and websites for information regarding the conflict. What is unique about the NPS is that it is the caretaker for many of the places where Civil War transpired. To put it mildly, this give the Park Service a unique perspective. All told, the Service protects and interprets over 100 parks related to the war and its legacy. Some (Gettysburg) are obvious; Others (Aspet, the home of sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens) less so. The one safe bet is that wherever you live you are close a national park or monument, and probably one related to the Civil War. The sesquicentennial is an exciting time because it is quite consciously an attempt to make up for the failures of the centennial fifty years ago. Nowhere is this more apparent than when visiting our parks. Visit if you can. Nothing beats the real thing.

Fort Jefferson, Dry Tortugas National Park

(image/National Park Service)

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