Click photo for music info
Category: Uncategorized
Splicing a Rope by hand
Marina said Rock and she delivered
In her interview a couple of weeks ago (see here) Marina Evans said that Dogtown the title track of her new EP was a rocker — and when she released it today, she delivered. Listen below:
You can catch Marina on Thursday and Friday this week (see her schedule here).
Tonight there’s a special Open Jamm with the Bandit Kings at Rhumb Line. Don’t forget you still have time to help them make their record (click here for more info). If you’re not sure what I’m talking about and watch the video below:
Taking a Break
The Invasion of Sandy Bay
During the Captain’s Courageous Festival this weekend, Khan Studio and the GMG Gallery hosted reader, Anita Sanchez and her book The Invasion of Sandy Bay. Anita and I swapped books, so she got Tales of Bong Tree Island and I got Invasion. I have started reading the book, but haven’t finished it yet.
In Anita’s book, a young boy plays a key role when the War of 1812 comes to his Massachusetts coastal fishing village. The little town of Sandy Bay, Massachusetts, was the site of one of the wildest invasions in U.S. history, when the might of the British Empire came up against hardheaded New England townsfolk. The Invasion of Sandy Bay, based on eyewitness accounts of actual events, tells the tale – through the eyes of a twelve-year-old boy – of what happened on the night when the British put too much gunpowder in one of their cannons. The hilarious – and true – events of the topsy-turvy invasion are set against the backdrop of the dangerous lives of the fishermen.
Based on the actual invasion of Sandy Bay (now Rockport), Massachusetts, this work adds a unique perspective to the War of 1812. The invasion is told through the eyes of 12-year-old Lemuel Brooks. On his first night of trying to learn the trade of fisherman, Lemuel and Bill Tarr, a veteran fisherman, are captured by the British frigate Nymph. Bill is forced to pilot the frigate closer to the village so the British Royal Marines can go ashore and capture the fort. Lemuel and Bill escape and warn the town. What ensues is not a typical invasion! One group of Marines captures the fort and takes nine of the town’s militiamen as prisoners. A raft with British Marines sinks near the shore, and the fishermen rescue them and take them prisoner. Colonel Appleton of the Gloucester militiamen bans a proposed prisoner exchange, so the townsfolk take matters into their own hands. Aside from publicizing this little-known incident, the novel also fleshes out what daily life was like with an afterword that helps separate fact from fiction. Students will enjoy Lemuel’s adventures during the invasion and will empathize with his views on life. —Library Media Connection
The book can be purchased on Amazon at http://www.amazon.com/The-Invasion-Sandy-Anita-Sanchez/dp/1590785606
E.J. Lefavour
Drop and Shop
From 2007
Remember?
One Week Only We Will Accept Yoga/Wellness/Fitness Submissions
This week and this week only GMG will be accepting Health/Wellness submissions as part of GMG Health/Wellness week. Get your submissions in this week and I will run ONE POST for your organization- note this is only for this week and then we will close the health wellness publicity machine down til next January so get them in for submission. (try to make them creative along the lines of what the fabulous Treetop Yoga did by incorporating some Gloucester settings, locations or fun into your submission. YouTube videos are a great way to get your point across. Make ONE video and send me the URL and I’ll run that for you. You have til Thursday to get me something. email your submission to goodmorninggloucester@yahoo.com
No excuse if you miss the deadline, no excuses if you didn’t see this post in time (you should be dissecting every square inch of the blog every day anyway so shame on you if you missed it) ![]()
One Week and One Week Only!
Use the Treetop Yoga Post as a guide to what I mean by making it creative and not simply an ad for your joint
The Boss
Community Stuff 9/24/12
GMG Health and Wellness Week Starts Now- Meditation at 222 Arts and Wellness
This week and this week only GMG will be accepting Health/Wellness submissions as part of GMG Health/Wellness week. Get your submissions in this week and I will run ONE POST for your organization- note this is only for this week and then we will close the health wellness publicity machine down til next January so get them in for submission. (try to make them creative along the lines of what the fabulous Treetop Yoga did by incorporating some Gloucester settings, locations or fun into your submission. YouTube videos are a great way to get your point across. Make ONE video and send me the URL and I’ll run that for you. You have til Thursday to get me something. email your submission to goodmorninggloucester@yahoo.com
No excuse if you miss the deadline, no excuses if you didn’t see this post in time (you should be dissecting every square inch of the blog every day anyway so shame on you if you missed it) ![]()
One Week and One Week Only!
Use the Treetop Yoga Post as a guide to what I mean by making it creative and not simply an ad for your joint
The Boss
Guest Poet, Brian Luster
If I were Walt Whitman, I would sing, but not of myself
I would sound my barbaric yawp to sing of Brooklyn; it contains multitudes
I would sing of the orthodox Jews in Borough Park
Of the fishermen on the boats in Sheepshead Bay
Of the Danes and the Swedes and the Finns who meet at their athletic clubs in Dyker Heights
Of the Russians and Ukrainians and Turks and Georgians who have their businesses on Kings Highway
Of the old-time families in Canarsie who say “berl” for “boil”
Of the Chinese and Vietnamese with their noodle shops and the Mexicans with their taquerias in Sunset Park
Of the Poles in Greenpoint, neighbors to Williamsburg with more Jews, but also Puerto Ricans and hipsters (Do they talk to one another? I wonder)
If I were Walt Whitman, I would carry a camera, not a pen
My boot-soles would tramp every corner of the borough
From beneath Brooklyn’s bridge where the ferries land (I would not cross on the ferry; I would eat ice cream)
To the promenade in Brooklyn Heights
And from there down to the fair ways of Red Hook, where the longshoremen lived
And then to Gowanus with its reeking canal
And on through Park Slope, up the hill to Prospect Park and the botanic garden
Turning south I would pass the Victorians of Ditmas Park and wander through Midwood and Gravesend
And so come to Coney Island to walk on Mermaid Avenue where Woody Guthrie once lived
At one end of Coney Island is Sea Gate—private and closed to outsiders
At the other end is Manhattan Beach—free and open to all
But I would not stop; my restless feet would urge me on
To the narrow streets of Gerritsen Beach, where the houses are cheek-by-jowl and have water in their backyards
And past the outrageous mansions of Mill Basin
And farther still to Paerdegat, whose waters flow into Jamaica Bay and mingle with the marshes and islands
I would go even farther, to landlocked East New York and Brownsville and Bushwick
Turning south again I would traverse the borough on Rockaway Avenue and Rockaway Parkway, not to the Rockaways (which are in Queens), but to Canarsie Pier
Here, at the end of the road, I would make my way past the apartment-dwellers who come for a taste of salt air
Past the families who bring their barbecue grills
Past the fisherman hoping to catch a striped bass or a fluke or a porgy or a blue
Past the crabbers with their wire traps and their pieces of chicken to use as bait
I would pass them all and find an empty spot on a bench overlooking the water
And as the sun sets, the shadows of Brooklyn would be cast onto the surface of Jamaica Bay
The shadows of the mansions and the apartment buildings and the brownstones
The shadows of the butchers and the fishmongers and the produce vendors
The shadows of the brewers and the distillers and the vintners
The shadows of the restaurateurs and the entrepreneurs
The foodies, the hipsters, the locavores, the community gardeners, the activists, the artists, the musicians, the poets
The newcomers and the old-timers
All the multitudes of Brooklyn
© Brian Luster 2012
Live Blogging ~ Fall surfing
Take Your Taste Buds on a Crazy Adventure
I went to the End of Summer Tasting at the Madfish on Friday. Due to a Cape Ann NightSUP scheduling conflict, I didn’t get to experience the whole tasting, but did get to experience 4 of the 10 courses. If you have the chance before they close for the season, you owe it to your taste buds to take them on the adventure of a Friday, Saturday or Sunday night dinner starting at 5:00pm at Madfish Grille under the new management and extraordinary culinary magic of Chefs Jordan Rubin and Johnny Sheehan. I’ll tell you, don’t miss the oyster steam bun (OMG your mouth will go crazy with the amazing tastes and textures!), corn soup and prawn cracker. Based on what I did sample, I have to believe that everything on the menu is equally incredibly fresh, delicious and unique. These guys will rock your mouth’s world.
E.J. Lefavour
Breaking My No Politics Policy Here On GMG To Announce My Political Party Preference
Fed up with psychotic hard core republicans and psychotic hard core democrats who won’t listen to any idea on the other side of their respective aisles I’m here to endorse may party preference.
I’m down with the Party Party.
F these crazy politics 24/7
Embrace The Party Party.
Sunset
Abraham Lincoln Quote of The Week From Greg Bover
September 21, 2012
“Tact is the ability to describe others as they see themselves."
Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865)
The 16th president of the United States was well known for his quick wit and aphorisms. His political accomplishments, the preservation of the Union and the ending of slavery, have become almost mythic parts of American history. Even a cursory look at the man behind the myths reveals a towering intellect coupled with an astute political sense. Lincoln, a moderate Republican, purposefully constructed his cabinet of men who most often disagreed with him, and each other, in order that he received perspectives different from his own, and steered a course between extremes toward the goals he believed were right for the country. Assassinated at the close of the Civil War, Lincoln left behind a rich legacy of thoughtful and often self-deprecating quotes including: “It is better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to open one’s mouth and remove all doubt."






















