Showing posts with label civil rights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label civil rights. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Meadowlark Lemon

Artist: Meadowlark Lemon
LP: My Kids
Song: "Earthmen"
[ listen ]

Smash Records was the next Washington, DC record store I visited last week; it's just a few blocks up the street from Crooked Beat. The store seemed more geared toward punk, metal, indie rock, clothing, and that sort of thing, so I didn't really expect to find much for my collection. I figured I'd pop in anyhow and I'm glad I did. They had some terrific stuff tucked into the dusty corners, and then they also had this bizarre 1979 album from Meadowlark Lemon, one of the most well-known and beloved members of the famous Harlem Globetrotters basketball team. The album is mostly a celebration of the beauty and innocence of childhood (Meadowlark has 10 kids; see front cover and the dedication in the liner notes), but it also includes an odd closing track called "Earthmen," a call for planetary unity in the face of a hypothetical hostile alien takeover of the planet. If such a takeover actually took place—complete with MOONRAKER-style laser-beam sound-effects—Meadowlark wonders: would people in the world finally forget all their prejudices and come together as one? For all of us are Earthmen! (Well, except for Earthwomen, of course. But we could probably offer them up as some sort of sacrifice or donation to the hostile aliens in order for them to leave all of us newly-unified Earthmen alone.) You can read all about the life and career of Meadowlark Lemon here, visit The Meadowlark Lemon Foundation website here, and get lots of info about The Harlem Globetrotters here. Hey, guess what Whoopi Goldberg, Pope John Paul II, Henry Kissinger, and Bob Hope all have in common. Each of them is an honorary member of The Harlem Globetrotters!

[ the outside of Smash Records — Washington, DC ]

[ the flag and neon sign of Smash Records — Washington, DC ]

[ the inside of Smash Records — Washington, DC ]

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

The Brooklyn Allstars

Artist: The Brooklyn Allstars
LP: The Exciting Brooklyn Allstars
Song: "A Soldier's Prayer"
[ listen ]

One of the stores the guy at RamaLama Records said I should visit while I was in Toledo was AA Records Are Us. Packed with records that have been gathered over the years by Frank Lynn, the store's friendly, chain-smoking owner, AA Records Are Us is one of those dusty places that you'd never manage to get through in a single day. I'd hardly begun poking around on the main floor when Frank took me downstairs to show me another room that was also filled with records from wall to wall. I began browsing through the soul and jazz LPs, but found them over-priced. (Things I'd just seen in Cincinnati and Dayton for $3 or $4 were $10, $15, or even $25 at AA Records; there was even a Martha & The Vandellas LP that was going for $700. I'm sorry, but if a record is worth $700, it belongs behind glass with laser-beams around it, not in a dusty bin next to the $10 Melba Moore LPs.) Still, I found good deals on several neat records, including Connie Smith's first LP, an old Marvin Rainwater album, and this late-'60s-ish gospel LP by The Exciting and Famous Brooklyn Allstars, who are evidently still making music today (see video below). You can read about The Brooklyn Allstars on AllMusic.com here, and visit the AA Records Are Us website here, where you'll find an unsuccessful attempt to link to this interesting 2007 Toledo Blade news story about Frank and his wonderful store. LP liner notes and photos are included below, along with some pictures I took at AA Records Are Us.

The Brooklyn Allstars on YouTube:

 [ The Brooklyn Allstars ]

[ AA Records Are Us — Toledo, OH ]

[ AA Records Are Us, main floor ]

 [ AA Records Are Us, basement ]

[ Frank Lynn, owner of AA Records Are Us — Toledo, OH ]