Monday, December 30, 2019

In Boston, It's 25 Cents








In Boston, It's 25 Cents
by Bill Russo


In the 1960s I was fortunate enough to spend a few years in Boston, once called the 'Athens of America' for its position as the nation's leading center of education.  Even today, a sheepskin from 'Beantown' seems to be valued above one from nearly every other metro area. Seems like everybody wants to go to Harvard, M.I.T., or the Berklee School of Music.

There are more than 60 colleges and universities in the city serving some 250,000 students each year.  In the 1960s, I was lucky enough to be one of those pupils, first at the venerable Huntington Preparatory School for boys; and later at Grahm Junior College.

At Huntington Prep, I was one of the few 'poor' boys among a student body that came from some of the wealthiest families in America. My best buddy at school was the son of one of the most successful mattress manufacturers on the East Coast.  His 'allowance' was far larger than my Dad's weekly paycheck!

Though we had a cafeteria in our building on Huntington Avenue, my pal and I often went to lunch at the nearby 'Lobster Claw' or one of the other spots in the area.  He always paid the tab and never made me feel bad for not being able to chip in.

My next stop on the educational ladder was Grahm Junior College, in Kenmore Square. The school focused on the performing arts, mostly radio, and television.

The star alumnus of our little college, now just a memory, is Andy Kaufman, also, sadly just a memory today.  After leaving Grahm, Andy went on to a highly successful career, first as 'Latka' on the long-running TV sitcom taxi, and later as a comedy star on stage and screen.

Andy always said that he learned Transcendental Meditation at Grahm - but there was no such course.  I got it though.  I understood because I studied Jazz and Gloria Lynn at Grahm - but there was no such course.  

I often chatted with one of the school's janitors. He was a very large, but quiet and gentle, African-American man who knew as much about Jazz as Louis Armstrong.   

He also knew many of the top performers.  Through him, I cut my teeth on the raw and gritty music that never really got into mainstream America, but gave birth to the material performed by people like Elvis Presley, the Beatles, and many more. 

You may not have heard of Gloria Lynn - whom I seriously studied, but she was a towering figure in Jazz and R & B circles. In 1964, it was no surprise to me when her song 'I Wish You Love' topped the Rhythm and Blues chart and put a pretty fair dent in the top of the Pop chart as well.  

I had another connection to the music world of Boston.  A much older cousin, was one of the leading brass guys in all of New England.  He didn't have, or use, brass knuckles, but if you gave him any instrument made of brass, he could handle it as well as anybody in New York, New Orleans, New California or anywhere else in the New World.  

Whether it was a Trombone, Trumpet, Flugelhorn, or Tuba, he could play it. He could even play a conch shell .  He did it too, on a bet one night, at a club on Cape Cod.   A conch shell is not brass, but the key to a brass player's ability is the 'lip'.  If your lip is good enough you can play just about anything, even a shell.

My cousin had a job with a major manufacturer and never went into music full time - but he was so good, that he was often hired as an extra musician when big name singers like Frank Sinatra or Tony Bennett came to Boston.

From my cousin I learned inside stories of many of the greats, from Judy Garland to Glenn Miller, Tommy Dorsey and even Lawrence Welk.

So what all this is leading up to is this: Based on my Boston experiences many years ago, here's a mostly true tale of the golden era of Boston - from Blinstrub's Village, the biggest club in New England, to Sinatra himself; here's my story -   

In Boston, It's 25 Cents  

It's mostly true, but please don't put me on the witness stand, because I can't swear to all of it.  It's free to listen, on Short Story Theater: Click to hear it. 

https://www.spreaker.com/user/11578348/in-boston-its-25-cents








Wednesday, December 25, 2019

Joubert, the Wolf Catcher



Do you ever find yourself yearning for bygone days when you could walk in a pristine forest, hear the sounds of the wolves, see elk, deer, and even a moose or two pass by you on the trail?

You don't need a time machine to find such a place.  All you have to do, even in the 2020s, is go to the most northern area of the 48 adjacent United States.  The vast Allagash wilderness in Aroostook County has all of the above and more.




It's a place where the wild animals outnumber the few people in the towns and villages, a hundred to one.  It's an area where the snowfall can be measured in yards, not feet.  It's a region where the record low temperature (set near Depot Mountain in 2009) is FIFTY DEGREES BELOW ZERO.  

The old record was negative 48, that frigid temperature mark was set in Van Buren, a village of about 2100 people, on the American side of the St. John River. It's near Madawaska, the biggest city in the far North, with a population just over 4,000 (2010 census).




Joubert the Wolf Catcher lived in the late 1800s and yet his story, could still happen today.  Much of what you'll see and hear about, including the families of the potato farmers, is still the standard - even now in the 2000s. 




Travel back to yesterday (and today) in the most Northern part of the 48 United States, The Allagash Wildnerness, and watch on YouTube, the free, 20 minute dramatized video of Bill Russo's tale,
Click to watch.  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P3-uUATRLCU
https://youtu.be/P3-uUATRLCU




Joubert, the Wolf Catcher. 

Thursday, December 19, 2019

Boston Crime: From Brinks to Lobsters





In January of 1950 the city of Boston was the scene of the largest heist in U.S. history when Big Joe McGuinness and his gang lifted 3 million from the Brinks Armored Car Company.


Now the city is once again setting a record - this time for the largest lobster heist in history.  In mid December 2019, a 29 year old 'losah' (loser) from Southie, (South Boston)  'allegedly' jumped into a box truck with 10 thousand bucks worth of 'Lobstahs'  (lobsters)


and tried to drive off towards Beverly or Salem. But the 'yegg' was spotted by employees of the New England Lobster company who saddled up and gave chase.

A couple of the workers followed the crook with a second New England Lobster Company truck. The guy who was scheduled to be driving the lobster truck, mounted his personal vehicle and joined in the 3 vehicle chase through the ancient streets of the home-town of the Boston Red Sox, Celtics and Bruins.
The guy in the car routed the thief, by smashing his vehicle into the front end of the stolen truck. The guys in the other lobster truck slammed into the back end of the truck stuffed with the lifted 'lobstahs'.

After they had the stolen truck wedged in, the employees dismounted and 'assisted' the 'alleged' crook out of the stolen truck. The 'alleged' stooge is now cooling his heels in the can. I think the guy could make bail, but will probably decide to stay safe in the lock-up, rather than try to take to the streets of Boston as long as the 'Lobstah Cowboys' are still in town.


-0-

Wednesday, December 18, 2019

Spending Christmas 'Under' the Snow



If you know anything about the "Blizzard of 78" you'll understand the plight of a family in 1904, forced to spend Christmas 'Under' the Snow. The tale of the Barnes family, hoping 'Dad' can make it back home for Christmas, is an 18 minute heartwarming episode of Short Story Theater...free to hear. Click the link. https://www.spreaker.com/episode/20363211







-0-



Thursday, December 12, 2019

Wild West Twitter Gunslingers Exposed




Reading today's headlines, my mind wandered and though I continued skimming the news, this meme seeped into my mind.  See if you can match it up to an item from today's 'feed' or from any recent day.  




 I'm not saying I aimed this at any one particular person - just put the shoe on whomever it fits. 

-0-

A World With No Seams








A Wish, A Hope, and A Prediction
by Bill Russo



It will happen. Not in my lifetime and not in yours. Nor will it occur in the life-span of your children or their children. But it will transpire at some distant point in the future. Instead of adding stars, all fifty of them will be taken away. The United States will be disbanded! And what then?

As an optimist, a glass half-full guy, I say what will take place is that the United States will go out of existence, but will be re-born as a part of U-N -O -T-W, the United Nations of the World.

Peace will eradicate war. Love will erase hate. And the world will be seamless. This is my hope. Call me silly, an old fool or whatever you wish. I prefer to think that 'human' nature will evolve into 'humane' nature and my prediction will come true.


-0-




Wednesday, December 11, 2019

The Jack in the Box



We know that letting a genie out of the bottle seldom turns out well; but what about a Jack-in-the-Box? Would you dare to release one?  Don't answer until you've seen my new suspense video - The Jack in the Box.

The  17 minute YouTube video of Jack in the Fox is Free to watch. 

Blog Archive

Followers