Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘Blogfinger News’ Category

Camp Ground c. 1870. Rev. Stokes is in black. Rev. Cookman is in white. Why is no street named after Stokes? Photo courtesy of W. T. Bell*

Camp Ground c. 1870. Rev. Stokes is in black. Rev. Cookman is in white. Why is no street named after Stokes?    Photo courtesy of W. T. Bell*   Reposted from June, 2013 on Blogfinger.

 

By Paul Goldfinger, Editor @Blogfinger

In an article in the New York Times, published on July 12, 1873, their “special correspondent” said,” On the eastern coast of New Jersey, from Sandy Hook to Cape May, there is not a more lovely spot, nor one better adapted for a Summer’s resort than Ocean Grove. The grove proper is situated six miles south of Long Branch, and contains 300 acres of forest land, bounded on the north by Wesley Lake, on the south by Fletcher Lake, on the east by the Atlantic Ocean, and on the west by the turnpike road to Long Branch.”

Even though Ocean Grove was only four years old then, there were already 300 cottages built or under construction. That week of July 11, 1873, there was a beehive of activity getting ready for the week long “Union Seaside Convention” which was being held for the dedication of the Tabernacle, which was a “monmouth tent” open on the sides and able to seat thousands. The event was not only for Methodists. It was clearly for Christians, but a variety of sects were welcomed and were in attendance including Presbyterians, Baptists, Congregationalists, Episcopalians, Friends and Methodists.

“Crowds” were pouring into the Grove from Philadelphia and New York by train. “By noon the place was fairly overrun.” The tourists had to be resourceful in finding a place to stay. There were to be 250 tents erected, and workmen were rushing about trying to get them finished.

The article mentioned that 1,500 people lived in OG for the summer season, and 600 of those lived in tents. The tents were set up all over town—there were no special tent places. It was noted that there was a “bare strip of grassland” running near the beach, and many tents were erected there. Setting up was a family affair, and the process was considered great “fun” as people were moving furnishings and supplies around all over town.

In the Grove were a few boarding houses and “several very good hotels.” You could stay for a week in an “excellent” place for $10.00. The “season” extended from June through September, but the huge camp meeting week was held in August. People would come from the train and go to the post office to find out where they could get a room.

The Times observed that “there is no hurry about anything. Everybody takes his time.” No intoxicating beverages could be sold in the Grove or for 3 miles around. The main activities were “boating, bathing and fishing.” Some of the “boys” played baseball. Others played croquet, although it’s not clear if girls could join in.

Most visitors and townies showed up for the dedication of the Tabernacle where there were prayers and speeches. Note that the Bishop Janes Tabernacle was constructed in 1877.

A couple of interesting items were mentioned in the article. One stated that homeowners received a 99 year lease, but at the end of that term, the family heirs could “buy the lot unconditionally.” That sounds like something to look into.

Finally, a very special event was to happen that week. Rev. Osborn, the founder of OG, was to be presented with a $3,000.00 cottage on Wesley Lake.

It sounds like Ocean Grove became quite famous very quickly after the Founders first got together in a park over by Long Pond (later, Wesley Lake) in 1869.

 

JOAN MORRIS:

 

 

CREDIT: Photo from Images of America: Ocean Grove.* Thanks for permission from Wayne T. Bell, author.

See the Blogfinger article about the birth of Ocean Grove: ” Who’s Your Daddy?”   The true story of the founding of Ocean Grove. (Scroll down a short distance)    link:

Who’s Your Daddy?

Read Full Post »

Scotrun, Pennsylvania. Ashley (l), Gilly (c) and Piper. 1999. ©Paul Goldfinger. Click left to enlarge

Scotrun, Pennsylvania. Hunting dogs: Ashley (l), Gilly (c) and Piper. 1999. ©Paul Goldfinger. Click left to enlarge.

 

ALABAMA:

Read Full Post »

Captiva Island, Florida. 2012. By Paul Goldfinger ©

Captiva Island, Florida. 2012. By Paul Goldfinger © Click left for full view.

ART FARMER (1928-1999)  made an album in 1958 with the great pianist Bill Evans. It is called “Modern Art.” The group consists of Art Farmer on trumpet,  Bill Evans on piano, Benny Golson on tenor sax, Addison Farmer on bass and Dave Bailey on drums.

The song “Like Someone in Love” was written in 1944 for a film called “Belle of the Yukon.”  Jimmy Van Heusen wrote the music, and Johnny Burke—the lyrics. This is one of the great love songs of all time, but you won’t hear the lyrics on this version.    Being an old saxman, I love the interplay between the sax and the trumpet early in the song. Listen for it.

—-Paul Goldfinger  (reposted from August 2013 on Blogfinger)

562918

Read Full Post »

The Milky Way. Photo from the Internet

 

Re-post from 2012.  Charles Layton was a member of the Blogfinger staff when he wrote this marvelous piece. Charles now lives in Philadelphia.  He is a professional editor from the Philadelphia Inquirer, now retired.

 

By Charles Layton

A few years ago we lived for three weeks in Nicaragua, in a house at the edge of a small, very remote fishing village called Casares. It was a spectacular place. Instead of shooshing and murmuring, as they mostly do in Ocean Grove, the waves on that shore towered and crashed and sucked and splattered and spat. They were never subdued.

From our porch, looking out on the Pacific Ocean, we watched pelicans dive bombing for fish. Each afternoon huge flocks – a hundred or more at a time – would fly right past us, headed for their nesting grounds.

But even better was the sky at night. After all the meager lights in that little town went dark, the sky became a light show of blazing stars and star clusters, plunging meteors, wandering planets. Sometimes, very late, when the call of nature roused me from bed, I would walk out on the patio alone and stare and stare at the universe, and especially at the Milky Way, wheeling above me. Stars by the thousands, unbelievably distinct and clear.

In Ocean Grove, on most nights, you can actually count the number of visible stars. Often it’s no more than a dozen. Sometimes it’s none. Living under a permanent scrim of light pollution, we forget how many stars are out there. Many of us have never actually seen the night sky in its true state – as I saw it on the coast of Nicaragua, and as our ancestors knew it.

In a couple of weeks we’ll hear jokes about the Mayan calendar coming to an end, and how that will be the destruction of the earth and all mankind. No need to do your Christmas shopping or pay your taxes now, our doom is written in the stars, har har. What idiots, those Mayans.

But really, the Mayans and all ancient peoples lived their lives in constant communion with the teeming, moving lights in the natural sky. The ancient peoples had no idea what those lights were. They noted that the lights moved in strange ways. Sometimes one could be seen to streak and fall out of the sky. Sometimes a comet would appear, ominously hovering. (What did that portent? Something important, right?) The night sky was those people’s television, fraught with drama and bad news.

The constellation Orion. The three middle stars are his belt

Religions arose to explain all those moving lights. Stories were told. People saw pictures in the sky – a lion, a crab, a hunter named Orion holding a bow in one hand and a club in the other. Because the planets moved independently of the rest of the turning firmament, the ancients associated those special lights with gods – Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn.

But because the sky was so brilliant, prominent, ever-present and mysterious, ancient people studied it methodically. They built observatories and took and recorded measurements. They found that the heavenly bodies displayed repeating patterns which, when plotted, yielded information useful to hunters, farmers, nomads and sailors. Astrologers tried to discern when “the stars were right” for planting or marrying or doing business or giving birth.

The Bible says the “wise men” (men who understood signs in the sky) were guided to Bethlehem by a star. If such a beckoning star rose in the sky now, I doubt we’d even see it — unless JCP&L suffered a major blackout.

Hurricane Sandy taught us the value of electricity, and I’m happy to have the power back on; I would never want to do without it. Still, it’s not a trivial thing, our loss of that ancient awareness of the richness of the sky.

 

 

BILLIE HOLIDAY  (this song added on 4/23/21):

 

Read Full Post »

The Fountains of Wayne. Adam Schlesinger is on the right. Stereogum.com

The Fountains of Wayne. Adam Schlesinger is on the right. Stereogum.com

By Paul Goldfinger, Editor  @Blogfinger, Updated from our 2013 post.  Please read the comments.

Going back in music history to Gregorian chants, Mozart operas, and Frank Sinatra singing with Tommy Dorsey, it was always important for the songs’ lyrics to make sense and to be clearly  heard.   Sinatra was a fanatic about phrasing and pronunciation of  words.

Lyricists always compose songs so that they tell a story  (as in Broadway musicals) or express ideas (as in “You’ve Got to be Carefully Taught” from South Pacific) or consist of poetry  (as in “You are the angel glow that lights the stars” from “All the Things You Are”)

However, since the rock era of recent times, the words, if you can clearly hear them, sometimes are unclear as to their meaning.  Which brings me to the late Adam Schlesinger, a successful modern-day songwriter who  wrote an editorial in the New York Times (2013)  asking whether song lyrics needed to tell a story or even to make any sense at all.

I was fascinated.  Adam Schlesinger had won Grammy and Emmy awards along with Tony and Oscar nominations for his song writing.

In the editorial, he said, “Lately I’ve been getting more interested in focusing on the overall sound and texture of song, and worrying less about the logic of the words.”

So, at last, someone who could explain to me why I am so often baffled by modern song lyrics.

What’s the Story NY Times link

THE CLICK FIVE:  “Just the Girl” written by Adam Schlesinger

Here is one of Adam Schlesinger’s songs performed by “The Click Five.”  It’s a simple story with understandable lyrics.  Note that Schlesinger is from New Jersey and was one of the founders of the group  “Fountains of Wayne.”

 

And here is a song I love,  but the lyrics are incomprehensible.   It is by a group called Beirut. The song is “A Sunday Smile.”

 

Read Full Post »

img116

 

LOUDON WAINRIGHT.  “Carrickfergus”  From Boardwalk Empire  

 

Read Full Post »

Main Avenue. Ocean Grove, NJ. Aug 17, 2013. Paul Goldfinger photos ©

Main Avenue. Ocean Grove, NJ.  Paul Goldfinger photos.

It was a perfect summer day, and the Grove was jumping.  The beach was beautiful, and downtown was really busy. Kids were buzzing around on skateboards and scooters. It seemed like everybody was happy and wanting to talk to each other.

It took us an hour to walk from Cheese on Main back up to Delaware.  We had free samples of hard salami, Gouda cheese and salt watermelon jelly. Then we made our way back on Main, stopping every block or so to talk to somebody.   We spoke to Sue, Carl, Fran, Nick, Arty, Charlotte, Kathleen and Ray.

Main Avenue. Ocean Grove, Nj ©

Main Avenue. Ocean Grove, NJ

They say that Ocean Grove has a porch culture, but the friendliness extends beyond the porches. It spills into the parks, the shops, the beachfront and on the sidewalks.

Ocean Grove was a happening place today. It keeps getting better and better.  —Paul Goldfinger, Editor Blogfinger

FRANK SINATRA:

Read Full Post »

Tuscan vineyards. By Paul Goldfinger © Click left for full view

Chianti vineyards.  By Paul Goldfinger.   Click image for full view.

 

CLINT EASTWOOD.   “Doe Eyes”—The love theme from the Bridges of Madison County”— album version.

 

Read Full Post »

tin_men

 

By Paul Goldfinger MD, Editor @ Blogfinger.net.  Re-posted.

Barry Levinson (b. 1942) is a film director known for his work featuring the city of Baltimore. I’ve always loved his movies, especially “Diner” and “Avalon. ” He also directed “Good Morning Vietnam” and “Rain Man.”

In 1987 he made the third in his Baltimore series—“Tin Men” starring Danny DeVito (a Jersey guy born in Neptune Township,) Richard Dreyfuss, and Barbara Hershey.

Danny DeVito on the Asbury beach July 29, 2002 during the Springsteen launch of "the Rising" Paul Goldfinger photo

Danny DeVito on the Asbury beach July 29, 2002 during the Springsteen launch of “The Rising.” Paul Goldfinger photo. © Blogfinger.net

The film, set in 1962, is about the con-men who sell aluminum siding door-to-door in Baltimore. The characters and dialogue are wonderful including several scenes with the guys sitting in a diner discussing television, gambling, women, money and their adventures as tin men. It features a soundtrack from the 1960’s including our song below by the Nat King Cole Trio, recorded in 1940.

“Sweet Lorraine” is a jazz classic written in 1928. There have been several hit versions, and the  Cole Trio rendition is the one featured in “Tin Men.”

Here it is:

I think that “Sweet Lorraine” is one of the best musical tributes written as a paean to a woman with a particular name. I found a list of 200 songs that contain a woman’s name in the title. These are the ones that have Sweet——: Lorraine, Mary, Melissa, Annette, Caroline, Virginia and Adeline.

But here is my list of favorite songs with a woman’s name in the title: (feel free to add your favorites:)

1. Judy is a Punk

2. Jennie From the Block

3. Wake Up Little Susie

4. Song for Myla Goldberg

5. Patricia the Stripper

6. Help Me Rhonda

7. Long Tall Sally

8. Lonesome Suzie

9. Christine Sixteen

10. Believe Me, Natalie

11.Run Around Sue

12. Donna and Blitzen

13. Mrs. Brown You’ve Got a Lovely Daughter

14. And finally my favorite: Don’t Walk Away Eileen

Read Full Post »

Pat Brenan of Neptune has been attending every Planotone concert for thirty years. Pat Brenan of Neptune has been attending every Planotone concert for thirty years, dressed as Kenny and his guys do. Paul Goldfinger photo  9/7/13. Ocean Grove, NJ. Great Auditorium.

 

 

By Paul Goldfinger, who wrote the Book of Love, and Editor of Blogfinger.net

 

2013:   The official count for last night’s Doo Wops concert was 2,700, but it sure looked like more than that—downstairs practically all seats occupied, and the balcony seats about 1/3 full.  The crowd was wide awake, alive and well.  We lost count of the standing O’s, whistles, shouts and applause.

Each of the three performing groups thanked the audience for helping to keep a musical era alive—an era of nostalgic, romantic and understandable music.  This was music that you could dance slow with, under low twinkling lights in gyms decorated with crepe paper.

That music, in OG last night, clearly was attracting some people who were born after the actual Doo Wop times of 1950’s going into the ’60’s when it helped form the basis for rock and roll.

The Beatles found inspiration in performers including Little Richard, Buddy Holly, Jerry Lee Lewis, the Drifters and many others.

Last night, the show opened with the Duprees–not my idea of a Doo Wop act now, but they are polished performers. The Duprees have had many hits during their 50 year history (1962-2012) and they do put on a musically excellent show, and they are an example of a traditional group that has modernized their act.    Unfortunately the loudness of their presentation sometimes made the music a bit muddy.  The personnel of this group has changed many times over the years. The current group are all fine singers.

The Duprees are celebrating their 50th anniversary with a new album. (2012), and I did like their rendition last night  of the Bobby Darin hit “Beyond the Sea” from that album.

THE DUPREES, from their 50th anniversary album with “Behind the Sea.”

 

 

When the CMA decided to end secular performances in the  GA, we were already seeing modernizing of the doowop music. Some groups brought in female voices to replace wobbly falsettos of the old timers, many of whom were ready for a bed at the Rock and Roll Hall of fame.  

And, the CMA has recently re-done their sound system—-thank goodness.

KENNY VANCE has had a long career dating back to the fifties.  He is now 79 years old and was a yearly favorite in the Great Auditorium. But he has modernized his performances as evidenced by his album. (2017)  Lost and Found—Archives volume I.  His version of “Tears on My Pillow”  shows how this music can be made alive again, and he has a volume II as well.  I wish he could be seen live again in Ocean Grove.

 

—Paul Goldfinger, Music Editor @Blogfinger.net

Read Full Post »

 

A large audience attended the event  in the Great Auditorium including Eddie (left) and Karen from OG,  and Ernie and Ronni from Edison. Paul Goldfinger photo. July 3,  2012. Blogfinger.net. 

 

Blogfinger has posted a number of articles about this unique musician:  Harry Eichhorn (1927-2019.)  The post (below) is from 2012.  Note that his wife Mary, mentioned in this article,  pre-deceased him.

By Paul Goldfinger, MD.   Editor Blogfinger.net

 

Harry Eichhorn and the Ocean Grove Summer Band performed in the Great Auditorium on July 3, 2012.  Harry, who founded the group 60 years ago and who has been its conductor all that time,  brought a varied program to the GA on Tuesday night.  There was something for everyone including Irving Berlin, Tchaikovsky, The Jersey Boys and John Phillip Sousa.

Harry is a musical multi-tasker. One of the selections featured snippets from at least 30 different songs.

Another consisted of  a medley of songs from the Music Man. One of those was “Till There was You,” probably a tribute to Mrs. Eichhorn who plays baritone horn and sits along the edge of the brass section.  Intermittently she would jump up from her seat and rush over to the organ or the piano. Harry owes her—she’s like a utility infielder for the band.

The tradition of keeping Sousa’s music alive in Ocean Grove was repeated at this concert. The first act ended with the “Washington  Post March,”  while the show closed with the “Stars and Stripes Forever.”    My favorite part of Stars and Stripes is towards the end when the piccolos get to shine.  Wouldn’t it be great if this wonderful march could start with the piccolos?  Well that’s what we would do in the Blogfinger version.

 

In this video, the GA sound quality is sub-optimal recorded with an iPhone, but you can get an idea as to a classic Summer Band concert in the GA playing Sousa.  At the point where everyone stands up, the video became tangled due to a collision with the guy in the next seat, a senior veteran who said, “Get that iPhone out my face sonny.”

But the big finish is always a goose bumper with the flag lit up and everyone clapping.  A nice conclusion to a gorgeous beach day in the Grove.  —Paul Goldfinger

 

Read Full Post »

NYC Street Series. By Paul Goldfinger. Click left for larger version. 7/31/2012.

 

SOUNDTRACK. Ace Frehley : New York Groove

 

Read Full Post »

Ocean Grove, NJ. By Paul Goldfinger. © October, 2013.

Ocean Grove, NJ. By Paul Goldfinger. © October, 2013.

 

ASTRUD GILBERTO:  “It Might As Well Be Spring:”  from the album Astrud For Lovers. Of course, it’s Stan Getz on tenor sax—unforgettable.

 

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »