THE DELL VIKINGS
THE DELL VIKINGS
Posted in Great Auditorium Musical Event, Photograph by Paul Goldfinger | Tagged Saturday night in Ocean Grove | 1 Comment »

Mr. Paul Eichlin pauses and enjoys the morning mist on the Ocean Grove pier. 9/19/15 By Bob Bowné. Special to Blogfinger. Reposted from 2015.
KERMIT RUFFINS:
Posted in Ocean Grove Gallery, Ocean Grove lifestyles, Ocean Grovers Around Town, Photograph by Bob Bowné | Tagged Bob Bowne Photo, Ocean Grove pier | 3 Comments »

Paul Goldfinger photo. July 2024. Paul Goldfinger. Auditorium Square Park. Ocean Grove. Click once to view larger.
How’s About It Baby?
Posted in Blogfinger Presents |

7/14/24. Bishop Jayne Chapel. Ocean Grove,, NJ. Paul Goldfinger photo 7/14/24. Click once to enlarge.
Ronald Naldi, famous tenor, presented a lovely concert on a Sunday afternoon accompanied by Sean Gough, a jazz pianist and accompanist for his grandfather. A good sized audience came out despite a threat of rain. The event was free, but contributions were welcome. The program was beautiful and varied. It’s always a thrill to hear Mr. Naldi perform in such a personal venue as this
Check your CMA summer program for other concerts where Mr. Naldi and the “Quartet” would appear.
From Mr. Naldi’s album Torne a Surriento. “A Vucchella.”
Posted in Blogfinger Presents |
MARTHA WAINWRIGHT. From the soundtrack of The Aviator.
Posted in Art, Asbury Park | Tagged octopus in Asbury Park | 1 Comment »

May 19, 2015. A misty afternoon at the Ocean Grove beach. Hardly anyone else was there. Paul Goldfinger photo.
“And when you wake up each morn
Aren’t you glad that you were born
Think what you’ve got the whole day through
Aren’t you glad you’re you”
Composer Jimmy Van Heusen 1945. Oscar nominee for this song in the film The Bells of St. Mary’s.
GERRY MULLIGAN and QUARTET “Aren’t You Glad You’re You?”
Posted in Blogfinger Presents, Photographic Gallery: Ocean Grove | Tagged A day at the beach in Ocean Grove New Jersey |
THE KING SISTERS:
Posted in Blogfinger Presents |
Torro Shoe Repair and Leather Works. Ft. Myers, Fla. By Paul Goldfinger © 2015.
By Paul Goldfinger, Editor @Blogfinger
I went into the Torro Shoe Repair and Leather Works shop on McGregor Blvd. in Fort Myers, Florida, not far from the Edison and Ford estates. The sign in the window offered cheerleading and kick boxing lessons. Inside, it was a small space with several machines to fix shoes and the sort of disarray that only occurs in places where artists or craftsmen work.
Somehow old-time shoe repair shops like this survive because some leather items are too good to be disposable. My belt came from Pennsylvania via Bill’s Khaki’s, and I needed two holes added.
This is not a belt to throw away when the size needs adjusting. I’m a sucker for handmade items that have patina, enduring parts, mechanical mechanisms, and classy old-fashioned styling, so this is the ad from Bill’s that got me to purchase their English bridle leather belt with a stainless steel buckle—this belt had “meaning:”
“For years, customers have asked us to make a belt that goes perfectly with our khakis and jeans. But making a belt just for the sake of it wasn’t compelling… the belt had to have meaning. Then we found Floyd, a second generation Amish harness maker whose workshop lies deep in the remote mountains of Pennsylvania. This belt was our first collaborative effort. The end result explains why we went to such great lengths to bring these belts to you.”
I never met the Torro craftsman who fixed my belt at the rate of $2.00 per hole. I imagined him to be old-world, perhaps Italian, in his manner, wearing a soiled apron that was tinted by hundreds of cans of shoe polish—-the kind that you had to rub into the shoe. I thought he might have Puccini playing on the radio. But he never materialized , and there was no music.
Instead, a pretty, slender, young blond woman came out from the back. She had no patina or other signs of aging or handmade workmanship, but she did have style. Maybe she was the kick boxing instructor.
Anyhow she told me to leave the belt and come back later. I said, “Don’t I get a ticket or something?” She said, ” I just handed it to you.” Uh oh, my cover was blown. I was so busy being distracted that a tiny orange ticket wound up in my shirt pocket. On it it said only “2 holes.”
Did I feel loved at Torro? Not really, but I did enjoy the visit. And my pants no longer tend to drift south.
PINK MARTINI from their album “Hang On Little Tomato.”
Posted in Blogfinger feature article, Blogfinger Presents, Feature article | Tagged Old fashioned shoe repair shop in Florida | 3 Comments »
BOBBY SHORT
Posted in Blogfinger Presents |
ENNIO MORRICONE. Love Theme From “Cinema Paradiso”. Anne Akiko Myers on violin.
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Great Auditorium doors are closed for this photo by Paul Goldfinger Ocean Grove, New Jersey. Blogfinger.net. One click to enlarge
RACHEL CANTU “De Colores.” (in colors)
Posted in Ocean Grove architecture, Ocean Grove Great Auditorium, Ocean Grove photographs, Photography: Jersey Shore Gallery | Tagged Great Auditorium in Ocean Grove |

Grand Marshall Michael Badger. July 6, 2024. Click once to enlarge. Paul Goldfinger, Editor, Blogfinger.net. An honor in a secular venue for the CMA’s prior President.
Michael: A song from your fans: It’s Sophie Millman.
Posted in Blogfinger Presents |
Hi Paul:
Greetings from Manhattan. There is a common aid to navigation — often used in coastal waters — that has always had a special meaning for me as a poet. Here is “The Bell Buoy,” a poem from my 2008 collection, Father of Water.
Best wishes,
Charles Pierre

“Shivering Sand.” Photogravure by Wylie. Undated. Click once to see the bell buoy more clearly. Reposted this poem from 2015 Blogfinger.net. ©
BELL BUOY
By Charles Pierre.
There is something singular in the rhythms
of the bell buoy, as it rings in the wake
of an unknown vessel already passing
on to its destination. The restless gestures
of this solitaire, anchored in the routine
of the sea, are a directing presence,
even in this hostile chopping,
metal on metal clanging from its heart,
clanging down the chain to the muddy anchor,
clanging out above the waves, creating
a point in the pointless sea, echoing out
to another, its clanging a song
of hope through these splintered waters,
a hard human song in an inhuman place,
something with a ringing truth to it
of who we are, something to sustain us,
wherever this imagined drifting leads.
Sounds: bell buoy ringing; waves hitting boat:
Music on the water, from the film The Sand Pebbles (1966) with Steve McQueen.:
MATT MONROE
Posted in Blogfinger Presents, Poems by Charles Pierre | Tagged Charles Pierre poet | 3 Comments »