Tuesday, January 13, 2015

Singing in dialect: Plantation Love Song - by Ruth McEnery Stuart

By Jack Brummet

When I was in 8th grade, my chorus teacher, Adelaide Anderson,  decided I should enter solo contests.  One of the two songs I performed was a dialect song called Plantation Love-Song.  It was a strange choice and was extremely hard to sing the dialect.  I think she chose it for me because she sensed my hillbilly roots.  As uncomfortable as I was singing it, I never had the problem of singing the same song as any other contestant.

I've looked for the song on and off over the years since the Internet cranked but only found it recently, since Google has recently scanned a book that contained the song.



Wikipedia:  "Stuart has been characterized as belonging to the school of 'American local color writing that emphasizes regional characteristics in landscape, way of life, and language.'  Stuart's treatment of blacks forms a significant portion of her corpus and, if potentially troublesome today, 'contemporary critics acclaimed her as providing an authentic representation of African Americans.' "

---o0o---

Thursday, January 08, 2015

The last line of Dialogue from the movie "Boyhood"

". . .it’s constant, the moments, it’s just — it’s like it’s always right now, you know?”


---o0o---

Painting: Curling

By Jack Brummet

[from a drawing I digitized and processed in Photoshop]

---o0o---

Wednesday, January 07, 2015

Caught by the surveillance camera

Image from Baroan Technologies:

---o0o---

Arizona D.O.T. website: Sasquatches/Yeti?/Bigfoot/Abominable Snowmen?

By Jack Brummet

"We might have spotted a family of sasquatches on SR 260 near Heber this afternoon. What do you think?" the Department of Transportation wrote in the caption of photos posted on their official Facebook, January 1st, 2015:
---o0o---