Lake Taupo

Lake Taupo

Thursday, June 23, 2016

Street Chant - "Pedestrian Support League"

"Pedestrian Support League" is all about the mundane and the dull times in a crappy old flat. Times of depression and paranoia are scattered throughout the song "you’re stealing my soap, and don’t think that I don’t know” being just one example. But the song itself is so far away from the dull theme - it's a case of perfect jangly indie-pop... a little ironic, much like the delivery from Emily Edrosa. It comes from Street Chant's second album 'Hauora', and like many other sophomore albums, this one must've been difficult as well. For a start, it came six years after their debut 'Means' and some of the difficulties have been stated by the band over the last couple of years before the actual release. But now we have an album we can enjoy and they have something they should be proud of.



Sunday, June 12, 2016

Al Hunter - "I Don't Want To Go To Work Today"

There are songs that suit certain days or nights of the week or songs that highlight the mood of a particular time. But there are not many positive songs about that much maligned Monday. So here is a song that not only defines Monday for most of us, it is also as negative as all the others.

Thursday, June 2, 2016

Shona Laing - "(Glad I'm) Not A Kennedy"



Shona Laing released "(Glad I'm) Not A Kennedy" in 1985. It was originally from her 'Genre' album and then included on her 'South' album a couple of years later.... after it had exploded and became her defining moment. The song actually came from trivial beginnings. On television there was something about the Kennedy's that made her say out loud "Glad I'm not a Kennedy" - obviously because of the tragedies that have struck the family throughout. In fact, the tragedies continued after this song was written - with the plane crash which took the lives of John F. Kennedy Jr. and his wife Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy in 1999.

One Kennedy tragedy was that of Rosemary Kennedy, the daughter of Joe and Rose, born in 1918. This was a very different kind of tragedy and one that only came to my attention when she died in 2005. While she lived to a ripe old age, her story was just as sad as the others, worse in the fact that it was based on a decision by her father that changed everything.

Due to a long and delayed birth she was deprived of oxygen for long periods, which may have contributed to some intellectual disabilities. As she grew up she blossomed into a beautiful young lady. She was a popular Kennedy daughter and her slowness more or less went unnoticed by the adoring general public.

Unfortunately for her, her siblings were succeeding academically and on the sports fields while she fell behind. Her behaviour was becoming more erratic and puberty wasn't making things easier for her parents and the reputation of the family. In response, it was decided that she would have a prefrontal lobotomy... at the age of 23. She was one of the first to have this new precedure. Her father was told it would settle her mood swings etc. But what it really did was incapacitate her and left her institutionised for the rest of her life - with the mental capacity of a 2-year old. A total disaster!

I've just started reading the biography 'Rosemary: The hidden Kennedy daughter' by Kate Clifford Larson and I already accept it's going to be an emotionally difficult read.