So tonight was the big night Phil and the gang were going to call up Jerry specifically at the seance show in the Little Room.
Or at least that's what a bunch of old zoners immediately assumed.
I guess it's probably not over yet.
I wonder how the show is going?
I wonder how the event went overall?
I hope Jerry's cool with how everything has gone since he moved on.
He's probably pissed at MikeW.
But then who isn't?
Top of Page Bottom of Page PermalinkFull Name: An organ grinder’s tune Turtle
on Monday, December 12, 2016 – 10:14 am
he said "hey man"..
he said "hey man"..
Top of Page Bottom of Page PermalinkFull Name: jazfish Jazfish
on Monday, December 12, 2016 – 10:22 am
"Iko ,Iko all day. Hey now."
"Iko ,Iko all day. Hey now."
Top of Page Bottom of Page PermalinkFull Name: joe coolio
on Monday, December 12, 2016 – 10:30 am
He said for the black widow
He said for the black widow to give Mountain girl the money he promised her.
Top of Page Bottom of Page PermalinkFull Name: ogkb pyramidheat
on Monday, December 12, 2016 – 10:32 am
"phil, please start melting
"phil, please start melting faces again w/ steve kimock...wtf is wrong w/ you"
Top of Page Bottom of Page PermalinkFull Name: Yukon Cornelius got, Straight outta Trumpcuntry
on Monday, December 12, 2016 – 11:04 am
"Where's my briefcase"?
"Where's my briefcase"?
Top of Page Bottom of Page PermalinkFull Name: aiq aiq
on Monday, December 12, 2016 – 11:05 am
:
: If you've only heard one Mardi Gras song, it's probably "Iko Iko," the hit recorded by the Dixie Cups in 1965. An earlier version (titled "Jock-a-mo") by James "Sugar Boy" Crawford came out in 1953, and many artists, from Dr. John to the Grateful Dead to Cyndi Lauper, have covered it. It's a playful, taunting chant, that comes from the traditional call and response challenges of two battling tribes at a Mardi Gras parade. The chorus goes something like this:
Everyone has recorded it a little differently, but no one who recorded it knew what it meant. Crawford had heard the phrases at parade battles, and the Dixie Cups said they had heard their grandmother sing it.
There are as many guesses about the meaning of this song as there are versions of it: Jock-a-mo means "brother John," or "jokester," or "Giacomo;" Jock-a-mo fin a ney means "kiss my ass," or "John is dead"; Iko means "I go," or "pay attention," or "gold," or "hiking around"; the words come from French, or Yoruba, or Italian...
Reporter Drew Hinshaw decided to ask some experts about the origin of the song after he noticed the similarity between the Iko refrain and a stirring call-and-response chant he heard at a parade in Ghana: "Iko Iko! Aayé!" In this 2009 article in the New Orleans music magazine Offbeat, he recounts how he showed the lyrics to a local linguistics professor who thought they definitely came from a West African language. Back in the US, a professor of Creole Studies thought it came from a mixture of Yoruba and French Creole, and proposed the following breakdown:
Meanwhile, Wikipedia says some mysterious, unnamed "creole lingua specialists" endorse the following French-based Creole interpretation:
Another theory making the rounds of various folk music message boards is that the "jock-a-mo" part comes from a Native American language where "chokma finha" means "very good." This at least matches up with what Crawford said about his original 1953 recording: he sang "chock-a-mo," but it was misspelled on the record label as "jock-a-mo."
We will probably never be able to pin down the origin of the words or what they once meant. But it may well be that even from the very first chanting of the phrases, the Africans, Native Americans, French, and English that made up the great language/culture mélange of New Orleans all understood it in their own way. And still had a good old time anyway.
Top of Page Bottom of Page PermalinkFull Name: jazfish Jazfish
on Monday, December 12, 2016 – 11:45 am
"Iko Iko wen dey . Hey now"
"Iko Iko wen dey . Hey now"
Jerry needed correction.
Top of Page Bottom of Page PermalinkFull Name: charmskooldropout hounder
on Monday, December 12, 2016 – 12:15 pm
"more lube"
"more lube"
Top of Page Bottom of Page PermalinkFull Name: Thumbkinetic (Bluestnote)
on Monday, December 12, 2016 – 12:25 pm
Where's my Zippo?
Where's my Zippo?
Top of Page Bottom of Page PermalinkFull Name: joe coolio
on Monday, December 12, 2016 – 12:59 pm
Stop singing Phil and let
Stop singing Phil and let your kids make it on their own.
Top of Page Bottom of Page PermalinkFull Name: Def. High Surfdead
on Monday, December 12, 2016 – 01:45 pm
"You gonna finish that?"
"You gonna finish that?"
Top of Page Bottom of Page PermalinkFull Name: aiq aiq
on Monday, December 12, 2016 – 02:32 pm
For years I thought the
For years I thought the Creedence song was "Stuck in a low dive again".
Top of Page Bottom of Page PermalinkFull Name: Thumbkinetic (Bluestnote)
on Monday, December 12, 2016 – 11:51 pm
HA. Lodi is worse.
HA. Lodi is worse.
Top of Page Bottom of Page PermalinkFull Name: Yukon Cornelius got, Straight outta Trumpcuntry
on Tuesday, December 13, 2016 – 01:11 am
Thumbkinetic
(Bluestnote) on Monday, December 12, 2016 – 12:25 pm
Where's my Zippo?<< There's one in the pocket of a local 541 guitar player. Handed down from an "elder"