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Sound Bites

@krispyweiss / krispyweiss.tumblr.com

With Kristopher Weiss
The ramblings of a frustrated, Luddite music critic - and fanatical fan. You can also follow Sound Bites on Facebook: @kristopherweisssoundbites
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Boomtown Rats Guitarist Garry Roberts Dies at 72

- “We feel strangely adrift without him tonight,” band says

Garry Roberts, guitarist and co-founder of the Boomtown Rats, died Nov. 9, his bandmates said.

Roberts was 72; no cause was given.

“We have known Garry since we were children and so we feel strangely adrift without him tonight,” band members Bob Geldof, Pete Briquette and Simon Crowe said in a statement issued “with very great grief.”

The Rats formed in Ireland in 1975 and scored hits such as “Like Clockwork” and “I Don’t Like Mondays” before their initial split in 1986. The band reformed in 2013 and released Citizens of Boomtown, its first album since 1984, in 2020.

Imelda May remembered Roberts as a “total legend and thoroughly nice man.

“Sending love to his family, friends and band family,” she wrote on Twitter.

11/9/22

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Movie Review: “Harry Chapin: When in Doubt, Do Something”

When in doubt, watch “Harry Chapin: When in Doubt, Do Something”

The story of Chapin’s life will - at least temporarily - restore one’s faith in humanity and remind viewers of the power of one.

Chapin’s story is one of music, yes. But it’s also one of family - his own and the American and world families, too. Chapin sometimes neglected the former to benefit the latter. But everyone admired him - except maybe his half-brother and manager, who wanted Chapin to focus more on his career and less on his charitable efforts.

Chapin skipped a July 15, 1981, business meeting to discuss doing just that. After a browbeating, he promised to arrive the next day, but he didn’t show up. As it happened, he was killed in a car accident on his way to perform a benefit concert.

Chapin was 38.

Writer/director Rick Korn threads the needle between Chapin’s musical and humanitarian pursuits, which is necessary because, as the film states, thinking of Chapin as a singer/songwriter is like thinking of Babe Ruth as a pitcher. Both are true and both are inaccurate.

Chapin played some 200 concerts a year - most of them benefits - and was personally and chronically underfunded. He co-founded Why Hunger, which continues its mission to this day, and was a member of the Presidential Commission on World Hunger.

“I want to matter,” Chapin says at one point in the film when describing his charitable works.

And beyond the indelible “Cats in the Cradle,” 13 additional hits and more than 16 million records sold, he did matter.

“If there was some way to harness Harry’s energy, we could solve energy problems, world-food problems and everything else,” Sen. Patrick Leahy says in archival footage.

Speakers lauding Chapin in both contemporary and historical interviews and news segments include Chicago’s Robert Lamm, Kenny Rogers, Pat Benatar, Harry Belafonte, Bob Geldof, Billy Joel, Darryl “DMC” McDaniels, Pete Seeger, Richie Havens, Graham Nash, Bruce Springsteen, family members, band members and others.

Chapin was, in Rogers’ words, “the most unselfish person I’ve ever met.”

The 90-minute film traces Chapin’s life from his childhood as the member of an intellectual, artistic and liberal East Coast family to his days as one of folk music’s most-revered storytellers to his humanitarian works to the devastating impact of his death, which Benetar recalls as “the supreme sadness of knowing that light had gone out.”

“When in Doubt, Do Something” ends on Chapin’s legacy, with his wife, children, friends and brothers recalling the musician whose music was secondary to his mission of helping others.

“He wanted to change the world and he did,” Tom Chapin said.

Grade card: “Harry Chapin: When in Doubt, Do Something” - A

8/30/21

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Harry Chapin Documentary Due Oct. 16

He was just getting started.

The words flash on the screen in the trailer for the forthcoming Harry Chapin documentary “When In Doubt, Do Something” and refer to the singer/philanthropist’s 1981 death in a car accident at age 38 - an event Pat Benatar remembers with “the supreme sadness of knowing that light had gone out.”

Billy Joel, Pete Seeger, Darryl “DMC” McDaniels, Bob Geldof and others also appear in the film via contemporary and archival clips.

Described as a “saint,” a “martyr,” “the most charming kid” (Robert Lamm) and “the most unselfish person I’ve ever met” (Kenny Rogers), Chapin co-founded WhyHunger - which will receive a portion of the film’s proceeds - and scored hits like “Taxi” and “Cat's in the Cradle.”

“If there was some way to harness Harry’s energy, we could solve energy problems, world-food problems and everything else,” Sen. Patrick Leahy says in perhaps the striking plaudit of them all.

“When in Doubt, Do Something” - also Chapin’s motto - opens virtually and in theaters Oct. 16.

9/16/20

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Bill Wyman Doc Due June 21

For the Who, it was John Entwistle.

George Harrison played the role in the Beatles.

And within the Rolling Stones, Bill Wyman was “The Quiet One.”

Culled from Wyman’s extensive archive of photos, home movies and memorabilia, archival footage of his former band and new interviews with Eric Clapton, Andrew Loog Oldham, Bob Geldof, producer Glynn Johns and the Supremes’ Mary Wilson, the documentary opens June 21.

The film tracks the band’s genesis through Wyman’s departure in 1993 and his life since.

“It is all of a haze to me,” a younger Keith Richards says in a trailer for the film. “If I want to know what I did in those years, I have to ask Bill Wyman.”

Wyman may be “The Quiet One,” but when he speaks, he says what’s on his mind.

“It was a special band,” he says of the Stones in the clip. “We could blow anyone off a stage.”

6/5/19

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