Saturday, October 21, 2023

TOMMY JAMES AND THE SHONDELLS AND THE MOB

You are known by the company you keep. When Thomas Gregory Jackson became Tommy James of the Shondells, he was already on a career arc that included the most popular musicians of his (our) generation at that time and also drew him into the circle of Morris Levy’s Roulette Records which was a subset of the Mafia crime families of New York and New Jersey. 

Though his own family moved in his early years because his father was a hotel manager, basically, Tommy James came from Niles, Michigan. So, this could be the story of Bob Seeger and the Silver Bullet Band or of Joe Walsh and the James Gang, or a dozen others from the 1960s who lived anywhere between Pittsburgh and Chicago. I did not know all of his gold records. Some I had to listen to on YouTube. His early hits echoed in my memories of times and places over the two weeks in which I was immersed in reading this. 

 

Tommy James’s autobiography is unassuming and revealing. 

  

Me, the Mob, and the Music:
One Helluva Ride with Tommy James
and the Shondells
 
by Tommy James with Martin Fitzpatrick,
Scribner; Simon & Schuster, 2011.


The title comes from a statement by Morris Levy after the first hit song: You’re in for a hell of a ride (pages 62-63). In the wake of that chart topper, Thomas Gregory Jackson became Tommy James. The name “Shondells” had no special meaning except that several pop groups had similar names: Rondels, Del-Tones, Delfonics, etc.

 

For much of his career, he lived in residence hotels and apartments. And of course, he was often touring, playing in town after town, city after city. I was surprised that even though he grew up in the hotel business, he seemed never to have used any special knowledge to garner a room upgrade, off-hours room service, or anything else. 

 

It took him a long time to come around to being a parent and he did not do very well at it. Abandoning his wife and child, it took about 90 pages before he called home, even though his wife was living with his parents from the very first. (Her family was opposed to the marriage because they were opposed to the pregnancy.) 

 

It was interesting that he absorbed the Mob mentality. After several scenes in which Morris Levy threatened people, Tommy used the same language and tone when he felt that Gene Pitney had taken his music. 

 

Hubert Humphrey wrote the liner notes for the album Crimson and Clover (page 165). This was a time of protest and very few young musicians were aligned with the Establishment, not even with the Democrats and certainly not with the Republicans. On another matter entirely, I once read that Barry Goldwater said that listening to Hubert Humphrey was like trying to read Playboy with your wife turning the pages. So, the story here of Tommy James giving Vice President Humphrey amphetamines struck a responsive chord. Humphrey said that he got a lot of work done that night. I can only imagine. 


I have to confess that I did not know until I read it here that Mayor Richard Daley of Chicago arranged for ballot boxes to disappear, thus swinging the electoral college votes from Illinois into the Republican column, contributing to the Nixon victory. Daley was furious because at the convention, in a speech nominating George McGovern, Sen. Abraham Ribicoff denounced Daley's administration for the "Gestapo tactics" of the Chicago police department.

 

Some years after that, eventually, Tommy James found his religion, realized that he was always a Christian, and had himself placed at the Betty Ford Clinic. 

 

Hit Songs I Know

Hanky Panky 

I Think We’re Alone Now 

Mony Mony 

Mirage

Crystal Blue Persuasion

Draggin the Line

 

Mentioned in the book, these songs I did not know but found on YouTube. 

Ball of Fire

Say I Am

She

Sweet Cherry Wine

 

PREVIOUSLY ON NECESSARY FACTS

Austin at Night 

South by Southwest 2013 

Rachmaninoff 

Music Makes You Braver 

State Guard Song “Texans Serving Texans”

Friday, October 20, 2023

Messier 30 and a Nearby Star

I made a project of viewing globular cluster Messier 30 again over three nights.

I located the object by drawing a triangle from Delta Capricorni (Deneb Algiedi - tail of the Goat), and Zeta Capricorni and the expected position of Messier 31 which was not visible. I found that dropping vertically not from Delta Capricorni, as recommended by Sue French in Celestial Sampler but from Nashira (Gamma Capri) to the same altitude as Zeta Cap worked better.  M30 is as far east from Zeta as Delta is from Gamma. I found Messier 31 in the field of view. 

Last night I investigated the star to the east of M30, which according to the Sky & Telescope Pocket Sky Atlas (Jumbo Edition) is a double. I could not split it. I used these oculars (eyepieces):

Meade 5000 14 mm. = 47X

Tele Vue 7 mm = 94X

Stellarvue 4mm = 165X

Tele Vue 7mm + 2X Barlow = 188X



That last did make the center of M30 a little sparkly and showed more of the elongaged shape of the cluster, but the overall view was poor at high magnification.

PREVIOUSLY ON NECESSARY FACTS

Globular Clusters

Two Deep-Sky Targets

The Andromeda Galaxy

Binocular Highlights (Book Review)


Sunday, October 15, 2023

Messier 30 and Other Views

Last night and this morning was my first time out since 30 August. I used the Celestron AVX mount and AstroTech 115 mm Apochromatic refractor to get reacquainted with familiar objects. However, for me the big win was a new target, Messier 30. M30 is likely an outside visitor. A  globular cluster attracted away from a satellite galaxy, it moves retrograde through the Milky Way disk.

(This was originally a post in the Observation Log IV on Cloudy Nights.)

 

I also set up my Explore Scientific 102 mm doublet refractor on the Twilight 1 mount. This is something that I do for learning, so as not to be totally dependent on the computerized goto AVX. The AVX found M30. Then, I located it in that telescope's red dot and found it again in the manual mount. It took some panning and scanning but was worth it, of course. I spent about 20 minutes with Messier 30 and the two telescopes. Planning my night, I found it in Sue French's Celestial Sample and logged it as my first goal. 

 

These were viewed with the 115 mm f/7 and a 14mm 82-degree Meade ocular:

 

14 October from 2130

(I re-ran the calibration because going from Vega to Altair, the mount wanted to drive the telescope into its own leg and I had to hit the power switch and start over. Never jog a robot without covering the E-stop.)

 

2208 - Dabih beta1,2 Capricorni

2214 - Algedi alpha 1,2(a,b) Capricorni

2225 - Epsilon Lyrae (Not split at 57X, I changed eyepieces to an AstroTech 5.5 mm Premium Flat for 151X and it was perfect. Also discernable at 102X with a 7 mm Tele Vue. I know that we all can achieve the double-double with less aperture and magnification, but a lot depends on the sky. My sky was good for the city, which is why I hauled out the AVX and AT-115 but it is very urban for a nominal suburb.)

2232 - M57 Ring Nebula. 5.5 mm. Large and almost colorful.

 

15 October 0550 AM

0556 - Messier 41

0607 - Venus almost first quarter, fuller crescent. Used 90% Moon filter.

0614 - Messier 31 Andromeda Galaxy - almost elliptical, large fuzzy patch over the hospital to my north.

0622 - Messier 1 Crab Nebula: many stars but no joy.

0628 - Messier 35 open cluster in the foot of Gemini

0634 - Rosette Nebula: many stars but no joy.

0642 - Castor - 14 mm (51X) not quite split. 7 mm split well.

 

PREVIOUSLY ON NECESSARY FACTS

 

Focus on Simon Georg Ploessl 

Measuring Your Universe: Alan Hirshfeld’s Astronomy Activity Manual 

Austin Under the Stars 

Meteorites 


Annular Eclipse 14 October 2023

The City of Kyle Public Library Astronomy Club hosted viewing of the annular solar eclipse of 14 October 2023. The Library also pitched in with extra viewing glasses, a case of bottle water, and a bucket of sidewalk chalk. We gave out 22 pairs of glasses, 12 from the club and 10 from the library. About 30 people attended, many staying up to an hour past maximum.





















































































From Kyle, Texas, we were not on the "Ring of Fire" path, but one of the viewers reading her cellphone reported that we would be at 88.9% coverage. 

Helping the crowd, I never got to take a photograph with my 102 mm refractor.

 

PREVIOUSLY ON NECESSARY FACTS

 

Lunar Eclipse 8 November 2022 

Jupiter-Saturn Conjunction 2020 

Redshift: Six Years with Astronomy 

Cursing the Moon 

Eclipses? 

An Amateur Astronomer’s Credo 

When Worlds Collide