Monday, February 16, 2009

The Real Baseball Season Starts This Week


By Allen Bacon, Editor, The Daily Bosco

In times past, the beginning of February used to be a very happy time for me. This was the time that my baseball season really started. By this time the Cal State Fullerton Titans, the four time national champions, my hometown team, and my alma mater, with their ballpark within "hearing and throwing distance" from my home would have already started the baseball season against our longtime rivals the Stanford Cardinal and the TCU Horned Frogs.

But not anymore. The powers that be at the NCAA have decided that the teams in Southern California and Florida have a distinct advantage by being able to start the season at the end of January over schools whose baseball fields are covered in four foot of snow at this time of the year. Last season the NCAA decided to move the start date for the College baseball season to the end of February. Actually our first game is this coming Friday.

I can't help it if your school is not smart enough to locate itself in a sunny climate. I can't help it if your school won't build or play in a stadium with a retractrable roof and astroturf. I can't help it if your students and coaches are unwilling to get on a bus and do a Western swing to start the season. You have interrupted the joy of starting the College Baseball Season for me!

To top things off, we were going to have our traditional Alumni Game or the traditional current team kicking the old Titan ballplayer's butts....at least it's a baseball game. But there was a steady downpour last weekend and for the second year in a row that game couldn't be played.

I'm not the only one here in Fullerton who gets anxious for the season to start. On February 1, Super Bowl Sunday, it was the first official day of college baseball practice. There were 200 people in the stands at Goodwin Field...at midnight...for the first practice...then they all stayed for a intrasquad scrimmage that started around 2 in the morning!

So in the meantime, I have to get my baseball fix by watching the Venezuelan Baseball Playoffs on ESPN Deportes or my DVD of the Japanese Pro Yakyu 2008 allstar game...or even my DVD of the Angels 2002 World Series victory over the Giants. I love the Spanish announcers on ESPN Deportes. One guy described a strike out this way...Buenas Dias, Buenas Tardes, y Buenas Noches Yes, baseball announcing cliches are universal.

Of course, baseball is a birthright here in Fullerton. Hall of famers Walter Johnson, Arky Vaughan, and Gary Carter all played on Fullerton fields before heading to the Big Show along with Del Crandall, Keith Ginter, Jeff Robinson, Steve Trachsel, Steve Busby, Tim Wallach, Aaron Rowan, Phil Nevin and many other major league greats. Last week, my neighbor was up early taking his son to tryouts for Pony League baseball...a scene that is repeated every year at this time for decades with hundreds of dads and sons.

My son Felix and I were no exception. Nobody knew it except me, but Felix could have been in the Hall of Fame if he hadn't been called away by the movie business. Felix has the only distinction, I think, of getting a base hit in his last at bat in all levels of baseball that he played. He got a basehit in his last at bat for West Fullerton Little League. He got a basehit in his last at bat for Fullerton Pony in the Western Regional playoffs. And he got a basehit in his last at bat for Fullerton High School.

Felix was a slap hitter, like Ichiro Suzuki, except nobody knew about Ichiro at the time (this was when he was playing Pro Yakyu in Japan before coming to Seattle) He wasn't flashy. He never hit an over the fence homerun in his entire baseball career. But he had a phenomenal on base percentage and batting average. Because I kept score for the teams he played on, I had to bring this to the attention of the coaches who always had a tendency to bat him low in the order because of his lack of flash and power. And he also hustled like Darrin Erstad. In fact, even to this day people will remind me how he used to run full bore out to his position when he took the field and run back just as fast back to the dug out after the inning was completed.

My favorite baseball moment with Felix, and there were lots of them, and the instant that I realized he would not be long for this game was on one Saturday afternoon. Felix was playing for the Angels in a game against the Yankees in the West Little League Major division. There was a great pitchers dual going on between the two pitchers, our guy RJ Hively (who now pitches for Cal State Fullerton) and another guy for the Yankees, Geoff Henderson who would go on to have a great High School career and remain a good friend of Felix. The game went into extra innings. In the top of the eighth RJ was walked by Geoff. Felix was the next batter. RJ stole second base. Felix battled Geoff to a 3-2 count. Geoff didn't throw a bad pitch but his slider was within Felix's reach on the outside corner and as Felix would often do, he lunged and slapped the ball over the Yankee second baseman's head in front of the center fielder, scoring RJ and winning the game. His team mates mugged
Felix for being the hero and the parents were going wild in the stands.

I'll never forget what happened next. Felix went to his bag in the dugout, quietly put away his gear, and said, "Let's go dad." As we were walking back to the car...the baseball hero and the proud dad, side by side, he turns to me and says, "I have this idea for a movie..." I knew he wasn't going to be a ballplayer for long.

Monday, February 9, 2009

Steve Martin's Latest Is Finger Pickin' Good


Steve Martin
The Crow: New Songs For
The Five-String Banjo
Five Scoops of Bosco


Reviewed by Allen Bacon, Editor, The Daily Bosco

For those of us who have followed the careeer of comedian/actor/ musician Steve Martin, it's hard to believe that it took him 45 years to record his first bluegrass album. That's because if you have been watching and listening closely, Martin uses the banjo for much more than a comic prop...he's a pretty accomplished musician.

This is all evident on his recent release The Crow: New Songs For the Five-String Banjo. Produced by good friend, high school classmate and former Nitty Gritty Dirt Band frontman John McEuen (a legendary banjo player himself), this album highlights fourteen songs for the banjo written by Martin over the years plus Clawhammer Medley (with Red Is the Rose, Sally Ann, Johnson Boys and others).

In his stand-up act, Martin often joked that "you can't play a sad song on the banjo." But in this album he contradicts that statement as his music covers a full range of emotions. As Martin writes in the liner notes, "I knew the banjo had a capacity for mournful melodies and the 'high, lonesome sound.' As I was sometimes mournful, sometimes lonesome and sometimes sad, this suited me perfectly."

This album is pure joy, especially for those of us who enjoy playing or have attempted to play bluegrass music. This takes me back to some happy memories jamming with my banjo playing friends.

The title track, first recorded for Tony Trischka's 2007 album, climbed the bluegrass charts to become Martin's second hit (after King Tut).

Vince Gill and Dolly Parton contribute their beautiful vocals on Pretty Flowers. Mary Black sings on Calico Train. Actor Eugene Levy plays guitar on Tin Roof, and Earl Scruggs appears on Daddy Played the Banjo.

Some of the songs on this album also show up Martins writing and story telling skills along with his sense of humor. A good example of this is his Late For School which he played last weekend on Saturday Night Live.

One thing that came to my mind when hearing this album is the time when another set of comediens (and Martin's friends)...Dan Ackroyd and John Belushi crossed over into the area of the blues. This is a totally different set of circumstances. Martin long ago has been accepted into the bluegrass community as a skilled banjo player and bluegrass performer even earning a grammy nomination on a collaborative album. Ackroyd and Belushi, on the other hand, while having a love for their genre of music, had to really develop their skills as bluesmen and were not at first totally accepted into the blues community.

On a side note, for a real treat, go to YouTube and see the video from the Late Show With David Letterman where Martin performs Foggy Mountain Breakdown with five other bluegrass greats including the legendary Earl Scruggs.

This album is currently available exclusively through Amazon.com for the next 90 days.

Monday, February 2, 2009

This Album Is Boss


Bruce Springsteen
Working On A Dream
Columbia Records
Five Scoops of Bosco


Reviewed by Allen Bacon, The Daily Bosco

I must admit it took me a couple of listens of Bruce Springsteen's latest before I really started liking it. Picked it up Friday night and by Sunday evening, especiailly after the Boss and his fellow E Streeter's energizing performance at the Super Bowl Halftime show....I was wearing the CD thin.

Working On A Dream
is Springsteen's second album in only fifteen months. The guy is on a roll again. Enjoy it while you can because if history is any indication it may be about four or five years until the next one. That's been his history anyway going back to his first two legendary albums which were put out in a span of eight months.

But let's be perfectly honest here. Springsteen has slipped into a predictable formula on his albums. That's not necessarily a bad thing...it's like putting on a comfortable pair of jeans. It feels good and you know what to expect.

It's all here on this album.

The Ballad (Outlaw Pete, The Last Carnival)...check. The Rousing Anthem (My Lucky Day, Working On A Dream)...check. The Party Rock and Roll Song (What Love Can Do, Surprise)...Check. The brooding and moody love songs (Life Itself, Queen of the Supermarket)...check. The Movie theme song (The Wrestler)...check

A couple of the songs seem like nods or homages to other artists. Listen to This Life and see if you don't hear Brian Wilson. The beginning of Tomorrow Never Knows sounds curiously like the beginning of a Creedence Clearwater Revival song.

My favorite song is a gritty, swamp-based number called Good Eye. Outlaw Pete has a couple of the funniest lines (He was born a little baby on the Appalachian Trail..at six months old he'd done three months in jail... But at eight minutes, the ballad is about seven minutes too long.

Great performances by the rest of the E Street Band too. Most notably Clarence Clemons, Nils Lofgren, Max Weinberg and Steve Van Zandt. That sounds like an all-star band now...A who's who of musicians.

Sunday, February 1, 2009

Super Revenge...30 Years In the Making


By Allen Bacon, Editor, The Daily Bosco

It took nearly 30 years but I believe revenge will be mine when the Arizona Cardinals beat the Pittsburgh Steelers in the Big Game today.

There is unfinished business with the 1980 Super Bowl if you are a Los Angeles Ram fan. This is of course when my Los Angeles Rams in their only Super Bowl appearance missed the opportunity to win against Terry Bradshaw and Lynn Swann and Mean Joe Greene and the rest of the Pittsburgh Steelers. We were actually leading in the third quarter of the game. Did I mention I hate the Pittsburgh Steelers?

There should be a moratorium on Super Bowl wins. If you win five...you should just be able to hang it up...no more for you. My poor Los Angeles Rams never won any Super Bowls...until they got to St. Louis (and I still refuse to recognize that team anymore...they ceased to exist after Georgia Frontierre moved the team). Pittsburgh's already won five...they don't need anymore.

Why will it be revenge when the Cardinals beat the Steelers today?

Follow my fuzzy logic here. (The similarities are uncanny)

The 1979 Rams were the worst team to make it to the Super Bowl. At 9-7 there is only one team that is as bad, record wise....The 2008 Arizona Cardinals at a record of 9-7. Both teams capitilized on poor teams in the NFC West to make it to the playoffs.

The 1979 Pittsburgh Steelers were 12-4...The 2008 Pittsburgh Steelers are 12-4.

The 1979 Rams were and 2008 Arizona Cardinals are heavy underdogs to the Pittsburgh Steelers.

The Los Angeles Rams were a transplanted team that came from Cleveland and then moved on to St. Louis...The Arizona Cardinals are a transplanted team that started in Chicago's Comisky Park moved to St. Louis before settling in the valley of the sun. Both franchises have been in three cities in their lifespan.

The Los Angeles Rams to that point had never been to or won a Super Bowl. The Cardinals have never been or won a Super Bowl for whatever city they were in.

When the 1979 Rams went to the Super Bowl a former USC quarterback was on the sidelines that day...the injured Pat Haden. When the 2008 Cardinals take the field today they will also have a former USC quarterback on the field in a backup roll...Matt Leinert.

In 1979 A Coke commercial featured a Pittsburgh linebacker...in 2009 a Coke commercial will feature a Pittsburgh linebacker.

The 1979 Los Angeles Rams beat the Tampa Bay Bucanneers in the most unlikely of all NFC championship games to earn a trip to the Super Bowl. The Super Bowl is being played in Tampa Bay today.

And now for the coup de gras...the Los Angeles Rams moved to St. Louis in the 90's. Keep in mind they had never a Super Bowl. And almost immediately after the move...the team wins the Super Bowl with current Arizona quarterback Curt Warner. Warner owes us one. Once a Ram...always a Ram. The former Ram will avenge our loss.

Oh, Revenge will be sweet. I can't wait to taste it.