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Etta James At Last

January 21, 2012 by · Comments Off on Etta James At Last 

Etta James At LastEtta James At Last, Legendary singer Etta James has died at the age of 73, from complications with leukemia.  While the Grammy-award winning singer and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame honoree had other hits, such as “I’d Rather Go Blind” and “Don’t Tell Mama,” James was best known for her soulful rendition of “At Last” — which has become one of the most beloved wedding songs of all time.

Although “At Last” was originally written for the 1942 musical film “Orchestra Wives” by Mack Gordon and Harry Warren, James made the song her own in 1961 — improvising on the melody and adding her own jazz-inflected vocals alongside the swooning strings.

Since then, countless couples have used her romantic rendition to make their Big Days memorable.

Greg Johnson, a blues curator and associate professor at the University of Mississippi, says the song is a wedding go-to because of the lyrics. “The title alone makes it a highly appropriate song for love finally consummated in marriage,” Johnson told The Huffington Post.

But he also says there’s more to the song than just the lyrics. According to Johnson, the style of James’ “At Last” suggests that the singer may have been influenced by the jazz songs that her mother loved. “There are stylistic elements that are in line with some of the jazz standards from the 1930s and ’40s. The orchestral arrangements were very tastefully done, thickening up the sound of the recording and adding a dimension that a simple rhythm section lacks.”

James’ husky, soulful voice is one of the most obvious explanations for how the song has become so legendary. Matt Sakakeeny, an assistant professor of music at Tulane University, categorized “At Last” as a “slow burner.” “Slow burners are moody and sexy in a way that remains publicly permissible,” he told The Huffington Post. “[The song] has that edgy blues-inflected lead vocal that certain couples want to let their guests know that they’re not just a couple goodie-two-shoes — that there’s going to be some action going on in the honeymoon suite later that night.”

Even celeb wedding planner Sharon Sacks danced to “At Last” at her wedding in 1986. “For our first dance, we talked about what would best share our love to one another,” Sacks told The Huffington Post. “The song ‘At Last’ said it all. Whenever I hear the song played at weddings, I look around the room and see couples singing along [while] they are in the arms of their date.”

And despite hearing it so many times, NYC-based DJ Andy Anderson (Gotham DJ) has said that the sentiment of the song trumps its familiarity. “It’s true that “At Last” has become one of ‘those songs’ … But there’s a reason. It’s just a damn great song,” Anderson told The Huffington Post. “Etta James telling that story about the quest for true love — I defy anyone not to be moved by that.”

Colton Harris Moore

December 17, 2011 by · Comments Off on Colton Harris Moore 

Colton Harris Moore, At times, Colton Harris-Moore’s two years on the run were euphoric – the nights of beatific solitude in the woods, the soaring adrenalin rush of his first moments airborne in the cockpit of a stolen plane.
But most other times were far less glamorous: sleeping in portable toilets or culverts as he sought shelter from the elements and the police.

The youthful thief who rocketed to international notoriety as the “Barefoot Bandit” is done with both extremes for the moment. He was sentenced Friday to more than seven years in a Washington state prison after pleading guilty to dozens of charges, including burglary and identity theft, stemming from his crime spree.

Harris-Moore, now 20, showed no reaction as the sentence was delivered by a judge who took pity on his bleak upbringing at the hands of an alcoholic mother and a series of her convict boyfriends – a situation she described as a “mind-numbing absence of hope.”

“This case is a tragedy in many ways, but it’s a triumph of the human spirit in other ways,” Island County Judge Vickie Churchill said. “I could have been reading about the history of a mass murderer. I could have been reading about a drug abusive, alcoholic young man. That is the triumph of Colton Harris-Moore: He has survived.”

Harris-Moore’s daring run from the law earned him international fame and a movie deal to help repay his victims after he flew a stolen plane from Indiana to the Bahamas in July 2010, crash-landed it near a mangrove swamp and was arrested by Bahamian authorities in a hail of bullets.

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