Discussion:
Idle Hour Night (radio edit) / Shadowville All-Stars
(too old to reply)
Will Dockery
2013-01-22 18:58:55 UTC
Permalink
"Chasing 'round a silver-dollar moon, 'round glimmering green ozone, 'round
midnight's pale blue maelstrom, through crimson horned stigmata tied with a
sailor's knot of stars before I give her up... to that Idle Hour Night." -
with Jack Snipe and 5 others at The Shadowville All-Stars.

http://www.reverbnation.com/willdockery/song/15928895-idle-hour-night--dockery-mallard
Hieronymous707
2013-01-23 09:53:15 UTC
Permalink
Snappy tune. I'll pass it around.
Will Dockery
2013-01-23 21:55:55 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hieronymous707
Snappy tune. I'll pass it around.
Thanks for listening and for any help you can give getting the tune played out and about!
--
Idle Hour Night / Shadowville All-Stars:
http://www.reverbnation.com/willdockery/song/15928895-idle-hour-night--dockery-mallard
Hieronymous707
2013-01-23 22:42:56 UTC
Permalink
4:55 PMWill Dockery
Post by Hieronymous707
Snappy tune. I'll pass it around.
Thanks for listening and for any help you can give getting the tune played out and about!

For what it's worth, I shared it on FB and Twitter. Good luck with it.
Will Dockery
2013-01-24 13:58:38 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hieronymous707
4:55 PMWill Dockery
Post by Hieronymous707
Snappy tune. I'll pass it around.
Thanks for listening and for any help you can give getting the tune played out and about!
For what it's worth, I shared it on FB and Twitter. Good luck with it.
Hey, I just noticed that you "Unfriended" me on Facebook again so I can't see your page.

Was this some mistake?
--
Idle Hour Night / Shadowville All-Stars:
http://www.reverbnation.com/willdockery/song/15928895-idle-hour-night--dockery-mallard
Hieronymous707
2013-01-24 15:09:42 UTC
Permalink
Post by Will Dockery
Post by Hieronymous707
4:55 PMWill Dockery
Post by Hieronymous707
Snappy tune. I'll pass it around.
Thanks for listening and for any help you can give getting the tune played out and about!
For what it's worth, I shared it on FB and Twitter. Good luck with it.
Hey, I just noticed
God but you're slow on
the uptake sometimes.
That was months ago.
Chuck Lysaght
2013-01-24 20:46:50 UTC
Permalink
Will. You shouldn't be friends with Corey.
Hieronymous707
2013-01-24 20:50:24 UTC
Permalink
3:46 PMChuck Lysaght
Will. You shouldn't be friends with Corey.

Chuck. Pay attention.
Will and I are not Facebook friends.
We are only friends in real life.
Chuck Lysaght
2013-01-24 20:59:36 UTC
Permalink
He shouldn't be friends with you at all. But that's up to him. I think you're scum.
Hieronymous707
2013-01-24 21:03:52 UTC
Permalink
3:59 PMChuck Lysaght
He shouldn't be friends with you at all. But that's up to him. I think you're scum.

I think you're entitled to think whatever you want.
I think it's a shame when what you think isn't real.
Peter J Ross
2013-01-25 19:38:20 UTC
Permalink
In alt.arts.poetry.comments on Thu, 24 Jan 2013 12:59:36 -0800 (PST),
Post by Chuck Lysaght
He shouldn't be friends with you at all. But that's up to him. I think you're scum.
Awww. Did Hignoramous not invite you to his sleepover?
--
PJR :-) | οἵη περ φύλλων γενεὴ, τοίη δὲ καὶ ἀνδρῶν.
| φύλλα τὰ μέν τ' ἄνεμος χαμάδις χέει, ἄλλα δέ θ' ὕλη
| τηλεθόωσα φύει, ἔαρος δ' ἐπιγίγνεται ὥρη·
| ὣς ἀνδρῶν γενεὴ ἡ μὲν φύει ἡ δ' ἀπολήγει. (Homer)
Chuck Lysaght
2013-01-25 19:46:36 UTC
Permalink
Pete. You're in full tilt kook mode again. lol.
Peter J Ross
2013-01-25 19:34:59 UTC
Permalink
In alt.arts.poetry.comments on Thu, 24 Jan 2013 12:46:50 -0800 (PST),
Post by Chuck Lysaght
Will. You shouldn't be friends with Corey.
Are you adopting the style and attitudes of a pre-teen girl because
you're (a) a moron, (b) a paedophile who wants to befriend pre-teen
girls on Facebook, or (c) both?

Just curious. But William Hill and Joe Coral have both stopped
accepting bets on (c) at any odds.
--
PJR :-) | οἵη περ φύλλων γενεὴ, τοίη δὲ καὶ ἀνδρῶν.
| φύλλα τὰ μέν τ' ἄνεμος χαμάδις χέει, ἄλλα δέ θ' ὕλη
| τηλεθόωσα φύει, ἔαρος δ' ἐπιγίγνεται ὥρη·
| ὣς ἀνδρῶν γενεὴ ἡ μὲν φύει ἡ δ' ἀπολήγει. (Homer)
Will Dockery
2013-03-08 17:22:47 UTC
Permalink
Post by Peter J Ross
Post by Chuck Lysaght
Will. You shouldn't be friends with Corey.
Are you adopting the style and attitudes of a pre-teen girl because
you're (a) a moron, (b) a paedophile who wants to befriend pre-teen
girls on Facebook, or (c) both?
Just curious. But William Hill and Joe Coral have both stopped
accepting bets on (c) at any odds.
Thanks for *plonking*, but what's the point in not reading what I write
while continuing to write about and obsess over me?

Anyway, here's the brand new mix of "Idle Hour Night", C&C is welcomed:

"O Paradox! Black is the badge of Hell, the hue of dungeons and the School
of Night; and beauty's crest becomes the Heavens' well."
-Wm. Shakespeare

Idle Hour Night / Will Dockery & The Shadowville All-Stars (Brian
Mallard, Jack Snipe, Rusty Wood, Eric M. Gunter, Terry Gannon & Gary
Frankfurth). Live at Hogbottom April 27 2013.

http://www.reverbnation.com/willdockery/song/15928895-idle-hour-night--dockery-mallard
Will Dockery
2013-01-28 14:15:10 UTC
Permalink
Post by Chuck Lysaght
Will. You shouldn't be friends with Corey.
I know Corey can be brash online Chuck, but in person he's a stand-up guy... he reminds me of Robert DeNiro, Dustin Hoffman or Jimmy Cagney, a classic Yankee good old boy, big on the smartass remarks & "ballbusting", or streetcorner jankin', as we call it down here in the Deep South.

Maybe y'all could give friendship another chance?

Now... back on topic:

"Chasing 'round a silver-dollar moon, 'round glimmering green ozone, 'round
midnight's pale blue maelstrom, through crimson horned stigmata tied with a
sailor's knot of stars before I give her up... to that Idle Hour Night." -
with Jack Snipe and 5 others at The Shadowville All-Stars.

http://www.reverbnation.com/willdockery/song/15928895-idle-hour-night--dockery-mallard
Hieronymous707
2013-01-28 14:50:45 UTC
Permalink
Dockery
Post by Chuck Lysaght
Will. You shouldn't be friends with Corey.
I know Corey can be brash online Chuck, but in person he's a stand-up guy... he reminds me of Robert DeNiro, Dustin Hoffman or Jimmy Cagney, a classic Yankee good old boy, big on the smartass remarks & "ballbusting", or streetcorner jankin', as we call it down here in the Deep South.

Maybe y'all could give friendship another chance?

Now... back on topic:

I thought it had already been fairly well established that I'm an asshole fuckhead brow beater. Now I'm apparently brash and all this other stuff too. It's a wonder I have any friends at all. For whatever it's worth, whatever writing like this means and although weave only ever met several times during one long weekend, I'm truly lucky to have people like you in whatever kind of life this is, Will. Knot blowing smoke; just so you nose.
Will Dockery
2013-01-29 02:20:33 UTC
Permalink
"Hieronymous707" <***@gmail.com> wrote in message news:51e11601-efb8-40c7-8a17-***@googlegroups.com...
Dockery
Post by Chuck Lysaght
Will. You shouldn't be friends with Corey.
I know Corey can be brash online Chuck, but in person he's a stand-up guy...
he reminds me of Robert DeNiro, Dustin Hoffman or Jimmy Cagney, a classic
Yankee good old boy, big on the smartass remarks & "ballbusting", or
streetcorner jankin', as we call it down here in the Deep South.

Maybe y'all could give friendship another chance?

Now... back on topic:

I thought it had already been fairly well established that I'm an asshole
fuckhead brow beater. Now I'm apparently brash and all this other stuff too.
It's a wonder I have any friends at all. For whatever it's worth, whatever
writing like this means and although weave only ever met several times
during one long weekend, I'm truly lucky to have people like you in whatever
kind of life this is, Will. Knot blowing smoke; just so you nose.

"Ah, get outta here." -Silvio
Hieronymous707
2013-01-29 09:19:16 UTC
Permalink
Will Dockery
2013-03-12 18:29:48 UTC
Permalink
On Tuesday, January 29, 2013 4:19:16 AM UTC-5, Hieronymous House wrote:
This is one of those blank, empty posts you were doing for a day or so back around a month ago. I did wonder if this was some sort of Usenet glitch or if it was an intentional action from you.

What's the story, Corey, if you feel like communicating it?

--
Under The Radar / Will Dockery & The Shadowville All-Stars:
http://www.reverbnation.com/willdockery/song/12609809-under-the-radar-for-sam-singer
Hieronymous House
2013-03-12 20:19:27 UTC
Permalink
2:29 PMWill Dockery
On Tuesday, January 29, 2013 4:19:16 AM UTC-5, Hieronymous House wrote:
This is one of those blank, empty posts you were doing for a day or so back around a month ago. I did wonder if this was some sort of Usenet glitch or if it was an intentional action from you.

What's the story, Corey,

I ruz jus feering ronery.

Will Dockery
2013-03-13 09:57:25 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hieronymous House
2:29 PMWill Dockery
This is one of those blank, empty posts you were doing for a day or so back around a month ago. I did wonder if this was some sort of Usenet glitch or if it was an intentional action from you.
What's the story, Corey,
I ruz jus feering ronery.
http://youtu.be/UEaKX9YYHiQ
So it was like Yoko Ono's "No" poetry?

Andy Warhol staring at a blank soupcan?
--
One Day In Shadowville #2
Will Dockery, George Sulzbach and Bodeen in Shadowville, 1996.

Hieronymous House
2013-03-13 10:07:38 UTC
Permalink
5:57 AMWill Dockery
- show quoted text -
So it was like Yoko Ono's "No" poetry?

Oh no, "Yes".
http://hellaheaven-ana.blogspot.com/2009/10/yes-yoko-onos-yes-painting-that.html
Will Dockery
2013-03-13 10:12:42 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hieronymous House
5:57 AMWill Dockery
- show quoted text -
So it was like Yoko Ono's "No" poetry?
Oh no, "Yes".
http://hellaheaven-ana.blogspot.com/2009/10/yes-yoko-onos-yes-painting-that.html
Got to have a look at that, Yoko had to be my first introduction to avant garde self parody/riff op art.
--
One Day In Shadowville #2
Will Dockery, George Sulzbach and Bodeen in Shadowville, 1996.
http://youtu.be/jfX5pOewhJ0
Hieronymous House
2013-03-13 10:16:10 UTC
Permalink
6:12 AMWill Dockery
Post by Hieronymous House
5:57 AMWill Dockery
- show quoted text -
So it was like Yoko Ono's "No" poetry?
Oh no, "Yes".
http://hellaheaven-ana.blogspot.com/2009/10/yes-yoko-onos-yes-painting-that.html
Got to have a look at that, Yoko had to be my first introduction to avant garde self parody/riff op art.

Here:

Q: How did you meet Yoko? John Lennon: There was a sort of underground clique in London; John Dunbar, who was married to Marianne Faithfull, had an art gallery in London called Indica, and I'd been going around to galleries a bit on me off days in between records, also to a few exhibitions in different galleries that showed sort of unknown artists or underground artists. I got the word that this amazing woman was putting on a show the next week, something about people in bags, in black bags, and it was going to be a bit of a happening and all that. So I went to a preview the night before it opened. I went in - she didn't know who I was or anything - and I was wandering around. There were a couple of artsy-type students who had been helping, lying around there in the gallery, and I was looking at it and was astounded. There was an apple on sale there for two hundred quid; I thought it was fantastic - I got the humor in her work immediately. I didn't have to have much knowledge about avant-garde or underground art, the humor got me straightaway. It was two hundred quid to watch the fresh apple decompose. But it was another piece that really decided me for or against the artist: a ladder that led to a painting, which was hung on the ceiling. It looked like a white canvas with a chain with a spyglass hanging on the end of it. I climbed the ladder, looked through the spyglass, and in tiny little letters it said, YES. So it was positive. I felt relieved. It's a great relief when you get up the ladder and you look through the spyglass and it doesn't say NO or FUCK YOU or something. I was very impressed. John Dunbar introduced us - neither of us knew who the hell each other was. She didn't know who I was; she'd only heard of Ringo; I think it means apple in Japanese. And Dunbar had sort of been hustling her, saying, "That's a good patron; you must go and talk to him or do something." Dunbar insisted she say hello to the millionaire - you know what I mean. And she came up and handed me a card that said BREATHE on it - one of her instructions - so I just went [pants]. This was our meeting. The second time I met her was at a gallery opening of Claes Oldenburg in London. We were very shy; we sort of nodded at each other - she was standing behind me. I sort of looked away because I'm very shy with people, especially chicks. We just sort of smiled and stood frozen together in this cocktail-party thing. The next thing was, she came to me to get some backing - like all the bastard underground do - for a show she was going. She gave me her Grapefruit book. I used to read it, and sometimes I'd get very annoyed by it; it would say thing like "paint until you drop dead" or "bleed." Then sometimes I'd be very enlightened by it. I went through all the changes that people go through with her work - sometimes I'd have it by the bed and I'd open it and it would say something nice and it would be all right, and then it would say something heavy and I wouldn't like it. So I gave her the money to back her show. For this whole thing, everything was in half: There was half a bed, half a room, half of everything, all beautifully cut in half and all painted white. And I said to her, "Why don't you sell the other half in bottles?" having caught on by then to what the game was. And she did that - this is still before we'd had any nuptials - and we still have the bottles from the show; it's my first. It was presented as "Yoko Plus Me" - that was our first public appearance. I didn't even go to see the show; I was too uptight. Q: When did you realize that you were in love with her? JL: It was beginning to happen; I would start looking at her book, but I wasn't quite aware what was happening to me. Then she did a thing called Dance Event, where different cards kept coming through the door every day saying BREATHE and DANCE and WATCH ALL THE LIGHTS UNTIL DAWN, and they upset me or made me happy, depending. I'd get very upset about it being intellectual or all fucking avant-garde, then I'd like it, and then I wouldn't. Then I went to India with the Maharoonie and we corresponded. The letters were still formal, but they just had a little side to them. I nearly took her to India, but I still wasn't sure for what reason; I was still sort of kidding myself, with sort of artistic reasons and all that. When we got back from India, we were talking to each other on the phone. I called her over; it was the middle of the night and Cynthia [Lennon's first wife] was away, and I thought, well, now's the time if I'm gonna get to know her any more. She came to the house and I didn't know what to do, so we went upstairs to my studio and I played her all the tapes that I'd made, all this far-out stuff, some comedy stuff, and some electronic music. She was suitably impressed, and then she said, "Well, let's make one ourselves." So we made Two Virgins. It was midnight when we started; it was dawn when we finished, and then we made love at dawn. It was very beautiful. From 'Lennon Remembers' (Jann Wenner editor of Rolling Stone magazine interviewing John Lennon in December 1970)
Will Dockery
2013-03-13 10:23:51 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hieronymous House
6:12 AMWill Dockery
Post by Hieronymous House
Post by Hieronymous House
5:57 AMWill Dockery
- show quoted text -
So it was like Yoko Ono's "No" poetry?
Oh no, "Yes".
http://hellaheaven-ana.blogspot.com/2009/10/yes-yoko-onos-yes-painting-that.html
Got to have a look at that, Yoko had to be my first introduction to avant garde self parody/riff op art.
Q: How did you meet Yoko? John Lennon: There was a sort of underground clique in London; John Dunbar, who was married to Marianne Faithfull, had an art gallery in London called Indica, and I'd been going around to galleries a bit on me off days in between records, also to a few exhibitions in different galleries that showed sort of unknown artists or underground artists. I got the word that this amazing woman was putting on a show the next week, something about people in bags, in black bags, and it was going to be a bit of a happening and all that. So I went to a preview the night before it opened. I went in - she didn't know who I was or anything - and I was wandering around. There were a couple of artsy-type students who had been helping, lying around there in the gallery, and I was looking at it and was astounded. There was an apple on sale there for two hundred quid; I thought it was fantastic - I got the humor in her work immediately. I didn't have to have much knowledge about avant-garde or underground art, the humor got me straightaway. It was two hundred quid to watch the fresh apple decompose. But it was another piece that really decided me for or against the artist: a ladder that led to a painting, which was hung on the ceiling. It looked like a white canvas with a chain with a spyglass hanging on the end of it. I climbed the ladder, looked through the spyglass, and in tiny little letters it said, YES. So it was positive. I felt relieved. It's a great relief when you get up the ladder and you look through the spyglass and it doesn't say NO or FUCK YOU or something. I was very impressed. John Dunbar introduced us - neither of us knew who the hell each other was. She didn't know who I was; she'd only heard of Ringo; I think it means apple in Japanese. And Dunbar had sort of been hustling her, saying, "That's a good patron; you must go and talk to him or do something." Dunbar insisted she say hello to the millionaire - you know what I mean. And she came up and handed me a card that said BREATHE on it - one of her instructions - so I just went [pants]. This was our meeting. The second time I met her was at a gallery opening of Claes Oldenburg in London. We were very shy; we sort of nodded at each other - she was standing behind me. I sort of looked away because I'm very shy with people, especially chicks. We just sort of smiled and stood frozen together in this cocktail-party thing. The next thing was, she came to me to get some backing - like all the bastard underground do - for a show she was going. She gave me her Grapefruit book. I used to read it, and sometimes I'd get very annoyed by it; it would say thing like "paint until you drop dead" or "bleed." Then sometimes I'd be very enlightened by it. I went through all the changes that people go through with her work - sometimes I'd have it by the bed and I'd open it and it would say something nice and it would be all right, and then it would say something heavy and I wouldn't like it. So I gave her the money to back her show. For this whole thing, everything was in half: There was half a bed, half a room, half of everything, all beautifully cut in half and all painted white. And I said to her, "Why don't you sell the other half in bottles?" having caught on by then to what the game was. And she did that - this is still before we'd had any nuptials - and we still have the bottles from the show; it's my first. It was presented as "Yoko Plus Me" - that was our first public appearance. I didn't even go to see the show; I was too uptight. Q: When did you realize that you were in love with her? JL: It was beginning to happen; I would start looking at her book, but I wasn't quite aware what was happening to me. Then she did a thing called Dance Event, where different cards kept coming through the door every day saying BREATHE and DANCE and WATCH ALL THE LIGHTS UNTIL DAWN, and they upset me or made me happy, depending. I'd get very upset about it being intellectual or all fucking avant-garde, then I'd like it, and then I wouldn't. Then I went to India with the Maharoonie and we corresponded. The letters were still formal, but they just had a little side to them. I nearly took her to India, but I still wasn't sure for what reason; I was still sort of kidding myself, with sort of artistic reasons and all that. When we got back from India, we were talking to each other on the phone. I called her over; it was the middle of the night and Cynthia [Lennon's first wife] was away, and I thought, well, now's the time if I'm gonna get to know her any more. She came to the house and I didn't know what to do, so we went upstairs to my studio and I played her all the tapes that I'd made, all this far-out stuff, some comedy stuff, and some electronic music. She was suitably impressed, and then she said, "Well, let's make one ourselves." So we made Two Virgins. It was midnight when we started; it was dawn when we finished, and then we made love at dawn. It was very beautiful. From 'Lennon Remembers' (Jann Wenner editor of Rolling Stone magazine interviewing John Lennon in December 1970)
I must be very /well read/ since I've read this several times over the last 40 or so years.

I really still love the part where John says Apple means Ringo.
--
One Day in Shadowville #1
Will Dockery, Bodeen and George Sulzbach during a day in Shadowville, 1996.

Hieronymous House
2013-03-13 10:41:54 UTC
Permalink
6:23 AMWill Dockery
- show quoted text -
I must be very /well read/ since I've read this several times over the last 40 or so years.

My 'well read' remark shouldn't continue to disturb you, but I understand why it does and I apologize. I never meant to suggest that you weren't well read, Will. Only that I am better read than you by virtue of having spent more time in the exercise of reading. You do other things well because I've seen you do them. I don't. I read well because that's about all I do anymore. That, and this.
q***@gmail.com
2013-03-13 10:44:43 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hieronymous House
6:23 AMWill Dockery
- show quoted text -
I must be very /well read/ since I've read this several times over the last 40 or so years.
My 'well read' remark shouldn't continue to disturb you, but I understand why it does and I apologize. I never meant to suggest that you weren't well read, Will. Only that I am better read than you by virtue of having spent more time in the exercise of reading. You do other things well because I've seen you do them. I don't. I read well because that's about all I do anymore. That, and this.
"The simple fact of the matter is that if you want to improve your writing, write more. Practice, practice, practice."

Regards
-H
Hieronymous House
2013-03-13 10:49:32 UTC
Permalink
***@gmail.com

"The simple fact of the matter is that if you want to improve your writing, write more. Practice, practice, practice."

Same principle applies to reading;
Same practice, and discipline,
Different perspective.
Will Dockery
2013-03-13 10:56:28 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hieronymous House
Post by q***@gmail.com
"The simple fact of the matter is that if you want to improve your writing, write more. Practice, practice, practice."
Same principle applies to reading;
Same practice, and discipline,
Different perspective.
How about being a good listener?

Some of the best poetry comes from overhearing people talk.

I know Jack Kerouac and Lou Reed agree with this, to name two mighty fine writers.
--
One Day in Shadowville #1
Will Dockery, Bodeen and George Sulzbach during a day in Shadowville, 1996.
http://youtu.be/R2YxhvJXdLU
Hieronymous House
2013-03-13 11:18:26 UTC
Permalink
6:56 AMWill Dockery

How about being a good listener?

Reading is listening with your 'mind's ear'.
Will Dockery
2013-03-15 14:04:31 UTC
Permalink
Post by q***@gmail.com
Post by Hieronymous House
6:23 AMWill Dockery
- show quoted text -
I must be very /well read/ since I've read this several times over the last 40 or so years.
My 'well read' remark shouldn't continue to disturb you, but I understand why it does and I apologize. I never meant to suggest that you weren't well read, Will. Only that I am better read than you by virtue of having spent more time in the exercise of reading. You do other things well because I've seen you do them. I don't. I read well because that's about all I do anymore. That, and this.
"The simple fact of the matter is that if you want to improve your writing, write more. Practice, practice, practice."
Regards
-H
Yes, gotta keep on keeping on.
--
Idle Hour Night / Will Dockery & The Shadowville All-Stars:
http://www.reverbnation.com/willdockery/song/15928895-idle-hour-night--dockery-mallard
Will Dockery
2013-03-13 10:53:08 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hieronymous House
6:23 AMWill Dockery
- show quoted text -
I must be very /well read/ since I've read this several times over the last 40 or so years.
My 'well read' remark shouldn't continue to disturb you, but I understand why it does and I apologize. I never meant to suggest that you weren't well read, Will. Only that I am better read than you by virtue of having spent more time in the exercise of reading. You do other things well because I've seen you do them. I don't. I read well because that's about all I do anymore. That, and this.
Okay, you may have me there since reading is really tough with the current state of my eyes. I still read books in the Latrine where the light is good, and get a few read every year there.

I read a lot when I was younger and still had glasses, but you may have passed me up, I reckon.
--
One Day in Shadowville #1
Will Dockery, Bodeen and George Sulzbach during a day in Shadowville, 1996.
http://youtu.be/R2YxhvJXdLU
Hieronymous House
2013-03-13 11:03:56 UTC
Permalink
Will Dockery

Okay, you may have me there since reading is really tough with the current state of my eyes. I still read books in the Latrine where the light is good, and get a few read every year there.

I read a lot when I was younger and still had glasses, but you may have passed me up, I reckon.

I have to wear dime store readers at +1.75 magnification to read anything anymore, but I can still pass the eye test at the DMV, so I know I don't need prescription lenses, yet. There will come a time for that I expect, and I can only hope I have the money to buy them, or at least enough insurance to help cover the cost.
Will Dockery
2013-03-13 11:42:07 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hieronymous House
Post by Will Dockery
How about being a good listener?
Reading is listening with your 'mind's ear'.
If I was old enough I sure would miss "old time" radio, the audiobooks are
great at simulating what that era must have been like.

--
Idle Hour Night / Will Dockery & The Shadowville All-Stars:
http://www.reverbnation.com/willdockery/song/15928895-idle-hour-night--dockery-mallard
Will Dockery
2013-03-19 03:00:51 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hieronymous707
Snappy tune. I'll pass it around.
Thanks again... by the way, where dis you pass it around to?

I'd like to follow up on those if I can.
--
Idle Hour Night / Shadowville All-Stars:
http://www.reverbnation.com/willdockery/song/15928895-idle-hour-night--dockery-mallard
Hieronymous House
2013-03-19 07:58:16 UTC
Permalink
Nowhere specific, just friends.
Will Dockery
2013-03-20 16:23:14 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hieronymous House
Nowhere specific, just friends.
Well, thanks.

You can feel free to burn copies of the Shadowville Speedway CD I gave you last year to give friends as well, if you'd like.

--
Music & poetry from Will Dockery & Friends:
http://www.reverbnation.com/willdockery
Hieronymous House
2013-03-21 12:30:22 UTC
Permalink
Mar 20Will Dockery
Post by Hieronymous House
Nowhere specific, just friends.
Well, thanks.

You're welcome. Actually, I gave that CD away
a while ago to one of my son's friends. He liked it.
Will Dockery
2013-03-21 13:59:01 UTC
Permalink
Mar 20 Will Dockery
Post by Will Dockery
Post by Hieronymous House
Nowhere specific, just friends.
Well, thanks.
You're welcome. Actually, I gave that CD away
a while ago to one of my son's friends. He liked it.
If he wants more, pass him the link:

--
Music & poetry from Will Dockery & The Shadowville All-Stars:
http://www.reverbnation.com/willdockery
Hieronymous House
2013-03-21 14:23:52 UTC
Permalink
I asked. No worries.
We're all good here.
Will Dockery
2013-03-22 11:23:08 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hieronymous House
I asked. No worries.
We're all good here.
Excellent, good to know.

Thanks again.
--
Idle Hour Night / Will Dockery & The Shadowville All-Stars
http://www.reverbnation.com/willdockery/song/15928895-idle-hour-night--dockery-mallard
Hieronymous House
2013-03-22 11:31:16 UTC
Permalink
No problem.
Will Dockery
2013-03-22 11:41:20 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hieronymous House
No problem.
Not having one.
Hieronymous House
2013-03-22 12:10:42 UTC
Permalink
7:41 AMWill Dockery
Post by Hieronymous House
No problem.
Not having one.

Right. No headache.
Will Dockery
2013-03-22 12:26:09 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hieronymous House
Right. No headache.
Right, the pills and coffee knocked that out.
Hieronymous House
2013-03-22 12:36:32 UTC
Permalink
8:26 AMWill Dockery
Post by Hieronymous House
Right. No headache.
Right, the pills and coffee knocked that out.

Good to know.
I'm very happy for you.
Please go on about your
business. Have a great day.
Will Dockery
2013-03-22 12:41:18 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hieronymous House
8:26 AMWill Dockery
Post by Will Dockery
Post by Hieronymous House
Right. No headache.
Right, the pills and coffee knocked that out.
Good to know.
I'm very happy for you.
Please go on about your
business. Have a great day.
It could be a busy one.
Or a long wait until tomorrow or Sunday.
Depending on when my shade tree mechanic is available.
Here's the Prose Poem I wrote last night...
I might call it "Headaches"

Thought we might see you at Macon Road/Forest Road, where we were broke down for an hour or so... why we never made it to Del Ranch.

About 2am we were there.

Around Midnight Dave's foot slipped on the accelerator or "something", and rammed a wooden latticed object surrounding a dumpster.

At first all that seemed to be wrong was a fender bender situation, scratched up and busted plastic bumper.

So we headed on over to Wal Mart for groceries... at about halfway, at 2nd Avenue near the donut place, we stopped and I saw a small leak, which I figured we could keep water in, I reckon not... something is wrong, a loose or broken hose, or possibly a messed up (plastic) radiator.

Brother Dave has Roadside assistance so at Macon Road, almost home, the car stalled right there at the Church, KFC, Forest Road, so we had to get towed home for the last mile or less...

Hopefully it isn't too much wrong, sure doesn't look like it would be.

Robbie Wright thinks it'll be a pretty simple job of replacing the radiator, at worst.
Hieronymous House
2013-03-22 12:55:00 UTC
Permalink
8:41 AMWill Dockery
- show quoted text -
It could be a busy one.
Or a long wait until tomorrow or Sunday.
Depending on when my shade tree mechanic is available.
Here's the Prose Poem I wrote last night...
I might call it "Headaches"

I get what you mean by Headaches, but what you call a Prose Poem reads like a note to a friend to me rather than what I'd call a prose poem, which I wouldn't capitalize as a simple matter of preference. Of course you can call whatever you write whatever you want. I hope it doesn't cost you too much to get your car fixed. Glad nobody got hurt. I'm sure Dave feels bad enough. No need to make him feel any worse by throwing any guilt his way for simply making a dumb mistake. Shit happens. Move on.
Will Dockery
2013-03-22 13:27:00 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hieronymous House
I get what you mean by Headaches, but what you call a Prose Poem reads like a
note to a friend to me rather than what I'd call a prose poem, which I wouldn't
capitalize as a simple matter of preference. Of course you can call whatever
you write whatever you want. I hope it doesn't cost you too much to get your
car fixed. Glad nobody got hurt. I'm sure Dave feels bad enough. No need to make
him feel any worse by throwing any guilt his way for simply making a dumb
mistake. Shit happens. Move on.
Robbie Wright sent me a couple of texts in which he writes that these plastic radiators are pretty simple to take out and put in, and from the way I described it that's what the problem seems to be to him.

Main problem is time, as in when Robbie has some to spare to take out the old plastic radiator to put in the new one.
Will Dockery
2013-03-23 11:37:20 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hieronymous House
Right. No headache.
None at all.

Brother Dave said to tell you hello.
Hieronymous House
2013-03-23 11:59:32 UTC
Permalink
Brother Dave said to tell you hello.

Tell Dave I said hello back.
Don't write it like you did.
Actually tell tell him.
Will Dockery
2017-05-03 14:31:25 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hieronymous707
Snappy tune. I'll pass it around.
Just found this, thank you for listening and commenting.

:)
Will Dockery
2013-01-24 15:22:30 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hieronymous707
Post by Will Dockery
Post by Will Dockery
Post by Hieronymous707
Snappy tune. I'll pass it around.
Thanks for listening and for any help you can give getting the tune
played out and about!
For what it's worth, I shared it on FB and Twitter. Good luck with it.
Hey, I just noticed
God but you're slow on
the uptake sometimes.
That was months ago.
I have about 7000 "friends" on Facebook, so it took a while to get your way.

"Chasing 'round a silver-dollar moon, 'round glimmering green ozone, 'round
Post by Hieronymous707
midnight's pale blue maelstrom, through crimson horned stigmata tied with
a sailor's knot of stars before I give her up... to that Idle Hour
Night." - with Jack Snipe and 5 others at The Shadowville All-Stars.
http://www.reverbnation.com/willdockery/song/15928895-idle-hour-night--dockery-mallard
Hieronymous707
2013-01-24 15:28:57 UTC
Permalink
10:22 AMWill Dockery
Post by Hieronymous707
Post by Will Dockery
Post by Will Dockery
Post by Hieronymous707
Snappy tune. I'll pass it around.
Thanks for listening and for any help you can give getting the tune
played out and about!
For what it's worth, I shared it on FB and Twitter. Good luck with it.
Hey, I just noticed
God but you're slow on
the uptake sometimes.
That was months ago.
I have about 7000 "friends" on Facebook, so it took a while to get your way.

I'm going in the opposite direction I guess.
I used to have thousands of friends. Now
I'm down to a precious few. Makes it easy
to keep track of their comings and goings.
Will Dockery
2013-01-26 00:54:39 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hieronymous707
Chuck. Pay attention.
Will and I are not Facebook friends.
We are only friends in real life.
Yes, we met and attended the Doo-Nanny art and music festival a couple of
years ago.

Corey can be seen taking photos at the stage during the performances
Doo-Nanny performances have been filmed by East Alabama Cable-TV and can be
watched right here free of charge:

http://www.youtube.com/user/RusticViewer07/videos?query=doonanny

DooNanny (part 1)
Uploaded on Mar 30, 2011
Doo-Nanny Festival featuring art and music. Bibb City Ramblers and
Shadowville All-Stars. EATV 7.

DooNanny (part 2)

DooNanny (part 3)

DooNanny (part 4)

DooNanny (part 5)


Outsider Folk Art Event
March 29 - March 31, 2013
http://doo-nanny.com/
Doo-Nanny
Begun as a roadside folk art show in 1996, the Doo-Nanny is now located on a
beautiful 80 acre farm in Seale, AL, near Columbus, Ga, and includes a wacky
"lo-fi" film festival, fun food, and an eclectic assortment of music and
activities. Camping is limited and we suggest planning ahead.
......start tying stuff to your roof now.......
Come all ye inventors, movie makers, ballerinas, bikers, morticians, bakers,
artists, conspiracy theorists, scientists, foodies, eco-whatevers,
moonshiners, comedians, fire-spinners, yodelers, he-shes, animal-trainers,
pickle-makers, party girls, sock monkeys, stackers, jugglers, musicians,
whittlers, spankers, fisherpersons, beggers, wanderers, and
map-makers.......
New this Year!....Krewes!....Sign up for a Krewe. It's fun and easy.....find
out more under the INFO tab!

--
Music & poetry from Will Dockery & The Shadowville All-Stars:
http://www.reverbnation.com/willdockery

"Chasing 'round a silver-dollar moon, 'round glimmering green ozone, 'round
Post by Hieronymous707
midnight's pale blue maelstrom, through crimson horned stigmata tied with
a sailor's knot of stars before I give her up... to that Idle Hour
Night." - with Jack Snipe and 5 others at The Shadowville All-Stars.
http://www.reverbnation.com/willdockery/song/15928895-idle-hour-night--dockery-mallard
Hieronymous707
2013-01-26 09:56:30 UTC
Permalink
Jan 25Will Dockery
Post by Hieronymous707
Chuck. Pay attention.
Will and I are not Facebook friends.
We are only friends in real life.
Yes, we met and attended the Doo-Nanny art and music festival a couple of
years ago.

Corey can be seen

That says it all right there.
Thank you very much, Will.
Have a great weekend.
Will Dockery
2013-01-27 04:12:10 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hieronymous707
Jan 25Will Dockery
Post by Hieronymous707
Chuck. Pay attention.
Will and I are not Facebook friends.
We are only friends in real life.
Yes, we met and attended the Doo-Nanny art and music festival a couple of
years ago.
Corey can be seen
That says it all right there.
Thank you very much, Will.
Have a great weekend.
Likewise, Corey!

--
Music & poetry from Will Dockery & The Shadowville All-Stars:
http://www.reverbnation.com/willdockery
Will Dockery
2013-03-23 12:09:10 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hieronymous House
Tell Dave I said hello back.
I will.

"Chasing 'round a silver-dollar moon, 'round glimmering green ozone, 'round
Post by Hieronymous House
midnight's pale blue maelstrom, through crimson horned stigmata tied with
a sailor's knot of stars before I give her up... to that Idle Hour
Night." - with Jack Snipe and 5 others at The Shadowville All-Stars.
http://www.reverbnation.com/willdockery/song/15928895-idle-hour-night--dockery-mallard
Hieronymous House
2013-03-23 12:40:30 UTC
Permalink
Thanks.
Will Dockery
2017-05-04 10:09:09 UTC
Permalink
Post by Hieronymous House
Thanks.
You're welcome.

:)
Will-Dockery
2024-07-07 01:42:16 UTC
Permalink
Post by Will Dockery
"Chasing 'round a silver-dollar moon, 'round glimmering gree
ozone, 'round
Post by Will Dockery
midnight's pale blue maelstrom, through crimson horned stigmat
tied with a
Post by Will Dockery
sailor's knot of stars before I give her up... to that Idle Hou
Night." -
Post by Will Dockery
with Jack Snipe and 5 others at The Shadowville All-Stars
http://www.reverbnation.com/willdockery/song/15928895-idle-hour-night--dockery-mallar

From the archives


This is a response to the post seen at
http://www.jlaforums.com/viewtopic.php?p=658899688#65889968

Will Dockery
2013-04-26 18:45:15 UTC
Permalink
Post by Will Dockery
"Chasing 'round a silver-dollar moon, 'round glimmering green ozone,
'round midnight's pale blue maelstrom, through crimson horned stigmata
tied with a sailor's knot of stars before I give her up... to that Idle
Hour Night." - with Jack Snipe and 5 others at The Shadowville All-Stars.
http://www.reverbnation.com/willdockery/song/15928895-idle-hour-night--dockery-mallard

--
Swamp Street Exile / Will Dockery & Rusty Wood:
http://www.reverbnation.com/play_now/song_11676601
b***@gmail.com
2017-05-04 00:54:58 UTC
Permalink
A favorite...

Agreed....
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