Dave’s Gone By Interview (1/11/2020): RAQUEL CION & Rabbi Sol Solomon

Click above to watch in-studio footage of Rabbi Sol Solomon’s phone interview with Raquel Cion.

Rabbi Sol Solomon chats with singer RAQUEL CION

Topics include: Mr. and Mr. Jones, David Bowie, cabaret.  

Segment aired Jan. 11, 2020 as part of the “Dave’s Gone By” podcast program hosted by Dave Lefkowitz.

Please Note: Segments extracted from “Dave’s Gone By” may have music and other elements removed for timing and media re-posting considerations.  For the full interview with all elements, please visit the audio of the complete original broadcast.

All content (c)2020 TotalTheater Productions.                                                   

More information on Dave’s Gone By: http://www.davesgoneby.com

Dave’s Gone By #728 (1/11/2020): CIONARA

Click above to watch in-studio footage of the entire episode.
Click above to listen to the episode.

Here is the 728th episode of the long-running radio show/podcast, Dave’s Gone By, which aired live on Facebook, Saturday, Jan. 11, 2020.

Host: Dave Lefkowitz

Guest: singer Raquel Cion, Dave’s wife Joyce

Featuring: Rabbi Sol Solomon interviews singer Raquel Cion, Greeley Crimes & Old Times, Inside Broadway, Colorado Limerick of the Damned (Como), Today Yesterday (Jan. 11), Dave Says Bye (Neil Innes).

00:00:01 DAVE GOES IN w/ Joyce (surprise sloth, Jeanne Zoppi, LIRR, accidental missile)
00:50:00 GREELEY CRIMES & OLD TIMES
01:28:00 GUEST: Rabbi Sol Solomon interviews Raquel Cion
02:10:00 COLORADO LIMERICK OF THE DAMNED w/ Rabbi Sol Solomon – Como
02:17:00 INSIDE BROADWAY
02:51:00 Friends of the Daverhood
03:01:00 DAVE SAYS BYE – Neil Innes
03:12:00 TODAY YESTERDAY – Jan. 11
03:33:00 DAVE GOES OUT

Jan. 11, 2020 Playlist: “Jeanne Zoppi” (00:20:00; Brian Gari). “The Urban Spaceman” (03:10:00; Bonzo Dog Band).

Raquel Cion
Como, CO
Jeanne Zoppi & Brian Gari

Dave’s Gone By #588 (1/7/2017): MEET THE NEW YEAR, SAME AS THE OLD YEAR

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Here is the 588th episode of the long-running radio show/podcast, Dave’s Gone By, which aired on UNC Radio, Jan. 7, 2017. Info: davesgoneby.com.

Host: Dave Lefkowitz
Guest: Dave’s wife Joyce

Featuring: Rabbi Sol Solomon’s Rabbinical Reflection #143 (Obama & the U.N.), Inside Broadway, Greeley Crimes & Old Times, Bob Dylan – Sooner & Later (The Times), Saturday Segues (David Bowie, In the News)
00:00:01 DAVE GOES IN w/ Joyce (facebook, bowie, cize, bots, NY Post, YikYak)
00:43:30 GREELEY CRIMES & OLD TIMES
01:14:00 Sponsors
01:17:00 DAVE GOES FURTHER IN w/ Joyce (psoas)
01:19:00 SATURDAY SEGUE – David Bowie
01:44:00 INSIDE BROADWAY
02:05:30 BOB DYLAN – Sooner & Later (The Times)
02:29:30 RABBI SOL SOLOMON’S RABBINICAL REFLECTION #143 (Obama & the U.N.)
02:40:00 Friends
02:48:00 SATURDAY SEGUE – In the News
03:18:00 Weather & Thanks
03:20:00 DAVE GOES OUT

Jan. 7, 2017 Playlist: “Cize excerpt” (00:19:00; Shaun T.). “It’s no Game, Part 1” (01:23:30), “Kooks” (01:27:30), “Girl Loves Me” (01:30:30) & “Drive in Saturday” (01:35:00; David Bowie). “Days Like This” (Falsettoland 1991 off-Broadway cast). “Only a Pawn in Their Game” (02:09:30) & “Restless Farewell” ({live} 02:16:30; Bob Dylan). “The Times They are a-Changin'” ({live} 02:13:00; Peter, Paul & Mary). “Torture” (02:49:00; The Cure). “All the Time in Airports” (02:35:00; The Handsome Family). “Has Anybody Here Seen Kelly” (02:57:00; Arthur Osmond). “My Mustang Ford” (02:59:00; Chuck Berry). “They Call the Wind Mariah” (03:01:30; The Kingston Trio). “Whale Song” (03:06:00; Pearl Jam). “January Hymn” (03:21:00; The Decemberists).


(pictured: Cize, David Bowie, Dylan’s “The Times They are a-Changin’)

Dave’s Gone By Skit: RABBI SOL SOLOMON’S RABBINICAL REFLECTION #135 (1/17/2016): David Bowie

click above to listen (audio file)
click above to listen (audio only)

RABBI SOL SOLOMON’S RABBINICAL REFLECTION #135 (1/17/2016): David Bowie

Aired Jan. 16, 2016 on Dave’s Gone By. Youtube clip: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7_goP2CmBVI

Shalom Dammit! This is Rabbi Sol Solomon with a Rabbinical Reflection for the week of January 17th, 2016.

It is time to say a sad Shalom to David Bowie, the super-talented singer, songwriter, rock star, and icon who died of liver cancer on January 10th. Most musicians find one persona in a career and stick with it: Joe Smith sings country, Edna Whatever does dance pop, Mordecai Ben David does . . . whatever he does. But David Bowie changed his look, his style, his sound more times than I change my underwear. Well, maybe that’s not the best example, since I’m kind of lazy in the laundry department, but you know what I mean. He started with twee British pop tunes like “Come and Buy My Toys” and “Love You `Til Tuesday,” songs that weren’t meant to last even until Monday. But they pointed the way towards freaky folk and post-Apollo weirdness and “Space Oddity,” the story of a man who gets completely lost in space and never comes back—like Gary Busey.

Wearing dresses and cavorting in transgender weirdness, Bowie pushed the conventions of behavior and attire—which could only mean one thing: he was destined for rock and roll. He created Ziggy Stardust, a rock idol with a comet-like trajectory and really, really tight pants. Suddenly, just going onstage and playing songs wasn’t enough anymore. You needed costumes and makeup and pyrotechnics and huge hydraulics. Long before Grizabella rose to cat heaven and Bono started singing from a claw, Bowie was ascending on a cherry picker and cavorting with glass spiders.

And when all that got too weird and dangerous, Bowie changed again. He became a Thin White Duke, white because he was basically covered head to foot with cocaine powder. But the music remained: “Rebel Rebel,” “Somebody Up There Likes Me,” “Young Americans”—soul music for white people. And believe me, we needed it, because up till then, the closest we got to soul music was Donovan. But even Bowie’s “plastic soul” was the real thing—so real that James Brown stole Carlos Alomar’s riff from “Fame”—not the other way around. They even asked James Brown about it, and he said, quote, “(series of grunts).”

But seriously, Bowie eased off the drugs just a little to save his sanity and then moved on to yet another incarnation: krautrock. He and Brian Eno found themselves in Berlin mixing electronic music and hard rock in a delightful way that could only come out of a country that murdered 40 million people. Bowie would never reach those musical peaks again, and indeed, his most commercially popular years were filled with dance-club pop and sometimes desperate attempts to stay trendy by incorporating that 1980s sound that we all loved so much. (Insert sarcastic facial expression here.)

Did he stay there, though? Of course not. He was David Bowie. He returned to arty, experimental, and often difficult music and stayed there for another two decades. He may not have gotten on the radio with songs like “Slip Away,” “Never Get Old,” and “Fall Dog Bombs the Moon,” but anyone with iTunes and ears can find them and hear their worth.

After that, for awhile, David Bowie laid low (no album-title pun intended). He pushed his back catalogue and old concerts and didn’t tour because of a heart condition. But then two years ago, he jumped once more into creativity, secretly recording new tracks with old colleagues. He put out “The Next Day” in 2013, then started working on an off-Broadway show, then released another album on his birthday this year. We all now know the reason for this 18-month burst of activity, and it may be the biggest Bowie takeaway of all. He knew his days were literally numbered. He knew the liver he was punishing 40 years ago was coming back like Rocky for a knockout. He knew he had so much more to do and so little time. So he did it. He pushed himself because any day, he would fall to earth.

Most of us, thank God, don’t have such a diagnosis hanging over our heads. Except we do. Who knows when HaShem will send a drunk driver careening towards us on the highway? Or a Muslim with a backpack? Or a mutated cell that will turn prostates into pancakes and ovaries into rotten eggs? Every day we’re still alive is a challenge to make that day count. To bring something new into the world that wasn’t there the day before.

Maybe it’s a poem. A painting. A table. A scarf. A youtube video of your pet doing something adorable. Okay, maybe the world doesn’t need more of that, but the impetus to strike while our irons are still hot is, perhaps, the greatest function of our human DNA.

Go figure it took a space alien, diamond dog, and spider from Mars to remind us. Thank you, David Bowie. You were a musical hero for a lot more than just one day.

This has been a Rabbinical Reflection from Rabbi Sol Solomon, Temple Sons of Bitches, in Great Neck, New York.

(c) 2016 TotalTheater. All rights reserved.

Dave’s Gone By #541 (1/16/2016): AGRA CULTURE

Click above to listen to the episode (audio only).

Here is the 541st episode of the long-running radio show/podcast, Dave’s Gone By, which aired on UNC Radio, Jan. 16, 2016. Info: Dave’s Gone By. 

Featuring: Rabbi Sol Solomon chats with musician Mike Agranoff; Rabbi Sol reflects on David Bowie; Saturday Segue (Bowie); Inside Broadway; Greeley Crimes & Old Times.

Host: Dave Lefkowitz
Guests: musician Mike Agranoff, Dave’s wife Joyce

00:00:01 DAVE GOES IN w/ Joyce (busy Joyce, Linked In, lotta death)
00:25:00 GREELEY CRIMES & OLD TIMES
00:55:00 Sponsors
00:59:00 SATURDAY SEGUE – David Bowie
01:37:30 Sponsors
01:41:30 INSIDE BROADWAY
02:13:00 RABBI SOL SOLOMON’S RABBINICAL REFLECTION #135 – David Bowie
02:19:00 GUEST: Rabbi Sol Solomon interview Mike Agranoff
03:44:30 BOB DYLAN – Sooner & Later (Planet Tracks)
04:04:00 Weather
04:07:00 Friends
04:16:00 DAVE GOES OUT

Jan. 16, 2016 Playlist: “When I Live My Dream” (01:13:00), “Sorrow” (01:16:30), “Dollar Days” (01:23:00), “Fall Dog Bombs the Moon” (01:28:00), “Lazarus” (02:08:30) & “`Heroes'” (04:23:00; David Bowie). “Tonight” (01:19:30; Iggy Pop). “The Modern Folk Musician” (02:19:00), “New York Central Yard” (02:30:30), “Road Jigs” (02:39:30), “Diana Hanson/Parting Glass” (02:43:30), “The Highway” ({live by phone; 02:48:30), “Urge for Going” (03:02:30), “The Ballad of the Sandman” (03:21:30), “Nova Scotia” (03:34:00) & “The Princess and the Frog” ({live by phone} 03:38:00; Mike Agranoff). “Something There is About You” (03:49:00), “You’re a Big Girl Now” (03:53:00) & “Going Going Gone” (03:58:00; Bob Dylan).

Miek Agranoff
David Bowie, RIP
Dylan’s Planet Waves

Dave’s Gone By #338 (1/8/2011): 21st CENTURY FOX

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Here is the 338th episode of the long-running radio show/podcast, Dave’s Gone By, which aired on UNC Radio, Jan. 8, 2011. Info: davesgoneby.com.

Host: Dave Lefkowitz

Guest: Charles Fox

Featuring: Dave chats with songwriter & TV theme composer Charles Fox. Plus: Dave Goes Off on NPR, David Bowie birthday tribute, and Bob Dylan: “Sooner & Later.”

00:00:01 DAVE GOES IN
00:20:00 GUEST: Charles Fox
00:57:00 Dave – Friends of the Daverhood
01:12:30 SATURDAY SEGUE – David Bowie Birthday Tribute
01:50:00 Weather
01:55:30 DAVE GOES OFF: on NPR, part 1
02:03:00 BOB DYLAN – Sooner & Later
02:22:30 DAVE GOES OFF: on NPR, part 2
02:51:30 DAVE GOES OFF: on Ebert’s Tweet
02:54:00 Sponsors & Upcoming Guests
02:59:00 DAVE GOES OUT

Jan. 8, 2011 Playlist: “Killing Me Softly” (Roberta Flack; 00:15:00), “Happy Days” (00:11:00), “Love Boat Theme” (00:13:00) & “Love American Style” (00:54:00) (Charles Fox), “I Got a Name” (00:42:30; Jim Croce), “Golden Years” (01:12:30), “Because You’re Young” (01:16:30), “Never Get Old” (01:21:30), “Fill Your Heart” (01:25:30), “Somebody Up There Likes Me” (01:29:00), “God Knows I’m Good” (01:35:00), “Survive” (01:38:30), “Song for Bob Dylan” (02:03:00) & “Heroes” (03:00:00; David Bowie). “Love Minus Zero/No Limit” (live; 02:07:00), “What Can I Do for You” (02:11:00), Obviously Five Believers” (02:19:30), “They Killed Him” (02:23:00) & “I Shall Be Free No. 10” (02:27:00; Bob Dylan), “Wallflower” (02:17:00; Doug Sahm & Band). “Everybody Wants My Fanny” (02:57:30; Benny Bell).
(pictured: Charles Fox, NPR, David Bowie)

Charles Fox
David Bowie
NPR
Dave

Dave’s Gone By #59 (1/5/2004): OH FOUR HEAVEN’S SAKE!

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Here is the 59th episode of the long-running radio show/podcast, Dave’s Gone By, which aired on NY’s WGBB-AM, Jan. 5, 2004. Info: davesgoneby.com. 

host: Dave Lefkowitz

Featuring: Dave Goes Off on the New Year. Plus: the satirical News Gone By, and tributes to David Bowie’s birthday and black & white M&Ms.

00:00:01  DAVE GOES IN: A quiet new year, an email onslaught, and the beauty of radio.
00:24:00  NEWS GONE BY: Terrorism Chess; Ben Franklin – Terrorist; Arts Funding; Iranian Mirthquake; Swingline Dollah-Dollah; Oyster Solidarity; Frivolous Lawsuit Time (Playground Mishap); McDonald’s Spilling & Starbucks Burning; Jets and Sharks; Dead Man Dangling (Bad Pun of the Week); Adios Ephedra; M&Ms in B&W; The Inc; My Big Fat Obnoxious Title; Croc Teaser; Bull on the Highway; Steinbrenner Faints; When a Bee Smells Blood; The Toilet Bowl; Food Chain Barbie.
01:10:00  DAVE GOES OUT: Birthday tribute to David Bowie; Thank Yous.

Playlist: “Five Years,” “Fantastic Voyage,” “Golden Years” & “Heroes” (David Bowie), “Coffee in a Cardboard Cup” (The World Goes `Round off-Broadway cast recording); “B-Side” ({live version}; Loudon Wainwright III); “B&W M&Ms” (Dave).

a3
David Bowie
your host