The Segarini Interview
I don’t know if you remember me, but I used to write a column or two here back before Corona went from Beer to Pandemic, and I wasn’t nipple deep in depression and writer’s block.
It occurred to me that maybe I should stick my head out of my burrow and let you know I’m okay, but still not ready to write about my favourite subjects like Gardening, Farm Tools of History, The Humour of Carrot Top and Naked Twister. Not to mention my recent discovery of a television host who may be more annoying, desperate for your love, and as shrill as the ongoing King of Late Night Fake Laughs and Maudlin Fawning, Jimmy “Don’t Call Me Jimi” Fallon.
Anyhoo, to remind you of who I are and why I is, here’s a re-run of an interview done with the Fabulous Bill King, a treasured friend and as talented a man as you are likely to ever meet. Not only will it re-introduce me to you, but will allow me to also reassure you that given enough time, Mitch McConnell will eventually die.
Bill King is a Legend around these parts. A man of NBA qualifying height who is himself, a top of the key 3-pointer whose skills range from Band Assemblage, to Composing and Arranging, to Husbanding a bright, wine-loving, tolerant woman of limitless good humour and Sire to an equally talented and skilled Son, to Step-Fathering a plethora of tiny fur-covered Yappables, to Author, Photographer, and Archivist of Soul and Groove, Nature and Architecture, Enabler of Song Singers well known and not, Producer of fine Musical Moments both onstage and in studio, and a Master of the 88 Keys of Life, on which every piece of music in the Known Universe can be accessed or added to if one is in possession of the skill it takes to coach the notes out of the Ivories and into the Ether.
That’s Bill in a nutshell …and my longest Run-In-Sentence ever ….
Bill and Bob
Bill and I share similar trajectories and managed to end up within a few miles of one another a few times, and are now both firmly settled in Toronto, our mutually well loved city we both call home.
For the whole Bill King scoop, just click on this link and learn about his incredible career, which includes being Linda Ronstadt’s, then Janis Joplin’s keyboard/band leader guy as well as time spent with other Legendary Artists.
http://torontojazz.com/artist/bill-king
Impressive, no?
Okay. Here’s the Interview published in FYIMusic online, and originally transcribed from an appearance on Bill’s CIUT FM radio show.
My comments (the Annotations) are in ITALICS and labelled “Bob” instead of my initials, R.S.
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Bill King – When hang time with Robert (Bob) Segarini presents itself – get in line. Between verbal exchanges about what Segarini sees in a dying and self-congratulatory music industry focused on minutia, Robert’s thoughts are occasion for wonderment and hilarity. That discovery of a golden recorded gem of significant proportion – a 45rpm, an LP, a concert, a neglected artist swallowed down an industry black hole and spewed out the backside – Robert will find, isolate and make us aware. Robert dropped by The Bill King Show at CIUT 89.5 FM.
The Interview
Bill King: You finally arrived, and I appreciate this, Robert.
Robert Segarini: You better.
B.K: Just back from Moose Jaw?
R.S: With a banjo on my knee and I had to sell it.
B.K: You look primed for a rest home.
R.S: I probably am, but I refuse to rest. To clarify, a trip that usually takes me thirty-five minutes took me an hour and twenty-two minutes.
B.K: Is that a record?
R.S: Thank you, snow. Yeah, the snow. I don’t know. I’ve never been up this early in the morning in my life except to go to bed.
B.K: You’ve witnessed snow in Stockton, California?
R.S: No. We used to drive to a little town called Long Barn in the Sierra Nevada foothills to see snow, then go home and put on my shorts and mow the lawn.
Stockton is in Northern California, 80 miles directly east of San Francisco, and to see snow my mom and dad, me and the dog (Spotty) would dive into Dad’s old ’36 Chevy and drive 40 minutes up into the Sierra Nevada’s and play in the snow, have a cocoa and then go home and go swimming.
B.K: That must have been cool.
R.S: I had an extraordinary youth. My adulthood wasn’t anywhere near as much fun.
B.K: I didn’t know about your beginnings in California – I thought it all began on Yonge Street.
Yonge Street 1972
Bob – Yonge Street was like the Sunset Strip crossed with the section of Hollywood Blvd that was long ago home to cut-rate electronic stores, strip joints, porn shops, and grindhouse movie theatres.
R.S: Nobody grows up on Yonge Street – you get older there. I was born in San Francisco to people that I guess were overburdened with children and put me up for adoption. That’s an exciting story. Back in those days, in the late Jurassic period, they tried to match you up with suitable adoptive parents. My foster dad was from the same little village outside of Genoa, Italy, as my actual family. Six months after I was born, I was adopted and moved to Stockton, California, the gateway to lost dreams and hope.
Stockton is the agricultural center of California in the San Joaquin Valley. We are the asparagus capital of the world.
It was an incredible time and an incredible place to grow up.
Bob – I still miss the Stockton of my youth.
B.K: I can vividly recall those towns south of Los Angeles and the orange groves.
R.S: Los Angeles is an area not a part of California. There’s a gap between San Diego and Bakersfield containing San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara – a bunch of other wonderful places, but in this gap, there is also a place called Los Angeles. We’re not quite sure who they belong to, maybe Mexico, we’re not sure. Possibly Venezuela. But it is a place that is full of people from Manitoba, Utah, Arkansas, Delaware, and France. They are not only there to have a free orange (because they grow wild in the streets) but to become celebrities and famous and popular and wealthy. It’s 10 million people from all over the world there to chase the dragon as it were.
B.K: Did you find music or did music find you?
R.S: My family had no musical inclinations in the least. My mom had a vast collection of 78s she had collected over the years. My dad whistled Cielito Lindo (an old Mexican folk song), and his favourite was Al Jolson’s Toot Toot, Tootsie Goodbye.
Bob – I only ever went to a movie with my Dad once. It was The Caddy with Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis. My Dad whistled along with That’s Amore, and laughed out loud at everything Jerry Lewis said and did. It was a side of him I had never seen. The Stockton Theatre, August of 1953, just before my 8th Birthday.
B.K: He must have known my dad. Yeah. That was a kind of a “go-to” song between men of a certain age.
R.S: My dad worked twenty hours a day and slept for two and a half – a very hard-working blue-collar self-made man who never finished eighth grade. The kind of guy who quit school to go to work. He and his three brothers supported the family after they moved from Italy to Northern California. He was three years old when they made a move and a wonderful guy but musical; not really.
My mother was very supportive. I tap-danced from the time I was two until I was five, mostly to Shine on Harvest Moon – did a lot of county fairs and church functions. I took up the accordion at gunpoint for my dad. It’s an Italian rite of passage.
Bob – The Scots have a similar Rite of Passage. The one where boys learn to drink Scotch without grimacing and pretend it tastes good. Ditto the Irish and Irish Whiskey. Let us not speak of Bagpipes, Banjoes, or Haggis …or Tim Horton or Starbuck coffee and the joys of taking a puck to the face.
Accordion from five until twelve; then my uncle (Elbert Bidwell), at the time the secretary-treasurer of the local American Federation of Musicians, gifted me with an AFM card and a Student Prince acoustic guitar from Sears and that of course, ruined my life – and here I am.
The first album I ever did was for RCA. It was a band called Family Tree, and the album was called Miss Butters. The Joffrey Ballet, when they were still in Seattle, wanted to turn it into a ballet, but when they left Seattle and moved to New York their new owners blew off the deal.
My Dad
When my dad passed away, we (my cousins and other family members) sat at the kitchen table and told stories about him. Many I had never heard. For example, I found this out about him. He was always kind of disgruntled with me because I didn’t go into the family produce – grocery business like the rest of the second generation of Segarinis. And even when it was evident that I had chosen music over “grocerying,” he never had anything to say except, “Don’t you ever sleep?” and “Get a haircut.”
Bob – This went on for about 3 years. I would run into my Dad in the garage at 3am in the morning. I would just be getting home, my Dad would just be going to work. It used to drive me nuts …now, it is a fond memory of my Dad trying to talk some sense into me.
When my first band rehearsed at our house, he slept through our rehearsals. He could sleep through anything. My dad slept through a two-car collision at the corner where our home was located that caused a tire to bounce off the front of the house just under the big bay window in the living room right next to his Barcalounger, shaking the whole house. Even the ensuing sirens failed to wake him up.
Bob – Our next door neighbor, Mr. Kragen, once called the police complaining about the noise we made when we rehearsed. When they came to the door and told us we were disturbing the neighbors, my Mom pointed to my Dad, sound asleep in his recliner next to the guitar amp, and they went away.
We used to deliver groceries to dozens of restaurants and sorority and fraternity houses at the University of Pacific, starting at four or five in the morning – him at the wheel of the truck and me sitting on a 100-pound sack of onions or potatoes, terrified that one of my friends would see me in the back of the pickup.
Bob – I was 13 – 14 years old. I saw Sorority girls in baby dolls getting coffee in the kitchens. Thanks Dad. Thanks vegetables.
Anyway, years later, I was living in Los Angeles when the Family Tree album was released, and RCA had sent a box (25) of records to my parent’s house, thinking that was still my address. My father went around to all the restaurants with the albums and told the owners to put them on their jukeboxes. They said, “John, the jukebox only holds singles, and that’s an album,” and my dad would say, “I don’t care, put it on there anyway.”
Bob – I really miss my Dad. His birth and death dates are etched into the centre of the vinyl at the end of the grooves on Gotta Have Pop. I called him Pop my entire childhood. The album’s name was a reference to him as well as pop music. He passed away just before the LP was released in 1978.
B.K: He could have been one of the biggest promo men on the coast.
R.S: He could have done very well. Delivering produce with my dad came with a perk. We always had lunch at whichever restaurant we finished our rounds at, and I don’t think my dad ever had to pay because he never lost at Liar’s Dice, a game all bartenders played with customers or customers played with each other everywhere. My dad would always make the same bet – double or nothing for lunch. I never saw him lose.
I learned my drinking prowess from my father. He didn’t drink that much, but he drank regularly, and I’m the same way.
Bob – He would have one beer with lunch. I would have a glass of Canada Dry Tom Collins mix. The bartenders would always add a maraschino cherry. I read an article in Science Digest that claimed those cherries were so preserved by the chemicals and dyes used to preserve and colour them, that they had about the same half-life as uranium. I buried one in the back yard and dug it up a year later. It looked exactly the same as when I buried it. Even the worms wouldn’t go near it. I learned science thanks to bartenders.
B.K: We both have Italian heritage.
R.S: King?
B.K: Michelone – Pennsylvania Italians – farming.
R.S: Michelone? There’s a vowel at the end of your name, and it validates your Italian heritage. I immediately trust you.
Bob – Maybe I should have changed my name. Might have done better if I had been BILL Segarini.
B.K: I don’t know how to explain the music thing when both sides of the family were farmers.
R.S: Being a spectacular keyboard player, I would assume you played the accordion at one point or another in your life.
B.K: My dad was not Italian.
R.S: You dodged the bullet.
B.K: That instrument wasn’t entering the house.
R.S: From the time I was five and started playing on my first twelve-button bass accordion until I graduated from the gigantic hundred and twenty-eight bass button monstrosity that damn near outweighed me. My mother loved to cook (which gave me my love of cooking) and threw a lot of dinner parties. My dad would trot me out after dinner, and I’d play and get silver dollars and fifty-cent pieces and tousled hair, and now and then my grandfather and my uncle for some insane reason would slip me five bucks. I guess I was paid off. His way of saying, “Go back to your room.”
B.K: Dad would make an announcement, “The boys are about to perform,” and we’d say, what? Good people from church would drop by, and he’d call, “Toot Toot Tootsie,” strap on the guitar, then play five beats to the bar. It’s like that gig with Chuck Berry.
R.S: Chuck Berry is the most famous one, as you know. Off he goes – no one ever knew the key. You had to chase after him. It sounds like we had similar backgrounds as cheap entertainment as children.
Bob – There were no Labour Laws back then. Not only did we not get union breaks, we had to eat in the kitchen and come and go by the back door/service entrance.
B.K: You’re a terrific writer and spend hours writing and chronicling a lot of what goes on the music industry. What writers turn you on?
R.S: How far back do you want me to go? As far as writing goes, I was always a reader – a voracious reader. I started reading very young – age two, probably, and I was also listening to the radio from the moment I was adopted. It got me to sleep at night. I got Superman and Jack Benny on TV, and all the rest of that stuff as well as the music.
Bob – I meant to say I got Superman and Benny on the RADIO, along with the tail-end of all the dramas, comedy, and mystery shows. Recorded music (records) were usually on at night on shows like “Burgie Bandstand” and “Lucky Lager Dance Time”, two 4 hour shows both sponsored by breweries.
I learned to read in the third grade, and I never looked back.
Bob – I meant to say I became OBSESSED with reading in the 3rd grade.
I used to do like 300 book reports a year. I was a Heinlein fan and Arthur C. Clarke but also a huge fan of the Oz books – L. Frank Baum and Lewis Carroll and the rest of them. I read a lot, and I and I wrote a lot. And then I started writing music when I was thirteen, and the inspiration for that was Buddy Holly and The Everly Brothers, but before and during that, I was more impacted by “doo-wop” music and Glenn Miller big bands. Doo-wop, especially anything on the Gee label, I would buy unheard.
I grew up into more of an R and B thing. The first song I wrote was in the eighth grade called Juvenile Delinquent. I also wrote a song called Susan about the girl who was a couple of years older than me and lived across the street that I had a massive crush on. I recorded it when I was 13 or 14. One of the two acetates made was obtained by the friend of a friend in Stockton, at an estate sale, and it’s now in my possession. I was trying to be Dion & the Belmonts.
Bob – Susan. OMG she was beautiful. She was about three years older than me. Taught me how to French kiss. She was my best friend for a couple of years.
Susan at 17
As far as writing prose goes or writing about all the crap I’ve been through or done or caused – I grew up reading Ralph Gleason and Herb Caen. Ralph was a music critic who started as a big band guy and graduated to jazz, then rock.
My Uncle Elbert got me into the AF of M and took me to San Francisco to the Blackhawk and The Purple Onion to see Billie Holiday, Miles Davis, and so many others. I was eleven and twelve.
Bob – My uncle Elbert was a relative from my Mother’s side of the Family. A band leader and the man who created the plectrum style of banjo playing, he was responsible for encouraging my musical ambitions, and exposing me to artists who are now considered to be Giants in their respective fields. because of him, I saw a lot of the greats most have only heard about. Like I have said before …I had an incredible childhood. In an incredible little town. Surrounded by incredible people. In an incredible time in history.
The clubs had what was called a ‘green room’ named after the old green-glass Coca-Cola bottles, and if you were with an adult, you could be there underage. I saw Earl Fatha Hines. I saw Erroll Garner. I saw all the greats, ALL of them, including Mose Allison who sang Don’t Do Nothing Till You Hear From Me with no vibrato – Parchment Farm and Seventh Son. This early education led me to re-discover Mose Allison in 1976, when he released my favourite of his to this day, Your Mind is on Vacation (But Your Mouth is Workin’ Overtime).
Ralph Gleason was a connective tissue between me and that music when I wasn’t fortunate enough to go with my uncle to see one of these artists. I read Ralph voraciously, and I read Herb Caen religiously because he just kept San Francisco alive and I loved San Francisco – my second favourite city on earth – Toronto is the first for the same reasons I love San Francisco: music and food. I read them faithfully, and then when Rolling Stone came out, I never missed an issue.
I’ll never forget this; the first issue had a picture of Lennon on the cover, and it folded in half, and it was like a newspaper. There was a big picture, half the front page, of John in makeup for How I Won the War. It was all about John Lennon, and it wasn’t Beatles stuff. It was like how does he put his pants on? Focused on him and the movie, not what’s your favourite colour? What’s your favourite food, like those teen magazines. So, you read Rolling Stone cover to cover, and that got me into reading a lot of music magazines.
Rolling Stone first issue
Bob – It is so sad to note was has happened to Rolling Stone and Billboard, following radio and and record companies down the rabbit hole of celebrity and teen quirkiness, only occasionally focusing on the unique, game changing, or musical risk takers.
B.K: Hunter S. Thompson!
R.S: Never missed his articles. But when you come to that kind of gonzo reportage, I was more into it a year and a half later.
Lester Bangs, Dave Marsh, and Ben Edmonds were excellent friends and Al Neister, who lives here in Toronto. They were part of the Creem family and lived together in Walled Lake just outside of Detroit. Oh, the stories I have; but those guys are who made me interested in doing a little bit of archaeology and reporting on what was going on around me. But I never acted on it any more than I worked on the fact that I was fascinated by radio at an early age.
Bob – Lester was a National Treasure. The soul of a poet, a pop culture Bard, an honest, angry, passionate force in music journalism …and of course, a times as crazy and self-destructive as a shit-house rat. I miss Lester, both as chronicler and friend.
I used to listen to this guy at night, Denny Kerwin. His show was called The Denny Kerwin Soiree on K-Joy in Stockton. And when I was 12 or 13 years old, I would sneak out of the house around midnight when he went on air, and I would get on my bicycle and I would get coffee and pedal to KJOYs studio, at the corner of Weber and Eldorado in the Hotel Stockton. You could see the foot and vehicle traffic right outside because the studio had the floor to ceiling bay windows and was on the corner of the Hotel Stockton.
KJOY
I would sit in the booth with him until 3 in the morning and watch him spin records. I’d leave with all the deejay copies of the 45s stacked up in the music director’s office Denny would give me, which were usually junk, but now and then there would be a good one. But it never occurred to me to go into radio, ever.
Bob ‘ Denny looked like a CPA or insurance adjuster, right down to the brown suit and bow-tie. But on the radio, he was smart, knowledgeable, and musically savvy. I can’t imagine letting a 12 or 13 year old kid sit in the booth late at night while you plied the airwaves. You would get canned in a minute.
B.K: Was Q-107 your first radio gig?
R.S: CHUM-FM was my first radio gig, thanks to a guy named Warren Cosford.
Segarini Live at The Palais CHUM FM and CITY TV
The Segarini Band had done a simulcast-on City TV and CHUM-FM, and I had done some voiceover stuff for some of the other concerts that they broadcast, like Motorhead. I had just let my band go and was finishing up with David Bendeth of all people – Paul DeLong – what a band that was with John Cleveland Hughes – we were so good. I’ll tell you about The Monks tour sometime off-mic.
I was sitting around my kitchen table with Cameron Carpenter, a very dear friend back then, and the phone rang, and the voice said, “Hi, I’m Warren Cosford, and I want to know if you would wish to come in and be a disc jockey at CHUM FM.’ I said something extraordinarily rude and hung up on him because I thought it was a joke.
Bob – It was the dining room table at 33 Armadale and Cam and I had been up all night clubbing and were drinking beer at 8 in the morning and poring Heiniken over each other while we sang,
He’s Dale
We’re covered
In ale”
After the wife got up saw us, and shook her head and left for work, the call came
I had written this big article in the Toronto Star newspaper that Peter Goddard had made the whole front page of the Entertainment Section of the Toronto Star, basically denouncing radio for not playing punk and new wave stuff and not encouraging local bands, like radio stations eventually did, and did beautifully, giving me and so many others a career, but at the time, I thought it was a joke. He called back, Thank God. So, I got into the radio quite by accident, I just answered the phone.
Bob – Oh for the days when local bands were played on the big 3 (CHUM FM, Q107, and CFNY) because of their music and nothing else. Radio stations in Toronto BROKE records and nurtured careers by supporting the artists and exposing them to a wider audience. Every station hosted shows in the bars. They had a presence on the street as well as on the dial.
B.K: You remained at CHUM. How long?
R.S: It was over six months, and I got fired for having Motorhead in for an interview. Then two of them stayed with me for a week after. We were supposed to do a ten-minute interview and we ended up doing a whole show. They used to put these little red dots – ‘stick em’ – on all the tracks on the LP you couldn’t play, right. We were taking those off and playing a lot of race records. Played a lot of Little Richard, some King and Federal label artists, all the good stuff that was in the library but never played. Nobody was doing it then. It was a great three hours of radio.
Bob – Once, while I was at CHUM, I asked the Music Director for some original rock and roll. Chuck Berry, Little Richard, Fats Domino, you know. That night I am delighted to see “Lucille” on my playlist …except …except, it’s the version by The Everly Brothers. In retrospect, I can see why they were upset when Lemmy, Phil, and I played 3 hours woth of Richard, Ray Charles, Fats, and others. I was let go the next afternoon.
As far as writing goes, like being a DJ, it never occurred to me. It never occurred to me to write prose about music, or about my life, but then, out of the blue, David Farrell, who you know and work with, called Greg Simpson (another mutual friend of ours) and asked Greg, who had been a writer in his past, to write a column for the first incarnation of FYI Music. Greg didn’t want to do it, so he suggested David, who used to be my neighbour who I’ve known forever and he called me up, and I said, “I don’t know how to do it, so he said write about your life” – so I did. I did that for two or three years.
I wrote three columns a week. Now, I have trouble doing one. It’s like everything else – the more you do it, the better you get at it.
Bob – Like Robert Heinlein so eloquently stated, “The only thing worse than writing, is not writing”.
Now, I don’t consider myself an excellent writer because I read, and I know my punctuation and grammar are not great. I write the same way I do radio. I write like I talk because it’s connective. That’s what I’ve always enjoyed reading, so that’s what I write. When (an earlier edition of) FYI folded, I just kept writing and started my little blog called Don’t Believe a Word I Say. I have other writers and a rotating bunch with five core writers and myself; wonderful people: Frank Gutch Junior, Cam Carpenter, the incredible Doug Thompson, and a guy named Darrell Vickers who lives in Pasadena California. He was the head writer for The Johnny Carson Tonight Show for the last three years it was on the air and the eight years before that, plus he’s worked with every significant comedian star you’ve ever heard. He’s written a lot of the iconic jokes you and I tell. I was blown away when I found out he had written some of the greatest jokes and one-liners out there. He’s originally from Oshawa of all places. And so, yeah – I write – and it’s what keeps me busy and happy, but there’s no money. Everybody does it to learn and for experience, and it’s a labour of love for all of us.
B.K: Those are the people who have something to say.
R.S: This is why the “Old School of Everything” is dying. Because the people that run things don’t understand that things have changed – they’re not changing. THINGS changed two decades ago. And the biggest mistake in our related fields was the murder of Napster by the people who should have thrown money at it and realized it was the new distribution system, not only for music but for everything.
The two years that Napster was running were the two years the most CDs sold. Then sales started to go downhill when people could no longer hear the music before they bought it – the industry destroyed itself. It’s the slowest murder/suicide in the history of the world.
Major record labels and that whole paradigm will always exist, but they don’t make music now. They manufacture a product for the formats of the existing radio stations who also no longer play anything other than what their tight formats allow. They play format fodder for people who want the more and familiar background and party music.
B.K: Nothing moves me like going back and find some form of roots music – I don’t care what it is, I want to hear the first thing that was done by somebody, and it always moves me.
R.S: You are an archaeologist. I also spend most of my time hunting artists and music both overlooked in the past and current. I’m in front of the computer a good eighteen hours a day wrestling with Word Press, trying to get the columns out and editing and stuff, but while I’m there every time I take a break, I’m looking for new things. I go to places where it may be.
The sad truth is, to be financially successful and popular, you have to hit the median or ‘mediocrity’ area. You must give the majority what they want and please as many people as possible to receive the most significant return. Generally, that has always compromised art in favour of commerce. We’re only blessed every once in a while with a perfect storm that creates a Sinatra, a Presley, or a Beatles, or those who connect like James Brown or others who not only become popular and prosperous financially, but are exceptional, unique, and creative.
BK: Here’s a good question before we end. A friend of mine from high school texted me a message today saying with all that happened in Ferguson, Missouri, and what’s going down in the states with racial profiling, is there anybody out there like a Dylan or Gil Scott-Heron delivering a message that unites all of us.
R.S: He asked the wrong question. It should have been, “Why haven’t I found the people that are addressing these problems?” They’re out there, in the local bars and venues, on the street corners. But they are not on the radio. All you have to do is leave your house.
Bob – Many thanks to Bill King for giving so many of us a platform to connect with the people of Toronto and other locations who support and are interested in music, radio, and recordings. …and thanks to all of you who still listen, still search, and still carry the torch.
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Segarini’s regular columns drive by night, smoke unfiltered Lucky Strikes, drink whisky out of the bottle, and oogle long gams on well built dames.
Bob “The Iceman” Segarini was in the bands The Family Tree, Roxy, The Wackers, The Dudes, and The Segarini Band and nominated for a Juno for production in 1978. He also hosted “Late Great Movies” on CITY TV, was a producer of Much Music, and an on-air personality on CHUM FM, Q107, SIRIUS Sat/Rad’s Iceberg 95, (now 85), and now publishes, edits, and writes for DBAWIS, continues to write music, make music, and record.
March 19, 2021 at 2:36 pm
It just never ends with you, does it? Sooo fuckin’ lucky, yet here I am feeling the richer for it…ta, mate. ❤
March 19, 2021 at 3:45 pm
Excellent. Good to hear from you Bob.
March 20, 2021 at 9:54 am
Susan…I’ll never forget the sleepover in Susan’s front room across the street from your house Bobby,,,she was in town with 3 of her GORGEOUS sorority sisters from San Jose State…some kind of night to remember
January 20, 2023 at 9:03 pm
Speaking of Miss Butters, is there any way to get full lyrics for it? There are some spots where I’m stuck.
January 20, 2023 at 9:56 pm
I will get back to you as soon as I remember them ….