Monday, June 7, 2010

Lee Hudson. At the reunion. Nuts.

The bad news is that Lee Hudson is coming to the NMA reunion. The good news is, he won't get there until late on Friday.


This works out so great. I'll arrive in San Antonio a few days before the reunion starts--late Sunday, in fact--so I'll have over four full days of relaxed enjoyment before Hudbucket shows up and lowers the general tone of things.

Do not be deceived by the fact that Lee and I appear to get along. Out of respect for our comrades, to keep the event from becoming a Texas cage match, we act civilly toward each other at reunions.

It's all an act. Believe me, we really can't stand each other.

Come out, come out, wherever you are.

This year's Navy Musicians Association will be my fifth. Attending has become an important tradition.

Even this pre-reunion period has its pleasures and traditions.I begin to get news from all over the country. Long-time members and first-timers tell me who's coming, who has to miss the event this year. I send announcements to all NMA members whose email addresses are listed on the roster.

Great traditions. Well, most of them. The one I don't look forward to is the Big Bounce: after sending a mass mailing to NMA members, my mailbox becomes clogged with emails bouncing back from members with nonfunctional email addresses.

It just happened again. Fully a quarter of the email addresses listed on the NMA roster don't work.

This can happen for a number of reasons:
  • You have a new email account, but forgot to notify the NMA.
  • Your mailbox is full.
  • Your settings are refusing mail. 
  • You wrote it unintelligibly on your membership application, registration form or other correspondence, 
Folks, email is the wave of the present. Go to the NMA roster and check your email address. The point of belonging to a reunion organization is not to hide from your buddies.

Go to the roster.

If you use Outlook Express, or a similar email client:
  • Left-click on your name. An email will open, addressed to you at the address you supplied the NMA.
If you don't host your email in your computer (you use Yahoo, Gmail or some other web-based email):
  • Right-click on your name.
  • A menu will let you put your email address into the clipboard (something like "copy email" or "copy shortcut.")
  • Copy your email and paste it into the search box at the top of your screen and have a look.
Welcome to the 21st century. We're glad to make your acquaintance.

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Has it been a year already?

The Navy Musicians Association 2010 reunion is mere weeks away. Here's a quick review of last year's get-together to put you in the mood...

Saturday, June 5, 2010

MUs in the Lone Star State

Never been to Texas. Big place, I understand.

So it figures a lot of former MUs would be from, or live in, Texas.

Two of my old shipmates, NMA regulars Doyle Church and Tex Waldron are from the Lone Star State.

Now, Juan Villapando, who lives in Corpus Christi, tells me he'll be coming to the reunion with, he hopes, a few more MUs. He says there are a few right it San Antonio, too.

It's roundup time.

Friday, June 4, 2010

The Blogging Lamp is Lit

The 2010 Navy Musicians Association reunion is only weeks away.

I'll be "live-blogging" the upcoming reunion, June 23-26, at the Doubletree Hotel in San Antonio, Texas. Here at Navy Lyres, I'll post highlights of each day's activities, including

  • hi-tech photos.
  • low-tech videos.
  • high-energy jam sessions.
  • low-life bull sessions.
  • assorted reports, rumors and revelations.
Commencing immediately, I'll blog daily. Stop by any time, check it out, leave a message.
 ..............DISCLAIMER..............
Following NMA reunions at Navy Lyres should never be considered a substitute for actual attendance. Navy Lyres proudly follows the MU's Creed: "What happens on the road, stays on the road."

Thursday, June 3, 2010

First timers

So much of the joy of attending a Navy Musicians Association involves new relationships. I'm looking forward to seeing Dennis Bear, Ralph Hasty, John Branam, Jim McConnell and scores of others, none of whom I knew in the service, but all of whom have become my shipmates in the last few years.

But there's a lot to be said for old buddies, too. Two shipmates from my first band, Navy Band San Francisco, in the mid-'70s, will be attending their first reunions in a few weeks.

Guitarist John Derby and I played together in Showband West. In fact, many would say we were Showband West. Well, I can think of two people who would say that.

(I hope you caught the magic word in the previous paragraph: "guitarist." It's been years since we had a real, Navy guitar player in attendance. I suspect we've all pretty much had enough of me and my E7 chord--see video, below right).

John is starting to play again after years of being away from the guitar. He blogs about this at Who Moved My Chops?
Dave Whitaker was the drummer and singer with San Francisco's Big Band. I'm glad Dave is coming, though I'm deeply hoping that he has given up the habit of reciting lengthy Richard Prior routines. Deeply hoping. Very deeply.

My advice to Dave and John is the same you'd give to any newcomers reporting aboard your Navy band:
Check the gig board regularly.

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Still the best damn showband in the fleet

I said so a year ago and I'll say it again: Newport's Northeastern Navy Showband is the best. If I'm wrong, if this is an average Navy ensemble, then the Navy's Music Program is in even better shape than I thought.

Here's my old unit (okay, some of these players weren't born when I led the group in the mid-80s), once again in Times Square for Fleet Week.