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The Honolulu Advertiser from Honolulu, Hawaii • 142

Location:
Honolulu, Hawaii
Issue Date:
Page:
142
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

3 eaiph GMA80FS rhythm section BETTEJO'S who has it i 1 4' M- 3it M- DKAR BETTEJO: This is in regard to your reader who wanted some Cache Valley Honey Butter. I am originally from Cache Valley, Utah. I am not sure who makes Cache Valley Honey Butter, but I am sending three addresses of which. I am sure, one will aid your reader in her search: Cache Chamber of Commerce, Logan. Utah 84321 Marion E.

Cox. Honey Producer Providence, Utah 84322 Cache Valley Dairy Assn. Smithfield. Utah. VIOLET BRANDON.

DEAR VIOLET: Thank you so much for taking the time to write. If this honey tastes The Rolling Stones show, which is currently touring the country (it plays Madison Square Garden Thursday and Friday), may very well have been the best rock show ever presented. It is certainly the best one in years and I think it is justified to say that, even if Mick Jagger (when I saw the show the second night out) had to come close to precipitating a riot in order to follow the dynamite performance of Tina Turner. It is a heavyweight show. It has to be, with B.B.

King and Tina Turner and the Stones. And it went down that way even though it opened as a drag with Terry Reid's boring, pretentious performance. The real show started with B.B. King King of the Blues and well named. He gave everybody lessons in guitar playing and singing.

He swung like mad with his new big band. AFTER B.B. KING'S set, came World War III. Or rather Ike Tina Turner. In the context of today's show business, to entice them on to the stage, but only succeeded in getting them out on the floor where, in waves they washed over the guards and pressed against the stage.

Hordes of bodies swirled in rhythm: as Jagger sang "Satisfaction." A girl, sitting on the shoulders of her mate, twisted like a go-go dancer. It was an incredible scene. Jagger loved it. "We all got some satisfaction," he said, which was true. He finally got it on and the audience got the release it wanted.

He followed that with "Hon-ky Tonk Woman" and Street Fighting Man" and that was it. JAGGER. EARLIER had sung two accoustical numbers, including "Prodigal Son," with Keith Richard accompanying him and included in the program several new songs from their un-released album. The Stones did it in the end and! Jagger is a performer of the first rank and Richard a much more exciting guitarist than I had remembered. Mick Taylor, the new man, did very little.

It's a great show and the Stones rose to the occasion. At the very least, Jagger ought to get a medal for courage in following King and Tina Turner. nearlv as eood as it sounds, it would be well Mick Jagger almost needed a riot. THEY NEEDED the 45 minutes, though, for the audience to come down from Ike Tina Turner. Beset with sound problems, some real, some imagined, Jagger led the Stones through a half hour of desultory numbers and then dug in and really turned the audience on.

He did his best album of the week GOOD MORNING BLUES. Leadbelly (Bio-graph 12013) Some extraordinarily powerful recordings made over 30 years ago by Leadbelly, possibly as an audition for a radio show, with Woody Guthrie as master of ceremonies. They include "Good Morning Blues" and "You Can't Lose Me Charlie" as well as a long version of "Death Letter Blues." It is a very moving blues performance previously not issued. R.J.G. old Godfrey Liner Notes.

Bassist Charlie Haden, formerly with Or-nette Coleman, is now recording on his own in New York. Duke Ellington's current tour of Europe will take him for the first time to Prague and other Czechoslovakian cities. Singer Sarah Vaughan has signed with the new record company owned by Quincy Jones and Ray Brown. Blues singer Son House is on a tour of colleges and concert halls doing a seminar on the blues which includes not only his performance but his reminiscences of life on the Mississippi Delta during the Depression. R.J.G.

worth sending for it all the way to Utah. DEAR BETTEJO: Quite some time ago I read about a Rachel Carson Wildlife Refuge, but I've not seen any more about this. I also read that there is an organization which is determined to bridge the gap between the general public interested in environmental control and scientists working in the field of ecology. Would it be possible for you to chase down information about either, or both, of these two organizations? CONCERNED DEAR CONCERNED: As far as I know the Rachel Carson Wildlife Refuge is not yet an actuality. If you, as a concerned person, think this sounds like a good idea, drop a line to Walter J.

Hickel, Secretary of the Interior, Washington, D.C. The Rachel Carson Trust for the Living Environment, 8940 Jones Mill Washington, D.C. 20015, would be a fine place to start your quest for further information about environmental control. DEAR BETTEJO: Can you put me in touch with a reliable record shop that will mail me records of Jose Luis Castro? I particularly like his recording of Guadalajara. His professional name is Jose Luis, I believe.

BETTE ELLEN FORD DEAR BETTIE: So would but I'm truly getting nowhere with this. Do any of my readers know anything about Jose Luis Castro? DEAR BETTEJO: The recipe for Coconut Palm Butter may be found in "Beachcomber's Handbook" by Euell Gibbons. I purchased a copy recently and was pleased with the many unusual and good recipes. ANN FISCHER. DEAR BETTEJO: Do you know if there is any place in the world where do-it-yourself saddles are available? I'm going to get a horse soon.

Meanwhile, I could be making a saddle. A HORSE LOVER. DEAR HORSE LOVER: Tandv Leather 1101 Foch Fort Worth, Tex. 76101. has leathercraft kits for making everything from sandals to saddles.

They print a 112-page catalogue, which they will send free, showing craft tools, accessories, finishing materials and a huge selection of leathers. Tandy even has a home-study course. DEAR BETTEJO: It would be very inters esting to have a plant that eats insects. Do you know if they are for sale somewhere? Where would I write to order one? -iA SIXTH GRADE ENTOMOLOGIST. DEAR ENTOMOLOGIST: You can buy an insect-devouring Venus Fly Trap from The Gardner's Cupboard, Box 61, Terre Haute, Ind.

Tina Turner must be the most sensational female performer on stage. She combines showmanship with musical ability and her bust-out performance is really like World War HI. Incredible. She comes on like a hurricane, accompanied by the band and the Ike-ettes. She dances and twists and shakes and sings.

The impact is instant and total. She does blues, of course, but the number that really wiped out the house was her version of "Come Together," the John Lennon song from the Abbey Road album. It was a most surprising and effective performance. Then came a 45-minute wait for the Rolling Stones. The Stones were delayed, their road manager said, because there had been no cars at the airport to meet them.

regular which, while it thrust him into the limelight, "really didn't help my career. La Rosa, in a move rather unique for a singer, last April went to work as a radio disc jockey. "MY MANAGER decided I should take the offer," he said of his daily 1 to 4 p.m. program on WNEW radio io New York. La Rosa's on-the-air style is casual and off-the-cuff.

"It's a stream of consciousness manner," he explained. But because of his "relative in La Rosa spins discs in NY By PATRICIA E. DAVIS NEW YORK (UPI) -Sixteen years have passed since Julius La Rosa's spectacular on-camera dismissal from the Arthur Godfrey Show for what Godfrey said was his "lack of humility." Have the years mellowed and "humbled" La Rosa? "Never!" stated the singer with vehement emphasis. LA ROSA, in an interview, said he holds no grudges over the incident experience," La Rosa admits that the commercials give him a bit of trouble. "THE HARDEST thing about the job was for me to adapt myself to speaking without expecting to get an answer.

But I love the comfort and ease of it. I enjoy the freedom to be pretty much myself," La Rosa, who hasn't given up singing his latest record, "Where Do I Go" from the rock musical "Hair" is currently on the music charts admitted that he will oc- casionally play one of his own records on his show, "but I confess to a certain bit of embarrassment about it." La Rosa, who looks far younger a his 39 years, said his stint as a disc jockey is changing his outlook on music. "BEFORE becoming a my reaction to current music styles had been relatively narrow I was a ballad man. But now I like the rock sounds more and more. The old stuff is beginning to sound rather dated." V'' IV ALOHA i M' rh STAR-BULlM'1 1969.

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About The Honolulu Advertiser Archive

Pages Available:
2,262,631
Years Available:
1856-2010