Friday 28 October 2022

Yacht Rock-SiriusXM This Week

Tune in tomorrow, Saturday October 29th, to Faction Talk, channel 103, at 4 PM East, 1 PM West.

Phone #: 844-686-5863 

Twitter: @lefsetz

If you miss the episode, you can hear it on demand on the SiriusXM app. Search: Lefsetz 


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Thursday 27 October 2022

Re-Health Care

Note: Take all the below with a grain of salt, as they say...DO YOUR OWN RESEARCH! HA!
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Wealthiest country in the world with this system of health care  ? Rubbish!

Chris Chapin

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Hey Bob, you're right. Get a colonoscopy, Don't put it off. After 20 plus years working in the music business (Geffen, UMVD, BMG, Sony-BMG, Warner Brothers), I left and began a new career in the medical field as a surgical tech. Hated working in the hospital, but found a great little GI medical center with weekends off.

No one likes prepping and getting a colonoscopy, but I can't tell you how many times an older patient would come in for their first one, and boom, we find cancer. Had they come in sooner and had it done when they were supposed to, they may not be in the situation they find themselves in. 
If cancer runs in the family, or someone adopted doesn't know their family medical background, those folks should have one more often.

Sure the prep tastes like crap, and it sucks having to fast for a day or more, but it just might save your life.

Mike Verzi

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Three stories about health care:

1)  India, mid 1970's:  My grandfather was a British-trained medical doctor in East Africa and India from the 1930's through the 1970's.

When I went to visit him in India, one of the neighborhood kids (a teenager) had wounded his hand. He went straight to my Grandfather's clinic.  (His clinic was on the first floor of the apartment complex he lived in).  My grandfather cleaned the wound, applied a band-aid / dressing, sent him home with a handwritten note for his parents on how to care for the wound, and told him to be more careful.  He also didn't charge - he said it was a simple thing and it was "the right thing to do".  No forms to fill out, no worries about lawsuits, and everyone was happy.

2)  Japan - a few weeks ago: A friend of mine was travelling to Japan, and broke a bone, requiring hospitalization.  She was worried about the bill.  When the hospital staff presented her with the bill, and apologized profusely for presenting the bill.  Since she wasn't a citizen of Japan, she ended having to pay the entire bill out of pocket.  The total fee was $21.

3)  US, California:  A few months ago, I dropped a pair of pointy scissors on my foot. No major injuries but I needed a tetanus shot . . . on a Sunday.  I have pretty decent insurance.   I drove to the nearest urgent care.  After waiting close to two hours, they finally saw me.  I ended up paying close to $100 out of pocket for the urgent care, plus extra $50 on top of that for the tetanus shot.


—Meghan Gohil

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You are so spot on as usual. Due to some lingering issues from long Covid I have a team of private doctors and specialists. After going the insurance route I realized that although many of them are competent doctors you get 15 minutes and you're lucky if they remember what you told them the last time bc they have too many patients. Not to mention in an emergency it will take a few weeks to get in an appointment. It's no way to live and I feel awful for those who have to. So I have been fortunate to build a team of exceptional drs that basically act as concierge medicine (have their cell phones, emails , can always get in day of etc). I also agree about research and talking to as many experts as possible  if you have something wrong you never know when and from who you may get a helpful nugget of information from. I keep insurance but that's really just for the chance of catastrophe for myself or a family member. Instead of fighting with them for the Pennies they will reimburse me I'm better off using the tax deduction (most ppl aren't aware of )for anything spent over 7.5 percent of income on health care . To me it's all worth it as the cost of the right healthcare is priceless!! Feel well 

Best ,
Jarred Arfa

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My mother was a 6 figure/year real estate agent in Scottsdale AZ, knocking heads.

She refused western medicine against all our advice and solely went to a homeopath for decades.

Then she had two heart attacks. The resulting blood loss to the brain brought on early dementia and Alzheimer's.

Now at 84, she's in assisted living, getting her diaper switched out 5 times a day. She gets me constantly confused with my uncle.

It's no way to live…

Dave Streets

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I agree with you 100% -- the only reason my husband & I stay in LA is healthcare. Until 2017, we had a second home in Sedona, AZ where you can't see any specialist, even a GP for MONTHS – so our  choice was Flagstaff ( 6-month snow warning) or Phoenix, and even when you go the 2 hours, your care there is in the hands of PA's, who were shockingly amateurish with no filter! We both wound up in the Sedona ER for chronic issues, and fortunately the Dr. was good, but it's not a long-term plan. So grateful that all our Drs. at St John's in Santa Monica : Rheumatologist, Internists, Urologist, Gastroenterologist, Pulminologist have been with us since 1996 and guided our care from a distance. Since SAG/AFTRA dumped coverage for Senior Performers during the height of Covid in 2020, it costs an extra $12-15,000/yr., Sadly, that now includes an Oncologist, but I prefer that to "wait & see," in AZ. Wish you were still here for Bob's Chicken Salad, I will always thank you for for the tip!

Denise Madden-Eckstein

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You're so right. Don't eat out. Drive an old car. It's hard to impress people with the need to save for a rainy day in the middle of a drought. I would love to leave LA after 32 years here, but with my own medical issues to deal with, my first prerequisite is moving someplace else where there's a top notch medical center, if not two or more. Unfortunately, any place with that amount of medical diversity is likely to be just as unaffordable as here. 

Sorry you've got more to cope with. Hang in there. 

Florie Brizel

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This is why I have to live within hours of NYC.   I'm never giving up access to Sloan Kettering.

Michael Alex

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My wife and I are lucky to have great docs ... and a bunch of them.  For the same reason you won't move away from LA, we will never move away from the DC area.

Alas, Father Time is undefeated.

John Hyman

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I couldn't agree with you more on the pitfalls of our healthcare system and seeing physicians regularly. I live in the SF Bay Area, blessed with the same level of healthcare you have in LA.

I now receive all my healthcare from the Veterans' Administrations system in San Francisco. Without a doubt, the best healthcare system I have ever used and a good model for non VA systems. I receive, dental, vision, hearing, psychiatric, pharmacy, all medical services and hospitalization at no additional cost to me. The price of admission, unfortunately, was high; a helicopter pilot in Vietnam, two Purple Hearts and shot down 6 times with permanent disabilities. 

It is quality care, residents are from UCSF, one of the top medical centers in the country. The physicians do not watch the clock during appointments, and will actually follow up on the phone with me. I am always treated respectfully and receive a level of care I never received before in civilian healthcare. 

Steve Greene  

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Oh hell yes (to most of what you said).

I had two women friends who died from breast cancer; one was 32, the other 48.  Both resisted and put off going to an actual oncologist, preferring their
naturalist healers until it was too late.  

I have to say though, I disagree with you that doctors who won't take insurance and/or are "concierge" doctors are somehow better/more attentive than others who do take insurance.  ALL of my physicians take Medicare and supplemental (yeah, you gotta have supplemental insurance).  And they make plenty of money, believe me.  AND they are top doctors at UCLA and Cedars. 

With one's PCP, it's a bit more difficult.  One only gets a max of 15 minutes with them, as you indicated.  Which is a drag.  But that's a result of the corporatization of medicine that we are now burdened with.  It sucks.  And the supplemental and Medicare are not cheap; we're paying five figures for two people. So no, I won't pay another $10-20K for someone who considers themselves above the fray as a concierge or who thinks it's too much trouble to bill Medicare.  

Yes, I know that upkeep on that 50 ft sloop in the Marina is expensive but I only have one thing to say:

Concierge THIS...

Gregory Prestopino

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The labs and hospitals are trying to get me to pay my deductible upfront.  They'll ask you for it.  My deductible out of pocket yearly is $500 for a procedure/hospital visit.  I have employee health insurance from my employer.

Had my prostate biopsied it was negative for cancer.  I was told I'd get a 10% discount if I prepaid my deductible to the hospital prior to the procedure.  Okay here's my $500.  Turns out after insurance I had to pay $230 out of pocket.  I tried to get my $270 back and it took forever.  It took five phone calls with the hospital system to get my money back. 

Had another trip to the hospital nothing was wrong ultimately, but they asked me to prepay my deductible again and I told them no.  What a scam!

Back to the prostate biopsy it cost about $19k.  I had to pay ultimately $890 out of pocket which included the $230 listed above. If you don't have health insurance I don't see how people can afford getting sick!  The $890 was the best money I ever spent.  

Cheers!

Tim Pringle

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I live in Stockholm and I´m 66.
Here we have an insurance that comes with your citizenship that says that you when you have paid 100 dollars for meetings with your assigned doctor (and resulting operations/ meetings with specialists arranged by your doctor for your specific your health problems/worries) within a 12 month period (starting on the date of your first consultancy) the rest of the twelve months are free of charge.

So yesterday I got an X-ray of my lungs (since I'm a long time smoker). It cost me 0 dollars. It was free of charge!

I'll be busy doing some other smoking tests (like a KOL-test) before my 12 month period runs out.  Not only because it doesn't cost me anything, but that sure helps!

Måns Ivarsson

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Bob, Canadians read your latest email and can't believe that a civilized country like the USA still allows their population to live in fear of going to the doctor or the hospital due to the costs. I'm 69 years old. You know how much I've spent directly on doctor's appointments, tests or hospital stays in my lifetime? Exactly zero dollars.Yes, we pay higher income taxes up here than south of the border, but it's not like it's double the taxes Americans pay. The health care is high quality. And we are now benefiting from doctors and health care professionals from overseas choosing to immigrate to Canada rather than the USA because they feel more welcome and safer (due to the fact that very, very few private citizens own guns).The most expensive part of a doctor's visit or medical test for a Canadian citizen is the cost of parking. Today I read that over 25% of Canada's population was born outside Canada.

The insurance and medical lobbies are LYING to your citizens, to maintain their inflated incomes. (much like the Russian people have been lied to about the power of their military). Nobody should have to worry about losing their house because they need a critical operation. Having your taxes go to government-supported health care is not communism. Not every home has a fireman or a policeman. We pool our tax money to pay for those services so that they are there the few times in our lives when we need them. Health care should be no different.And the reduction nation-wide in overall stress and unhappiness is one of the reason Americans find Canadians so easy-going. Once you've lived somewhere with national health care, you would never go back.I know some of your readers will quote some exceptions of stories of Canadians waiting longer times for treatment, but keep in mind those are dug out by insurance and medical companies to support their positions, and are a very tiny percentage.There are always exceptions, and cases of people abusing the system, but most Canadians would maintain that our health care system is one of the main reasons they like living here. So many actors, musicians, and technical folks are moving back to Canada from L.A, NYC and Nashville because as they get past retirement age, the lure of government-subsidized (note, I'm not saying free) medical care makes so much sense. As Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. once said, "Taxes are the price you pay for civilization".

To end on a happy note, I was at a Toronto Blue Jays baseball game a few years ago, when Montreal-born Russ Martin was catching for the Jays. He was at bat in a tie game, and the bases were loaded.   A fan behind me shouted  "Lean in, Russ, take one for the team!!   You're Canadian, you've got free health care!!"

Regards,
Doug McClement

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Your newsletter is very timely.  I live in Toronto Canada.  Our much vaunted universal payer system in terrible crisis across our great country.  At least 20% of Canadians have no GP.  Primary care physicians are retiring at an alarming rate as the pressure of excessive patient loads, the aftermath of Covid, grinding amounts of paperwork and hard to serve aging patients makes family life impossible.

No Canadian politician will stick out his/her neck and advocate private insurance.  "Universal healthcare" is a sacred cow.  The activists won't allow even the mention of an orthopedic hospital for those who are willing to pay for a prosthetic hip or knee.  Meanwhile you might wait a year just to see an orthopedic surgeon to get an assessment and then another year for surgery while you are suffer in extreme pain.

Emergency room waits are 16 + hours as the public goes to hospital for treatment of flu, migraines etc that could/should be done in clinics or urgent care centres.

A friend of ours recently fell and hit her head while at the mall.  Security staff insisted that they call EMS.  Paramedics took her to Sunnybrook Hospital in Toronto.  She waited 13 hours to see a GP who told her that if she had no symptoms yet she is probably okay and sent her home.  Meanwhile patients were arriving in pain and needing immediate care. It was so busy that they ran out of gurneys and some patients were laid out on towels on the floor.

Our system has collapsed! Those that are financially able are getting treatment out of country.

Sad. Sad. Sad.

Harvey Glasner
Toronto

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sorry bob you way off on this one. To date there is no evidence health checks do anything other than perpetuate health anxiety and line the pockets of salesmen masquerading as doctors. There will always be the anecdote of the missed rare (or even not rare!) diagnosis which features heavily on our mental because of cognitive bias but overall, physicals and poorly thought about screening are actually harmful. The truth is medicine is not the all powerful determinant on health the industry wants you to believe. Lifestyle and environment have far more impact (clean water, sewage, pollution,vaccines, diet, exercise, mental well being (the absence of neurosis and anxiety). The situation is far more complex than your recent newsletter suggests. I feel for the Americans forced to spend considerable sums of money and falling victim to the industry sales tactics. Even the question of which cancer will kill you vs which cancer you will die with is still not entirely clear. No one lives forever. 

DECLARED INTERESTS - NHS FAMILY DOCTOR.

Robert Dylan

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I used to live in America.But I was young and very fit.I left California when I was 40 years old. My home base is Stockholm,Sweden now.My daughter lives in Temecula,Cal ,she is a nurse.She tells me all about insurance companies and doctor operations. All I want to say is.''Stupidity doesn't run in America.It gallops''
Best of health.

Tom Riviere

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I'm a software developer 20 years into my career -- worked in small and medium shops, one of which got acquired by IBM five years ago, and I quit to go independent because corporate isn't for me. I always had some kind of health insurance through my 20's and early 30's, used it occasionally (a broken bone, my wife giving birth to our son) but generally paid through the nose for TERRIBLE coverage and high deductible/copay. As a result of a freak, still-unexplained incident while we still had it, my wife had a spontaneous cerebrospinal fluid leak that left her laying in a hospital bed for 10 days where she received NO HELP and NO relief -- after being met with confusion from a variety of specialists and surgeons, a plucky, motivated intern identified the condition early on day 2. The solution was a simple mechanical procedure that we were actively denied, day after day after day, until I literally told Riverside Methodist Hospital to go f... itself, pushed my wife out in a wheelchair, went to OSU, and they fixed her immediately.

Wanna know what more than a week of Maury Povich on a CRT TV and steamed eggs cost? $55,000.

I ended up paying like 6 grand out of pocket after insurance chose at random what they were willing to cover. A bag of saline was like $100; the cost of a fruit cup would've bought me a Maserati.

I've had conversations with supremely coked-up dudes in the club toilet that were less arrogant and less aggressive than what we got from that bald-headed, know-it-all, prick of a neurosurgeon who told me "I've never seen this before so I have no idea, but I'm certain that you're wrong." when I explained what she needed done. 

I was right.

Anyways, after I refused to be absorbed into the corporate machine, I was offered "affordable" COBRA coverage for however many months and it was like $4000 a month, completely insane. I never signed up.

Open enrollment comes around, I check out healthcare.gov -- to cover two adults and a child for the s...tiest plan available was still like $2500 a month -- no thanks!

It turns out that paying out of pocket for dental, (minimal, common) prescriptions and routine visits is orders of magnitude cheaper than carrying worthless, overpriced health insurance. If I get hit by a truck, I'm throwing my wallet into the sewer and telling the hospital that my name is Ricardo Montalbán, unhoused -- let 'em write it off, who gives a s... I paid $6,000 for eggs!

-Kevin Kaiser

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I've been a Kaiser member for over 50 years.  It is a health maintenance olus health care organization, not a sickness treatment organization like most US health providers and doctors. 

Preventive medicine, regular checkups ($35) are extensive and required. Labs $20.  They've saved my life three times. Heart operation? Pacemaker? Brilliantly done. 2-3 k for the operations, 250 for the pmaker. And if they don't provide a service, they send you elsewhere and pay. 

You are a victim of capitalist private medicine. 

Call kaiser. You can join. No pre existing conditions problems.  

This is the model for universal single payer health care. 

David Rubinson

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Agreed. I just had surgery a couple of weeks ago. Nothing life threatening but serious enough. Without California health care I would have been in a bad way. I tell people all the time, it might be expensive out here but they care about things that need to be cared about like healthcare!

Mazi Ray
Los Angeles

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This is all excellent advice. 

Since not everyone has access to, or can afford the "concierge medicine" that you have, I will add one thing: If you are fortunate enough to live where there is a teaching hospital, join their system over other available options. They will have the newest information and the most highly educated docs. They are usually profs at the attached medical school, for whom staying current isn't a luxury—it's a necessity. To be clear, there is a difference in standards of care from the consolidators that are cutting costs and the not for profit teaching hospitals that are not. Teaching hospitals associated with major universities are also hubs for research and clinical trials. That means the newest treatments are available to those with acute or chronic illness. 

I offer this advice as a Survivor-to-Survivor counsellor for the Bladder Cancer Advocacy Network who has seen both the commercial and teaching systems up close. There is no comparison. It is why I also live near good facilities. I can't take the risk that my brother-in-law, who lives in a small resort town, took. He found out about the difference the hard way, nearly dying of a misdiagnosed cardiac issue that likely would not have happened at a better institution. 

One last thing, if you don't have access to a major teaching facility and are diagnosed with a tricky problem, find a way to get care from providers who see your issue every day. Avoid general surgeons for anything more complicated than a tonsillectomy or hernia repair. Use a specialist who has 10,000 hours and a large number of reps with your procedure. 

Jon Sinton

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Can't begin to tell you how timely your article is.

I used to say that it should be illegal to show prescription drug commercials on tv.  After all, you need a doctor to prescribe them and the doctor should be telling you what you need, not the other way around.  But we live in a very different world today.  We have to take our healthcare in our own hands and be proactive.

Health insurance companies only care about denying coverage so that they can add to their bottom line. They don't care about you and me.  When my wife gave birth to our third child, the doctor told her she had to stay in the hospital another day, but the insurance company denied the request and sent her home against doctors orders.  Do the pencil pushers really think they know better than your doctor, or is it more about the bottom line than what's good for your health?

A number of years ago, I changed from my long-time doctor to a nurse practitioner (due to a change in my insurance).  At my physical, I mentioned an issue I'd had for over a decade that caused flair-ups of pain. My prior doctor had treated the symptoms with pain killers. The nurse practitioner asked if I wouldn't rather solve the underlying problem, rather just treat the flair-ups.  I looked at her in disbelief as she told me how to avoid the issue.  I haven't had those pains since.

Years ago, my son had pain and went to an ER at a local hospital.  They told him he had indigestion and sent him home with Tums.  The next night he had emergency gallbladder surgery at a different hospital.  When the first hospital sent him a bill, he told them where they could put it since they had misdiagnosed him.

Another son has recently had a health issue that he's been trying to address.  He's been to numerous doctors.  Lots of conflicting opinions on a diagnosis.  He was in pain, so he went to a hospital ER . . . and then another, and another.  3 ER visits at 3 different hospitals in various parts of the city. He told me that all 3 were overflowing with people in the waiting rooms, hallways, outdoors, etc.  Minimum of a 3 hour wait at any of them. And he said that COVID wasn't the problem. There just aren't enough staff and not enough space. And he got 3 different diagnosis and no real help. One doctor says that the prior doctor's diagnosis is ridiculous. Doctor needs a CT scan, but the insurance denies it.  Doctor says, "he really needs it" and the insurance company says, "we'll get back to you in a few weeks."

My son's daughter (age 4) has been sick.  He took her to the pediatrician.  The doctor said it's a flu bug and it will go away.  But she's had it for 3 weeks. My son suggests that she might have C. diff, but the doctor says that's impossible.  So my son gathers a stool sample from his daughter and takes it in for analysis at a diagnostic lab.  Turns out that my granddaughter has C. diff and they are seeing a gastro specialist tomorrow.

Yes, being proactive with your healthcare is more important than ever.  Our current system is broken.

Russ Paris

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Americans will never truly be able to comprehend how truly disgraceful the rest of the world thinks it is that they don't have universal healthcare.
When I saw your email's headline I hoped maybe it would be a long screed advocating for it. But instead it's about getting good insurance, and how you should still pay to get checked up even though it's expensive.
It's like a trapped animals at the zoo.

Thanks
Michael Griffin 

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Thanks for writing this and urging people to get checked as often as they can, but at least yearly.
 
I have just undergone my second cancer scare which started with a mole on my back that my wife urged me to get checked. I finally did and it was malignant melanoma. From there they ended up ripping out 4 lymph nodes because that's where melanoma likes to go., thankfully I was clean but it was a major operation which I will now recover from. Although it hurst and it all sucks, I am glad to go thru it rather than find out too late this spot on my back killed me.
 
Previously, on this day in 2003 I had a colon tumor removed that I discovered by paying attention to discomfort that I felt and going in to use my insurance I bitch about paying. Low and behold, stage 3. Cut it out, then 6 months of chemo. The chemo was worse than the cancer itself.
 
But here I am.
 
GET YOURSELF CHECKED. TODAY.

Danny Zelisko

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Great email Bob - totally rings true and may save a life or two. 
My internist is an "MDVIP" concierge doctor, which means I pay for the privilege of being his patient. It sounds almost unfathomable, but it's worth every penny. He answers texts and emails almost immediately, and I can actually get him on the phone! Not sure if he takes Medicare; guess 
I'll find out next year.
Anyway, thanks for encouraging people to take care of their health. I'm thankful for mine every single day. If you ever need to visit Hopkins Hospital (which I hope you don't), let me know - it's not far from my house and I can hook you up with a room in my building.....

Rich Madow

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Insurance is unaffordable until you need it  -

Terry Anzaldo

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Ha -- 46 years I've been singing to myself "Doctor say's he's comin', but you got a permanent rash"

Andy Rosenzweig


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Re-More Than A Feeling

Hitch a Ride is the best song on the "Boston" record.  One of the best guitar solos ever imo.

Hal Cohen

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Thanks for calling out Boston. One of the first two albums I ever bought with my own allowance money was their debut, along with Al Stewart's 'Year of the Cat'. Top to bottom that Boston album is a gem. "More Than a Feeling" was not my favorite, despite its undeniability. "Rock and Roll Band" was a young, music-loving daydreamer's paradise. If you were in, and a fan, this was their creation story, the rock and roll dream painted in technicolor sound that you could sing right along to (or try to anyway) and feel like it could be your own story. Scholz is underrated as a pure musical master, and I would go to bat for Brad Delp as one of the best singers of that, or any era. Sad he's no longer with us. 

"Smokin" still passes the volume knob test and is a pure burner of a track. "Hitch a Ride" is just a gorgeous and moving melody. Still get chills when that guitar solo kicks in. And yes, "Foreplay/ Long Time" is a classic. When the snare hits twice to segue into the main song it sparks a kind of euphoria that only great music can bring. 

Call it Classic, call it corporate, call it what you will, but mostly call it timeless. Just plain great music.  

-Chris Horvath

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Bob-Wow. You brought back waves of feelings with this piece. When "More Than A Feeling" came out, we were amazed at the clean, new sound of it—like nothing we'd heard before. It was an anthem of our High school Senior year, and we played that first Boston eight track in our cars incessantly as we cruised our little Kansas town. Life was good!  Thanks for bringing back those memories. 

Bruce Dyson

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Amen.  I was music director of BCN when the demo (the original) was brought into the station by Paul Ahern, their manager.  It was reel to reel and we put it on a cart which were used mostly for station I.Ds and spots.

There were a couple of us in the studio and it took maybe 30 seconds to say 'holy s..t'.  We played that song every hour the first few days, which we never ever did.  The rule was no song could be played more than once every other shift.
It is one of the best rock songs ever, if we are being honest.  

John Brodey

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Trivia: 
When I was a teenage recording artist signed to Epic Records, my Jimmy Ienner production company produced single "Rock & Roll President" was released on the same day in 1976 as 2 other singles by new, unknown Epic artists: "More Than a Feeling" (Boston) and "Play That Funky Music White Boy" (Wild Cherry") - so I was in good company!
:)

Wallace Collins

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I loved reading this about Boston. It was definitely a "guilty" pleasure back then. My favorite story was while living in LA (for the third time), I remember listening to Jones' Jukebox one afternoon in the mid-2000's and hearing mention how much he loved Boston when they came out but couldn't tell anyone because he was "punk" rock and anti-corporate! But he was jealous of those guitar tones that he knew he could never get!

Weirdly my two favorite Boston tunes were/are "Hitch A Ride" and "Let Me Take You Home Tonight!"

Cheers

David George

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I still shamefacedly have that Boston album, it belonged to Steve Jones, Sex Pistols guitarist and Jonesys Jukebox host;  he absolutely loved it.   Like you said Boston were uncool so Steve's adoration seemed strange.    But, his post Pistols group, The Professionals, with drummer Paul Cook, put out some great tracks with his power guitar chords overdubbed maybe 10 times, paying symphonic homage to Boston and, probably, Phil Spector.   The vocals were, sadly, not on a par but the sound.....wow!    Just Another Dream and 1-2-3 are on YouTube - the proof is in the pudding.

Its almost the end of October and its sunny and 14 degrees on this side of the ocean;  something's definitely not right.

Muchos
Fachtna O Ceallaigh.

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Everybody, and I mean EVERYBODY in my high school had this on 8-track in their Chevelle, their GTO, their Olds Cutlass 442. EVERYBODY. Many, many joints smoked on lunch hour in those cars (nearly every day) to Boston's first album. To call it ubiquitous, doesn't come close to describing the unbelievable impact it had on anybody who was alive then. I'd bet the farm that every single one of my classmates can sing every f...ing word of every song on that record. Me too. And THAT, my friend, will never happen again. Ever.

Sad. We were lucky, Bob.
Really, really lucky.
Counting my blessings.

Pete Kehoe
Journeyman musician (still)
Northern Michigan
(Currently in Amsterdam)

_____________________________________

Didn't know about Scholz's affinity for the James Gang.
Now that you mention it...
The endings of "More Than A Feeling" and "Tend My Garden" do kinda take similar musical paths.

Marty Bender

_____________________________________

"More Than A Feeling" is pure genius.  I owned it within 12 hours of first hearing it on the radio in September of '76.  Skipped school to buy it.

Chris Herrmann

_____________________________________

The Boston debut was my first album I purchased, at the ripe age of 15.  I split the purchase with my younger brother, it still has the $2.98 price sticker from our local Kresge's (Five & Dime store). 

I retained possession and it hangs above our pool table, along with several other landmark albums shared by my wife and I.  
I was never a huge Boston fan after that first, but the debut holds up quite well.  There's no shame in that!

Al Jones

_____________________________________

I was 14, going on 15 and getting serious about practicing guitar when this came out and it nearly wiped out everything that I had been listening to up to then. It's hard to overstate just how electrifying and inspiring this was at a time when most mainstream rock wasn't anywhere near as well-crafted. Make no mistake: this song, and in fact the entire album are perfect. 
And when Brad Delp sang "I dream of girl I used to know", at 15 I had yet to have that as a personal experience. But now, of course, that line has me choked up pretty much every time.

Philbillie

_____________________________________

More Than A Feeling was the song that captured what my girlfriend at the time and I had when we first started out.  That Boston is  not in the Hall Of Fame when a whack of less significant acts are - I won't name them - is criminal.  That Boston pretty much invented the 'Power Hits' radio format has never been chronicled.  That Boston was the hinge that opened the door to Van Halen etc has never been credited.  I was very fortunate to be assigned as the photographer at the Toronto daily I was working at - a year before I became 'the critic with a camera' - to capture the band at Maple Leaf Gardens.  Got some great shots of Delp and even went to the after party and hung with Tom and the opening act, one Rick Derringer.  

Bottom line, we were young and about as carefree a demographic that ever existed.  And "those old songs" were no more than five or ten years old.  The "sound of infinite space" as I used to describe Boston's production was the perfect match for an America that was moving forward from Vietnam with unlimited potential.  Like Boston, it wouldn't last long.  But if you were there...wow.

Personally I think rock died with The Sex Pistols.  Shot the whole spectacle full of holes so to speak.  

But, geez, Boston.   Sounded great in the car with my arm around my girl.

Thanks Bob

Jonathan Gross

_____________________________________

"Foreplay/Long Time" is the deathless Boston track. It's that hint of prog that draws you in and Delp's vocal on the final verse after that organ break is pure FM joy. Too bad about him, by the way.

I was thinking about this topic the other day while looking at the streaming numbers for "Midnights." Will anyone be talking about or listening to that record 46 years from now? It's so boring! Even my 18-year-old daughter who professes to love Taylor says, and I quote: "she just makes so much…and now it's all the same." Maybe I am just too old to get it and it is the "Satisfaction" of its day. But I don't think so.

Best

David Vawter

_____________________________________

This was great and as always you are spot on.
 
I remember when the album was released in September of 1976. Our local rock station in my  hometown Columbus OH played just about every song on the record which is unheard of. I was starting college and yet I still love this album to this day.
 
That said, how many freshmen in college today will still listen and enjoy their present day music in 46 years….my answer is none!

Steve Gerardi

_____________________________________

I turned 17  August 29, 1976. Like every year, Mom took me to the "record store" – usually Wallich's or Licorice Pizza – to pick out my birthday gifts.
Of course, the debut from Boston was on my list… along with the latest from Grand Funk, Al Stewart, REO Speedwagon, and Hall & Oates.
 
1976 was a transitional and/or landmark year for many established Rock icons. Many released one of their best (Aerosmith, Thin Lizzy, Steve Miller)… many not one of their best (Led Zeppelin, Alice Cooper, Eric Clapton).
 
"Boston" is as important as "RAMONES". 
 
I've played (blasted) the song at least a few times in each of the last 46 years…
 
Thanks for a great read, Bob.

Bruce R. Kilgour

_____________________________________

Boston was a gateway into hard rock for me.  The guitar sounds are heavy yet smooth and melodic.  What many took for corporate,  I took for a style.  It was the soundtrack of my childhood. 

I remember riding with my dads 4H group on a rented coach bus in 76 from cedar rapids Iowa to Washington DC. 

We had two 8 track tapes for the whole ride, John Denver back home again and the 1st Boston album. The Boston tape got played until the bus could sing along. It ended up getting stretched and unplayable from the use during the return trip.

I'm fine with John Denver but I still adore that 1st album.  Peace of Mind was the song that got me.

David Fink

_____________________________________

Ah Bob , what a spot-on analysis! Here I am driving in urban Johannesburg blasting " All Right Now" and I'm sixteen again. Music is more than a feeling, it`s life.

Benjy Mudie
South Africa

_____________________________________

Hey man, great piece of writing. 14 year old me bought this album when it came out and wore it out, probably the second or third LP I'd bought with dough from my paper route and mowing. Today, my 16 year old is a big fan of "Peace of Mind" along with a pile of old and new tracks from all over.

Tom Grueskin

_____________________________________

Prompted by your email, I listened to Boston this morning driving down the Autobahn to work today.  A few thoughts crossed my mind:

1) Memories very similar to yours from 1976 came rushing back.  The feeling of community that came from knowing that there were millions of kids in high schools across the country simultaneously discovering and enjoying the same soundtrack was, well, more than a feeling.  

2) Years ago in New York, I noticed there were hipster parents who'd dress their kids up in little Ramones t-shirts.  Can you imagine our parents dressing us up in Benny Goodman or Percy Faith t-shirts?  The music on the radio in 1976 was *ours* ... with no meddlesome parental involvement.  That was nice.

3) Can you imagine a hit song (or whatever passes for one these days) with an organ as a lead instrument?  An *organ*!

Sincerely,
Gunnar Miller
Frankfurt Germany

_____________________________________

Wow!  Keen insights on the Fall of '76, Bob. En point, as usual.

I was a wanna-be teenager, 12 years old, living in the west San Fernando Valley, Canoga Park. I lived and breathed rock 'n roll, particularly what was coming across the airwaves from KLOS and KMET ("The Mighty Met!").  I thought it was great that Paul Thomas Anderson put those billboards of KMET into "Licorice Pizza", his retro movie from last year. Those billboards were everywhere in LA at that time and rock 'n roll radio was the king of the airwaves.  KMET had that clever gimmick of the call letters being upside down on the billboard ads and on their T-shirts…who'd ever done that before??  

And speaking of Licorice Pizza, that was the closest record store for me, in Canoga Park, on Topanga Canyon Blvd.  It was like Mecca for me and my friends.
It's funny to remember, because now they're synonymous with "hopelessly obsolete", but 8 track tapes at that time were as prestigious as LPs and were actually more expensive than LPs.  For those of us who didn't have quality home stereo systems, 8 track tapes were the logical choice because you could do what my brother did which was to rig up a used car stereo 8 track player in our bedrooms and of course they were, in our part of the world, what we were playing as we sped around the Valley in his car.  

There was no way in hell our parents were going to buy us an actual quality stereo system like you describe, but nonetheless, my friends and I could all mimic the rapid-fire descriptions of Pioneer, Kenwood and Marantz systems from the ubiquitous radio ads for Cal Stereo…a boy could dream.

The discussions on the playground would be about what songs we heard on the radio the night before and the concerts that had been announced that were coming to LA that we had zero chance of going to (triple bill of Aerosmith, Lynyrd Skynard and Rick Derringer at Angels Stadium!!)

You're right:  terrestrial radio is a mere shadow of it's gloried past:  another jock in the same caliber as Mary Turner was Jim Ladd, on KMET.

Other albums that were getting heavy play in my brother's '69 Plymouth Fury's 8 track tape player that Summer and Fall along with Boston's first album were Blue Oyster Cult's Agents of Fortune, Led Zeppelin's The Song Remains The Same, Wings At The Speed Of Sound and…um…Kiss Destroyer :)
Thanks again, Bob!

Darriel Arnott

_____________________________________

From: Mike McLeish and many more

Greetings from down under.
I loved your piece on More Than A Feeling. The timing was personally fortuitous because I'd just the other day watched Rick Beato deconstruct the song in one of his 'What Makes This Song Great?' episodes.

You may well have seen it. Hell, you may well know Rick.

But just in case...

https://bit.ly/3ziTTOR

Mike
Melbourne, Australia

_____________________________________

Boston?  Unique solitary game-changer.  Gathered up everything every other hard rock pop band had done in a studio up to that point, and took it a step farther.  Moved the goal posts.  One and done.   Paul Lanning

_____________________________________

Thank you for the reminder. 
Graduating class of '76, Queens, NY. 
So, as you can see, we need all the help we can get. 
I think Scholz must have also liked Tommy James and the Shondells. 
And in return, Tommy liked Tom. 
And everyone envied The Who.
Who wouldn't? 
Brad Delp *sigh*, if ever there was a voice so alive, it was his.
In closing, I bought an Electro Harmonix Rock Man from the source the first year it came out. 
I'm sure you're not surprised to learn that  I lost it years ago. 

Jon Weiss

_____________________________________

Nice article on Boston.  I still remember, when I was a music dealer in the '70s, cracking the shrink-wrap on that first album and playing it in the store.  People would walk in and immediately be going, "Who is THIS?!"  That was all it took, that thing sold like hotcakes.  We sold the album for $4.79 back in those days. $6.99 for the 8-track, but by this time, LPs were the thing -- if you were serious about the music, you had a turntable.  If you were REALLY serious you had a Technics turntable.

I saw Boston in concert twice.  The first time I went with friends, and the driver of the car was one of those guys who only went to concerts to chase girls, he wasn't really into the music, so we wound up being late and having to sit far back from the stage.  I vowed then and there that I wouldn't go to a concert again unless I was in control of the transportation, so I could make sure to be there on time, and I've stuck to that to this day.

The second time was at Red Rocks in Colorado, which is the best concert venue in the western US, this was the tour in which they brought in a ringer to hit the high notes that Brad Delp could no longer reach.  Hearing "More than a Feeling" in that place was pretty magical, let me tell you.

After that stellar debut album, the second album did almost as well but wasn't quite as good, and from then on they went slowly into the toilet, with mostly dreck-filled albums dribbling out every eight years or so.  I never saw a group hit such heights so fast, only to keep releasing albums that took years and years to make but weren't very good.

Mike Blakesley

_____________________________________

Hi Bob — that Boston album was a wild ride for everyone involved.

Tom Scholz was an engineer working at Polaroid up in Boston area when he recorded his demos.  Lennie Petze, I recall, played a big part in signing the band.  John Boylan, at the time an Epic staff producer, served as producer, but has written that he did not do much as Scholz turned his demos into the first Boston album.

The wonderful Paula Scher wrote about the process of design of that starship guitar album cover in her book, "Make It Bigger."  I was in those meetings as the band's product manager at Epic in New York.  

Boston was adamant about having a guitar on their cover.  They even brought in their own sketch, which Paula and I both determined, pretty immediately, would have been completely inappropriate.  That put us on the spot, we had to come up with an alternative fast.  Paula bought some time with her wicked sense of humor suggesting a pot of beans or Boston Creme Pie on the cover.  The idea that won the day — addressed the band's desire for a guitar (and came from a combination of inspiration and desperation) — was the huge spaceship which is really a Les Paul guitar but because of the elongated perspective, is not obvious.  Roger Huyssen brilliantly painted that cover.

The record took off like a rocket at radio, thanks to the strength of the music and the dedication of the Epic promotion staff.  Boston needed a lot of help to get them ready for live performances.  Al DeMarino of Epic artist development played a large role there.  All the guys were willing, but not experienced beyond the bar band scene.  In the end, they were good students, Brad Delp had a great voice to compliment Scholz's vision, and the record was on its way.

All-in-all, it was a great example of a label getting behind a great piece of music, each department doing its job.  We had great leadership at Epic under Ron Alexenburg.  At least up to then, Boston was the fastest selling first release by a new band in the history of the industry.

It is an achievement of which we are all proud.

Jim Charne

_____________________________________

I was never a Boston fan... but I can't help thinking that they altered the course of my life. 

I'm from NH. I was born in 1972. I was a kid in the 80's when I truly was turned on to music. My town was small, about 19,000 people, and we had a s..tty local top 40 radio station. 

My beacon for music was WBCN out of Boston.  We could get the signal in my town. It wasn't always strong, but by dial was always pegged to 104.1. We got a lot of "local" music on 'BCN, including Boston. 

In 1986 I was a freshman in high school. There was a girl I was crazy over. She was a freshman too.  She went to a junior high in a nearby (smaller) town and I had never seen her before. I can still recall the day I first laid eyes on her. That was it. I was long gone. 

Throughout the entire school year, I tried to get to know her. I finally started to make headway and knew I had a chance. Then one weekend, I went to a party at "the cliffs," a teenage hangout spot in the woods that overlooked the town. 

I met a girl, a junior, that was interested in me. When we met, Boston was playing on the boom box. She was a Boston freak. She wouldn't stop talking about them, let alone singing every word. 

Long story short, we connected and then started dating. 

I was completely caught up in the fact that I was a freshman, she was a junior, and she chose me. Like a fool, I abandoned the pursuit of the freshman girl I was nuts for.  I blew it! 

F..king Boston. Every time I got in her car Boston was playing. I tried to change the cassette, she'd pop it back in. Boston all the damn time!

I couldn't take it anymore. I had to dump her. 

All the while the freshman I was interested in started dating a senior and did for the next three years. Destiny was put on hold for me. 

To this day I can't listen to Boston without thinking of the one I let get away. 

I threw it all away… for Boston! 

Judd Maracello

_____________________________________

Warner Brothers passed on Boston. My late friend and WB promo guy Charlie McKenzie heard the cassette playing in an A&R man's cubicle and when he found out the label had passed on it, took the cassette to friends at Epic …. Or so the story goes I was told back then……..

Michael Fremer

_____________________________________

Rolling Stones, led zeppelin, CSNY, Neil Young, the Pretenders, Rockpile, Clash, the Doors, Foghat, The Grateful Dead, George Harrison, Steely Dan, Pink Floyd, David Bowie, Television, Kraftwork, Elvis Costello, Sex Pistols, Ramones, Iggy Pop, Jackson Brown, Kiss, Talking Heads, Jethro Tull, Isley Brothers , Supertramp, Ted Nugent, 

The 70's Baby, they call it Rock for a reason

Alan Fenton

_____________________________________

I was in college in the early 90's when my roommate got a CD player in his car. First CD player either of us owned so we had to go to the local Walmart to get a CD to play while we drove around. It had to be something where we wouldn't get annoyed with a bunch of filler, so we went with Boston. Such a great soundtrack for driving around, looking for trouble.

Jeff Neely

_____________________________________

After reading that I made it 602,878,three hundred and 28.  Thanks for the warm and fuzzy email on a dark and rainy Vancouver day

Rob Severyn

_____________________________________

Brilliant post and good to know I'm not the only one looking in the rear-view mirror wondering about people I know I'll most likely never see again but their faces, their unique voices and their laughter still resonates in my head, often as it hits the pillow some memory will whoosh into my thoughts and I'll think, yes I'll revisit them again tonight in my dreams. It's a miracle we are on this planet, it's a miracle 'our' sperm hit our Mother's egg and it's a miracle that we lived these last bunch of incredible decades with it's collective artistry in songs, acts and even movies. The golden years, in that LA sun too.   Bless you for your words Bob.  

Eddie Gordon

_____________________________________

Funny enough I was driving in Boston today and on came "More than a Feeling" from Boston and I had many of the same feelings you express here.

Ronald C. Pruett, Jr.


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David Paich-This Week's Podcast

David Paich is the primary songwriter, keyboardist and a vocalist in Toto. He also co-wrote Boz Scaggs's "Lowdown" and "Lido Shuffle," and worked on Michael Jackson's "Thriller" and too many other records to count. David talks about what it was like growing up the son of legendary Hollywood arranger Marty Paich, what it's like working your way up in the business, on the road with Sonny & Cher and in the studio, and the success of Toto. Paich has just released his first solo album, "Forgotten Toys," we talk about the record and so much more!

https://www.iheart.com/podcast/1119-the-bob-lefsetz-podcast-30806836/episode/david-paich-103816926/

https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/david-paich/id1316200737?i=1000584057882

https://open.spotify.com/episode/2dMVhBcSftPpAvlxFDwJmP?si=i5bWxKiVS-exvRbPulYgAg

https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/9ff4fb19-54d4-41ae-ae7a-8a6f8d3dafa8/episodes/e1624485-51e7-4f13-ad83-7e42fbf61f04/the-bob-lefsetz-podcast-david-paich

https://www.stitcher.com/show/the-bob-lefsetz-podcast/episode/david-paich-207979571


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Wednesday 26 October 2022

Revolver Super Deluxe

This is a cash grab. Just in time for Christmas...

Let's start with the new stereo version. For the first time in his history of remixing the Beatles, Giles Martin has come up with a final version very similar to the original product. I was stunned, because I find every other remix in this series sacrilegious, execrable, I believe they should all be destroyed, for fear they will become the standard in the future. Alas, this is not a problem with "Revolver."

And the mono CD doesn't sound as big as Giles's remix, but it's totally faithful. What I mean is certain instruments are emphasized beyond the original in the stereo remix. Like the cowbell in "Taxman" I heard just now. Then again, how are people listening to these records, if you're using earbuds, does it make a difference?

And I fired up the big rig solely because it has the only CD player I possess. And I must say, the sound was impressive. But how many people have the equipment to reproduce this sound? And let's be clear, it's something you feel as well as hear, you're in the sound, and that's an experience that's familiar to us from the seventies that today's generations may be completely unaware of. With the bass pumping and the highs clear... Now that we have hi-res streaming, does that mean people will be incentivized to purchase better playback systems? No, unless listening becomes fetishized, like vinyl. You know, where you listen and that's the only thing you do. Music has been relegated to the background, but when "Revolver" was released it was positively foreground.

And I was stunned there wasn't a vinyl disc included in the package, with the aforementioned fetishization. And one thing we know is vinyl sounds different, even if it's inherently not as pristine as the original digital production. But "Revolver" was cut analog, and listened to via vinyl, tape wasn't even a thing, so maybe that would be the definitive product.

Wait a second, there is a vinyl version, but they didn't send that to me, because vinyl production is backed-up and the costs are higher and the $199.98 package is sold out. Once upon a time, the music was for everyone, now it's for a chosen few who probably won't even listen to it more than once, if that. Whereas "Revolver" was cheap upon original release, and we played it ad infinitum, the records showed the wear, the scratches, the fingerprints, the dust. The music remains the same, but the world has completely changed.

But, once again, the remix is a change.

And if you want the original experience, check out the mono. It's a bit flat, but it'll remind you of what you were hooked on to begin with. And the weird thing that probably nobody involved in this production realizes is by time "Revolver" was released mono was history in America, we all bought stereo albums. After being told our heavy tonearms would kill stereo records mono records were made the same price, not a dollar less, and the industry reneged on this wear and tear problem and soon mono albums disappeared...why can't we get the original stereo mix?

Even if in many cases we listened to our original albums on mono systems.

As for the extras in this package... That's no longer a big thing, especially after the documentary and those multiple CD album packages of thirty years ago. Curios.

So the redo of "Revolver" is not really news, EXCEPT...

EXCEPT WHAT?

The CD is no longer the standard. You remember when the original "Revolver" CD came out in the late eighties? Well, maybe you don't remember that either, but they put out the Beatles CDs in batches of four, the initial albums were in mono, the ones after that were in stereo, and we were all stunned how good they sounded, when nothing from that era sounded as good. Was it George Martin? The studio? The engineers? All of that. But was there more sound to be extracted?

That's all I was interested in, a hi-res version, which I saw no hype about, all I've been reading is hosannas about the remix from people who weren't even alive when the album was originally released.

But I decided to do research online and it turned out on the package's site there was a link to a few tracks on all the streaming services, including Qobuz, the hi-res standard. And I clicked through and listened.

Now that's a revelation. I can't say enough about hi-res music, BECAUSE YOU CAN HEAR THE DIFFERENCE! Of course you need an external DAC to even reproduce this sound, ergo the Dragonfly Cobalt, but the final "Revolver" product is 24-Bit 96kHz as opposed to CD quality, 16-Bit 44.1 kHz.

I'm listening to the CD quality version on Qobuz right now. Sounds good. But when I put on the hi-res take...

It's an entirely different record.

Then again, it's the remix of "Taxman" I'm listening to, so it's not exactly apples to apples.

But let me be definitive, the hi-res streaming version of "Taxman" is superior to the CD, both CDs, the remix and the mono.

But you can't stream the mono yet. That'll happen Friday.

So my recommendation to you is to skip this package and just buy an external DAC and subscribe to Qobuz, for at least the free term.

Of course you can hear hi-res on Apple and Amazon too. And they're both very good, a definite improvement over CD quality, but, going back and forth...the Qobuz version is still a bit better, there's more bottom, there's...

And the Apple version is in Atmos. But unlike almost all the other Atmos remixes, it sounds akin to the stereo version, it's not an issue of the vocals being lower or...

So do you really care?

The 50th anniversary of "Revolver" already came and went. There's no exact hook.

But, even though people argued that "Rubber Soul" was the best album during the era, and some eventually cottoned to the "White Album," and for some reason everybody is down on "Sgt. Pepper," unnecessarily so in my book, the status, the reputation, the evaluation of "Revolver" has only risen. Even though the original American version lacked two tracks of the English one.

And I'd like to impart to you how big "Yellow Submarine" and "Eleanor Rigby" were during the summer of '66, but unless you were alive at the time I can't, you've got no frame of reference. We read all these chart statistics, about some act having x number of number ones, besting the Beatles. NO ONE BESTED THE BEATLES! Everybody knew the above two songs, YOU COULDN'T ESCAPE THEM!

As for the rest of the album...

"To lead a better life
I need my love to be here"

"Here, There and Everywhere" was the new "You've Got to Hide Your Love Away," a mellow non-single standard. And both were played on our guitars, we'd sing them together, regularly.

As for "Got to Get You Into My Life,"... It wasn't released as a single until 1976, long after the band broke up, it was just another album track.

But that was the magic of "Revolver," unlike "Rubber Soul," it had both hit singles and album tracks.

It opened with "Taxman" which we only understood on the surface, because many of us weren't even paying taxes, and none of us was that rich living in England.

And no one ever talks about "I Want to Tell You," with its indelible riff, a progenitor of what became standard on FM radio the year later, with Cream and other bands, but the key track...

"Turn off your mind
Relax and float down stream"

1966. Most people hadn't yet smoked marijuana. Most people weren't that hip. We listened to "Tomorrow Never Knows," but it took us years to fully understand it. And it's tracks like this that built John Lennon's reputation. He might not have written as many hit singles as Paul McCartney, but McCartney couldn't come up with stuff like "Strawberry Fields Forever" and "Tomorrow Never Knows."

Listening to "Tomorrow Never Knows," John Lennon is still alive, right there in the speakers, revealing truth like a pied piper, it's all there for you to understand and digest.

So, "Revolver" was a monumental album. Giles Martin has not tarnished its reputation. But this project is a lot about nothing...

Except for the hi-res release.

https://www.thebeatles.com/announcing-revolver-special-editions-0

Stream today: https://thebeatles.lnk.to/Taxman2022Mix


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Health Care

"The doctor says he's comin', but you gotta pay in cash"

"Life in the Fast Lane
Eagles

None of my doctors take insurance.

Oh, if I've got to go into the hospital, if I need a major procedure, I'm covered, shy of that...

You don't want to save money on your health care, no way. A friend in England was delineating a health problem, and he said he learned from living in the U.S. that you've got to have a physical every year. They don't do this in the U.K. And he went and they found a progressive disease and if you're waiting for symptoms to arrive, it's oftentimes too late.

You've got to go to the doctor, just ask Warren Zevon.

And you've got to have insurance.

I was stopped at a light yesterday and I saw a mom with a sign asking for cash for her son with leukemia. I wondered what went on there, because this is something insurance covers, I know, I've got it. But maybe they had no insurance, maybe they're here illegally. I mean can't the system help this kid?

No, the system is...

Well, this is interesting. The self-reliant want to drown the government in the bathtub, leaving us all to buy private insurance, but if you can find someone who loves, even likes their insurance company...well, I've never found one. And the old days of lifetime employment are gone. So many are independent contractors, with no benefits, they need to buy their own health insurance. And those under 35 feel invulnerable, it can't happen to them. And they're right, odds are with them, but in truth they are susceptible to health crises, never mind an accident where they break a bone.

And, in truth, if you have an accident that requires immediate attention you can be seen at the emergency room at no cost. That's the law. So if you're dead broke, you're covered, for the big things anyway, other than the emergency, you're screwed.

So I believe in the big doctor. In every facet of medicine there's an expert. In your town, in the United States and in the world. Chances are you don't need to see that expert, but I have had to, more than once. You see everything can't be easily diagnosed, everything can't be easily treated, which is why you don't want to see the generalist, but you want to see the expert who sees the condition all the time.

That's another reason I won't live in the hinterlands, why I'm never leaving Los Angeles...THE HEALTH CARE! I can recount the lousy health care I've gotten in the country, but instead of pointing at the pitfalls, let me focus on the opposite end, the zeitgeist, the best.

In truth practicing medicine is not the road to wealth it once was. Remember when the doctor was the richest person in your town? Those days are long gone. Back in the eighties we had a doctor friend making $225,000 a year. You know how much he makes today? $225,000 a year. No one works independently, they all work for the system, and the system has requirements. And usually that has to do with the number of patients you must see a day. It's staggering. Fifty. The pressures are astounding. And the documentation! You have to satiate both the medical group and the insurance companies. You've got to hire people just to fill out the forms.

And if you're a patient... You'd better front-load your questions, because unless you're in an obvious crisis, you're going to get a very short period of time. It's positively hit and run.

For everybody other than those willing to pay.

My internist left the medical group, he wanted to practice medicine his way. He charges whatever he wants, and he'll file the insurance forms, you might get a few cents on the dollar, but that's your issue, not his. So the annual physical now costs around $2000. But this is the guy who diagnosed my aforementioned cancer. And the service? I usually don't bother calling a doctor, what for? I've found oftentimes they don't even get back to you at all. And if they do...it's hours or days later and oftentimes you're unavailable yourself. But my guy, you're not only gonna hear from him the same day, but within hours, assuming it's not an emergency...an emergency will get him to the phone right away. He answers his e-mail promptly and I want to reinforce, I'M PAYING FOR THIS SERVICE!

And he won't take Medicare. Too many hoops to jump through, too much paperwork.

Nor will my heart doctor. I pay this heart doctor nearly two grand a year. And I'm not in crisis. And I'd rather not pay the money, but my friend Judd, who I grew up with, he keeled over from a heart attack two falls ago. He was 67. As was his father, who died of a heart attack at the same age. Do I think he saw a doctor? Sure. Did he see someone like my heart specialist? No way. Even my internist, he says if you come regularly and do what he says, you won't die of a heart attack. But you've got to pay for that service.

And I went to this heart doctor and she said I was near heart attack. I didn't believe it, but she did these special tests and created a medication program tailored to me. All that stuff you read in the newspaper? That's general information, not specific to you. The people saying to forget an annual physical, that you don't need a colonoscopy every five years? IGNORE THEM! And yes, after seeing this heart doctor my numbers aligned, they're where they should be.

As for mental health... If your therapist takes insurance, fire them and get someone new. None of the psychiatrists in Los Angeles takes insurance. They'll give you a form, that you can file, but you're on your own.

And squeezing money from insurance companies is a game unto itself. They're always denying claims based on codes. And then they deny stuff that is exorbitant relative to most people, but if you're sick, you need it. And you can't tweet or even e-mail them, to get the process going you really have to talk to someone, who has no ability to make a decision, it's an endless ordeal, an endless time suck. The goal is to make you give up and pay for it yourself.

And then for the vaunted Medicare...

First and foremost, you should see what I pay. By time I pay for the government part, the supplemental plan and the drug plan, I'm at two-thirds of what I was paying in the old, pre-65 days, which was over four figures a year.

However, it's not only my internist who doesn't take Medicare, my dermatologist doesn't either. Dermatologists have the quickest appointments extant. Five minutes frequently. Fifteen minutes is a rarity. Today I got an hour. But it cost me $490. No billing, I had to whip out my card before I left, and if I wanted to use credit, I'd pay another 3.5%, so I used my debit card. That's the equivalent of cash these days. Nobody other than the super-rich carries a wad of cash today. You need at least a grand, a couple of thou in your wallet to cover expenses. And the people you do see with this amount of cash? Usually it's undeclared. They got paid in cash, they're paying in cash, the IRS is clueless. Another way the wealthy profit in our tax system. But the IRS, which has already been cut off at the knees, must continue to be held back, because... The rich should get away with it? You're not even itemizing deductions, for the rich, tax forms are...LET THE GAMES BEGIN! Look at Trump, on trial right now!

As for my money...

I took a 30% haircut on my investments. On my cash I'm losing 10% a year. And I don't see any low-hanging fruit to make more. I'm o.k., don't worry about me. But what if someone has a family? How do they make it? MANY DON'T!

And the aged. You can't live on Social Security. It's going to get really ugly folks, many of those boomers who took Social Security early...they're gonna outlive their money. You can't get a job when you're ninety, not even as a greeter at Walmart.

But no one likes to plan for the future, which inevitably comes, unless you off yourself. And people have been doing that on a regular basis recently, especially men, they call them "deaths of despair."

And the men who refuse to see the doctor, believing they're immune. Warren Zevon is the poster boy for this. Didn't go to a doctor until too late, and then he died of cancer.

So you're not going to live forever, that we know for sure, how are you going to navigate your health care?

BUY INSURANCE! For all the negative I've outlined above, you don't want to go bare. It's not only the aged who get cancer. Most people who go bankrupt do so as a result of health care debts. And many of them DO have insurance. Never cancel your car insurance, your health insurance... Don't go out to eat, drive an old car. Believe me, when your number comes up, no one is going to jump out of the woods and make you whole. Odds are low that you lose the health care lottery, but it happens.

AND GO TO THE DOCTOR, EACH AND EVERY YEAR!

I've never ever had a precancerous cell. It seemed I was immune.

Until today.

My PSA, my prostate stuff is pretty good, I'm one of the rare men who can say this. But I've got a lot of other stuff wrong with me that almost no one else has, like my pemphigus foliaceus.

Which it took four doctors to diagnose. Most patients see five in a year, it took me eighteen months to be diagnosed. No one could get it right. And by time they did, I had to go into the hospital. But I live in Los Angeles, where I was referred to someone had studied at Johns Hopkins, the epicenter of pemphigus treatment. What are the odds I'm going to find this even in other cities?

So if you've got undiagnosable symptoms, keep seeing new people. Research. Go to see the big expert, even if you have to journey to another city. Money means nothing if you're dead.

Sure, there are hypochondriacs, but for all the ink they get, proportionately they're very few in number. The issue isn't them clogging up the arteries of the health care system, but the people not utilizing it, or underutilizing it.

And the longer you live... You're gonna get ill. You may not take any pills now, but you will, believe me. And if you don't, you'll pay the price. Like the woman I know who refused to take blood pressure medicine, who turned to alternatives, and then had a stroke.

That's another thing. If you're truly sick... GO TO SEE A WESTERN DOCTOR! Oh, I believe in acupuncture, but in truth I've had better success with physical therapy. But the distrusting elite hear you're ill and tell you about all these cockamamie remedies. Like CBD. Every study shows no effect. I've tried it...nothing. But the dopers love it, it's part of their religion, DON'T LISTEN TO THEM!

But CBD is painless. And muscle aches are usually a minor issue.

Oh, another thing, your body will tell you if you've got a problem. LISTEN TO IT!

Better to be ahead of the game, and capture it at the physical, like the rogue superbug in my urine.

But you don't want to think about it, you're squeamish, you're healthy, it'll never happen to you.

But it will.


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Tuesday 25 October 2022

More Than A Feeling

Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3TALvlL

YouTube: https://bit.ly/3TuI1Bn


1

"I looked out this morning and the sun was gone"

Fall didn't arrive in L.A. until Saturday. It was endless summer, not that anybody was at the beach. That's what foreigners don't understand, it may always be warm in Southern California, but the residents observe the seasons, to the point that they wear puffy coats in fifty degree weather.

It's been weird watching the temperature. I do it every day, it's in the "Times," I see whether fall has arrived in Vermont, how cold it is at my sister's place in Minneapolis, whether it's going to snow in Colorado.

It's still in the sixties in northern Vermont. Used to be colder at this point. The end of October and November were hell. Too warm to snow, and the cold rain was miserable. But climate change has changed everything, the leaves even turn later.

And snow arrived late in the Rockies, but Alta got two feet over the weekend, and most of Colorado got nearly a foot. And more is coming. We're not going to see the green grass again until spring.

But I was in suspended animation in SoCal, wearing my shorts and Polo shirts. Until...

As for the light, it's positively scary. I left my house for dinner last night at 6:30 and it was nearly dark. And when I wake up in the morning, it is dark. I can sometimes see light in the distance, but something's changed. And when something changes, you get reflective. You remember what was happening at the same time years ago.

Today I thought of the fall of '76, when "More Than a Feeling" was all over the radio.

The seventies get a bad rap. The people alive during the sixties, the hipsters...many believe music died in 1968, certainly didn't survive 1970.

You see the seventies were when music really blew up. When the mainstream realized how much money there was in it. When it became corporatized, but hands were still off, because the business was throwing off so much MONEY!

No one was complaining about the price of concert tickets. Successful acts weren't bitching about distribution, being ripped-off, music drove the culture and getting a ticket at all was a minor miracle, you had to be there, inside.

And when you were not at the gig, you listened.

To the music on the radio. News? Talk? No one did. That was for old farts. Stations all had an individual outlook, they were not uniform, and they weren't jive. The jocks were your friends. You even knew who the program director was, there were stories about them in the press, because they were stars, how did they gain such success? And the female jocks, like the Burner, Mary Turner, were bigger, had more mindshare, than the supposedly iconic stars of today. Believe me, as many people who adore Gaga and Beyonce, Mary Turner had more reach, not that she compared to the women in Fleetwood Mac, or Heart, or...

The musicians were gods. We all played instruments at home, but it was clear who was a professional and who was an amateur.

And you listened to radio for the new stuff. And if you liked it enough, or heard two tracks from the same record, you bought the album and played it until you knew it by heart.

We knew our music so much better back then. Because there was less of it, everything wasn't at our fingertips, and what we bought, we listened to, constantly.

1976... The Bicentennial, which was a muted affair in the wake of the resignation of Nixon two years before. But also, a slew of classic records.

Like Aerosmith's "Rocks." Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers' debut. And Rod Stewart covered Cat Stevens' "First Cut is the Deepest" and was all over the airwaves, his credibility intact. And Steve Miller came back with "Fly Like an Eagle." Bob Seger finally broke into the big time with "Night Moves." Lynyrd Skynyrd asked us to give them back their bullets. Boz Scaggs went from nowhere to somewhere with "Silk Degrees." At the end of the year the Eagles released "Hotel California."

And Boston released its debut album. Which the cognoscenti pooh-poohed as corporate rock. They needed an explanation, a way to kick the band's music to the curb, because it was just too good, it made hard rock palatable, there were melodies, changes, anathema to the tastemakers who were losing control.

But I can't say I loved "More Than a Feeling." I've NEVER loved "More Than a Feeling." But I do remember hearing it on the radio, it was indelible, and ultimately all over L.A.'s multiple rock stations.

And I still can't remember what made me buy the album. But it wasn't "More Than a Feeling." But what I do remember is playing "Foreplay/Long Time" ad infinitum on my new stereo.

2

Last night Richard asked me what my go-to Spotify playlist was.

And I told him I didn't have one. That I'd graze the new music genre playlists now and again, but it was overwhelming. And occasionally I'd listen to playlists I'd created for my radio show, but really I picked and chose what I wanted to listen to. Statistically most people do this, but Richard didn't believe me.

I told Richard I had certain go-to tracks, like "Foreplay/Long Time," and he looked at me and laughed.

You can't admit you like Boston.

But this afternoon, with the sun out, going through my e-mail after dropping off Felice's rental car, I was in a sunny mood and I needed sunny music to accompany me on my mental ride.

And that's when I put on "More Than a Feeling."

"I lost myself in a familiar song
I closed my eyes and slipped away"

I was right back in the fall of '76. I was in my 2002, on the San Diego Freeway, the music was blasting and nothing else mattered.

"It's more than a feeling
When I hear that old song they used to play"

That's what youngsters don't understand. That music was social media, videogames and streaming television all wrapped up into one, it was EVERYTHING! And when we hear those old songs, we're taken back to our youth, when we were still optimistic, when our entire lives were in front of us as opposed to being behind us.

"So many people have come and gone
Their faces fade as the years go by"

Actually, they don't fade, I can see them clear as day, but people are dropping like flies. It's very weird. I haven't quite felt lucky that I'm still alive, but I'm sure that's coming down the pike, with the attrition.

And most were not prepared, it was relatively sudden. They had no time for a victory lap, for long term reflection, to sit at home, drive on the freeway with these classic tunes blasting.

And we all look bad. We hate looking at ourselves in the mirror. And then there are those who get plastic surgery, as if we can't tell.

"And I begin dreaming
'Til I see Marianne walk away
I see my Marianne walking away"

In the back of your mind...you thought you'd reconnect, you'd see them again, maybe even get back together. But while you weren't paying attention, that dream died. And it was just a dream. The funny thing about people is they change, not only in looks. When you're with them they're one thing, and then the subsequent influences and vagaries of life turn them into someone else. There's still some common ground, but a lot less than was in your memory. As for how they look, they're always frozen in time in your mind, they never age, and then you encounter them and just like you, they're older, they're different.

And then there are those mistakes you made, the faux pas. You've winced for decades, wanting to take your actions back, apologize, even though you never have. You realize you might as well shed the cloak, absolve yourself, because those people are gone, it's now your life only, you'd better be wide awake as the days go by, because the calendar may run out of pages.

"When I'm tired and thinking cold
I hide in my music, forget the day"

There was no lyric sheet, I was never sure whether it was "goes" or "cold." Now you can just look it up online, not that it's always perfectly right.

But if we got depressed, if we felt down, we always had our records. One for each mood. We'd drop the needle and they'd take us away. It was aural heroin. We needed nothing more than the music. And although many owned headphones, it was really about buying the biggest, most powerful stereo system you could afford, and blasting it, forcing out all the bad thoughts. That's what you needed, shelter, food and music. You owned a car, and then a stereo, it was one of your most expensive purchases. You dreamed about it, scoped it out at the multiple stereo shops, and when you got home and set it up, turned it on and heard the music emanate from the speakers, you were ELATED!

"And dream of a girl I used to know
I closed my eyes and she slipped away
She slipped away"

It's all slipping away. And the worst thing is you've lived so long you have a hard time remembering. Were you actually at that show or not?

But you never forget the music, those records.

3

So I'm sitting in front of my Mac, something that didn't even exist back then, home computers were not a thing. And I'm looking out on a perfectly clear day with "More Than a Feeling" blasting and I'm mesmerized, in a trance, and I can't believe how damn great the track is.

It's like a lost art, a lost formula, no one can do this anymore, write an anthem.

After grunge, rock went down the rabbit hole. It's noisy and edgy, made for a select few, not everybody.

Sure, maybe the hair bands took it too far at the end of the eighties, but that does not mean what came before wasn't good, won't sustain.

I looked at Spotify, "More Than a Feeling" had 602,878,327 streams.

The Weeknd has five tracks over a billion, one two billion, one three billion, but the rest of the songs have streams in the neighborhood of "More Than a Feeling," if not less.

Not that anything else by Boston hits those heights.

It's funny that the number two most streamed track is "Peace of Mind," with 156,110,123, I wouldn't have predicted that. "Foreplay/Long Time" has 95,995,662.

Fleetwood Mac has two tracks with just a few more streams than "More Than a Feeling," "The Chain" at 756,375,597, and "Go Your Own Way" with 698,380,929. And then there's "Dreams," boosted by that viral TikTok video, with a bit over a billion, 1,080,992,932.

Stunningly, "More Than a Feeling" has more streams on Spotify than any Eagles track other than "Hotel California," with 1,160,429,874.

The biggest Steve Miller cut, "The Joker," only has 368,939,215.

Aerosmith has two cuts that exceed "More Than a Feeling," but neither is from what most people consider their classic era, starting with "Get Your Wings" and going through "Rocks." "Dream On," from the first LP, has 667,316,905, and the soundtrack cut "I Don't Want to Miss a Thing," written by Diane Warren, not the Toxic Twins, has 770,411,220.

Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers have nothing close, except for Tom's solo effort, "Free Fallin'," with 513,318,964.

Rod Stewart blew all his credibility with those standards albums he did with Clive Davis, and now, years later, most people don't want to listen to the classic stuff, "Maggie May" has a mere 263,431,618 streams. Rod the Mod only has four tracks in nine figures, another whose first three digits begin with 207, and two others with 156 and 132.

Frampton does not come alive on Spotify, nothing on his classic double album even hits nine figures, only two hit eight.

Bob Seger is nowhere close, with only two nine figure cuts, one that begins with a 2 and another that begins with a 1.

"Sweet Home Alabama" is bigger than "More Than a Feeling," with 997,936,625 streams, "Gimme Back My Bullets" has 18 and a half million.

So what we've learned here is "More Than a Feeling" is gigantic, has a huge place in the firmament, it's never died and is still being kept alive.

But you can't get an insider to testify about the group. No one ever lobbies for the band to be in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, everybody's too cool to admit how great that debut was.

What came after did not reach those heights. Primarily because of the war with CBS, which wanted new product when Tom Scholz wanted more time.

But that debut...

The opening cut was "More Than a Feeling." Talk about an album opener...

Scholz created the Rockman so other acts could have what he had, could get that sound.

Scholz created the whole thing alone, he adored the James Gang, he was influenced, he was a fan.

And then he rang the bell, broke the bank. Everybody else was worried about trends, most not making it to the top, or making excuses why they failed in the marketplace and then this nobody, a college graduate, from MIT no less, comes along and wins the sweepstakes!

I still recall as I wander on, it's as clear as the sun in the summer sky how great "More Than a Feeling" and Boston are. It may be a long time gone, but it's not forgotten, not by me, not by almost anybody, it won't die.

This music is part of me, part of my DNA, it's ridden shotgun in my life longer than almost every human being. And in retrospect it's the apotheosis, this height was never reached again.

People tried to imitate Boston, but that truly was corporate rock and then disco came along and then the entire music business crapped out.

It was resuscitated by MTV, but before that no one cared how Tom Scholz looked, or Brad Delp, we made the pictures in our minds.

And now this music is like the Dead Sea Scrolls.

Much music from the twenty first century has already forgotten. And none of it reaches as many as "More Than a Feeling" once did.

The music just took you away and put a smile on your face.

IT WAS WAY MORE THAN A FEELING!


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