Legendary Marvin Pontiac
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Artist:
Marvin Pontiac
Label: Strange & Beautiful
Category: Music
Average customer rating:
Format: Original recording reissued
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 1
UPC: 655217001823
EAN: 0655217001823
ASIN: B00004SBO1
Release Date: 2000-04-11 |
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Listmania:
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C.d.'s you cant live without.
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Favorite Albums (Only One For Each Group)
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March of the Wierdos
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Non Waits for Waits Fans
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Some CDs I Get Never Tired to Listen to
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Sons of Lee Marvin
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All Time Top 25 (for today)
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Difficult & beautiful music
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Top 10 Albums of 2000
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First fifteen in cd folder.
Tracks:
- I'm A Doggy
- Small Car
- Now I'm Happy
- Power
- Runnin' Round
- Pancakes
- Bring Me Rocks
- Rubin
- Wanna Wanna
- Sleep At Night
- Arms & Legs
- She Ain't Going Home
- Little Fly
- No Kids
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Customer Reviews:
Legendary Marvin Pontiac.......2005-09-16
Definitely not the best work of John Lurie, but it is still one of my favories. It's something like more educated Robbie Robertson, with a crazy Tom-Waits-tuch. Strange and beautiful, just as the labels name. It is pitty Lurie does not work any more. Or does he?
Elmore most certainly knew Marvin was not a read person.........2005-06-14
arnabc is wrong to assume Elmore didn't 'get it' John Lurie was involved in the "Get Shorty" movie.
Marvin, Granpappy and Me.......2004-07-28
When I was a young boy, sitting on my Granpappy's knee, I would spend lazy afternoons listening to his old croaky humming of a tune long forgotten by anyone else for miles around. He'd smoke his old pipe and I remember breathing in the beautifully scented blue smoke. He would occasionally be stirred out of his reverie as if spirits were in the room; he'd shake his head and snarl and suddenly lurch for the old phonograph, which he kept, right there by the back door woodpile, as if his crooked old life depended on it. He'd reach for the mysterious sleeve of black discs contained within the small box beneath the dormant turntable, wrench one out, crank up the box and drop that needle beautifully onto the spinning disc. Only then would he calm right down and be transported, by that music he heard, to another world.
When I learnt to read, I finally was able to make out the crude and mysterious shapes of the letters on those old 78s. Many of them were different from each other but two words remained the same on each disc: Marvin Pontiac. He was the only singer my Granpappy would listen to.
Now Granpappy was a strict old buzzard and a grouch and in his declining years he was a painful old sod to be around but you could always be guaranteed that when he put on his Pontiac records, Granpappy would calm right down again.
When Granpappy passed from this world he left nothing to no one. Except me. His Marvin Pontiac 78s. Some of the songs I had on those discs haven't made it to this CD collection. Songs like, "Diggin' In Yer Heels", "Pass The Tobacco, Nurse" and "Detroit? Schmetroit!"
Years passed and I eventually lost these 78s to a cab driver who I later discovered cheated during our poker game. Thank God for the re-release of these discs on CD. They have brought my memories back.
Great Invented Bluesman.......2003-06-01
Yes it's a hoax! There was no such old blues guy as Marvin Pontiac; he is an invention of the strange mind of John Lurie, but that doesn't take away from the fun of this album. As somebody once said, "It's true even if it didn't happen!" This is some great blues and cool music. First song "I'm a Doggy" is great, funny, and worth the price of the CD right there. Not all of the album is as good, but definitely worth a listen.
A LITTLE FICTION, A LITTLE FUSION, A LOT OF FUN!.......2002-08-30
Oddly enough, I stumbled upon Marvin Pontiac in January while reading Elmore Leonard's "Tishomingo Blues". In the book, fictional character Robert Taylor plays "guess that tune" with another character in the book. The tune in the novel is "I'm a Doggy" which, according to the novel, purportedly was recorded in 1952 and soon became a minor hit. In the novel, Robert Taylor reports that Mr. Pontiac only recorded one album during his career and only after the producer agreed to mow Pontiac's lawn. Other accounts of Mr. Pontiac life are just as mysterious. Some say he went insane after claiming to have been abducted and probed by aliens and he died in 1970 at the Esmerelda State Mental Institution in Detroit. Other accounts report that he was hit and killed by a bus in June of 1977. All in all, his life and death is probably the biggest sham since the "Paul Is Dead" rumors and clues circulated in the 70's. Careful attention to the liner notes reveals that Pontiac is, in fact nothing more than, the alter ego of John Lurie. Most notably, the lone recording of Pontiac appears on Lurie's label, "Strange & Beautiful" which did not exist in 1952 when Pontiac purportedly recorded and released "I'm A Doggy". Moreover, the CD features musicians that include Lurie's brother Evan, John Medeski and Marc Ribot who would have been infants at the time of the actual 1952 recording. Finally, this CD was recorded in 2000, 30 years after the latest purported death of Pontiac. Are these the vocals of a dead man or just Lurie having a little fun? I suspect it's the latter. Whatever the reason for the deception, the CD itself is delightful to listen to. It features an array of styles from back porch blues to lounge lizard jazz. All complimented with Lurie's Barry White styled vocals. Alter ego's aside, this is a fine production by Lurie. I am just sorry that Lurie buried Pontiac without recording a sequel. Buy it and contemplate the mystery while you enjoy the music.
Music CD:
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- From Q with Love ~ Quincy Jones
- Goes Blue ~ Ximo Tebar
- No Resemblance Whatsoever ~ Dan Fogelberg and Tim Weisberg
- The Paul Desmond Quartet with Jim Hall ~ Paul Desmond Quartet with Jim Hall
- The Best of Tommy Dorsey & His Orchestra ~ Tommy Dorsey & His Orchestra
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