Where They Stand

Minnesota is 35-47, fifth in the AL Central, ten games behind Chicago.  The Twins are 5-5 in their last ten games and have lost two consecutive games.

Rochester is 40-47, sixth in the IL North, eleven games behind Lehigh Valley.  The Red Wings are 4-6 in their last ten games and have won one consecutive game.

New Britain is 47-37, second in the EL Eastern, a half game behind Trenton.  The Rock Cats are 7-3 in their last ten games and have won three consecutive games.

Fort Myers is 9-6 in the second half, second in the FSL South, one game behind Bradenton.  The Miracle is 7-3 in its last ten games and has won three consecutive games.

Beloit is 6-8 in the second half, sixth in the ML Western, three games behind Kane County and Quad Cities.  The Snappers are 3-7 in their last ten games and have lost three consecutive games.

Elizabethton is 11-5, first in the AL West, one and a half games ahead of Greeneville.  The Twins are 8-2 in their last ten games and have won three consecutive games.

The GCL Twins are 8-7, tied for first in the GCL South with the Rays and the Red Sox.  The Twins are 5-5 in their last ten games and have won two consecutive games.

The DSL Twins are 14-15, tied for fourth in the B. C. B. C., four games behind the Reds.  The Twins are 5-5 in their last ten games and have lost one consecutive game.

Game 82: Twins 3, Tigers 7

These games are bound to happen. The Twins relief corps have been pretty effective this year. Not so much today. After 7 mostly sharp innings by Diamond, Gardy gave the ball to Burnett who gave up the tying run. Robertson then hung a 1-0 slider which Fielder smashed out for a three run homer.

The Twins had 15 hits in the game. They also had three men thrown out at home.

Classic Album Reviews: Woody Guthrie — Dust Bowl Ballads (1940)

Released in 1940, many consider Woody Guthrie’s Dust Bowl Ballads to the first “concept album.” Listening, it is easy to see why as the name really says it all: Woody Guthrie with guitar and harmonica singing ballads about the dust bowl, it’s just that simple. These aren’t just songs about the Dust Bowl, however. They about the poor sharecroppers, farmers, and family folk impacted by the dust storms of the 1930’s. Through these songs you can see the dust, taste it, smell it, feel it all over your body. The songs are that powerful. The first song (The Great Dust Storm) tells the story. You see that big dust cloud, you learn how the farmers reacted, how scared they were and you can’t believe how bad the storm was, that it could be related to the devastation wrought by a Hurricane Katrina or the wildfires in Colorado Springs.

Dust Bowl Ballads contain songs that are probably familiar to most, even if you don’t know the names or who even sang them:  Dusty Old Dust (So Long It’s Been Good To Know You) and Blowin’ Down the Road (I Ain’t Gonna Be Treated That a Way) are so familiar that they’re ingrained in our musical DNA. Pretty Boy Floyd has been covered by so many folk artists, it’s hard to keep count. A musical highlight for me is Do Re Mi, a song about the Okies moving to California and finding out it isn’t the paradise it was advertised as. The fact is that there were so many people moving to California that the local farming communities passed anti-vagrancy ordinances and the Okies had to prove that they either had a job or money (do-re-mi).

Finally one can’t have a song about the Dust Bowl and not mention The Joads.  Woody Guthrie loved the movie Grapes of Wrath so much that he wrote a seven minute song (broken into two parts) that basically tells the entire Grapes of Wrath story (with a riff stolen from an older folk song). It’s just as heartbreaking as the book and movie. If you ever need a seven minute refresher of Grapes of Wrath, you may want to check out Tom Joad I and II.

Woody’s voice is quite plaintive but ironically it’s his voice that really gives these songs their texture. The guitar and harmonica are simple, as are the lyrics. But it’s Woody Guthrie’s gift that he could take complex issues and boil them down to their very core. Very few songwriters have been able to do that and to do it over a whole album and it makes Dust Bowl Ballads one of those foundational albums that everyone should have, regardless of your musical tastes.

Supposedly you can stream the album from the Smithsonian here.  But I couldn't get it to work.