Dessa — Fighting Fish

From her album Parts of Speech.  As talked about in last week's  FMD, the hip-hop songs are great while the ballads are meh.  This is a great song and one of my faves from the album.

Dessa's vocals aren't the easiest to hear in this version but I thought it was a pretty good representation of her live show.  After the break I included a version with easier-to-follow the vocals.

Continue reading Dessa — Fighting Fish

6 votes, average: 7.17 out of 106 votes, average: 7.17 out of 106 votes, average: 7.17 out of 106 votes, average: 7.17 out of 106 votes, average: 7.17 out of 106 votes, average: 7.17 out of 106 votes, average: 7.17 out of 106 votes, average: 7.17 out of 106 votes, average: 7.17 out of 106 votes, average: 7.17 out of 10 (6 votes, average: 7.17 out of 10)
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Happy Birthday–January 9

Bill Thomas (1905)
Johnny Washington (1916)
John Kibler (1928)
Julio Navarro (1936)
Ralph Terry (1936)
Masaaki Mori (1937)
Al Clark (1948)
Joe Wallis (1952)
Ivan DeJesus (1953)
Otis Nixon (1959)
Stan Javier (1964)
Jay Powell (1972)
Ken Cloude (1975)

Bill Thomas pitched in the minors from 1924-1952. He set records for games pitched (1,016), wins (383), losses (347), innings (5,995), hits allowed (6,721), and runs allowed (3,098).

Outfielder/first baseman Johnny Washington played in the Negro Leagues for nearly twenty years.

John Kibler was a National League umpire from 1963-1989.

Masaaki Mori was involved with twenty-seven pennant winners in Japan, sixteen as a player, three as a coach, and eight as a manager.

Al Clark was a long-time American League umpire.

Continue reading Happy Birthday–January 9

Haim – The Wire

httpv://youtu.be/TLTQjhW55jA

I debated between 3 videos for this, but ultimately this one won out.  Because gurl singers (for Pepper).  Also, I couldn't find a version of The Preature's "Is This How You Feel" that I liked (seems for them, live <<< produced?)

I'm throwing a bonus video your way too:

Continue reading Haim – The Wire

7 votes, average: 7.86 out of 107 votes, average: 7.86 out of 107 votes, average: 7.86 out of 107 votes, average: 7.86 out of 107 votes, average: 7.86 out of 107 votes, average: 7.86 out of 107 votes, average: 7.86 out of 107 votes, average: 7.86 out of 107 votes, average: 7.86 out of 107 votes, average: 7.86 out of 10 (7 votes, average: 7.86 out of 10)
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The 50 Best Players not (yet) in the Hall of Fame

On Monday evening Graham Womack, the proprietor of Baseball: Past and Present, published his fourth annual article on the 50 best baseball players not in the Hall of Fame. Graham's list is the product of ballots submitted by over 200 readers, including yours truly (my third year voting). I counted four former Minnesota Twins on the list, but there might be a couple short-time guys I missed. Graham's piece is a massive article, but entirely worth the read.

I really enjoy the way Womack conducts this survey. Voters are first asked to identify who they believe are the best players outside the Hall of Fame (no metrics or other specific criteria are required), and secondly whether the player belongs in the Hall of Fame. This way, apart from the PED issue, there's a fairly clear delineation of where voters believe the Hall of Fame ends and the Hall of Very Good starts.

In sean's WGOM's Take on the Hall of Fame post, Doc expressed his desire to see the median Hall of Famer at each position. I've broken the positions down below, then contextualized the medians with a decent selection of players eligible for Womack's list. Continue reading The 50 Best Players not (yet) in the Hall of Fame