Elwood: What sort of music do you usually have here?
Claire: Oh we got both kinds, We got country, and western.
Blue
Oh, so lonesome
for you
Why can’t you be
blue over me
Blue
Bill Mack but a
big hit by LeAnn Rimes
Well it's one for
the money, well it's two for the show
Well it's three to
get ready, now go, cat go
But don't you step
on my blue suede shoes
Well you can do
anything but lay off of my blue suede shoes
Carl Perkins or
Elvis Pressley
Devil with the
blue dress, blue dress, blue dress,
Devil with the
blue dress on
Mitch Ryder
Blues stay away
from me
Uh-uh-uh, blues
why don't you let me be
I don't know why
you keep a-hauntin' me. and I guess that's why
Delmore Brothers
Got the blues, got
the blues
Got the blues, got
the St. Louis blues
Louis Prima
OK,
what is your favorite color? For me it
is blue. As John Lennon once sang, “The
sun is up, the sky is blue” or Judy Garland’s “Somewhere over the rainbow. Skies
are blue.” Thinking about blue: 1) there are more songs with blue is the lyrics
than any other color; 2) blue is the only color to have a genre of music named
after it, The Blues; 3) if one of our 50 states primarily votes for the
Democrat presidential candidate, it is a “blue state” 4) and so it goes.
What
about your favorite Blues genre or blue in the lyrics song? Well, as an ole rock and roller Carl Perkins
and Mitch Ryder are tough to beat. But
my all-time favorite is the Delmore Brothers, “Blues stay away from me.” The music is very haunting (probably because
of the tenor four string guitar and the harmonica {Wayne Raney} and brings
back memories of my youth when Saturday night dances were scattered across the
rural areas of Kansas. Those dances usually presented a “big band” sound, or “hillbilly”
music; rock and roll generally was confined to school dances. Yea, I
know very few readers have heard a recording by the Delmore Brothers! But consider they were stars of the Grand Ole
Opry in the 1930s and wrote more than 1000 songs. Perhaps Bob Dylan summed it
up best: “The Delmore Brothers, God I really loved them! I think they’ve
influenced every harmony I’ve tried to sing.”
So, there you know some of my strange secrets!
A poster, source unknown, advertising the Delmore Brothers. |
Maybe you have a favorite "blue" movie? Who could forget The Blues Brothers--It's 106 miles to Chicago, we've got a full tank of gas, half a pack of cigarettes, it's dark and we're wearing sunglasses. So,
what about your favorite blue mineral? I
presume a large segment of the population would immediately state azurite, the
copper carbonate. Others might spout turquoise or zoisite (tanzanite), opal, aquamarine,
or numerous others. I have espoused my
views on blue minerals with numerous Blog postings and today have a couple of new,
blue, copper arsenates: guanacoite and arhbarite. You aren’t familiar with them? Neither was I
until I found them in a dusty drawer of a small rock and mineral store and
started reading.
Arhbarite,
a hydrated copper magnesium arsenate [Cu2Mg(AsO4)(OH)3],
gets its “strange” name from the Type Locality in Morocco, the Arhbar (orAghbar) Mine. It usually has a dark blue color, a vitreous to sub-vitreous luster, a blue streak, and often forms as botryoidal cluster of radially grown crystals. However, at times the crystals are so tiny that the mineral appears massive. Arhbarite forms in the oxidized zone of polymetallic ore deposits due to percolating hydrothermal fluids and is usually associated with other copper arsenates such as conichalcite and guanacoite. Arhbarite is a rare mineral only found in two localities, the Type and in Guanaco in Chile.
gets its “strange” name from the Type Locality in Morocco, the Arhbar (orAghbar) Mine. It usually has a dark blue color, a vitreous to sub-vitreous luster, a blue streak, and often forms as botryoidal cluster of radially grown crystals. However, at times the crystals are so tiny that the mineral appears massive. Arhbarite forms in the oxidized zone of polymetallic ore deposits due to percolating hydrothermal fluids and is usually associated with other copper arsenates such as conichalcite and guanacoite. Arhbarite is a rare mineral only found in two localities, the Type and in Guanaco in Chile.
In
fact, the “strange” name for the second mineral, guanacoite, comes from its Type
Locality in the El Guanaco Mine (Atacama Desert, Chile). The mine produces gold (primary commodity), silver,
and copper (chalcocite, bornite, enargite, and covellite) from Eocene rhyolite. It is both a subsurface and surface mine. In
addition, the Mine is a source for numerous and colorful blue and green copper
minerals, including copper arsenates.
Dark blue massive arhbarite vug (top) with light blue guanacoite prismatic and bladed crystals (bottom). Length (vertical in photo) of both minerals ~3 mm. |
Closeup of above photomicrograph. |
Dark blue arhbarite surrounded by prismatic crystals of guanacoite. Maximum width of blue mass ~1 mm.. |
RIP
John Lewis: Freedom is not a state; it is an act. It is not some enchanted
garden perched high on a distant plateau where we can finally sit down and
rest. Freedom is the continuous action we all must take, and each generation
must do its part to create an even more fair, more just society.
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