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To: Solon who wrote (29748)8/18/2012 1:06:45 AM
From: 2MAR$  Respond to of 69300
 
The power of music , great story you might enjoy : "Searching for Sugar Man : Sixto Rodriguez, The Most Famous Musician That No One's Ever Heard Of"
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/16/rodriguez-searching-for-sugar-man_n_1791189.html

Sixto Rodriguez: 'It's a fantastic rags-to-riches story' Forty years after recording his first album, Sixto Rodriguez, 70, is on the cusp of international stardom
guardian.co.uk


Sixto Rodriguez, photographed in London by Antonio Olmos for the Observer
The first thing Sixto Rodriguez asks me to do when I sit down to interview him in a film distributor's office in London is to tell him all about myself. He's eager to know everything: who I am, where I'm from. ("Is that an Irish accent? Erin go bragh!") The Observer's photographer is also required to give a potted history of himself before Rodriguez submits to having his photo taken. He looks the epitome of the veteran rock star – black suit, black-rimmed glasses, black hair down to his shoulders – but he couldn't be more self-effacing or more generous with his attention. As for his own life and career, the subject of a riveting new documentary called Searching for Sugar Man: "Oh," he says, "it's just a typical rags-to-riches story. Better that way than riches-to-rags."

    Searching For Sugar Man
  1. Production year: 2011
  2. Country: Rest of the world
  3. Runtime: 85 mins
  4. Directors: Malik Benjelloul
  5. More on this film

    Actually, it's a bit of both, and there's nothing typical about it. When Rodriguez first came to notice at the start of the 70s, he had the makings of a folk-rock star – the next Bob Dylan, as his co-producer Dennis Coffey put it. But somehow stardom eluded him. His albums, Cold Fact and Coming from Reality, sank without a trace in the US and Rodriguez sank with them. Bizarre rumours went about that he had died – of a heroin overdose or by setting fire to himself on stage. In fact, as he recalls now, he returned quietly to Detroit and became a labourer. "I did a lot of heavy-lifting – construction, demolition, that kind of thing. Dusty, dirty work." Meanwhile, totally unknown to him, his music was gaining a huge fanbase in South Africa where its politically charged lyrics had struck a chord with a growing anti-apartheid movement. His South African fans believed him dead, and neither word of his popularity in that isolated country nor royalties from hundreds of thousands of his albums sold trickled back to the US.

    Sixto Rodriguez and director Malik Bendjelloul tell Xan Brooks about a new documentary about singer Rodriguez's incredible story, Searching for Sugar Man Link to this video The documentary tells how, after the fall of apartheid, three dedicated fans finally tracked Rodriguez down to a tiny house in Detroit and flew him to South Africa in 1998 for a triumphant, back-from-the-dead tour. "It was incredible," he says. "They were just so good to me. And the stories I heard! One soldier said: 'We made love to your music, we made war to your music'. Another person had a tattoo of the Cold Fact cover." He shakes his head. "It was amazing."

    He's played in many countries including the UK since then, but outside South Africa and Australia he remains a niche interest. Searching for Sugar Man, which won an audience award and a jury prize at Sundance earlier this year, is likely to change that. "We're getting bookings. We're going to LA after London, and we got a call to do Australia next spring."

    Rodriguez turned 70 last week but this new success, four decades later than expected, doesn't seem to concern him. "I haven't reached the plateau yet," he assures me. "I feel fit and ready."




To: Solon who wrote (29748)8/18/2012 1:11:35 AM
From: 2MAR$  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 69300
 
"The Kind of Story We Need To Exist" , his music became legend to all South Africans during the Apartheid movement , this humble guy from Detroit never knew this for over 30yrs & never recieved one royalty for all the 100's of 1000's of records sold . They loved him and finally found him after all that time .

Roger Ebert gives the the docufilm " Searching for Sugarman " 4 stars .
http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20120808/REVIEWS/120809984



Searching for Sugar Man
BY ROGER EBERT / August 8, 2012


Cast & Credits
A documentary featuring Stephen Segerman, Dennis Coffey, Mike Theodore, Dan Dimaggio, Jerome Ferretti, Steve Rowland, Willem Moller, Craig Bartholomew-Strydom, Ilse Assmann, Steve M. Harris, Robbie Mann, Clarence Avant, Eva Rodriguez, Sixto Rodriguez, Regan Rodriguez, Sandra Rodriguez-Kennedy, Rick Emmerson, Rian Malan.

Sony Pictures Classics presents a film written and directed by Malik Bendjelloul. Running time: 86 minutes. MPAA rating: PG-13 (language)




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Do some stories exist only because we need for them to? "Searching for Sugar Man" is about a gifted singer-songwriter from Detroit who was an enigma. His face half-hidden by long flowing hair and dark glasses, he sang in folk music bars with his back turned to the audience. His name was Sixto Rodriguez. He was so good that without fame or a large fan base, he signed a two-album contract with Sussex and A&R Records. The first album, "Cold Fact," got a rare four-star review from Billboard. Neither it nor the second one, "Coming From Reality," sold well, the contract was dropped, and the story seemed to end there.

Nothing else was heard from Sixto Rodriguez. But several years later, his albums traveled half the world away, to Cape Town, South Africa, where bootleg copies passed from hand to hand and his songs became anthems of the anti-apartheid movement. When an indie record store owner named Stephen Segerman released them commercially, they took off, the first selling 500,000 copies, which in that nation would be comparable to the Beatles or Elvis Presley.

This documentary by Swedish director Malik Bendjelloul moves between Detroit and Cape Town, speaking to such influential South Africans as Rian Malan about the impact Rodriguez had at the time. But what about the singer himself? Nothing was known. Rumors spread that he was dead — a suicide, who killed himself onstage by shooting himself or setting himself afire. Absolutely no evidence existed to support such theories, which by their sensational nature would hardly have passed unnoticed. In the absence of information the mystery only grew, about a man who was known only by his music, and even whose face was hardly clear.

The rise of the Internet made it easier for Segerman to search for his best-selling star (whose royalties went to A&M Records). Segerman himself began to be called "Sugarman," after the title of one of Rodriguez's songs. In the film, he emerges as one of those figures independent music depends upon — always there in his store, supporting and listening to music he believes in, spreading the gospel. In the case of Rodriguez, the gospel had already spread through South Africa on its own, propelled by the power of the songs.

There was no mention of Rodriguez on the net. Segerman posted a Web page about his search. In the late 1990s he received a comment on that page — no, not from Rodriguez but from someone who had information. If there is any chance you know nothing about this film, I am not going to reveal its ending. Let me just say it is miraculous and inspiring.

"Searching for Sugar Man" is a documentary that enlists us in the process of its search. Using archival footage, it shows both Segerman and Bendjelloul pressing ahead in a quest that became increasingly frustrating. The information they eventually dislodge about Rodriguez suggests a secular saint, a
deeply good man, whose music is the expression of a blessed inner being.

I hope you're able to see this film. You deserve to.

And yes, it exists because we need for it to.



To: Solon who wrote (29748)8/18/2012 10:43:04 AM
From: average joe  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 69300
 
The Strange Saga of Kenneth Goff Aug 15th in Conspiracy & UFO Phenomenon by Nick Redfern



Born in Delavan, Wisconsin in 1914, Kenneth Goff was a strange character with intriguing links to the early years of Ufology that many have either forgotten about, or simply have no awareness of at all. Which is a pity, since the Goff saga is one of truly intriguing and conspiratorial proportions! It’s also a subject that – as a little bit of a teaser – I’m heavily into for a forthcoming book, so any and all comments, observations and information would be very welcome and appreciated!

Described in now-declassified FBI files of May 6, 1955 as “a self-styled freelance Evangelist who for the past number of years has been speaking around the U.S. regarding the threat of communism to the U.S.,” Goff routinely delivered lectures to interested parties that included: Treason in our State Department; Should we use the Atom Bomb?; Red Secret Plot for Seizure of Denver; and Do the Reds Plan to Come by Alaska?

As the FBI additionally noted: “Also, some of the titles of Goff’s books, which he publishes voluminously are: ‘Will Russia Invade America?’, ‘One World, A Red World’, and ‘Confessions of Stalin’s Agent.’” But, the FBI had other concerns about Goff. He had once been a rabid commie himself, and there were certain figures in the Bureau that believed Goff was not quite the now-anti-communist that he professed to be. Rather, there was a suspicion that Goff’s had gone deep-cover and his red-hating ravings were merely a collective, ingenious ruse to camouflage his real intent: establishing networks of communists sympathizers across the United States.


The FBI certainly had a fine stash of material on Goff, who, it was recorded in disapproving fashion: “…is a self-admitted former member of the Communist Party,” and who “…was found guilty by jury trial on February 25, 1948, in United States District Court, District of Columbia, and was fined $100 as a result of the subject’s placing anti-communist signs before the Soviet Embassy in Washington, D.C.”

FBI files on Goff also recorded that: “The ‘Rocky Mountain News’ on October 25, 1951, contained an article stating that three Englewood persons were ordered to appear in Denver Municipal Court as an aftermath of the ripping of the Soviet flag yesterday at Civic Center. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Goff were two of these three individuals.”

Patriotic Americans might say that protesting outside the Soviet Embassy and tearing up the Soviet flag were very laudable actions for a U.S. citizen to undertake on home-turf at the height of the fraught and dicey Cold War. The FBI wasn’t so sure: “It has been a concern that Goff always ensures he is seen while displaying anti-Soviet tendencies. [Deleted] has remarked that if Goff is still privately ‘of a party mind’ this might explain his public displays.”

Goff was certainly an interesting character, and had made comments in the 1950s about communist-based plans to covertly introduce fluoride into the US water-supply, to create a “spirit of lethargy” in the nation. And: guess what? Goff had a deep interest in Flying Saucers. Indeed, one of Goff’s regular lectures was titled: Traitors in the Pulpit, or What’s Behind the Flying Saucers – Are they from Russia, Another Planet, or God?

But it was not so much from the perspective of UFOs being alien, Russian or from Heaven, however, that interested Goff. His concern was how the UFO subject could be utilized as a tool of manipulation and control by government.



In his 1959 publication, Red Shadows, Goff offered the following to his readers – which, of course, secretly included the FBI: “During the past few years, the flying saucer scare has rapidly become one of the main issues, used by organizations working for a one-world government, to frighten people into the belief that we will need a super world government to cope with an invasion from another planet. Many means are being used to create a vast amount of imagination in the minds of the general public, concerning the possibilities of an invasion by strange creatures from Mars or Venus.”

He continued: “This drive began early in the 40’s, with a radio drama, put on my Orson Welles, which caused panic in many of the larger cities of the East, and resulted in the death of several people. The Orson Welles program of invasion from Mars was used by the Communist Party as a test to find out how the people would react on instructions given out over the radio. It was an important part of the Communist rehearsal for the Revolution.”

The now-infamous Welles broadcast was, of course, based upon H.G. Wells’ acclaimed novel War of the Worlds. And while, today, it is fashionable and almost de rigueur within ufological circles to suggest conspiratorial and nefarious aspects the Welles broadcast, it was far less so in the early 1950s.

Goff, then, was quite the prophet – and particularly so when one takes into consideration the fact that he had been mouthing off about War of the Worlds, a “one-world government” and a secret program to manipulate the public with staged UFO encounters as far back as 1951. Or, if not a prophet, he may well have acquired a fair degree of inside-information. Kenneth Goff, an enigma to the end, died in 1972 while still only in his early sixties.

mysteriousuniverse.org