Wednesday, June 06, 2012

To Our Most Beloved Dino In Rembrance Of The Day That Coolness Came To Earth

Hey pallies, likes tomorrow is the 95th anniversary of the date of our Dino's comin' to earth, and I am gonna be unable to be on the 'puter for the next few days, and thus unable to give our most beloved Dino his due on his day....the DAY THAT COOLNESS CAME TO EARTH. So, likes on this day before our great man's great day, thought I woulda do a bit of Dino-homagin' and likes have decided as ilovedinomartin did last year to 'gain post that perfect prose scribed by Dino-biographer Mr. Nick Tosches, "God Created Dean Martin In His Own Image Then Stood Back."

Taken from Tosches' tome, "Nick Tosches' Reader" it's a stunnin'ly stellar piece of Dino-patter written on the release of one of our amazin' man's final al-b-ums, "Once In A While."

This was our Dino's last disc for the pallies at Reprise. Recorded in November 1974,
it likes took almost 4 long years before it was released on October 20, 1978.

Written by Tosches twelve years before his award winnin' Dino-bio, "DINO: Living High In The Dirty Business Of Living" reached print, "God Created Dean Martin In His Own Image Then Stood Back," is likes, to this Dino-philes perspective, likes the most most powerful homagin' of the man who came to be known far and wide as "The King Of Cool."

Tosches likes knows how to speak the ultimately ubber Dino-truth, and likes his devotion to our great man is devotionally deep, passionately pure, and trustworthy true! And, thus it is with these wondrously wise words, might I say pallies, of profound poetry, that we honor our beloved Dino on his day of birthin'.

ilovedinomartin says our deepest of the deep appreciato to Mr. Nick Tosches for puttin' the accent on our Dino in this coolest of the cool way and makin' for the most fittin' of fittin' tributes to the man known as Dino!

To view this in it's original format, as usual, just clicks on the tag of this Dino-message. Dino-awed, DMP



God Created Dean Martin
In His Own Image,
Then Stood Back

from the "Nick Tosches' Reader" chapter 27

Since 1972 life has been amiss, and there has been emptiness. Bare, unbudding; the saplings of stark need knew no spring. Candles were lit, letters were writ; prayers said, tears shed. But grayness begat naught but bleak grayness, and the new Dean Martin album never came.

Some of us, such as Elvis, who had declared Dino his idol, could not bear the agony of forbearance. Others, such as myself, endured by listening to the original mono version of "That's Amore" and reminding ourselves that it had taken Michelangelo eight years to fresco the altar wall of the Sistine Chapel --- and Michelangelo didn't even drink!

Now we faithful can rejoice. Let there be the pouring of liquors and the raising of skirts. The man has returned, and life as we knew it may resume.

It is no secret that Dean Martin has influenced more singers than any man alive. He taught Elvis the dramaturgy of sincerity, Jerry Lee the powers of diplopic decrescendo. Jim Morrison the nuances of erotic detachment, and Randy Newman how to comb his hair. Once In A While, Dino's first album in more than six years, proves that il padrone (as Jim Morrison called him) is still the master.

The love song has been the center of Dino's art from the beginning (He first hit the charts in 1950, vowing "I Will Always Love You.") Here the gurglings and gropings of love are celebrated in all their glory. "Without a Word of Warning" and "The Day You Came Along" tell of answered dreams of the moist kind. "It's Magic" and "Only Forever," two beauties from the '40's, bow the knee of fealty to She-Whose-Face-Launches-Ships-and-Smiles-Salaciously-After-the-Fourth-Drink, "If I Had You" and
"Once in a While" wallow sweetly in the lappings of unrequited love. "I Cried for You" is a savoring of vengeance. In "Love Thy Neighbor" Dino advices us to bless the skin of errant wives in no certain terms.

Two of the album's most impressive performances are found in "Twilight on the Trail" and a version of the World War I killer "That Old Gang Of Mine." The first, remindful of Dino's "Houston," is a homage to irresponsibility and the joys of immediate gratification. "That Old Gang of Mine" shows that while Dino is always singing about broads, his old buddies are still where his heart is.

What a guy.

Felice ritorno, Dino! Let's make it a regular thing again, okay?

2 comments:

Always On Watch said...

95 years ago tomorrow! Hard to believe as our Dino will never be 95 years old in my mind's eye.

dino martin peters said...

Hey pallie, likes indeed Miss AOW, our most beloved Dino is truly truly TIMELESS! Keeps lovin' our Dino!