SoundCloud Broadside Balladeer Vic

Showing posts with label nature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nature. Show all posts

Saturday, July 28, 2018

Blizzard - A Poem by Jean Henri Sadot



Poetry Video published at Vic Sadot YouTube ChannelExtracted from a longer video of 8 Jean-Henri Sadot poems presented as poems or songs on the July 28, 2003 Dream Streets Radio Show hosted by Steven Leech.

The full Dream Streets Radio video has 8 Jean-Henri Sadot poems presented as poems or songs on the audio track from the July 28, 2003 Dream Streets Radio Show hosted by Steven Leech on WVUD 91.3 FM, "The Voice of the University of Delaware", in Newark, DE.


Blizzard was written by Jean-Henri Sadot in 1966. The 8 poem video made from the July 28, 2003 Dream Streets Radio Show Presents Poems of Jean-Henri Sadot has: (1) Iron Hill; (2) Early Roses of 1940; (3) White Clay Creek; (4) The Statue of Liberty; (5) Summertime Sunset; (6) Blizzard; (7) A Little Girl’s Bedtime; and (8) The Moods of the Sea. Vic Sadot, son of the poet, is reading Jean-Henri Sadot poems, or sharing renderings of them into song as he relates the history behind the poems of Jean-Henri Sadot. Steven Leech aka “Even Steven” was one of the founders of a poetry publication that gave a platform for hundreds of writers to be heard and the Dream Streets editorial teams managed to produce regular releases of Dream Streets for decades.


See History of Dream Streets and other archive items in www.dreamstreetsarchive.com

Vic Sadot is available for bookings and interviews at BroadsideBalladeer@gmail.com

Vic has 4 CD’s available on CD Baby, and numerous videos on YouTube. 
Vic has 4 CD’s available on CD Baby, and numerous videos on YouTube. All Vic Sadot album covers ever released are now available on T-shirts and mugs at Vic Sadot Crazy Planet T-Shirt Shop at CafĂ© Press: "Good Time Delaware" 1985 45 rpm single; "Ride the Wind" 1988 LP; "Comin' Home" Planete Folle 1997 CD; “Broadsides & Retrospectives” 2005 LP; "9/11 Truth & Justice Songs" 9-11-2011 10th Anniversary CD released on 9/11/11 with 16 songs; and “Truth Troubadour” 12-19-16 with 18
songs


The Official Home Website of Vic Sadot is www.vicsadot.com



Friday, July 27, 2018

Video Created for Dream Streets Radio Show Presents Poems of Jean-Henri Sadot 2003 Audio



This video was created from a 2003 Dream Streets Radio Show audio track. This particular Dreamstreets show was aired on July 28, 2003 in Newark, DE on WVUD, the Voice of the University of Delaware. 



The 8 poems on this video are: Iron Hill, Early Roses of 1940, White Clay Creek, The Statue of Liberty; Summertime Sunset; Blizzard; Little Girl’s Bedtime; and The Moods of the Sea. Vic Sadot, son of the poet, is reading Jean-Henri Sadot poems, or sharing renderings of them into song as he relates the history behind the poems of Jean-Henri Sadot. 



Screeshot from "Summertime Sunset" in 
Dream Streets Radio Show Presents Poems of Jean-Henri Sadot Venus and Mars Charm at Dusk by Astro Bob King at Area Voices 12-16-2016




Summertime Sunset screenshot

Steven Leech (Pardon svp for misspelling in video as “Leach” in earliest editions) is the Host of Dream Streets Radio Show on WVUD in Newark, DE. “Even Steven” was one of the founders of a poetry publication that gave a platform for hundreds of writers to be heard and managed to produce regular releases of Dream Streets for decades. See History of Dream Streets in www.dreamstreetsarchive.com




Screenshot from Dream Streets Radio Show Presents the Poems of Jean-Henri Sadot vidto. There is actually a Jean Sadot poem about The Scuttling of the Free French Fleet, but in this 2003 audio there was only a discussion about the events of 1940 and the formation of the French Resistance and the Free French Army and Navy under General Charles DeGaulle

SYNOPSIS: Introduction & discussion of Jean-Henri Sadot’s childhood in Normandy, just across from England; his involvement starting at age 20 in WWII as a French soldier, Resistance camp participant in the Pyrennes Mountains on the Spanish border, and his escape from Nazi occupied France on a battleship running out of Toulon harbor that went to North Africa and then to Brooklyn Navy Yard in New York City for retooling for warfare in the invasion of Provence in 1944.
He participated in the retaking of Toulon, the same harbor he escaped from just before Admiral deLaborde ordered the scuttling of the French Fleet to keep it from being used by the Nazis and the Vichy collaboration government. Jean Sadot’s poems carry themes and perspectives on history and nature often grounded in local places or very personal experiences. He worked on the Chrysler assembly line and attended classes at the University of Delaware while raising 5 children with his wife Eleanor Lafferty, who grew up on a farm in Landenberg, PA and graduated from Kennett Square High School before serving in New York City as a US Navy “Wave” office worker during WWII. They met in a Broadway Cafe and wrote letters until reuniting after the war.

There is a discussion of strained French-American relations in 2003 due to the new invasion and occupation of Iraq by the US and UK under G W Bush and Tony Blair. The French and Germans were very much against this war. G W Bush and Dick Cheney and the NeoCons had lied to make war and profited from it with their fellow “Masters of War”. In 2003 the US and UK were not supported in the military and cultural destruction of Iraq. Most of the NATO nations, and notably France and Germany, were against the invasion of Iraq as they were doing business there, as were many American businesses. Public remarks in the media by President G. W. Bush aggravated the disagreement and tensions as Bush comments compared the 60th Anniversary of the D-Day Landing in Normandy, France to his 2003 invasion and occupation of Iraq as comparable to the 1944 “liberation” of France and other European countries under Nazi occupation. Vic had just returned from playing at the FĂȘte de Musique in Carentan, Normandy, France, his father Jean-Henri Sadot's home town. Vic has a little story to tell about cousin Gilbert Sadot getting a call in the evening from the Carentan mayor inviting him, and his visiting American and other French cousins to meet with the mayor and the town's cultural minister for champagne at the Hotel de Ville. They brought up the subject of "Freedom fries" and strained US-French relations over the G. W. Bush - Cheney regime US-UK invasion and occupation of Iraq.

Two poems have been extracted from the video to be shorter stand alone videos:
White Clay Creek &
Summertime Sunset.

Official Site for Vic Sadot Music is www.vicsadot.com


Summertime Sunset - A Poem by Jean Henri Sadot



This Summertime Sunset poetry video is a 4 minute 20 second segment extracted from the 26 minute 37 second video that was created from a 2003 Dream Streets Radio Show audio track in July 2018 by Vic Sadot.


The full video segment has 8 Jean-Henri Sadot poems presented as poems or songs on the audio track from the July 28, 2003 Dream Streets Radio Show hosted by Steven Leech on WVUD 91.3 FM, "The Voice of the University of Delaware", in Newark, DE.

Summertime Sunset was written by Jean-Henri Sadot in 1966. The 8 poem video made from the July 28, 2003 Dream Streets Radio Show has: (1) Iron Hill; (2) Early Roses of 1940; (3) White Clay Creek; (4) The Statue of Liberty; (5) Summertime Sunset; (6) Blizzard; (7) A Little Girl’s Bedtime; and (8) The Moods of the Sea. Vic Sadot, son of the poet, is reading Jean-Henri Sadot poems, or sharing renderings of them into song as he relates the history behind the poems of Jean-Henri Sadot. Steven Leech aka “Even Steven” was one of the founders of a poetry publication that gave a platform for hundreds of writers to be heard and the Dream Streets editorial teams managed to produce regular releases of Dream Streets for decades.

See History of Dream Streets and other archive items in www.dreamstreetsarchive.com

Vic Sadot is available for bookings and interviews at BroadsideBalladeer@gmail.com

Vic has 4 CD’s available on CD Baby, and numerous videos on YouTube. Truth Troubadour was released in December of 2016 at CD Baby. https://store.cdbaby.com/cd/vicsadot4


The Official Home Website of Vic Sadot is www.vicsadot.com