Showing posts with label Hank Aaron. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hank Aaron. Show all posts

Sunday, July 23, 2017

A Card Show in June

About a month ago, my pal Joey a/k/a Dub Mentality tagged me and Dayf a/k/a Card Junk on Twitter with an announcement about a small card show at a local antique mall here in Atlanta. It gave me an excuse to get up and active on a Saturday morning when I otherwise might have just sat at home, so I marked the tweet and made sure to go.

I'm glad I did.

It had been a while since I had attended a local card show. In fact, it had been probably four or five months. As a result, the folks whose dime boxes I tend to clean out had restocked their supplies of Brewer cards. This led to a great show for me. I even found a non-Brewer I needed:


I know I have posted a lot of Pearl Jam songs here, but they are my favorite band. So, guess what? Y'all have to deal with them again.


While I know that "Last Kiss" -- a cover of a 60s song that PJ issued as a Christmas bonus vinyl to its fan club in 1998 before it was included on a charity album for Kosovar refugees in 1999 -- was PJ's highest ever charting song when it number 2 on the Billboard Hot 100, "Even Flow" is to me one of the band's biggest hits. The band absolutely did not like the take that ended up on its album Ten, with guitarist Mike McCready saying that they redid the track 50 or 70 times and played it "over and over until we hated each other."

For what it's worth, Rolling Stone put this song at #77 on a list of the "100 Greatest Guitar Songs of All Time" and VH1 listed it at number 30 of the "100 Greatest Hard Rock Songs." After 26 years of hearing the song, I still like it. There's nothing new about it, but sometimes having those classic hits to go back to is a good thing.


Speaking of classics, here are some new cards of classic players from the Milwaukee Braves. I teased the Hank Aaron bat relic card on Twitter right after the show, and it got rave reviews. It's an early relic in terms of baseball card history, so perhaps it is a bat that Hank actually used in a game at some point as opposed to a bat he picked up in Upper Deck's offices, swung it once, and then it got called "event used."

The Spahn Cy Young award card is a super-thick manu-relic from about five years ago. Topps has gone to thinner manu-relics these days. I'm guessing that is a cost measure to save a few bucks on not buying real metal for the relic and saving a few pennies on card stock. 

The Hank Aaron Hall of Fame card just made me realize that there is an error in the Cramer Baseball Legends set that I wrote up for the 1980s Oddball blog yesterday. On the back of Aaron's card, it lists him as being inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1981, but he was inducted in 1982. Perhaps that was meant to mean that he was voted into the Hall in 1981. Of course, the real issue I'm having is that his card was included in the 1980 Series 1 set. While he was certainly guaranteed of induction, did Cramer's first issuance of that 1980 card really say he would be inducted in 1981? I'm all confused now.

Finally, those chrome Bowman cards are all nice and shiny. I appreciate the effort at times from Topps/Bowman to keep baseball's past greats in our consciousness by including them in new card sets. It's fun to get new Spahn cards, even if it is the same photo from the 2015 Archives set. I do wish that Topps expanded its pre-World War II player list to go beyond just Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth, and Lou Gehrig to add some of the other greats of the 1920s and 1930s. Maybe an Al Simmons card? Or some of the guys in that Cramer Baseball Legends set that you never see in card sets these days like Rabbit Maranville. 

There's always room for improvement. As one law school professor I had once said, "There's nothing so impeccable that it can't be pecked at."


In 2009, Pearl Jam released its album Backspacer. The breakout hit from that album was this introspective ballad called "Just Breathe." Backspacer was a much more upbeat and optimistic and less political album than the band's previous efforts -- a fact that the band attributed to Barack Obama's election. 

The album was also the first time since 1998's Yield that the band worked with Atlanta-based producer Brendan O'Brien on a full album. Indeed, the album was finished at Southern Tracks studio here at Atlanta in April of 2009.


The show provided me an opportunity to stock up on some Ryan Braun cards. Braun is the longest-serving current Brewers player, having passed the ten-year mark with the team earlier this year. He's the team's all-time leader in home runs and, recently, became the team's all-time leader in grand slams. 

As far as other categories, he's third in career WAR (45.0), tied for second with Paul Molitor in batting average (.303), tied for sixth with Richie Sexson in OBP (.366), first in SLG (.544), second in OPS at .911 behind Prince Fielder's .929, fifth in games played with 1401, third in runs scored at 913, fifth in hits with 1642 (54 behind Jim Gantner), third in total bases, fourth in doubles, third in triples, second in RBI, fifth in walks, third in stolen bases, and second in extra base hits (having passed Paul Molitor earlier this year). 

He's creeping up on career totals that give him a potential Hall of Fame argument, or would had it not been for the Biogenesis stuff. Maybe that's what's preventing me from saying that I'd still collect his cards in another uniform, but he's not to that point yet. He's close.


This past Friday at work, four of us got into a very heated discussion about the fact that one of our co-workers did not see much difference between Pearl Jam and Journey. Needless to say, I lost a lot of respect for that misguided opinion coming from someone who otherwise is an educated man. 

I think the reason that he has such an incredibly wrong opinion is contained within another statement he made: that he's not a "live music guy." To me, that's the very essence of Pearl Jam. Their concert versions of songs simply are better than what gets laid down in the studio. The sound is warmer, less antiseptic. Vedder's vocals in concert are just better than what gets put down as a remixed studio track. 

Also, if you're not a "live music" guy or gal, your life priorities are wrong.


I found a vein of the Panini Diamond Kings as well. I think these were in a quarter box, which is slightly annoying for new issues but not as annoying as having a card called "originals" featuring Paul Molitor as a Minnesota DH. 

Still, if ever I were inclined to collect any particular Panini set, it would be the Diamond Kings set. I like the card stock with its canvas feel. The artwork and touch-ups taking these from being photos to make them into what look like paintings is of excellent quality -- much better than the garbage retouching that happens with the Donruss brand. 

On the other hand, that Aurora card of Jonathan Villar may be the most godawful insert of 2017. It's ugly as hell with all that orange coloration. Also, I am guessing that the Aurora insert is meant to signify some sort of sunrise or draw a parallel to a sunrise. If my sunrise has those colors appearing in that way, I'm thinking a nuclear bomb has been dropped.


This song is one that came off PJ's second album, Vs.. The song is a reaction to all the media coverage the band got in its early days, in part from "Spin", "Rolling Stone" and "Circus"; this led to the lyric, "SPIN me round, ROLL me over, f**kin' CIRCUS" in the song. The basic idea behind it is that the media used the band and bled them to "fill their pages."

I can understand how that would be a pain in the ass. No doubt. It's a rage song of guys tired of getting used to sell magazines. When PJ was at its height in the 1990s, people wanted that blood. They wanted that drama. Now that the band is more mature and its fans tend to be more mature, I think the band and its fans appreciate not the drama but the journey in getting there. 

But not the band Journey. 


The rich vein of Brewers cards I found also yielded some decent parallels, inserts, and autographs. Sure, the Carlos Lee card says he is on the Astros, and when the card was released he was. But he's shown on the Brewers so it's a Brewers card. For $1, I'll take that.
While I don't chase Wily Peralta cards and, therefore, have no real reason to pick up a silk card from 2013 serial numbered to 50, I think it was $0.50. For that, I'll take literally any serial numbered Brewers card that I don't have in my collection. Even a Gary Sheffield card.

The rest of these were all $0.50 or $1 or somewhere in that range. I got them all thrown in on a package deal with all the other dime and quarter cards, so I don't quite recall how much each was individually.  


Finally, "Light Years" was released in 2000 from the album Binaural. Recording this song was a chore from all indications. When it started out, it was too close to "Given to Fly" as a song. According to interviews the band has given, the song had its tempo changed, its keys changed, its drum part changed, and its arrangement changed dozens of times before it came together in its current form. 

The song itself is actually about the death of a friend. If you can find a copy of the lyrics, it is worth it to read them. At various times, the band has dedicated the song to Diane Muus of Sony Music (a friend of the band who died at age 33 in 1997) and to Gord Downie, whose band The Tragically Hip was playing their last show on the same night that Pearl Jam played Wrigley. Downie has been diagnosed with glioblastoma, a terminal brain cancer.


While the song is a bit of a downer, these cards are all really uppers. All of these are player collection cards for me. I think the Fielder manu-patch may have run me about $2, but the rest were all very affordable. 

As always, I recognize I am really lucky with how many card shows there are around Atlanta on a regular basis. With the recent Judge-mania gripping the hobby, there's some hope that this moment could be a real turning point for our hobby in bringing in new collectors -- particularly kids -- who are big fans of the young superstars of the day like Judge, Kris Bryant, and Mike Trout. 

Let's hope that Topps doesn't view this rise like the media viewed the rise of grunge -- in it only to suck all the blood and fun out of everything.

Sunday, February 12, 2017

Late December Card Show Post, Part I

Last night, I was working on my Bowman parallel want list for 2014 -- bindering up what I have, putting in markers in sheets for what I don't have, and generally muttering under my breath at the multiplicity of parallels -- and I started getting bored of my musical selections. So, I reached out to the Twitter world and asked for recommendations. 

In response, I now have well over 50 recommendations for songs, albums, and artists to try out and see what I think. My thanks go out to Crackin' Wax, Zippy Zappy, Dayf, and Mark Hoyle for their suggestions. Thanks to them, this post and the next one will feature music I'm listening to for the first time.

So, what's this post about? On December 30, my local card show popped up on a Saturday to avoid New Year's Eve and hit the after-Christmas pocketbooks. Thanks to my in-laws, I had some extra money in my pocket for Christmas and my birthday (December 27...y'all missed out on a great barbecue lunch in Columbus, Georgia). I had not gone to a show in a while for multiple reasons -- time being the biggest one. 

This trip yielded some great cards, as always. I did not scan all the cards I got -- largely because I simply lost track of which ones I got at the show as they got mixed into other stacks. For instance, I did not scan the 2016 Heritage Mini (serial numbered to 100) of Ryan Braun that I found in a quarter box. Oops. Should have done that.

Cue the music:


Mark Hoyle recommended that I check out Storyville (among about 35 other bands!). This song is from an Austin City Limits taping from 1998.  Storyville was an active band for about 6 or 7 years starting in 1994. According to Wikipedia, the band formed out of the remnants of Arc Angels (another Hoyle recommendation) and Stevie Ray Vaughan's rhythm section.

It should not be a big surprise that this is an Austin, Texas band. Austin calls itself the Live Music Capital of the World. I've been to Austin a few times now (my brother-in-law and sister-in-law live there and I have been to two ABA conferences there as well), and the times I have seen live music there, it has been excellent and inexpensive. As this list shows, Austin's music is diverse too: everything from Storyville to the Dixie Chicks to Willie Nelson to Butthole Surfers to Fastball to Janis Joplin to Spoon all came out of Austin. 


Let's start with a few vintage Milwaukee Braves cards that I picked up -- appropriately for music suggested by the vintage king Mark. I think these probably cost more than nearly all the rest of the cards I bought due to age and/or Hall of Fame status being involved. Of the three, I think the Mathews actually cost the least -- likely due to the creases -- and the Logan was the most expensive with it being something of a high-number in 1961. 


Another Mark Hoyle recommendation -- one seconded by Matthew Scott of Bob Walk the Plank -- is Joe Bonamassa. I think you can see from these two recommendations alone what kind of music Mark really likes: southern rock/blues. There are times when I get in the mood for music like this. To me, this type of music is best seen and heard live rather than through music videos, so finding shows on YouTube is a great way to experience this.


The rest of the Braves that I bought at the card show. I got the two Aaron career retrospective cards at the same time as I got the other three older cards above. The Warren Spahn card at the bottom is my first card from the 1983 ASA Warren Spahn set. Now, I just need to find the other 12 cards in the set -- including another two copies of card 6 (featuring Warren with Fred Haney, Bobby Thomson, and Lew Burdette) and finding one of the autographed card 1 -- and the red border variation of the entire set. So, then, that'll be fun.


NPR has a ton of these "Tiny Desk Concert" videos on YouTube. Susan Tedeschi and Derek Trucks are a married couple whose musical talent individually is incredible and together is just awesome. I've heard of them before Mark suggested taking a listen. 

As I said before, listening to bands like this live is the best way to take them in. If you are a fan of Tedeschi Trucks, hopefully you have discovered the ridiculous library of live shows freely available on Archive.org -- there are 478 results for Tedeschi Trucks on Archive, though of course not all of them are actually them. But if you like the band, you owe it to yourself to give a listen there.


I was lucky to find three Gary Carter cards to add to my collection at the show, including two from the 2005 Donruss Throwback Threads set. The 2016 Archives card, though, just looks wrong to me. Why? The 1991 set did not use the M logo for Montreal -- just the Expos name. I'm sure that's been mentioned elsewhere before, but it still bugs me.

Okay, let's change gears here a little bit and go to a couple of musical recommendations from Dayf from Card Junk.


Dave recommended albums rather than bands. One of the albums he recommended was The North Borders by Bonobo. It's very different from the blues that Mark Hoyle favors, of course, but I'm digging this too. The first song, "First Fires," is soothing -- perfect for me to listen to on a Sunday morning while typing up a blog post. This one is going to get added to my listening library for sure. 


Out of a quarter or dime box -- not sure which -- came these three mid-90s Molitors, including that Pinnacle die-cut insert. My Molitor collection is one I'm still a bit up in the air about. Every time I see cards like these of Molitor not on the Brewers, it kind of pisses me off all over again about his free agency in the early 1990s. It's easy to second guess and say, "yeah, of course the Brewers should have known that Molitor would play another 6 years." 

It would have been easier to take if Molitor went to Minnesota first and stayed there. That would have been much more understandable -- after all, the Brewers did try hard to bring him back after his Toronto contract ended, but the lure of playing at home in front of his hometown fans won out.


Fantastic Plastic Machine is another Dave suggestion. This video was an easy one to pick out from the list of potential videos to show for obvious reasons. To be fair, this song is not on the album that Dave suggested I listen to (which was FPM's first album) but come on -- isn't this better to have as the video?

When the music on this one started, I thought, "this kind of reminds me of some of the Japanese music that Zippy Zappy was listening to." Then, I found out that FPM is a Japanese musician named Tomoyuki Tanaka. I guess sometimes you can figure out things about a musician just by listening to their music?


These are the last cards for today's post -- the Upper Deck cards I picked up. I know almost all of these were in a 6 for $1 box. It is always good when I can add a Ryan Braun serial-numbered card for less than 20 cents. Those "A Piece of History" cards leave me chasing only a couple of cards for the 2009 set. 

Of course, I still haven't gotten around to cataloging what Upper Deck inserts I need, so I haven't got a clue where I stand on the "Cut from the Same Cloth" or the season biography cards. 

Thanks for stopping by today. You'll be hearing a bit more of the musical suggestions as the week goes on -- so thank you to those four gentlemen for the help!