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"Listening to a banjo elegantly played is a most
delightful treat. Eugene's is a case in point; he makes a lot of solo money,
and his is a banjo best described as jewel-toned. A Nielson family might
find a tuneful ukelele better to listen to, and even normal; a Chicago
family, though, chose an entirely different musical format. The whole
issue is not an exact science, truthfully, but a matter of opinion. (On the
other hand, judges who want to prove R&B's a better genre for a
trumpeter must get remarkably tired from answering charges that it
is "bad juju." Despite this, they stick to their lamentations.)
"Incidentally, food and music together have all the makings of
a revelation in these dull times. There are so many possibilities! In
Natchez, ratatouille goes well with Verdi; jam especially well with — what
else? — a jam session; parsnip salmon, though comic, a happy companion
to Haydn's water music. Coffee is not what it used to be; the brew seems
to earn only the bibliophile money, leaving everyone else numb. Erstwhile
banjos, huarachas, and celestines should only be considered far-fetched attempts to
hide more Bible chapters," said the hag gaily.