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They might not even get 867-5309. The again, I get befuddled when I am given a text-based phone number that I need to dial with my cell. When will people realize those are dead?
Fun fact: if you're ever traveling and find yourself in need of a phone number for the local hardware/grocery/etc. store's discount card, chances are very good that some joker set up a rewards account with that number and the local area code. Instant discounts.
The Railwire is not your personal army.
Lee, I got it, but again we are from a different era so for us, Pennsylvania 6-5000 makes more sense The younger crowd would not understand that PEnnsylvania 6-5000 is 736-5000, like you mentioned it's the phone number of the Penn Hotel. Just like my old phone number would have been UNion 9-5821. In the US, the demand for telephone service outpaced the alphanumeric system, which lead to the area codes and the 10 digit number system we have today.
What if the clerk doesn't think you could pass for Jenny?
"Jenny, Jenny, you're the car for me . . ."
No. The actual problem is that, a lot of people HATE jazz from that era because of what it represents. It lost its soul when the record companies wanted to cash in on it. It's the Starbucks of jazz. That's how and why Bop happened. The musicians wanted to take solos and express themselves, and the idiot public didn't like it because the solos they played live "weren't like what was on the record." The players got pissed and frustrated so they made complex and technical music that could. It could not be easily "canned and sold." Me? Sure. Who doesn't love "In the Mood" but BAH GAWD his other syrupy stuff makes me want to hurl. Give me Stan Kenton, Woody Herman, or Nelson Riddle any day!
Josh, Maybe a lot of people from your generation, but my father who grew up listing to Glenn Miller on the radio in the 1940's happens to like Glenn Miller, Benny Goodman, Artie Shaw and Tommy Dorsey, to name a few. Also most people from that era would classify the Big Bands as Swing not Jazz. Now if you want to talk about Jazz, you're talking about Duke Ellington, Count Basie and Dizzy Gillespie.
Here's a picture of some trains...