Author Topic: Joe Pernice homage to Manny Ramirez  (Read 1187 times)

Joe Pernice homage to Manny Ramirez
« on: September 28, 2004, 04:40:00 pm »
(Dorchester, MA ?? September 28, 2004)  Holbrook, MA native Joe Pernice, of the critically acclaimed Pernice Brothers, has written and recorded an homage to Red Sox slugger Manny Ramirez, called ??Moonshot Manny (Pega Luna Manny)? which is available for a limited time as a download at www.pernicebrothers.com/manny.  Pernice and his record label, the Dorchester-based Ashmont Records are asking for a minimum donation of $1 per download, and the proceeds will benefit Boston??s First Night.
 
 Said Joe Pernice, ??At some point in the middle of the season I started singing, ??Manny hit me home with a moonshot, baby? to the TV set every time Manny would step up to the plate. Just as my falsetto was shaping up fairly and the tune was actually becoming a song, my wife started singing it too. Then our friends joined in. Pretty soon a gang of us was dancing around the apartment, singing the tune and making a racket. And Manny was on fire. He gave us one of the best summers I can remember.?
 
 It??s an interesting time to be in Boston.  Red Sox Fever is palpable.  Every other person on the street is dressed in Red Sox gear.  The public gathering places without big screen TV??s are dead any night the team is playing.  The hope that a Red Sox fan carries in his or her heart for 364 days a year is surging.  Possibilities exist.  Dreams come true.  
 
 Dreams do come true, as was witnessed last Wednesday, when a man named Frank called the First Night Boston people, after reading in the Globe that they couldn??t afford the midnight fireworks this year, and said he was sending them a check for $50,000.  Said label co-owner Joyce Linehan,* ??We don??t have $50,000, but since the cheap digital recording equipment we used to record this was largely paid for with money from First Night gigs over the past few years, and the Red Sox are as Boston as First Night, the Fourth of July on the Esplanade, the Zakim Bridge, the Marathon, and so on, we thought we??d take this opportunity to exploit one Boston Institution (the Sox) for another (First Night) thereby maximizing the exploitation of another future Boston institution, Dorchester??s Ashmont Records, home of Joe Pernice??s recording projects.  It??s really just a cheap publicity stunt.  But it??s also a great song.  And a great cause. All proceeds will go to First Night Boston.  We thought  this was especially appropriate, since the aforementioned hope that Red Sox fans carry throughout the year, is similar in quality to the hope that Bostonians greet the New Year with on First Night. ??
 
 Said Linehan, ??The download will be available for a limited time only.  There are no plans to make this song commercially available, because it was just recorded last Thursday, and by the time we get it replicated, the Sox will have won the World Series, and it won??t be as timely.

vansmack

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Re: Joe Pernice homage to Manny Ramirez
« Reply #1 on: September 28, 2004, 05:39:00 pm »
Just jumping on the wagon.....
 
   <img src="http://www.dropkickmurphys.com/assets/tessie_animate.gif" alt=" - " />
 
 Dropkick Murphys and the Boston Red Sox have given a modern treatment to "Tessie." The song - originally a Broadway hit - became the anthem for a growing band of Boston diehards known as the Royal Rooters and helped spur the Red Sox (then known as the Boston Pilgrims) on to a dramatic come-from-behind victory in the first World Series in 1903 (click here for more information about the Royal Rooters)
 
 Now, more than 100 years removed from that inaugural World Series, Dropkick Murphys have given the song a facelift at the behest of Red Sox Executive Vice President Dr. Charles Steinberg and Boston Herald beat writer Jeff Horrigan. With the help of Sox center fielder Johnny Damon and pitchers Bronson Arroyo and Lenny Dinardo, the Murphys have recorded a new version of the song that is sure to become the rallying cry of Red Sox Nation as the team seeks to end an 85-year championship drought.
 
 While "Tessie" and the Royal Rooters (whose ranks included John "Honey Fitz" Fitzgerald, grandfather of President John F. Kennedy) helped weave the Red Sox into the fabric of New England as the team won five of the first fifteen World Series, DROPKICK MURPHYS felt a fresh approach was needed if they were going to resurrect the old fight song.
 
 "Jeff Horrigan sent me the song, but we didn't really like it. It was so old," recalls MURPHYS bassist KEN CASEY. "But we liked the story behind it about baseball fans using it to annoy the other team, so we rewrote it ready to annoy a whole new generation of baseball fans."
 
 "Tessie" is hardly the first time DROPKICK MURPHYS have proudly shown allegiance to their hometown teams. The closing sounds of their 2001 album Sing Loud, Sing Proud! pay tribute to legendary Boston Celtics broadcaster Johnny Most. Meanwhile, "Time To Go," a rambunctious ode to the Boston Bruins, led to a rare combination of punk and puck this past season. The Bruins invited the MURPHYS to perform during the second intermission of a game against the Vancouver Canucks last November. The band followed the Bruins' 2-1 overtime victory with an additional 40-minute set after the game in front of a sold-out crowd upwards of 17,000 at Boston's FleetCenter, joined on guitar by Bruins Nick Boynton and Brian Rolston (who netted the game-winning goal).
 
 The profits from "Tessie" - will benefit the Red Sox Foundation, official charity of the Red Sox (for more information on the Red Sox Foundation click here), the five track CD single with bonus music video track will be available instores on August 24th and available through the Dropkick Murphys on-line webstore
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keithstg

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Re: Joe Pernice homage to Manny Ramirez
« Reply #2 on: September 29, 2004, 08:39:00 am »
Either way both are better than that "Orioles Baseball" song that they play in Camden before every game...