Well, I am glad that's over!
I finished the final meeting recap that I had to do for work, and now i get a little breather next week--
Before it all starts up again the following week.
This last one was, to me, was the most difficult, because the speakers pretty much read their presentations, so it was very bland and boring.
It was so obvious with one of the speakers, as, evidently unaware to him, he put up the stapled pages he was reading from in front of his face, and thus, in front of his computer's camera.
At least it was audibly listenable pretty much the entire way through, which always makes the job a bit easier.
But it is done, before I can get a "fever" about it.
And when i use the word "fever," it is the only segue way I could think of to talk about the life of guitarist Rick Derringer, who passed away the other day.
You might not recognize the name, but you have heard his guitar playing and production on dozens of recordings, everyone from Cyndi Lauper to "Weird Al" Yankovic to Barbra Streisand to Edgar Winter.
One of the most prolific session guitarists of all time began his life as Rick Zehringer--later Derringer--and he first rose to prominence with his band The McCoys, which had one of the biggest hits of the 1960s in "Hang On Sloopy."
(He is on the far left in the photo above.)
The McCoys had one other big hit--the "Sloopy" sound alike "Fever"--that is where my reference came from--tried to change into a harder rocking band, but by the late 1960s, they were done.
Derringer then morphed into a popular session and backing musician, played in the bands backing up Lauper and Yankovic, and had an interesting solo career, with his best-known solo tune being "Rock and Roll Hoochie Koo."
Derringer had quite an interesting career, and he will certainly be missed--
Unlike those meeting write-ups that I had to do, which I won't miss at all.
Notice how I back segued into that.
Now I will try to hang on ...
Oh, enough of that already!
Have a good weekend, and i will speak to you again on Monday.