123 episodes

Welcome! I'm Jim McGinnis and this is a place for thoughts and musings of an old Floridian. At its heart, stories, and reflections on the lives of Americans. Oftentimes, my studio is my back porch, where there are frequently sounds of crickets, birds, barking dogs, and trains. So I apologize for the raw recordings, but that’s me—unbridled and unvarnished.

Stories We Can Tell Jim McGinnis

    • Society & Culture
    • 4.7 • 15 Ratings

Welcome! I'm Jim McGinnis and this is a place for thoughts and musings of an old Floridian. At its heart, stories, and reflections on the lives of Americans. Oftentimes, my studio is my back porch, where there are frequently sounds of crickets, birds, barking dogs, and trains. So I apologize for the raw recordings, but that’s me—unbridled and unvarnished.

    Deciduous Man of History

    Deciduous Man of History

    "Deciduous Man..." Thanks, Shane Bullard for a little inspiration on this one. A few years ago, Shane was playing some good tunes here on social media...just strumming his 6-string and singing some great old country songs. I haven’t heard much from him in a while. I sure hope he starts playing again. For now, he sits and thinks about the fight. The good fight. Emerging slowly from a darkness That got hold of him last night. Oh, whether you’re a man of means or measure, Or just a wolf in black sheep’s clothing.How pathetic to be stuck there In self-pity and self-loathing. And what we’re falling for.But he rallies. Gazing out upon the Flag, he sings a line or two from Hag— "Today I started loving you again. And I’m right back where I’ve really always been…" His mind goes walking, across the Edmund Pettus bridge, Walking on the moon. Walking into death in Normandy that June. Through dust and fires, Across rivers running red with blood. Down deep, the music plays, Bad news on the doorstep, Bud. His faith returns against all reason. In spite of, in the face of, because of, and for the grace of, everything that’s happened. Despite the wrecking force of greedAnd the weight of sorriness gone to seed,He still believes in goodness, though.Honor, strength, and courage—And other stuff, you know.In those who swim against the stream,Who refuse to think alike,Alice Paul and Lucy Burns waging hunger strikes. Woody Guthrie fighting fascists with two chords on his guitar.Samuel Clemens sitting, Cooly smoking a cigar While birthing Huckleberry Finn.Jefferson writes the Declaration while he plays the violin,John Coltrane and Einstein were probably there to hear it—Living out the mystery of the cosmos, The science and the Holy Spirit.And there’s more.Let him tell you about Austin and the Bakersfield sound, And half a million on a farm, outside a little New York town, Giving peace a chance.Tell me, what’s the matter with a bit of song and dance? In the mud, Dave.Jump in the mud.But then here comes the blues, trying to pull us underWith all the dark and somber news of pillaging and plunder.History talk— Of railroads and boomtownsAnd gold and silver riches foundFrom Comstock in NevadaAnd the Black Hills of Dakota—No more buffalo, James, no Lakota.And never mind the sixty bucks he paid to fill up on the way,He rails against the offshore rigsAnd spills in Prudhoe Bay.Now, we fight the Keystone lineAcross the Plains, today.The question comes, though not the first, Not about the vain attempts to curb our thirst, Just “Hey, what’s the use of knowing all the worst?”“I don’t know,” he just may say,And he probably doesn’t know.He’s not the lion anymore, But that won’t stop the preaching, just listen to him roarWhen he speaks of schemes of thugs and parliaments of whores.He can’t forget old Howard ZinnWho talked about the mortal sin,Of going along to get along, Giving up and giving in.The world has suffered most,Not from chasing Don Quixote’s ghost, Not from deviance and defiance, But from unresisting, unthinking, obedience and compliance.Gazing out again upon the Flag, he hears those favorite lines from Hag,And he’s right back where he’s really always been…In spite of, in the face of,Because of, and for the grace ofEverything that’s happened. Everything we’ve done.At the end of the day, he’s headed home to his sweet dogs.The river on the left is calm and clear, there is no fog,He can see all the way across.Greeted at the kitchen door,By the Shepherd and the Labrador—Joyful and hungry. He feeds them well and then himself.And leaves the Irish on the shelf.He makes a cup of teaAnd sips it slow.Accompanied by birdsong, To Kristofferson’s devil, singing low,A line from a song a brother taught him fifty years ago.“I don’t believe that no one wants to know.”Gone, for now, is whatever got hold of him last night.His faith returns against all reason.A greater fool for any s

    • 7 min
    "The Lightness of Jimmy Buffett" by Jim McGinnis

    "The Lightness of Jimmy Buffett" by Jim McGinnis

    Intro: "The Lightness of Jimmy Buffett"

    “Do you happen to know, He Went To Paris?” I asked
    her, on our first evening walk on the beach together. And before Kay could say
    anything, I started singing it to her as we strolled along, holding hands. And
    that was the beginning. Little did we know how this pirate troubadour/jester
    would serenade us as we moved through our lives.

    The last few days I’ve been thinking about Jimmy Buffett—his
    stories, his images. And a funny thing happened: his words started coming to me
    in bits and pieces—so quickly, I had to brush them away from my face. I wrote
    them down furiously and this little story came out it.

    His music has accompanied us while floating in the
    Atlantic, the Gulf, and the intracoastal waterways. …through celebrations, road-trips,
    trials and tribulations, and even a wake or two. We’ve been blessed by so many
    great voices in our lives, and we don’t spend a whole lot of time ranking or
    rating them, but Jimmy holds a  special
    place. Kay and I both were Florida born and bred, and he provides a saltwater
    soundtrack, if you will—blue skies and ultraviolet rays.

    He broadened my cultural horizons. He taught me about the
     magic, mystery and mischief in everyday
    life, spirituality in natural beauty, and liberation in laughter. His lessons
    on the art of “noticing” our surroundings pick 
    up where Hemingway and Alice Walker left off.

    For half a century Buffett’s music has served as a
    visceral reminder to live in the world, as Muir said, and not
    just on it.

    With his words, he takes us with him, wherever he goes. From
    that night in Montana with no room for doubt, to the corner of Walk and Don’t
    Walk, just sipping coffee from Café du Monde. A journey past the channel
    islands out into the cosmos, singing “Mother, mother, ocean,”  from a hymn he taught me at an early age.

    Now I’ve heard—and maybe you have too—Buffett’s work
    described as an escape, but it’s not an escape, exactly. He gives our spirits
    lift when we are too much burdened by troubles, worries, and obligations. Challenging
    us to try to live happily ever after every now and then.

    There is a lightness, in even his deepest work. “Follow
    in my wake,” he says, and so we do.

    Hope you enjoy...

    JM

     

    • 9 min
    "Guitar Story" by Jim McGinnis

    "Guitar Story" by Jim McGinnis

    Guitar Story is something new about a few old friends: "And then
    there are the four guitars. He Strums and picks, Stirring sparks with
    stars." (a whole lot of folks show up in this one--from Tom Waits and
    George Jones to Coltrane...and a dog that howls at A Minor)



    He switched
    to the Les Paul electric

    And fired
    up another cigarette,

    Then played a cool and jumbled set—

    Cat Stevens, the Rolling Stones, Chili Peppers, and old George Jones.

    • 10 min
    Prine's Refrain (Yellow Bicycle) by Jim McGinnis-final draft 2023

    Prine's Refrain (Yellow Bicycle) by Jim McGinnis-final draft 2023

    This is the final draft of something I wrote, before the name came to me. I really like this version. You can find the finished work in "Sabal Palm," a compilation I recently published. Copyright 2023 by Jim McGinnis. Hope you enjoy it

    • 9 min
    For Kids-Reading "Good Dog Loose," by Jim McGinnis, Illustrated by Tamara Fernandez

    For Kids-Reading "Good Dog Loose," by Jim McGinnis, Illustrated by Tamara Fernandez

    Reading "Good Dog Loose," -for kids of any age- brought to life by Tamara's illustrations (she's pretty good) -available on Amazon

    • 6 min
    Flying a Great Small Flag (revisited)

    Flying a Great Small Flag (revisited)

    "I figure anyone who flies a great big flag can fly a great small one." -JM

    • 9 min

Customer Reviews

4.7 out of 5
15 Ratings

15 Ratings

PrarieThistle ,

Love the natural setting

Excellent work.

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