Friday is basically my personal Independence Day this week — I took it off,
which magically transforms the weekend into a glorious three‑day escape. And
honestly, I need it. My back has been staging a full‑scale rebellion. I had an
appointment Monday, and the doctor delivered the kind of news you only hear in
Blue Ridge Parkway folklore: my spine apparently looks like a winding mountain road. Not the scenic kind with
overlooks and picnic tables — the kind where GPS gives up and says, “You’re on
your own, buddy.”
Apparently, straight lines are overrated but the good news is I'm officially on
the road to getting it taken care of—pun fully intended.
Today’s distraction: another North Carolina killer soul 45 on the Pyramid label. Both sides are fantastic, — but I swear they put the A‑side in a key that required Barb to rent a ladder. She’s reaching notes that only migrating geese can hear. But who am I to complain? I couldn't sing in key if my life depended on it. If someone threatened me with bodily harm and demanded I hit the right note, I'd probably just apologize and start writing my will.
But those pink Pyramid label 45s — those are the ones that make the heart do that tiny cartoon boing sound. You spot that shade of pink peeking out in a crate and suddenly you’re a prospector in the Gold Rush, except instead of a pickaxe you’re armed with caffeine, hope, and a highly trained record sniffing instinct.
It’s always the same ritual: You flip past a few battered country promos, a stack of battered yacht rock 45s that survived three hurricanes, a polka record that has seen things… and then — there it is. That pink. That label. That moment where your pulse politely accelerates like, “Sir, we may have a situation.”
Some of those Pyramid 45s really are worth their weight in gold, and even the ones that aren’t still feel like you’ve uncovered a secret handshake from North Carolina history. They’re little artifacts of regional magic — the kind of records that make crate digging feel like treasure hunting instead of “I’m crouched on a concrete floor wondering why my knees (and spine) hate me.”
Enjoy the tune—and unlike my spine, hopefully it stays in alignment




















