The Sentinel-Record

Editorial roundup

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April 22 Arkansas Democrat- Gazette: His music lives on ... Levon Helm tried once to explain what a certain powerful American musical form was all about.

Basically, Levon said, you draw a radius from Memphis into Arkansas and over into Mississipp­i. You pick up Robert Johnson, Johnny Cash and Elvis Presley, your black blues and your white blues.

Then the radius reaches down toward New Orleans to touch those distinctiv­e jazz sounds.

Then you bring the radius around into eastern Tennessee and up to the Virginia hills. You pick up the Carter family and mountain music and bluegrass and the Grand Ole Opry.

Then you throw in some of that black gospel music and that white Scotch- Irish gospel music from Virginia down to Arkansas and Mississipp­i that everybody got pumped into their systems in church on Sunday mornings.

Then, Levon explained, you had yourself a stew for simmering and stirring.

When the time was right, usually late at night for what sometimes got called the “midnight ramble,” you lifted the lid.

“If it mixes well and if it dances,” then you have something, as Levon told a mostly uninitiate­d young film director, Martin Scorsese, in that highly acclaimed late-’ 70s documentar­y The Last Waltz. Scorsese asked: What do you call it? “Rock ‘ n’ roll,” Levon said. On Thursday, the 71- year- old Helm- from the Phillips County hamlet called Turkey Scratch north of Marvell- died at a cancer center in Manhattan.

He’d already had a bout of throat cancer that kept him from performing those distinctiv­e vocals, the markers of “The Weight” and “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down.” That left him to provide only that equally distinctiv­e drumming. ...

On this sad news, there are two powerful matters to be celebrated.

One is Levon’s compelling personal story. The other, even richer, is his essence, which is absolute authentici­ty.

He fell in as a teenager with Ronnie Hawkins and the Hawks in Fayettevil­le in the ‘ 50s and wound up from that as the drummer for Bob Dylan.

Then, in the volatile late ‘ 60s, these sidemen of Dylan went out on their own, calling themselves, simply and appropriat­ely, The Band. They put out uncompromi­sing and no- frills music that the critics extolled as pure and seminal.

Then The Band broke up, an occasion for “The Last Waltz.” The documentar­y was supposed to be about The Band in its final concert. But Levon pretty much washed his hands of the project because so much of it was overdubbed. That brings us to the essence, the authentici­ty. Levon fell out over the years with the other leader of The Band, guitarist Robbie Robertson. He didn’t think Robertson was authentic.

He felt so strongly about it that he declined to attend the induction of The Band into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. ...

In recent years Levon nabbed Grammys for what they call “Americana” music. That’s a fancy word for the pure music of our heritage, our American musical roots, which Levon wholly represente­d and to which he was wholly devoted. ...

Levon did some motion- picture acting over the years. I never thought he was very good, except on one account: No one else, absolutely no one else, could have played Loretta Lynn’s daddy in Coal Miner’s Daughter.

In fact, here’s what you need to do some evening soon: Get yourself “Music from Big Pink,” the essential album of The Band. And Dirt Farmer, of course. Then you’ll need two DVDS, of The Last Waltz and Coal Miner’s Daughter. Now you’re ready for your own “Midnight Ramble.” This will not be the night the music died. It will be the night the music lives. April 20

Northwest Arkansas Times: on Petrino

It’s safe to say Razorback football fans will not

Turning the page remember April 2012 fondly.

A series of poor decisions by the head coach caused him to lose his job – and justifiabl­y so. It was an embarrassi­ng episode not just for Bobby Petrino, but for the University of Arkansas and the entire state.

There’s a silver lining, however. The actions of one man need not leave a permanent stain on the team. Also, it is encouragin­g to see the university acting quickly to close the book on this sordid tale.

Athletic Director Jeff Long, after conducting an investigat­ion, wasted little time terminatin­g Petrino. Then, on Tuesday, we learned Jessica Dorrell, the woman who had been on Petrino’s motorcycle with him the day of his accident, had agreed to resign from her job as student athlete developmen­t coordinato­r, less than a month after she began.

Dorrell, 25, accepted $ 14,000 – a quarter of her salary – in a settlement with the university. That money will come from the Razorback Foundation Inc., an independen­t nonprofit group, so no taxpayer money comes into play. In exchange, Dorrell agreed not to attempt to profit from her time with the Razorbacks, which means no tell- all book is forthcomin­g. She also agreed not to sue the university or specific individual­s associated with it, including Long and Petrino.

That’s about as good an outcome to this episode as we could have imagined, at least from the university’s perspectiv­e. The timely manner in which this was resolved makes it all the better.

In a news release, Long stated both he and Dorrell believe “she should have the opportunit­y to move on.” We agree.

It’s also time for the Razorbacks and their fans to move on. ...

For those still in distress over the loss of a successful head coach, it’s important to remember the Razorbacks still bring a tremendous amount of talent to the field.

There remains plenty of reason to be optimistic about the 2012 season.

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