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From The Desk Of Steve Wynn: “Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood”

wynnlogo3Fifteen years after he scratched a lifelong itch and moved to New York City, Steve Wynn has settled in nicely to life on Manhattan’s Upper West Side. The relocation also breathed fire into a music career that already had notched landmark albums by his first band, the Dream Syndicate, collaborations with Gutterball and a slew of excellent early solo releases. Once he turned 40, Wynn rolled up his sleeves and really went to work, cranking out masterpieces like 2001’s Here Come The Miracles and 2003’s Static Transmission. Wynn, wife/drummer Linda Pitmon, Peter Buck (R.E.M.) and Scott McCaughey (Minus 5) are set to begin a U.S. tour. Read our Q&A with Wynn. (Also read our 2001 Q&A with Wynn, conducted by novelist George Pelecanos, as well as our overview of the Dream Syndicate and its fellow Paisley Underground bands.)

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Steve Wynn: I didn’t watch Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood as a child. I got into it sometime during my junior year in high school, and he spoke to all of the bruised optimism, awkwardness and melancholy of my adolescent years. I still get so happy and, usually, so weepy whenever I watch his show. It’s easy to approach this show with bemused irony (Eddie Murphy sure did a pretty good take on him in the ’80s), but the man is absolutely guileless, speaks the gospel truth, sticks up for the underdog, digs jazz and is also quite the snappy dresser. Up there with Lenny Bruce, Sandy Koufax, Gene Hackman and Miles Davis on my list of favorite people of the 20th century. Video after the jump.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L-tUd_Ji-AY