• HOME PAGE
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
Current time: 06-17-2025, 06:38 AM Hello There, Guest! (Login — Register)
Wines.com

Translate

  • HOMEHOME
  •   
  • Recent PostsRecent Posts
  •   
  • Search
  •      
  • Archive Lists
  •   
  • Help

WineBoard / GENERAL / Rants & Raves v
« Previous 1 … 39 40 41 42 43 … 73 Next »
/ They like us, they really like us....

Threaded Mode | Linear Mode
They like us, they really like us....
10-08-2004, 09:32 AM,
#1
Botafogo Offline
Wine Whiz
***
Posts: 1,328
Threads: 145
Joined: Jan 1999
 
This made my week:

http://www.latimes.com/features/food/la-fo-matters6oct06,1,7121776.column?coll=la-headlines-food
Find
Reply
10-08-2004, 11:02 AM,
#2
Innkeeper Offline
Wine Guru
*****
Posts: 10,465
Threads: 1,106
Joined: Nov 1999
 
Couldn't get onto their site. Hope it was nice.
Find
Reply
10-08-2004, 01:05 PM,
#3
Botafogo Offline
Wine Whiz
***
Posts: 1,328
Threads: 145
Joined: Jan 1999
 
Well, it is Pulitzer Prize winning Media Columnist and Gourmand at Large David Shaw opining thusly:

A man of fervent certitude

Roberto ROGNESS of Wine Expo in Santa Monica has a similar philosophy about wine and life, but there's nothing casual about his writing. He tends to wax alternately rhapsodic and agitated in the one-page newsletters he e-mails and faxes to customers every week (and in the eight-page newsletters he mails out quarterly).

Visually, the Wine Expo mailer is among the least attractive of those I receive — the fax version is a jumble of black and blacker type on a single sheet of paper. But Rogness' fervent certitude about almost everything more than compensates. I eagerly await his weekly communiqués to see what new pronouncement, discovery or outrage he wants to share.

Rogness, the only wine merchant I know who calls himself "general manager and creative director," has been in love with music ever since he was taken to a Harry Belafonte concert at age 5, and his newsletters are filled with musical references, some having nothing whatever to do with wine. Last Fourth of July, he urged readers to write their congressmen and ask that "Born to Be Wild" replace "The Star-Spangled Banner" as our national anthem.

Rogness is almost as likely to recommend a CD or a rock concert as he is a wine — and he's just as likely to recommend a CD-wine pairing as a food-wine pairing. Not long ago, for example, under the heading "Rethinking the Classics," he recommended listening to Sister Bossa's "Cool Jazzy Cuts With a Brazilian Flavour" while drinking one of three Italian wines he was then selling.

"The idea was that the musicians and the winemakers were … putting a slightly modern spin on [old classics]," he says, and he regarded them as complementary pleasures because the wines were "big, fairly strong, meditative wines and that CD is a tranced-out version of Bossa Nova. I thought that the wine and the music … would be a wonderful fusion of sensations."

Rogness often compares artists and songs to specific wines and winemaking styles. A frequent critic of Robert Parker and the big "hedonistic fruit bombs" that Parker often favors, Rogness has likened Parker's favorite Zinfandels to "a drag queen in the middle of a great production of Carmen." And he's written, "Thelonius Monk has more to do with the way (and the type) of wines we select than Robert Parker does."

I suppose some folks might find this pretentious. I don't. Rogness is knowledgeable and passionate about both wine and music — he played in professional bands for years, still plays guitar, bass and harmonica and has a 300-CD changer constantly going in the shop — and even when I disagree with his characterizations, I find them intriguing and worth considering.

Rogness and Kemner are salesmen, of course, but it's not the sales pitches that make their newsletters worth reading; their gripes are often more interesting than their grapes. Their genuine enthusiasm for whatever they're writing about and their sheer delight in sharing their discoveries and philosophies with their readers get my attention even when I'm not in the market for their wines.
Find
Reply
10-08-2004, 01:09 PM,
#4
wondersofwine Offline
Registered
Posts: 5,585
Threads: 1,179
Joined: May 2001
 
Huzzah to Roberto! And a clash of cymbals!
Find
Reply
10-08-2004, 01:36 PM,
#5
Thomas Offline
Wine Virtuoso
****
Posts: 6,563
Threads: 231
Joined: Feb 1999
 
Gee, it doesn't sound like the sweet, gentle, quiet, shy, modest, diplomat I know named Roberto Rogness--but then, I am a poor judge of character [img]http://wines.com/ubb2/confused.gif[/img]
Find
Reply
10-08-2004, 05:28 PM,
#6
winoweenie Offline
Wine Guru
*****
Posts: 14,029
Threads: 2,192
Joined: Jun 1999
 
This writer is either deaf, dumb, and tasteless or someone has taken over the body of my bud Boto and is passing itself off as his-very-own-self. CONGRATS!!!WW [img]http://wines.com/ubb2/wink.gif[/img]
Find
Reply
10-08-2004, 05:39 PM,
#7
Botafogo Offline
Wine Whiz
***
Posts: 1,328
Threads: 145
Joined: Jan 1999
 
Verne, I thought you would especially love the part about Monk being more of an influence on our wine selection than Parker...

I have been woodshedding for a while, writing the Holiday catalogue and expediting the arrival of maybe 60 new wines here in the next month, but I hope to spend more time here soon.

Roberto

[This message has been edited by Botafogo (edited 10-08-2004).]
Find
Reply
10-08-2004, 06:31 PM,
#8
quijote Offline
Registered
Posts: 475
Threads: 96
Joined: Feb 2003
 
Does this mean I should stop doing my drag-queen routine during "Carmen"?
Find
Reply
10-09-2004, 07:05 AM,
#9
winoweenie Offline
Wine Guru
*****
Posts: 14,029
Threads: 2,192
Joined: Jun 1999
 
A great line indeed there Boto-Baby. Sorry I haven't been up country there for awhile but we've spent most of our time in San Diego where CB loves it. WW
Find
Reply
« Next Oldest | Next Newest »


  • View a Printable Version
  • Send this Thread to a Friend
  • Subscribe to this thread



© 1994-2025 Copyright Wines.com. All rights reserved.