(Meyers Manx)
Meyers Manx has unveiled its first-ever Remastered Kit, which empowers enthusiasts to build and customize the world’s most iconic dune buggy according to their personalized specs. The all-new Meyers Manx Remastered kit benefits from modernized production techniques that leverage 3D scanning, digital design tools and CNC technology to deliver the most precise self-assembly set to date. The result is an easier-to-build kit boasting higher quality construction that honors Bruce Meyers’ groundbreaking creation while incorporating updates by legendary designer Freeman Thomas. The re-imagined kit introduces new features for the first time since 1970, including: An all-new, locking rear trunk; An easily-removable dash assembly; Integrated wiring tubes; New remastered classic kit colors, including a solid gel-coat and metal flake gel-coat hues, along with a UV clear coat that serves as an additional layer of protection.The kit includes key body, dashboard, and trim components. Additional parts are available separately. “It is a privilege to work on the Manx Dune buggy, which is such an iconic piece of California cultural history,” Thomas said. “The goal of the Remastered program was to preserve [founder] Bruce Meyers’ unmistakable design while incorporating modern touches that make full assembly accessible to more people.” Meyers Manx chairman and Trousdale Ventures founder Phillip Sarofim added that the most authentic and satisfying Manx experience involves building and customizing a buggy kit. “The 1960s were all about can-do spirit, from grassroots car customizers to the Space Program,” Sarofim said. “We’re bringing a taste of that era back with a modernized, easier-to-build version of the original dune buggy kit that launched an automotive cultural movement. The original Meyers Manx has been prolifically emulated but never duplicated, and this is an opportunity to build and drive an authentic legend.” The Remastered Kit has already stoked interest from Alois Ruf, founder of Ruf Automobile. “We’ve always loved how the classic Meyers Manx Buggy drives,” he said. “Knowing that at-home assembly has been a challenge for some, the Remastered Kit should make it easier for a new group of enthusiasts to build their dream cars at home.” Meyers Manx also recently announced that 2023 will mark the debut of the Meyers Manx 2.0, the electric version of the classic buggy. The company is expected to announce further production details soon.
The AE Song of the Week:
How many times do I have to try to tell you
That I'm sorry for the things I've done
But when I start to try to tell you
That's when you have to tell me
Hey, this kind of trouble's only just begun
I tell myself too many times
Why don't you ever learn to keep your big mouth shut
That's why it hurts so bad to hear the words
That keep on falling from your mouth
Falling from your mouth
Falling from your mouth
Tell me
Why
Why
I may be mad
I may be blind
I may be viciously unkind
But I can still read what you're thinking
And I've heard it said too many times
That you'd be better off
Besides
Why can't you see this boat is sinking
Let's go down to the water's edge
And we can cast away those doubts
Some things are better left unsaid
But they still turn me inside out
Turning inside out turning inside out
Tell me
Why
Tell me
Why
This is the book I never read
These are the words I never said
This is the path I'll never tread
These are the dreams I'll dream instead
This is the joy that's seldom spread
These are the tears
The tears we shed
This is the fear
This is the dread
These are the contents of my head
And these are the years that we have spent
And this is what they represent
And this is how I feel
Do you know how I feel?
'Cause I don't think you know how I feel
I don't think you know what I feel
I don't think you know what I feel
You don't know what I feel
"Why" by Annie Lennox, from the album "Diva" (1992).* Written by Calvin E. (Gene) Taylor. Publisher: DistroKid, Kobalt Music Publishing Ltd., Songtrust Ave. Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind. Watch the Official Music Video here.
*This was the first single Annie Lennox released after the 1990 breakup of Eurythmics, her duo with Dave Stewart. Unlike Stewart, Lennox is rather introverted and often questioned herself. And while Stewart was always very encouraging, she wasn't sure she could make music without him. In November 2007, Lennox was interviewed extensively by Malcolm Bragg on The South Bank Show. In this program she said that "Why" was a personal song related to her going solo; she wasn't sure that she could write songs by herself, or where she was going in music or in life. It took her about 10 minutes to write. "It's weird," she added, "Some songs are like that, while others are not." "Why" showed that Lennox had the goods to go solo, something her fans already knew. It charted in a number of territories and impelled the Diva album to #1 in the UK. The album sold particularly well in America, moving over 2 million copies. Lennox had plenty to write about when she started work on the Diva album: She had recently become a mother, her father had died, and she was just getting going as a solo artist. All these tribulations bonded together into this song, where she asks a simple question: Why? When asked about this song in Daniel Rachel's book The Art of Noise: Conversations with Great Songwriters, Lennox replied: "It's basically about the point we humans inevitably come to when we realize that the knots and twists in relationships simply can't be untangled, and we're left dangling with a massive question mark with no apparent resolution. Why? Why? Why? Haven't we all asked that question of ourselves and the universe?" Annie Lennox blogged regarding this song, when promoting her 2009 greatest hits album: "I think this song expresses something of a sense of 'I need to take a stand, and say this.' It's almost testifying, like 'My Way,' or something. The world can be so baffling at times, so you find yourself constantly trying to figure it out... It's also about looking at the aftermath of things. After all this darkness and disappointment with the personal battles you've gone through... Contemplating the ashes of experience, and questioning what it was ever all about. It's like the remains of a building that's crashed and burned to the ground." Lennox wrote this track herself, but she had a lot of help putting it together. Her primary collaborator was Marius De Vries, a keyboard player/programmer who worked on the track. It was produced by Stephen Lipson, who had worked on the Frankie Goes To Hollywood album Welcome To The Pleasuredome. This won the 1992 Ivor Novello Award for Best Song Musically and Lyrically. The music video, directed by Sophie Muller, features Lennox getting ready for the album cover photo shoot. The clip won Best Female Video at the 1992 MTV Video Music Awards. Muller also directed clips for Lennox's "Walking On Broken Glass," "Little Bird" and "Angel." Lennox was 37 when the album was released. Adapting to her maturity influenced this song. "I feel vulnerable about aging, but perhaps I can be like Edith Piaf, with that chanson sense of grief or melancholy," she told Q in 1992. "I think 'Why' has a little of that. Maybe people will value the texture of age in me. Or maybe I will come to feel I'm too old, it's a kids' game, and go off to write film music." Lennox performed this on a number of TV shows, including Top Of The Pops and Saturday Night Live. (Knowledge courtesy of Songfacts.com)
Editor's Note: You can access previous issues of AE by clicking on "Next 1 Entries" below. - WG