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Jun. 7th, 2008 @ 07:59 am The now explosion
Current Mood: saturday!
Current Music: The Shrunken Planet on WFMU

I'm on vacation!

This should have been the time that I wound down my duties at work, and passed everything over to the folks in Europe, but it looks like lingering contractual obligations to some (mostly non-Europe) clients are leaving me in limbo — there's seemingly no one left in the company who can handle their cases. The Europers won't.

But, for the next ten days, barring any sudden crises, I'm going to try to put it out of my mind. We're road-tripping to Toronto.


I tend to doze off at night to WNYC's broadcast of On Point, a show I term "the second most depressing talk show on radio" — John Batchelor's return to the air (on WABC and KFI, Sunday nights) means that he has reclaimed the top spot. Last night's On Point featured an attempt at lighter fare for an hour: "Count Basie and the American Soundtrack".
It was a time of Depression and FDR, Joe Louis and Amelia Earhart. It had a soundtrack. And Count Basie was a huge part of it.

Do we have a soundtrack today? Gnarls Barkley? Beck?
And I'm thinking, this is a ridiculous Freedom Rock view to take.


I doubt that folks in the early heyday of the Basie band thought in terms of having a collective soundtrack to their lives; it seems more a construct of later decades — a means of selling Pepsi to The Pepsi Generation, or Glenn Miller's greatest hits to their parents and grandparents, or NOW That's What I Call Classic Rock! shovelware to their children and grandchildren. (Plus, "everything ever recorded" is theoretically at our fingertips, to an extent unthinkable in previous generations. I've now heard Gracie Allen's singing voice. I love her so much that I'm willing to forget having heard her sing.)

My mother and grandfather-in-law were of different ages in 1938, child and adolescent, respectively, and they no doubt heard some Basie on the radio back then, and grooved to his music in later decades, and would groove to it now, were I to put on a Basie CD. It was my parents' love of the music that made it a part of my '60s soundtrack, not quite as much a presence in my life back then as JohnPaulGeorgeAndRingo, or "Build Me Up, Buttercup" or Ramsey Lewis' "The In Crowd" (now resurrected on Don Imus' TV simulcast), but present nonetheless. And the Allman Brothers music that was foisted on me by AOR stations back in the day, well, it's present now (and this time around I actually like it!), no need of any help from NOW!

But enough of this collective hallucination of some narrow array of supposed era-defining musics. 1938 (or so) was probably also about Dennis Day or Xavier Cugat, or Mahalia Jackson or Roy Acuff, depending on where you sat. That '30s was part of my '70s. NOW!Now here's some '60s music. (Eat your damn paisley, you dirty hippies!)

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sybille
May. 25th, 2008 @ 11:05 am This birthday post arranged by Gil Evans
Current Mood: procrastinatin'
Current Music: Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me! on WNYC

Whenever I'd go to Maxwell's or listen to some indie band of the moment (whether on the radio, or on New York Noise, or, increasingly, on TV commercials), I'd hear Evil Uncle Miles' distinctive whisper-rasp in my head, asking, "Didn't we do it good the first time?" He was talking, when the question was originally uttered, about the first wave of Brooks-Brothers-suited jazz neo-classicists, the peers and spawn of young Wynt0n (himself begat by mid-'60s Miles), but it applies equally to more high-profile musics.

WKCR played a couple of cuts from E.S.P. last night, and I was reminded: damn, they did do it good the first time. And Miles himself was around the top of his game, two decades after his stint as a teenage not-quite-phenom with big ears.


The cover of The Musings of Miles, 1955.

It would be another dozen years before he would dress this silly in public again. (And then he would outdo himself with each successive year.) Miles would have been 82 today; alas, he's having another hip-replacement operation in Rock'n'Roll Heaven.

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richie
Feb. 23rd, 2008 @ 09:14 am I travel(ed)
Current Music: last night's The Soup

More summertime pics: not far out of Stanfield Airport, near Halifax, the deluge began. The billboards, large and small, ground-level and aloft, every few miles, it seemed, proclaiming McLOBSTER, and McLOBSTER IS HERE. By the time we got to Cape Breton Island, McLobster had made its way onto the itinerary.

We never could get a good shot of one of the highway billboards, but here's one that greets you as you drive onto the grounds of the Casa de los Golden Arches:



Here's the McLobster, which is, I suppose, a miniature Lobster Roll.



(On that same day there was a piece on CTV Newsnet about the closing of the restaurant that boasted of having invented the Lobster Roll.) McLobster was OK; McD's made its billions on achieving and standardizing OK-ness and McLobster is worthy of its "Mc". I made a mental note to try a Real Lobster Roll, but have yet to do so; now that I've found a good gluten-free baguette, I'll have to dig up a recipe.

Next visit, I'll try the McHaggis.


We bought our first family car a few months ago.... )
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desi
Nov. 24th, 2007 @ 05:40 pm Ears of a child
Current Mood: bushed
Current Music: last week's Pushing Daisies

If practicing the recorder is a second job, it's very hard to fit 2.0 jobs into the 1.4-sized slot that a weekday affords; weekends — getting things done (e.g. groceries, sleep) that there's no time for during the week — aren't much better. So whether or not I'm at a loss for (blog) words, I'm certainly at a loss for energy; that makes it a good time to play with HTML, when the "Update Journal" link is staring you in the face. Here's my second attempt at embedding; by using something more embed-friendly (from YouTube this time), this should work much easier.

I first saw this a while back via Destination: Out's del.icio.us links. I'd not yet had the chance to listen to Giuseppi Logan's ESP recordings (still haven't), only some ensemble work on Roswell Rudd's Everywhere, so he stood in my mind mostly as some short-lived mid-'60s NYC phenom who'd quickly fallen off the map — I first heard of him via Amiri Baraka's Black Music collection, and (then) through a 1980-ish interview with Jackie McLean or Woody Shaw, just a quick lament sorta thing: "Y'know who I saw [on the street(s)]? Giuseppi damn Logan."


A short film by Edward English, from 1966:

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fitzcarraldo
Aug. 18th, 2007 @ 11:29 am Drums unlimited
Current Mood: feh
Current Music: The WKCR Max Roach Memorial Marathon

Through attrition, the only childhood Max Roach album that remains in memory (and in physical reality, sitting somewhere in New Jersey or North Carolina) is Lift Every Voice and Sing, from 1971. In an era when jazz musicians were "exploring" soul, rock, and funk, as a means of maintaining some semblance of commercial viability (and while Jackie McLean would lampoon it, even he recorded a disco LP for RCA a few years later), Max did this relatively-scholarly album with a gospel choir, plus William Bell and Max's newly-ex-wife, Abbey Lincoln.

It isn't the greatest introduction to his music (or to Billy Harper, who played tenor in his quintet back then), but how many kids these days get introduced to (t)his music at all? Or even recognize it as music?

I figured we wouldn't have Max around much longer; Phil Schaap, months ago at least, stopped doing his trademark yell, GOOD MORNING, MAX! at the first, inevitable, mention of Max's name during his daily "Bird Flight" radio show (yelling because I presume Max, like Art Blakey, another drummer/bandleader who launched dozens of musicians' careers, had drummed himself into the ranks of the hard-of-hearing); Joe McPhee stopped just short of eulogizing him at the end of a Trio X gig this past winter or spring.

We've lost a living encyclopedia of percussion, someone who kept learning and learning, growing and growing, teaching and teaching, from the Swing Era through numerous Jazz-Is-Dead eras in the subsequent decades.

I'm slogging through Stanley Crouch's anthology Considering Genius; in an essay devoted to Miles Davis at Carnegie Hall, he tells the story of how Max interrupted the 1961 concert, a benefit for the African Medical Education and Research Foundation, in a one-man protest against what he believed was a pro-apartheid, pro-colonialist organization. That Miles would abandon the concert, half-finished (tho' the show did eventually Go On), is emblematic of the respect he had for his former bandmate; that Max would do this at all was emblematic of the extent (especially in those days) to which he didn't let his activities as a public citizen fall subservient to his activities as a Bankable Name.

I can't imagine Jay-Z or Beyoncé (a bubblegum Max-and-Abbey for the hypercorporate age) disrupting someone else's gig for anything except self-promotion.

We've lost more than a living encyclopedia of percussion.
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richie
Aug. 4th, 2007 @ 09:06 am Cold / Sweat
Current Mood: foo
Current Music: Weekend Edition on WNYC
Tags: ,

When it comes to air conditioning, there seems to be this NYC-office-building lowest-common-denominator of erring on the side of too much over too little. The worst offender is one particular conference room at the office; it rivals the one in the company's old location, the one where my long tag-team job interview took place; they may have hired me just for being hardy enough to withstand the near-freezing temperatures that afternoon.

The old building had the eighth circle of air-conditioning hell (with walk-in restaurant refrigerators being the ninth); the current location contains merely the sixth circle. I keep a heavy denim shirt at my desk, to wear during the 45-90 minutes each week that I spend in that conference room. Because I tend to walk fast during the commute (as a way of squeezing in some exercise each day), I sweat profusely, even if it's 50 degrees outside; if it weren't for that, I'd bundle up every day, in preparation for the air conditioning.
Our team lead was out-of-action with a bad cold early this week, but he was reachable by phone. Whenever someone at the office would talk to him on the phone, I could hear the other party say something along the lines of, "Hi…. [pause to hear reply] Damn! You sound awful!" (And now that the lead is back in person, he sounds, when he speaks, like he has a fistful of marbles shoved up his nose. He's still in "bad cold" territory.)

I have the same cold, I think; sporadic headaches — "is it sinuses or a brain tumor?" — had been worrying me since late last week, but feel now, more and more, like a plain-old head cold in the making, and my throat feels a little scratchy (something I can't attribute to smoking: I've been nearly pot-free, and not tobaccoing as much as usual). I've been taking Airborne, holding the symptoms at bay, but eventually I'll be in bad-cold territory.

Of course, this means I'll likely be sick just in time for my week off from work.
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punk 2
Jun. 30th, 2007 @ 10:08 am Your Anthony Braxton quote of the week
Current Mood: it's saturday!!!
Current Music: Weekend Edition on WNYC

#167 in a series
I believe that one of the problems of this time period is that we don’t understand the old Ghost, the old masters. We have been given a viewpoint of the masters that takes away the aura of the Ghosts. All of it looks like artifacts and more and more children are not able to gain some sense of the real culture. But trance music means that individuals can do individual experiences and they can tap into anything, including the essence of the masters, of the old masters.

— from the liner notes to Sextet Istanbul 1995


This was quoted in Henry Kuntz's review of the new 9-CD-plus-1-DVD box set of Iridium recordings, the first new Bells article since going on hiatus around 1979.

(Your digressive contrarian rant of the week: I note that the first piece of new content I saw at Crawdaddy!'s resurrected site concerned The Hold Steady, whose Craig Finn fits to a T the rock-bard archetype popularized by the music-as-multimedia-poetry-slam school of criticism — wrongheaded and, ultimately, smothering — that Crawdaddy! helped midwife back in the day. There needs to be some sort of punk-rock Moment of Evisceration for this school — i.e. the laying waste of received Rolling Stone AOR-showbiz "wisdom" — except punk rock is now itself part of their canon.)

We don't bat an eye, nowadays, at the notion of a box set of 9 CDs and a DVD. But I was reminded of Keith Jarrett's Sun Bear Concerts, a wonderfully-packaged, but physically-imposing 9-LP set of solo-piano improvs released in 1976; I remember seeing a copy or two at one of the old Record Bar chain stores a few months after it was released, and just marvelling at it for a few seconds. Who would buy such a thing? The hardcore solo-Jarrett fans, who would eat their vitamins, say their prayers, and prepare for the act of purchasing and carting home this monstrosity.

But now, it's nothing out of the ordinary, a 6-CD box set. Not much bigger than a Big Mac.

But Ben Sidran — he has a new 24-CD release. Neener neener, Keef.
For decades, we thought that Louis Armstrong was born on July 4, 1900 — a perfect birthdate for such a huge American icon. But it wasn't so, and even WKCR now does its Louis marathon in August, his real birth month. Still, with a nod to their previous practice, they play his music all day on July 4, a day in which I tend to celebrate Louis' other life — that of stoner icon.

/me waves to the missus (I'm running late!)
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desi
May. 5th, 2007 @ 12:05 am Oh well
Current Mood: ¡f01n9!
Current Music: Air — Air Song

If there were such a thing as slow music, on the listener side, it would be the opposite of having a constant drip of tunes coursing through your 80-gig earbuds. Or the opposite of cruising 'round in your bassmobile. On the cultural-production side, maybe it's someone like Jack Wright. Slow-music venue: Wright's Spring Garden house, or the Finger Palace, a converted living room. (Slow music might also be more instruments getting played in living rooms, period, whether or not there's something called an audience.)
But this is just an excuse to play with the lj-embed tag. Jack Wright (alto saxophone); Evan Lipson (bass); Toshi Makihara (drums), recorded 12 October 2006 in Philadelphia, taken from this page at the Internet Archive. That link will come in handy, because I don't think the embedding is working.



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sybille
Mar. 1st, 2007 @ 07:28 pm lj-cut
Current Mood: new york
Current Music: Da Vinci's Inquest

Leroy Jenkins has passed away, at the age of 74. And yes, I know I'm several days late in posting this. But I'd put in my 2¢ earlier, over at ILM, noting that the AACM, back in the 60's, had done a lot to make it possible for this then-middle-aged disaffected music teacher and ex-addict ("After 30 years, I still have marks on my arms from using drugs.") to carve out a niche in the post-jazz world.

Jenkins, like his young compadres in the "Braxton Trio", the Creative Construction Company — Anthony Braxton and (Ishmael Wadada) Leo Smith — plus, perhaps, third-wave AACM-er George Lewis, were part of the "wing" of the organization that was dismissed by some as being too "cerebral", too "European", lacking the kick-ass explicitly-jazz reference points of the Art Ensemble of Chicago. But that kind of POV seemed to assume there was an implicit "J" in "AACM" that stood for "Jazz"; 'twas never so. It's after the end of the world, and you are free to be too anything.


The one time I had a chance to see Jenkins play, I chose not to. This was back when he'd formed a group called Sting, and I was doubly pissed that 1) the Revolutionary Ensemble, the trio he co-founded after the Creative Construction Company returned from France, had broken up, and 2) Sting had electric instruments and vocals, surely a bid for commercial success. I chose to go see/hear some non-commercial acoustic music instead; I have no idea now what that was.

So I've blown it. Can't see him play now. In this realm of fiddle-playin', only Mark Feldman — apologies to Jason Hwang, Billy Bang-Bang, and the Carlas — has given me the warm-and-fuzzies like Mr. Jenkins did on disc.


I stumbled upon my old E2 node dedicated, in part, to the Revolutionary Ensemble's one major-label LP, The People's Republic. From seven friggin' years ago — yow!


EDITZ: Destination: Out has a couple of posts — one an R.I.P., one paying tribute to The People's Republic — and MP3s.
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fitzcarraldo
Feb. 11th, 2007 @ 12:09 pm Favorite piece of music licensing for the week
Current Music: real-estate porn on HGTV

Just seen/heard on HGTV: the Buzzcocks' "Everybody's Happy Nowadays", in an ad for the AARP. Punk's not dead, it's just looking at condos in South Florida.
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punk 2