I am watching the National League playoff game, Cincy Reds at Phillies, and pinch hitter Mike Sweeney loops one into left field for a base hit. The left fielder bobbles the ball slightly as the runners advance and I find myself humming “Bemsha Swing” by Thelonious Monk.
In my thread here about how the brain works — if mine is at all typical or exemplary, and it may not be — I marvel at this because I had just been thinking, some time over the last few days or weeks that I used to be able to whistle that tune but that I could not recently recall how it goes:
“Duh-dunt, dun, dun donna donna, dunt dah// Duh-dunt, dun, dun, donna donna, dah” or something.
Meanwhile: the first thought that went through my mind when Sweeney ball was fielded was the word “dropsies” meaning the Reds seemed to have trouble catching the ball cleanly — they had committed four errors so far in the game and had squandered a four-run lead to fall behind 6-4, most egregiously when the right fielder missed a ball in the lights and then the relay man had the ball slip out of his hands, to let the go-ahead and tying runs score.
From “dropsies” I thought of the song title “Doxy”, a standard by Sonny Rollins (I had to look that up — All Music has 242 occurrences of “Doxy”, and 358 for “Bemsha”). And when I thought of “Doxy” — which for the life of me I could not now this minute hum for you, although I would say 6-to-4 I could name in it three bars if you give me a multiple choice “Name That Tune” pop/jazz quiz — I heard “Bemsha Swing”.
And my explanation: both of those songs were new to me until 2004 when Jack Walrath was visiting me in Palo Alto and we cut a proposed live album (with Jeff Pitson on keys, as a duo) at a little dive bar in Pacifica called “The Octopus” (which Billy Cohen booked us into as a last minute deelio — we actually played there twice and dragged a little rig to record the second session). Further: around that time, I started dating a woman in Philly and would go back there quite often, like 20 times in two years, for about six or seven months cumulatively (enough, for example, that I joined NARAS there, took a class from Aaron Levinson at UArts and discovered Man Man — well, because Jim Romeo was their agent, and Ryan “Honus Honus” Katner was my barrista of choice at Last Drop, he had a day job — I also frequented Ars Nova and met Mark Christman and first heard, for example, Mary Halversen playing with John Tchai, but I digress). Maybe I dredged up the melody of “Bemsha Swing” (or my version of it, at least) because seeing the Phillies triggered that part of my brain, my tunes from 2004-5?? I remember I used to make a point of whistling this melody rather ostentatiously in public feeling I was doing my little part to spread the word about Monk — not that anyone ever stopped and asked me what I was doing.
Actually I wrote a note to a grad student at Penn (I think her name was Bethany Levy or Bethany Klein) who posted a flyer around town asking people to describe “their song” — I never heard from her so I assume she thought I was some kind of flake. (she may have been fishing for people who like either “Celebrate” by Kool and the Gang OR the Celine Dion song from “Titanic” (is it “Our Love Will Go On”? — whatever, I prefer the Straitjackets version…I was off her charts, most probably, no pun intended).
Here is a link to Either Orchestra’s version of “Doxy”, from their debut album. Amazon here lets you get a 30 second sample of the performance. Notably, this, from 1986, features band leader label founder Russ Gershon on tenor and Josh Roseman in the trombone section — although their homepage credits Ken Freundlich for the arrangement “New Orleans style”.
But here’s a version of “Bemsha Swing” by Medeski Martin and Wood, from their 1993 release “It’s a Jungle in Here” with additional horns by Steven Bernstein, David Binney and Josh Roseman among the section. It’s actually a medley into “Lively Up Yourself” which I am just learning is appropriate perhaps because according to a wiki post “Bemsha” –actually by Monk and Denzil Best, is a variation of the word “Bimshire” which is a geographical reference to Best’s homeland, Barbados. I did not know that, I am hearing, in a Ed McMahon tone. (I just, for yucks, tried to quickly dredge that soundclip out of the archive, to no avail; although who knew Woody Allen guest hosted “The Tonight Show”?)
Bemsha:
Go, Giants. (Go, Giants of jazz!!!)
don cherry and herbie hancock circa 1986 doing “bemsha”
Reviewing my previous posts I realize that the link I provide to a video of Don Cherry playing Monk’s “Bemsha Swing” from probably 20 years ago on European tv does not actually play; you have to click the link that says “Play on youtube” and then it plays. Beyond being somewhat ridiculously proud of my idiocy on certain technical aspects of how the internet works, and this wordpress site on which I’ve posted 80 times and added an additional 300 or so footnotes (“comments”, like this one), I am not sure why this is so. (It played before; although sometimes the videos I find do not “embed” they just give code; some links are only links if I post them under the comments, for some reason; et cetera).
My question is: does the person who posted the Don Cherry video actually have the right to alter how it is or was being seen linked to my site? I guess I could ask him to disable whatever he pushed to stop it from playing on my site. But the bigger question is: does HE have any copyrights to this video? If not why is he seeming to enforce some sort of control?
I am soft on ip generally, intellectual property rights. I am soft on property rights period. On the other hand I state all the time that companies like Pandora exploit musicians rights, especially composers rights (mechanical rights). So, if there were a mechanism by which I could cause people to hear a performance of “Bemsha Swing” and then remit to the Monk publishing administration a fractional amount of money, that would be great. I feel less strongly about “performances” meaning the people who appear in the video. I guess I could deposit a certain amount of money with wordpress to have music appear in my blog — like a blanket policy or consent decree. Or better everyone has an account (with their email carriers — as part of their $10 per year, which is what I pay yahoo, supposedly for storage) and when they hear music, it gets counted and the composers get paid. But for someone to post bootlegs or whatnot on his youtube site and then lock me out of embedding to him I think takes some gall.
I could find any number of other Monk or Cherry photos to illustrate this post. I think its a fair use in that it helps Don Cherry or T. Monk if people on the internet see their likeness and want to know more about them or find their music. (And contribute to the larger revenue streams, larger than what it is worth to view a photo on a non-revenue producing site, or stream music via it).
On a strict level 90 percent of the images I use here are copyrighted, and I am in violation. Even a cellphone photo of a tv image is a derivative image, and uses someone else’s work. And definitely if this site, “Plastic Alto” or whatever (which for all I know is actually property of wordpress.com, and I unknowingly and ignorantly am doing some sort of work for hire — at the very least I am some sort of loss leader for the manufacturers — “buy our machines among a billion other uses you can see the great “Plastic Alto” and its unlicensed use of music and images”) ever attracts enough of a following that advertisers (god forbid) and I agree to set up shop together, certainly then music administrators have a right to collect on behalf of their clients the composers. But I am not so certain “finders keepers” rules such that the guy who recorded and saved some obscure tv show has the right to control it.
I will try to ask him.
found myself search-injuning this so that I could post less feebly at Patch regarding columnist Eric Nelson discussing baseball and health care:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/george-carlin-seven-words-that-shook-a-nation-852833.html
Roberto Clemente has two balls on him..