Fay Victor, ‘Barn songs’ featuring cellist Marika Hughes VS a painting I saw at the DeYoung Museum of San Francisco today called ‘The Cello Player’

Sometimes these posts are just indicative of what someone might write.

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Maybe I will add as a coda other photos I took at the museum today: a radish help up next to the Oldenburg paperclip; the shapeshifter Innuit piece, bear-man thing; the re-making of the Hawaiian exotic Captain Cook 1804 Wallpaper that by a modern female and likely AOA artist seems to feature some dudes goofing for their ladies the act of birthing. The natives in the wallpaper with their European mis-remembered dancing styles. — I was gonna contrast that with a John Kelly naked wahini drawings book I found in my Dad’s attic; a lightbending effect thru the building; Terry’s shadow over a crack in the Goldsworthy from 2005; that’s bout it.

Marika I saw and met thru Tin Hat Trio or Tin Hat or Tin Hat Trio Plus. I might have met her at the Cub with Austin Willacy, I mean booked. She’s been in a lot of things. I think I had noticed something else by Fay Victor, who sings in a unique style. I also like the new Tierney Sutton cd, on movie songs.

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Terry thought he was making the cello

edit to ad: it’s Marika’s barn!

Hey, Marika:
I have a new concert series in Palo Alto.
I don’t recall if you played in my previous serie, either with Tin Hat or maybe Austin Willacy, but I had seen you and heard you and met you a couple times.
I was just writing (superficially) in my (frivolous) blog, about you and Fay Victor. When I started to copy over the blurb, from today’s I was so surprised and happy to discover that “the barn” is actually your barn!
Any time if fits your schedule to come out and play my new series, Mitchell Park community center, you are invited.
I pay $&^%# for headliners or $&@# per player for combos that are democratic or jointly led. Whichever fits you.
In your case, because I’m a big fan, I would also throw in a flight and a room.
In my blog I was tieing it to a painting I saw at The DeYoung called “The Cellist”.
I was also fixing to write about Zoe Keating and Imogene Heap — both of whom played in my Cubberley series, years ago.
Also, I married a gal named (the artist) Terry Acebo Davis and we live in a townhouse in Palo Alto downtown and share a wall with an Israeli guy named H_ and his new significant other is a cellist we call (—-) but I don’t have the ear to tell, though I hear her, when she’s in town, practicing, if she is soloist or just a regular player – -she is from Canada, and I didn’t catch her last name. What I mean to say is I am channeling cello so to speak, so having this strong reaction to your work with Fay Victor – which I had heard about already somehow.
Mark Weiss
Plastic Alto blog and Earthwise Productions (“at the Mitch”)
(650) WEI RDUDE
i am going to a Allison MIller show tonite at Stanford. I don’t know if you play with her, but she plays with Ben Goldberg who plays with tin hat so there. I will probably ask her if she knows you. I’m guessing: of course!!
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Earthwise songwriter showcase Saturday at The Cub to feature Austin and Oakland artists

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Matt Sever performer known as Matt The Electrician

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Sylvie Simmons, a Brit who has lived in the US since the 1970s, in LA and now The Bay Area.

One of these days, I’m going to sit right down and update this with links and bios and all that, but what got me buzzing this morning as I was rising and thinking ahead to my day and the life of the mind is that the show is being held at Cubberley, where I produced a series called Palo Alto Soundcheck and The Cubberley Sessions, about 150 events, 1994-2001. Those shows were mostly in the Theatre (300 cap, proscenium arch, banked seating — for example Train and Dar Williams), or the Auditorium (also known as MultiPurpose room in the high school days, or The Cafeteria, though also recent uses as The Children’s Museum and The Library — for example, Cake and Blink 182 and Neurosis — 500 capacity, open floor, small stage at north end, we used the kitchen as a green room), but also once The Amphitheatre (700 capacity, outdoors, very popular during the high school days — The Palo Palooza, featuring Skankin’ Pickle, Rufus The Bobcat). Saturday’s 8 p.m. show is in a old room new to me — H-1. This is a classroom and now meeting room, with about 75 capacity and theatre seating. Not really a stage. We bring or brang our own sound in all the above and forthcoming cases – or we contract for such. Nowadays, especially at The Mitch — which has no stage — we also bring a magic carpet for the players to ride on.

Cubberley’s room H-1 I learned subsequent to the bulk of this – -and I had walked by it hundreds of times, on the way to Piazza’s market for example — was a classroom used by Ron Jones during his famous “The Wave” fiasco. In 1967 or so — read “the tumultous sixties”, “Vietnam era” and all that. This innovative teacher and Stanford grad ran a social studies classroom experiment in which he divided his class into two groups, which ended up, at the reveal, to be Nazi Fascists and submissive Jews.

Besides basically getting him fired (that, and he didn’t take roll, was outspoken) it became, during my high school years, an  “Afterschool Special” on ABC and subject of a couple novelizations a feature film and a documentary. In US and Germany, natch. (2008: Germans are often anti-fascist as a show of concern about being such great Fascists back in the day — I don’t think I’ve used the word “H _ tler” herein, and won’t start now — although I’ve gone from saying “search-injun” to “Google” as a verb and noun thanks to the blessing of Alan Eagle, if you excuse the digression and hey, have you tried to pet my shaggy dog, D_?). Interestingly, to me at least, The Wave resembles the more famous (and more recently Hollywooded) Zimbardo project at nearby Stanford, aka The Stanford Prison Experiment. Jones by the way lives in SF and has continued an interesting and not-unAmerican career as educator and activist. He has a book about coaching a team of special kids in basketball, “the team that never lost a game’. He helped produce a live musical stage version of his experiment.

Not to harp too much on this locale — although Karla Kane of the Weekly did take the bait and used the term “historic” in her preview blurb — but let’s just say I started Earthwise Productions in 1994 as a bulwark against Fascism — and the creep of corporate capitalism arguably towards potential fascisim – the so-called “bundling”  of corporate interests and big government power ) and now I am deliberately if incidentally calling attention to this issue with this show.

THIS MACHINE KILLS FASCISTS was something Woody Guthrie had on his guitar. In this case we have Matt and Sylvie with a guitar and a uke and I don’t know how political they feel but I am still motivated in large part by more than just the beauty of music or the attractions being a commodities that could be exchanged for money: Rolling Stones tour in comparison was grossing $11m per show and likely more locally — say $15 million at Levi’s Stadium — ironic name that — whereas we are at $15 per ticket and 75 capacity to that’s about a thousand dollars gross potential.

I promise promise promise for more info about the performers per se but continue to insist that arts are an essential part of a democracy; the new post-wrecking ball Cubberley should be planned as having a serious arts component and facility and Palo Alto civic budget per se should include expenditures for the arts and purchase.

Sylvie Simmons, who besides an album of originals and some Leonard Cohen covers, is a well-known journalist and critic — the first female in the “boys club” of rock writers, some say. On her blog she said that Matt Sever is “an edgier Paul Simon”. Well, he’s also a bearded, West Coast or Southern, likes to work with his hands, more proletariat than bourgeois, humbler and funnier Paul Simon.

I shouldn’t have to remind Sylive to bring some of her books. I’m good for an inscribed copy of her Leonard Cohen book — I just bought my first of Cohen’s books although I haven’t cracked it beyond the first page — something about S_ with  lot of piercings; K_ hitting B- with a shovel — sounds like fun!

I said this somewhere but it bears repeating – it’s my blog, Gersh Dern it, and my party so I will cry cry cry Vox clam juice with Tito’s thank you — that: there’s a picture of Sylvie with Steve Earle — he, Matt and I are all wearing beards tonight – -and there is a Leonard Cohen tribute band in SF called Conspiracy of Beards — and I have a weak anecote — 25 years in Palo Alto rock and roll is like one night a Max’s Kansas City — about seeing Steve Earle at the Fillmore and deciding I should try to book him into the Cub and I noticed Frank Riley his agent at the show, and followed Frank into the men’s room to query (somewhat queerly). He said Steve would not consider any offers below $10K which at the time was way out of my league. And (the rest of the story is that later while looking for news of self, self-Googling as it were,  I found a citation to a book of fiction by an obscure Canadian author who had a “Mark Weiss” who was a “concert promoter” and feloniously assaulted someone in the bathroom of the Fillmore.

Here’s a badly remembered and not obviously fitting passage from a Leonard Cohen book I bought on The Alameda in San Jose on my way to the hockey game the other night:

Everyone is Montreal is wearing fur coats and loading up on Leadbelly records…I got invited to the event but did not bring my guitar…

edit to add, the next day: Cool Hand Luke with Paul Newman was on cable last night, from 1967 — it has the same anti-authority themes that provoked Ron Jones’ “The Wave”.

And1: I had another anecdote about trying to get Trevor Noah’s agent, Matt Schultz, of CAA, who I met at the lobby bar of the Nashville Marriott and IEBA, to open for Matt and Sylvie, billed as “Matt The Comedian”. I offered him $500 and a flight and a room, but he is too cool for (a defunct, Palo Alto high) school.

edit to add, like four hours before show, day of show: ok, I admit, I’m confused: Syvlie Simmons may be an East Bay i.e. Oakland artist or she may be from San Francisco. But I cannot tell you why I think that.

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Model for model city after Oldenburg and Kapoor with a gratuitous wink towards very early and very late Gehry

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OK it’s really just a wadded newspaper, a slightly dampened piece of pumpkin bread covered in a napkin, a pen, and a water bottle

b/w a parallax view of the table, 3 o’clock on a Wednesday at Coupa, stoic focused millennial not quite in frame — nice white faux leather bag or purse:

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Gordon Dyal vs Paul Krugman

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Former Gunn football and track block and New Mexico Native — before LAH I think his dad was at Los Alamos.

What would I know about billionaires?

Apropos of Gunn football I posted a comment about Gordon Dyal, Gunn ‘79 Dartmouth ‘83, who I said had made tens of millions as a Wall Street Guy. Fact checking my own blurb – –the Palo Alto   weekly gives you five minutes to edit your comment although it took me six — I learned that one he left wall street for a boutique agency at Columbus Circle near Carnegie Hall and two if he consulted on hundred billion dollar deals he might have made hundreds of millions himself.  So I’m likely wrong by a factor of 10x which come to think of it might be true for  qualitative things I say here. (It also says somewhere that he bought a huge ranch in Montana, likes to hunt, and is therefore an environmentalist and on the board of all the big save the planet groups) Gordon Dyal was more of a track guy than football.  I Remember the Gunn  seniors as being a great group of athletic smart and fun guys.  I believe I spoke to him exactly once for a minute and a half in the basement of Phi Delt.

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Krugman today who himself won a Nobel prize in economics compares a $60,000 worker with a $60 million man.  What Does it mean if some of us are worth 1,000  times or 10,000 times what another one of us is? Sort of appropriately reminds me of the Orson Welles line in the third man about people looking like dots from the top of the Ferris wheel.

I wonder if Gordon Dyal will run into Glen Eberle of Boise Idaho —  in my mind Idaho and Montana are sort of the same thing but neither is Wyoming  or Dakota.

Glen is a former Olympic biathlon man, Dartmouth  class of ‘85, who owns a company that makes technical gear for outdoorsman and sharpshooters of the legal variety.

ok another weird Segue But here is a picture of a lady arrested for selling churros in the subway without a churro-selling license:

8E5174A5-CDAE-46E3-8E68-6305F5C30714.jpegThree more typical Dartmouth men, not billionaires but credits to their fields, indubitably old boy:

OK Ed told me once because for a minute there I would stay at the Gramercy Park Hotel before Ian Schrager bought it and I could afford it  that he and his would move to Gramercy Park if they won the lottery. Meaning in this context thatbeven very successful very smart people usually know their limits, what parts of their world they are meant to tread.   Or the meaning of dumb luck. Which reminds me that when I met Gene Tenace as a 10-year-old He  showed me his World Series ring inscribed “S plus S equals S”.

Sweat plus sacrifice equals success, circa 1974.

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Bob, Jimmy, Andy, Terry, Mark & Mitch

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Bob Margolin and Jimmy Vivino headlined a show at Mitchell Park, for Earthwise on Saturday, July 6, 2019, with Mitch Woods opening then sitting in. Afterwards, Terry and I, along with our sound guy Andy Heller, posed for this photo.

How many of us are wearing shades?

How many of us are wearing eyeglasses?

How many of us are wearing caps?

How many of us are wearing hats?

How many of us are wearing Hawaiian shirts or what you call it? I think Mitch rolled in wearing a shirt like mine, then upgraded to something with longer sleeves — he’s a classy guy.

Mitch is doing a quasi-residency at The Mitch. He’ll support Elvin Bishop on Dec. 20 (with Maria Muldaur for a few songs), then likely return in 2020 with another group of friends — roughly related to his cd, “Friends Along The Way”.

Stay tuned.

Also, Terry Mt Terry, Terry My Wife (TMW), has curated a website for Earthwise.

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Old Davis band circa 1970

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I got a call from Greg Brown one day saying that he wanted to show me a flyer he did for Old Davis. He said it was a band featuring a member of what would become Journey, either Gregg Rolie or Neil Schon. We did not sent up a meeting and when I asked him about this some time later, he forgot where he put it.

I tried to find this band by Google and could never remember the name.

By the way, I am starting to use the term “Google” as a verb, because Alan Eagle talked at my Andy Dolich sports marketing class and said it was “okay”. (Previously and various I used a coined term, “search-injun” as a verb and noun).

When I tried to find cites about my own Charlie Musselwhite concert, coming to the Palo Alto JCC, I found a flyer for the bluesman playing the Big Beat of Palo Alto which was on San Antonio near Charleston. Old Davis was on the bill.

For some reason, my Elvin Bishop show is selling much better than my Charlie Musselwhite show. I tried to get them to appear as a duo but they would not. (They are playing together in Berkeley I think). My Elvin show features Mitch Woods with Maria Muldaur as a support act. My Charlie show features the emerging artist Valerie Troutt of Oakland and Howard Wiley.

Other groups or acts to appear in upcoming shows, mostly at the Mitch, include: Matt the Electrician and Sylvie Simmons (at Cubberley, room H-1 — hey that reminds me: maybe I should have “Beat Hotel Rm 32′ to a 12 minute opening set, or Sussman Can’t Sleep; Dave Douglas Engage; Larry Ochs Dave Rempis; Mother Hips Duo; Patricia Barber; CJ Chenier; Marta Sanchez; Wayne Horvitz Sara Schoenbeck – -I’m actually doing a set of piano duo co-bills; Johnny A.

So much for Old Davis: anybody?

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The art for this Charlie Musselwhite Old Davis Big Beat flyer looks like the Day on the Green logo, right? (I’m not saying that Greg Brown did the Day on the Green art – its likely a different flyer…) seems to say “Martin”

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Tool of The Times

Today is Veterans Day and I thought of my father, a mug Ehren Tool made, then noticed this article from May featuring Berkeley veteran artist Ehren Tool, who Dad, Terry and I befriended during his Palo Alto Art Center residency in 2013.

9F8B3556-5519-4A7A-A504-0FD9039A3296.jpegI liked and forwarded a story in today’s paper (?!) about honor flights: treating veterans to visit our nations capital and its halls and monuments, to Democracy.

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Upcoming Earthwise showcases for Troutt, Simmons and Rothwell

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Valerie Troutt is a composer, teacher, leader and singer out of the East Bay.

Her ensemble supports blues legend Charlie Musselwhite at the Palo Alto JCC on Dec. 29.

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Sylvie Simmons with Steve Earle (who not likely to appear Saturday — but I did see him live in Santa Fe once and at the Fillmore; I approached his agent Frank Riley in the men’s room and he explained that Steve is likely beyond my reach in terms of his fee; fair enough; oddly, a writer out of Canada created a “mark weiss..concert promoter” in a work of fiction who assualts someone in the bathroom of the Fillmore

Sylvie Simmons is a ukelele based singer-songwriter, also internationally known for her knowledge of writer and performer Leonard Cohen. She appears at Cubberley’s H-1 in Palo Alto, with Matt the Electrician, who, despite the monniker released 4 albums of original folk and is recording this week in Portland with Tucker Martine. This Saturday, November 16.

Carmen Rothwell is a jazz bassist from Seattle. She will appear Thursday, Nov. 21 at The Mitch, with Engage: Dave Douglas, she, Jeff Parker and Clarence Penn.

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Carmen Rothwell, circa 2015

 

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Repertory bands VS Tribute bands VS cover bands

Two cases: case one Tom Harrell took ill two weeks ago in Palo alto and his Trio played on without him; Raises the question is Harrell’scomposition so well regarded by his peers that future generations will play his music; Did my audience appreciate the show or could they get over the fact that the focal point had taken out which by the way I wasn’t clear on until somewhere between sound check and the hit—  Low when I saw Thom in the hospital I told his manager wife that he should rest because his long-term health was paramount .  Mingus is music lives on. Monk in Ellington and les brown and Glenn Miller more obviously.

Darkstar Orchestra plays the dead as does Joe Russo I’m working on a Robert Hunter tribute.

I never hand I made fun of and on sale at Montalvo with “classic album band and had the nerve to send my thoughts to their agent who I just met at a conference.  I never hand I made fun of an on sale at Montalvo with “classic album band and had the nerve to send my thoughts to their agent who I just met at a conference

Tug hill singer of Waycross once

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Journalism is dead

“Doonesbury turning 50”

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