Yo, Britt, come feel some more Palo Alto headliner love

228FEB76-FEF6-49C6-AC15-DA6E7975E5BB.jpeg(I produced your first NorCal show, 1997, Cubberley Community Center, 1997, “Twin Harmonic Pop Festival — a Noise Pop R.I.P. off, I admit)

Mark Weiss

dba Earthwise

(I sent this to their agent, hoping to get a date here in Palo Alto somewhere down the line. I rode my bike to the show, a beautiful 7-mile jaunt along the shoreline; there were about 100 other bikes in all; I left after Spoon’s 40-minute support slot, arriving home in time to cook for TMW)

Posted in austistic | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Hey, please don’t steal my Sun Kil Moon posters

F3D1CCCB-5784-4D4F-8FA7-008F59764189.jpeg Tickets are going pretty fast at Eventbrite  for $20 all ages general admission. Earthwise productions has a total of five shows on sale most at Mitchell Park, The Mitch. There is a free Tom Harrell Quartet jazz concert also available at Eventbrite October 24.

169314A4-C16C-4E7B-9A53-E82FA1713765.jpeg

Posted in music, Plato's Republic | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Jenn Clemena ‘Hot Cheetos’ VS John Cale ‘Caged Heat’

This gallery contains 2 photos.

    And1: Cake, 1994, “cream rinse and tobacco smoke” (of Jolene) b/w ATE IN YOUR SIX So that’s a pun on the Filipino word for elder or aunt and continuing the food theme which is appropriate because I heard … Continue reading

More Galleries | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Wonder Woman VS Matzo Man

Parentheses I ripped this from an article in the New York Times about 25 important Modern arts and the screen capture is from an edited video of the 1970s super hero show whereas the other piece is from a well curated group of print at Palo alto Art Center I should update with the names of the actual artists And works

Posted in ethniceities, sex, sf moma | Leave a comment

Jen Shyu VS Steph Chou

This gallery contains 4 photos.

Actually Steph Chou, who was written up in the recent Downbeat, reminds me of Patricia Barber.

More Galleries | Leave a comment

Deep blue sky over Oaxaca

7D3BD449-C4A1-479F-9F85-E0F191712511

Photo by Guillermo Gomez Abascal

Posted in this blue marble | Tagged | Leave a comment

John Santos Machete VS Willow Teller shot pot

This is a red herring in that John Santos Group at Mitchell Park El Palo Alto room not likely featuring a vocalist, yet it is alluding to my 1998 jazz series that was called Quantum Decoherence o fJazz shows in that when you walk into a room like Cub or Mitch and do hear music of this high quality it seems somewhat random or chaotic or not predictable; likewise we don’t know which 5 band members John might bring two months from two nights ago and still call it his band.

I passed through the plastic arts show yesterday afternoon just long enough to meet, in the courtyard of the Art Center, near the Oliveira bronze lady, Willow Teller, a young ceramicist from Palo Alto.
I had noticed her work, a holey pot, not in the sense of sacred but indeeed profound enough. Responding to a prompt from her instructor, she created an artwork that was in reaction to the seeming epidemic of gun violence here. The pot looked shot thru by bullets, with blood seeping from the wound, and pooling on the interior.

She also wore a t-shirt that depicted, I think, a ceramics zombie moving instinctually (?) towards his or her wheel or kiln. Must..make..pottery.

Do we have free will or are we the products of our environments?

She said her teacher, Jordan King, had a booth on the lawn along Embarcadero. I hope to make it back today to take another look at the student work from the Gunn art lab, and take a gander at the storied Paly glass posse. Jan Schacter of Portola Valley, a former board member of the art center, said that Paly was among only a half dozen schools in the country that have a glass program.

As my headline indicates, and is my wont in Plastic Alto — named for a jazz legend’s acrylic axe and not for the yearly Glass and Ceramics show — I am producing a John Santos jazz show. I met up with John Friday, at the Stanford Jazz Workshop, appearing he was as a special guest with Erik Jekabson, along with Dave Ellis, Dave McNab, David Flores and John Wittala.

Santos and I shook on the terms of his upcoming appearance Friday, September 13 at The Mitch — he has amazing hands. They have been the source of his livelihood — as a percussionist, especially the conga – for 40 years. He is also, of course, a good talker, and Terry and I (TMW — Terry My Wife, the artist Terry Acebo Davis) viewed or at least listened to a string of John Santos lectures on the internet. Lectures and demonstrations. (Hey, I wonder if he has any ceramic instruments? I remember that in 1996 July, almost certainly 23 years ago, when Medeski Martin and Wood shook the Cubberley, towards the end of the evening there was a layer of ceramic dust from something Billy M aka Illy B was shaking. Yet I digress, dig?)

I told Ms. Schacter, which she probably already knew, that Pueblo Potters like Jody Naranjo and Christina McHorse and Susan Folwell dig their own clay, and were taught matrilineally by their Grammy’s.
Santos meanwhile says he was influenced by his Puerto Riqueno Grammy and also sold a cd that touted him on its face as a Grammy nominee or winner. (He also famously objected when the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciencs streamlined their awards from 135 categories to about 50).

So, getting back to the main thrust of my post, I am putting onsale, like in the next half hour, if you are reading this in “real time” on a warm Sunday, Bastille Day. The John Santos Show — and I’m not sure yet, nor likely is he, weather this will be called John Santos Sextet or Machete Ensemble — joins a list of options for dear listener that includes:

John Santos Sextet, Friday, September 13;
Sun Kiln Moon, Friday, September 27;
Amendola/Dunn/Greenware, October 11;
Tom Harrell Four (at PAC –FOR FREE!!!), Thursday, October 24;
And I also, in between taking in as a “kelper” first JRAD at Frost and then THE ROLLING STONES at Levi’s, a special jazz quartet event featuring arguably the most interesting young sax player in the land; I’m being oddly dramatic and coy to have concealed his identity because he is not at all appearing anywhere else in the next week or so, nearby.

But I do remember seeing Peter Apfelbaum at a local show about 15 years ago – -and in fact I interviewed Peter for my show-within-a-show at KZSU with Raya and Sarah — during his “It Is Written” days — and in the program notes to the event he said his two favorite musicians under 30 were Ambrose Akinmusire – -who recently was picked by Downbeat Critics as the best trumpet in the land — and this heretofore obscured young fresh fellow.

I am putting the yoke before the ox so to speak a bit but I am contemplating having my own sister, Linda Weiss Lipinski Moulding, open the show for John Santos Machete or Not Ensemble, on bullwhip. She could do about 5 minutes talking about the history of the instrument and how she came to develop a bit of prowess therein. She also is a kit drummer, a percussionist –she took the Santos music class at College of San Mateo — a juggler and a Mom; her son took studio skills at CSM from my fellow Dartmouthian Krys Bobrowski — I always bogart that name. French horn, studied with Christian Wolfe, Vorticella. I will at least ask Lin and then John, about this bit of nepotism contemplated.

Oh, and excuse the digression but I just learned that my nephew ATL shares a birthday with the reedsman Ben Goldberg (clarinet — he appeared with Allison Miller at the first of my 10 show run at Mitch or PAC).

Back to the young potter:

I also had op – -I’m not shy — to say once or twice or thrice the story of Jessica Yu and I — and the Packard Foundation — raising $30,000 for the Gunn Art department after a fire. Ron Cooper said that he would put a plaque on one of the kilns noting such.

Okay, I am skating on thin ice so to speak but I noticed via EventBrite that one of the first people to purchase tickets to Mark Kozelek pka Sun Kil Moon (the actual name) is a Korean or Korean American. It reminds me of the time that a black guy called to complain about my producing a show with: Cake, The Negro Problem and New EZ Devils. This guy literally ran around town tearing down my posters, which were a masterful creation of Lane Wurster and Mac MacCaughan.

Although I am taking Duffy for a spa day, in Foster City (oh my dog!), I hope to hit the Halliwell one-star Gina Lollobrigida flick “Something about Bread” at the Packard Stanford Theatre but not Roman Holiday with Peck and Hep — which I saw recently at same site. By the way, a dude named Bernstein once booked Sonny Terry and Brownie McG into that space, and I saw Greater Tuna there.

On ceramics per se, there is also a wall piece at the entrance to PAC Aud — did I mention I’m doing a free Tom Harrell show there on October  24

 

and1: She explains: The teapot is smooth sculpture clay and I used a deep firebrick glaze. I also had a saggar vase there that I fired with seaweed, salt, and sawdust (see below)

andand but not anand pothadwaran: I have photos of Willow Teller and her shot pot but my phone died so I cannot upload them just now, which reminds me that about 6 pm on July 6 a man was returning a book and I said to him, stay for the blues show I’m producing here in about 2 hours with Steady Rollin’ Bob Margolin, Jimmy Vivino and a special relativity orbital quantum leap by Mitch Woods and he said he didn’t have time for music or art because we need to get into space before the sun expires. Andrew Marvell call your literary executor.

I have a contrived coinage early on that references Brian Oldfield, who died recently, but I recall an article that placed him near us, at Zotts. By way of Noname the rapper, whose couplet, “track…field/I shot, you put…” I’m saying “shot put” but I say “shot pot“. Willow Teller was asked to make a tea pot with a social message and she pocked it with mock bullet holes and a blood red glaze inside the lid. I also started to lecture her on the fact that when Bruce Beasley was at Dartmouth he told his deans he was transferring to Cal to work with Peter Voulkos, and college president John Sloane Dickey himself offerered to build Bruce a better smelt.

Also I would be remiss as an all-seeing eyeball to not mention Willow’s classmate Chloe Cheng who has a piece out of a Thiebaud painting, despite the spelling error, and a depiction of Vincent Van Gogh under a pine tree on a starry starry night.

andandand:
I’ve tinkered with this a couple times and am not thrilled with it but stand by it, or am sinking in it, stoically. But I have to add this picture of the blues drummer Francis Clay, just for his name (in a post bridging ceramics with percussion — it came to mind sorting thru the emails from Bob Margolin and Nancy Wright recently, in that she asked about Bob or Jimmy Vivino playing with Francis Clay.

edit to add: I spoke to Mateo Romero, after a columnist for Albuquerque paper Joline GK mentioned it, a young artist in Taos likely killed by her own partner, but then Mateo also mentioned the passing of the very influential Christina McHorse. She is in my parents’ collection, either at the Crocker or the DeYoung.

Posted in art, ethniceities, this blue marble | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Sabathia to Alonso to Barco vs Tinker to Evers to Chance

shortstop Tinker

I cannot recite much of Canterbury tales beyond April being the cruelest month, eventually, but somehow I can do this from memory:
These are cruelest of baseball words
Tinker to Evers to Chance
A trio of bearcubs yet fleeter than birds
Tinker to Evers to Chance
Ruthlessly pricking our gonfallon bubble
Tinker to Evers to Chance
Making a Giant hit into a double
Words that are laden (as in line 1) with nothing but trouble
Tinker to Evers to Chance

An Evers gold border registered by PSA–note the weird Cub logo, I once used on posters and t-shirts for Cubberley Sessions

Not sure what “gonfallon” is.
Could be “sad” not “cruel”, except when discussing or alluding to T.S. Elliot and Chaucer.
Gonfallon, I’m certain, is not a contrafact of Falun Gong.

I confuse Frank Chance with Hal Chase — one of them is from Los Gatos.

Pete Alonso his 26 homeruns before the All Star break, the best by a NL rookie; cf McGwire. The Dodgers hit eight home runs on oedipal day. Ten players hit 3 dingers in a game, tho I’ve only heard of six of them: Goldschmidt, Yelich, Turner of LA, Bryant, and Josh Bell, but I never noticed him until ASG. (And when did “ASG” become a TLA?)

Sabithia, according to today’s Times, is the 14th hurler with 250 wins and 3,000 K’s. Joining Johnson, Gibson, Jenkins, Perry, Seaver, Niekro, Sutton, Carlton, Blyleven, Ryan, Clemens, Maddux, Randy Johnson Big Unit — not Big Train — and he, in that order.

I wrote to the illustrator of the Times “First Half Scoreboard”:
From: mark weiss
To: info@davidebarco.com
Sent: Friday, July 12, 2019, 10:49:47 AM PDT
Subject: sabithia to alonso to barco

Sir:
I like the illustration on page B10 sports of today’s Times. The lighting in our living room was bad, so I had to magnify your name using my cellphone camera feature.

I am surprised that an Italian artist created a baseball illustration.

On your pages, I noticed your excellent Colin Kaepernick image, with fists for the fro. (Medusa meets Smith-Carlos).

Today’s news stream has an item about the American right wing targeting Kaepernick and darkening his skin for the sake of propaganda. In my (obscure) blog, Plastic Alto I may base a post on these two illustrations. (i.e, Yours, and the one used by the right wing).

For what it’s worth, the baseball information content that accompanies your drawing is well-done. Fro example, Sale, 17; Buehler, 16; Bieber, 15; Scherzer, 15, Verlander, 15.

Regards,
Mark Weiss
Plastic Alto blog
Palo Alto, CA 94301

PS I create concerts, and sometimes commission illustrators for poster art. Have you done rock or jazz posters? (I see that you specialize in sports).

PPS See also “tinker to evers to chance” or don’t ever leave your tinkering to chance!!

**********************

Somebody named Edwin Jackson of Toronto broke a record for appearing with 14 teams, that he shared with — and I think I glossed this — with Octavio Dotel.

It’s artistic license but Alonso’s angle at the plate looks like he is hitting fungos to his third base coach.

(It also reminds me of the great folk-illustration I bought of Rivera at HighLine a few months ago). Will have to edita dat.

This is really meta- but I know have tags for six Colins: Bonini, Stretch, Dieden, McGregor — don’t recall who that is — Powell and the QB.

b/w A discussion of the posters art of San Francisco Mime Troup who are coming to Cubberley Amphitheatre next month.I have vintage posters I procured at last year’s show of Factwino the Opera by Spain ’84; Factwino Meets The ‘Moral Majority’ also by Spain which I thought was 1982 but I must have bought a reprint since it says “inkworks” in the dingbat/union badge; Factwino Versus Armageddonman.

and1: i’ve wandered into foul territory but yesterday for the cover I bought a Rick Griffith Lydia Pense 1969 album:

andand: This is apparently a Beach Boys tribute by Palo Alto by way of Baltimore artist Chey Woodward. I like the lettering:

E6: Hal Chase is from Los Gatos, Frank Chance Fresno; Chase went to Santa Clara but Chance went to Cal.

I could not find Davide Barco’s illustration in the online Times so I had to Swede it in from my hardcopy. Here is a detail of Alonso V Sabathia.

I like this pose for Alonso better, though it came after Barco’s deadline.

Not actual game footage; from HRD

This is not Alonso vs Sabathia source photo, but it made A1.

nola tango


The Kaepernick brouhaha was on Yahoo; the right wing used a photo to contrast the current President with this popular yet divisive sports figure turned activist; supposedly, the propagandists darkened the image to accentuate their racism and that of their followers. (Reminds that Time magazine did that to OJ — and they also altered Saddam Hussein’s mustache to look like German WWII villain chancellor).

kappy by barco

Tempts me to go out with a band from PA of similar name

Jim Horne of the Times Wordplay added this to our gonfalon flagpole:
Here’s what I imagine must happen to constructors a lot. They go through life counting letters, looking for that amazing coincidence that can spark an elegantly constructed grid. The vast majority of ideas don’t work out. By random chance, standard crosswords are 15 by 15 so that’s the magic number. One day, Ronald J. or Nancy J. notices that if you combine the name of one of the players from Baseball’s Sad Lexicon with his position, it comes to exactly 15 letters. Amazingly the same thing is true of the next player. Almost unbelievably, the trick also works for the third. Bingo, we have a theme. One more descriptive 15-letter answer and the rest is just fill. It must be quite satisfying when discoveries like that emerge.

c h a n c e f i r s t b a s e = 15
t i n k e r s h o r t s t o p = 15
e v e r s s e c o n d b a s e = 15

argh: ok, for exactitude here is some poetry stuff fro reals:
April is the cruellest month, breeding

Lilacs out of the dead land, mixing

Memory and desire, stirring

Dull roots with spring rain.’

And some modernized read bawdlerized Chaucer:
(please note there is also Landesman jazz version, I wrote of above)
‘When April the sweet showers fall

And pierce the drought of March to the root, and all

The veins are bathed in liquor of such power

As brings about the engendering of the flower ….’

Posted in art, sports | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Joan VS Barb

619EB14A-55C6-4614-A3FA-177036A35848.jpeg

9DC1ED92-F651-4D3B-A9B2-4753DF70E241.jpeg

Posted in ethniceities | Leave a comment

Earthwise on-sales at The Mitch


I have five shows onsale at EventBrite, mostly at The Mitch.

  1. Jazz Matinee, Sunday, August 18, 2019 2 pm at Mitchell Park El Palo Alto room. I cannot announce the name of this act until next week or so. So it’s a little weird it’s on-sale. It’s a matinee because I have tickets to The Rolling Stones at 49ers stadium that night — I’m also seeing Joe Russo Almost Dead (JRAD) at Frost the day before.  I’ve admire this musician/leader/composer for several years and am thrilled to be presenting this person. This person is from the Bay Area and based elsewhere and is coming to town to record a cd, with a small window that matched The Mitch schedule on that Sunday, and my schedule I guess. So far no one has gone all in just on the title “Special Jazz Matinee”.
  2. Sun Kil Moon, Friday September 27. I had heard about Red House Painters back in the day — the 1990s, but was not particularly a fan. I recall seeing them in Cambridge, MA once while visiting that area. But recently I started tripping on the Duk Koo Kim song, which I heard on a compilation included in NME, a special issue on Joni Mitchell and her influence (hey I just noticed the Mitch thingy there, far out!). Then I saw him a Kuubwa recently, a folk yeah!! show. Then I saw Donny McCaslin at Bing basement and he has Mark Kozelek of SKM doing vocals on something. Then I ran into him Mark at Caffe Trieste and he said to contact his agent but he was not opposed to playing Palo Alto.
  3. Scott Amendola/Trevor Dunn/Philip Greenlief on Friday, October 11. I’ve worked with Scott Amendola probably a dozen times, but never worked with Greenlief or Dunn. I’ve seen Greenlief play at Luggage Store or the series he books at that little gallery on Mason Street; I don’t think I’ve ever seen Trevor Dunn but hold him in a reverence, not exactly sure why. We’ll find out.
  4. I also have a Tom Harrell show on sale for Thursday October 24 but NOT at The Mitch. I have it onsale with a tba location but no one has bit yet. I will clear up the room shortly. Harrell is a trumpet player who grew up in Los Altos and went to Stanford and has TK credits according to All Music and his based I think in NYC.
  5. He has 40 sets as a leader, including Infinity this year on HalfNote or HighNote. There are roughly eight songs or compositions by other jazz dudes or dudettes called either “for tom harrell” or “tom harrell”. There are 791 sessions in the All Music data base as credits for Tom Harrell, but that includes people covering his songs (“composer”). I count 83 sets where he does not appear accept as a composer, so that makes almost 700 recordings on which he appears, apparently including Carlos Santana 1972 “Caravanserie”.
    his latest was featured on NPR in April in a piece by Kevin Whitehead, to wit: do it, to wit:
    check back later, and i’ll edit out the clams:
    KEVIN WHITEHEAD, BYLINE: “Dublin” by trumpet player Tom Harrell – for decades, he’s been making first-rate records and acquiring high-profile admirers without quite becoming a household name. Harrell occupies his own corner of the jazz scene. He likes to record his own compositions and generally takes a thoughtful and even reserved approach. But he’s a swinger, too, and his best pieces have compulsive drive. The highlight of his new quintet album, “Infinity,” is his tune “Ground.” Its infectious, doubled-up shuffle beat sends the trumpeter to his happy place.

    (SOUNDBITE OF TOM HARRELL’S “GROUND”)

    WHITEHEAD: A buoyant rhythm section always helps – in this case, Ben Street on bass, Johnathan Blake on drums and Charles Altura doing a little light overdubbing on guitars. Not having a piano opens up the texture. Leader Tom Harrell is partial to understatement in the great tradition of un-shouty jazz horn players. Any trumpeter using Harmon mute to get a plaintive sound will remind some listeners of Miles Davis. Tom Harrell is his own man, but he may make that connection himself. His solo on “Hope” recalls Miles’ economy and dry wit.

    (SOUNDBITE OF TOM HARRELL’S “HOPE”)

    WHITEHEAD: The trumpeter’s partner in the front line is tenor saxophonist Mark Turner, a thinking horn player himself. There’s good give and take between them when they solo back to back. These players are thoughtful, but that doesn’t mean they can’t turn up the heat, especially with that rhythm section pushing.

    (SOUNDBITE OF TOM HARRELL’S “CORONATION”)

    WHITEHEAD: Tom Harrell has been crossing paths with and hiring most of these younger musicians for a decade. So even though this lineup and much of the music is newish, the performances have a lived-in feel. That comfort level among the players lets them be their best. Group chemistry and deft composing make “Infinity” one more polished, inventive, easy-on-the-ears Tom Harrell album to check out – jazz in the modern mainstream that’s really, really good.

    I hope they don’t mind that I’m calling the show “Tom Harrell Goes Home”.

    This just in: hold Friday, Sept. 13, 2019 at The Mitch if you are an avid fan of Earthwise at The Mitch in that I just got an email from an artist saying that if I send him a deposit “we can make it work”.

Posted in filthy lucre, jazz | Leave a comment