Subdural pacino bleeding

PANIC GROWING OVER GOO
LOS ANGELES — An Al Pacino movie broke out in the middle of a concert by the band Chicago, with thousands of fans serving as extras.

Cameras were wheeled onstage during intermission of the group’s show at the Greek Theatre on Friday night to film a scene from Pacino’s upcoming movie “Imagine,” in which he plays aging rock star Danny Collins.

was seen attacking tourist s 300 block of Broadway

was seen attacking tourist s 300 block of Broadway

With coaching from the director, the crowd chanted the name of Pacino’s character as the 73-year-old actor walked on stage to sing “Hey Baby Doll” in a black suit. The movie co-stars Michael Caine, Annette Bening and Jennifer Garner.

and:
I think Dan Ausmussens account of the goo killing birds here in real life (!) is similar to the movie “The Host” by Bong Joon Ho, which means pretty soon we will have a monster, not Ed Lee or Ron Conway, jump out of the Bay and start ravaging people.

Meanwhile I shot (with a camera, although a friendly bystander or enabler provided the flash) the Tom Parkinson plaque on Addison, part of Berkeley Poetry Walk installation.

This whole farrago starting to sound like Brock Clarke novel.

How can Birdman and The Humbling (not Danny Collins) both have the stars being locked out of their dressing rooms in their tighty whitey’s and fake suicide with guns, and literary reference — one with Ray Carver the other with Philip Roth.

Simon’s (Pacino) extraordinary dressing room soliloquy, during which he makes the first of the film’s many references to “King Lear,” is followed by a sequence eerily similar to a scene in “Birdman,” in which the main character accidentally locks himself out of his dressing room and has to convince disbelieving theater personnel that he is who he says he is. Not long after making it to the stage, Simon makes a suicidal dive into the orchestra pit that lands him a 30-day stay in a psychiatric hospital.

The Humbling based on 2009 book by Roth, reviewed in the Times then by Kathryn Harrison, best known for her book “While They Slept” about a Medford, OR case about a teenager bludgeoning his parents with an aluminum baseball bat, if that somehow fits here.

As my former purchase and one-time lunch partner (via Matt Gonzalez, at Just For You, a whiles back, such that it is no longer off the record, just off my rocker) would say:

I’m so confused. (Jonathan Richman, see below)

and worse: I used to confuse Al Pacino with Bob Dinero.

and: wish I had made this a tribute to Ernie Banks instead: let’s play two or make two movies on the same two or three gags.

and: we caught the large-headed end of “Biloxi Blues” on cable, wow! Neil Simon.

Kay Kosty at Angelica’s in RWC soonly.

This is worse than 3-dot. This is pixelated. Shotgun blast. Scattershot. Birdshot.

even oddlier this is a tribute to Jeff Golub, and his 2011 cd “The Three Kings” that featured my former client Henry Butler and was referenced indirectly today in The Times. He died of PSP, progressive supranuclear palsy.

I get Jeff Golub mixed up with Jeff Lorber.

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Ben Goldberg Orphic hit with 9 musicians at YBCA

Ben Goldberg and I spoke briefly the other day about his upcoming hit at YBCA, and he emphasized that this is the only live performance of a project with a new cd he recorded and his releasing Orphic Machine, featuring these nine players:

Carla Kihlstedt, violin and voice
Greg Cohen, bass
Kenny Wollesen, vibraphone
Ron Miles, trumpet
Ches Smith, drums
Nels Cline, guitar
Rob Sudduth, tenor saxophone
Myra Melford, piano
Ben Goldberg, clarinets

More on his site. More hopefully here, and better, later. Thanks again Ben for supporting Taylor Ho Bynum here in September, at Lytton Plaza, I have photo evidence. He say:

Orphic Machine was my biggest compositional project to date. I wrote around the clock for four months, completing a song cycle of ten movements, scored for nine musicians

The YBCA Yerba Buena Center Arts website is very confusing about this but he said Myra Melford artist in residence curated the music series which also has Henry Threadgill and Jenny Scheinman, and Matana Roberts on the post card we got.

Quote makes me EDITA that I libbed both Clockers the Richard Price 1992 novel and on DVD Spike Lee joint.

edit to add: the cd was reviewed by Nate Chinen in New York Times on April 28, 2015:
The high degree of difficulty on “Orphic Machine,” an enveloping new album by the clarinetist Ben Goldberg, has little to do with the formal intricacy or catalytic chemistry in his music.

The challenge comes from Mr. Goldberg’s inspiration for the album: “Summa Lyrica: A Primer of the Commonplaces in Speculative Poetics,” a book-length essay by Allen Grossman.

An influential work of poetic theory ever since its publication more than 20 years ago, it’s hardly a natural candidate for a musical adaptation. But Mr. Goldberg, who had Mr. Grossman as an undergraduate professor in the late-’70s, brings a light touch and a soulful ear. There’s little that rings emotionally heavy here, even though Mr. Grossman’s death last year at 82 imparts a whiff of elegy to this music.

Mr. Goldberg marshals some of the sharpest improvisers on the scene into a dynamic orchestra. Carla Kihlstedt, his fellow member of the style-blending chamber group Tin Hat, takes center stage through most of “Orphic Machine,” singing verses excerpted from the original text. That it works so bewitchingly is a testament to Ms. Kihlstedt’s coolheaded, unflashy singing, and to Mr. Goldberg’s graceful way with a melody. On “Immortality,” they even bring a sly sensuality to the first line of Mr. Grossman’s argument: “The function of poetry is to obtain for everybody one kind of success at the limits of the autonomy of the will.” (Yes, somehow it works.)

Ben Goldberg (clarinet) with Taylor Ho Bynum, earthwise productions at Lytton Plaza, fall, 2014:
hobynumgoldberg2014

edit to add, four years later, Taylor Ho Bynum comment on that little show at Lytton: although this post is before that:
In Palo Alto I had a fantastic time duetting in the plaza with the clarinetist Ben Goldberg, wild abstractions with echoes of Rex Stewart and Barney Bigard, harkening back to busking days long past. Our first time playing together but hopefully not our last, I felt an immediate aesthetic connection. The night before, another wonderful first time duo, with pianist Myra Melford. (I’ve played in her quartet in the past, but this was the first one-on-one.) She is a player of such strength and sensitivity, it was a real pleasure. I’ve been so lucky with the music across the board; every concert has been both inspiring and unique, each collaborator has given me something special, I am truly grateful.

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John Ellis LA-story w. Don Ellis ‘Whiplash’

My former client John Axson Ellis teaching Los Angeles area jazz futures via the Monk Institute and residency spring 2014 at art center

My former client John Axson Ellis teaching Los Angeles area jazz futures via the Monk Institute and residency spring 2014 at art center


Go, John! I didn’t realize.

Caveat: “hundreds” of recording credits is a big of a stretch: All Music Guide lists 138 credits which is closer to 42 sessions, still pretty busy dude, because that includes up to 5 each on his own cd- sax, clarinet, primary artist, composer. Actually John plays at least eight instruments: tenor, soprano, flute, bass clarinet, keys, that weird plastic toy thingy, ocarina, vocals.

Donny McCaslin meanwhile has 291 credits by that standard.

The internal search functions recommended this after I read an article about “Whiplash” the movie, which includes a cue drop from the Don Ellis performance of that Hank Levy song: John is not Don is not Dave or David. But has mos def carved out his niche (and Mos Def sang with him).
posted to site KCET by dude from Monk Inst

adn1:
The movie about Jazz “Whiplash” named for a Hank Levy (sax, composer) song, as performed by Don Ellis, back in the day:

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Jim Newton pen James Newton flute

Academic Jim

Academic Jim


Wah hoo wah not wah-who-cares? to Jim Newton the former Paly Campanile Editor, The Dartmouth publisher, James Reston intern and LA Times editorialist and his new job teaching or reaching at UCLA, our tax dollars at work (although I still like him as a Dartmouth trustee someday, taking the David Shipler tap — and how is that for a lead, editor?)

Minght I humbly suggest a collaboration with James Newton the flutist, also at UCLA, at the Herb Alpert School?

Last saw Jim — and his parents, and wifey, I think — at Fox Theatre Redwood City on panel with Leon Panette with whom he wrote a book. Prior to that he was with Kamala Harris the next Senator from California, on a book tour about Ike.

The Fourth Estate has taken a beating but we are down but not out.
Do you still have that little label pin of “Santa Claus”?

Music Jams

Music Jams

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Eartha Kitt as Catwoman w. Rene Marie ‘Lift Every Voice’

(Congrats to Rene Marie, aka Rene Marie Croan and Rene Marie Stevens for Grammy nomination for Motema Records. I met Rene Marie, with Pete Douglas and Reggie Marshall and a lovely pasta dinner in Half Moon Bay a few years ago, and then tried to deliver her a white paper on artist management, at SFO which was like the Neil Simon line “linguini? now it’s GAR-bage!!” although Reggie said it was “pretty good”. I think I also spied a video of Rene and her son, but not sure if it is the son who went to Stanford. You go, Ms! either way. She is up there with Sharon Jones as people wanting to take it back!!! As in, don’t take it, take it back!!)

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Kate Lee Short the Oculus w. Dave Ellis various

OR TO MY COI MISTRESS

This is already at PAC although even better around 8 tonight or so I hear or hope to

This is already at PAC although even better around 8 tonight or so I hear or hope to


Seven p.m. to approximately 7:20 finds me, lweatcdr, as opposed to weat, at Palo Alto Art Center, party for “Hear This” sculpture and rather hip noises, and perchance peeps, then I am off to my second home town, Saratoga (1968-1974), to watch the Mighty Titans pluck the Falcons –maybe I will bring some chicken wings, I saw them for sales at Whole Foods the one in Palo Alto although I will also be passing by or could be the even larger and cooler Whole Foods of Cupertino, where ironically enough I ran into Manny Cappello who owns or maybe founded Wing Stop and went to Gunn and is Saratoga Town Council, and bring, for comparison, wings from both places — same or different kitchen, they are probably surplussed from Packers-Seahawks, basketball, natch. I am watching Russell, Gil-Fernandez, Lee I mean Lee-H something, Lee-Heidenrich?, Lukas Dorward not his little brother killer crossover means he is a Vike, but on Varsity as a frosh, very rare, Noah Riley, who I mentioned to Pac-12 assistant coach and his forbear at QB Chris Strausser, and more.

But on the subject of chicken, there is Dave Ellis of North Carolina and Brooklyn, formerly known as SQWRM, and his installations of speakers, and now thanks to Karen Kienzle and KRew, or KREW but not KCRW, I would not expect, but maybe, if WWOZ of New Orleans can live-cast Danilo Perez at the Ace Hotel Panama City, sure KCRW Palo Alto, Kate Lee Short photo by Phil Bond, here installed and instigated for a minute, whose counting?

Dave Ellis on the left, with scarf and unknown friend, a whiles ago, i'm certain

Dave Ellis on the left, with scarf and unknown friend, a whiles ago, i’m certain

Shaggy dog or chicken story.

Revealer: Dave Ellis I I hardly know — I and I hardly know or a typo but he is not Dave Ellis the musician but his brother John Axson Ellis is my former client on sax and they grew up on a chicken farm or chicken farm church or such. LWEATDR is lord willing and the creek don’t rise and speaking of Carolina yes that was me who delivered Archers of Loaf in 1995 when Guadalupe Creek rose enough to cancel a Sharks match but these knuckleheads soldiered thru to the Cub and WEAT is not a radio call letter but an Andrew Marvel reference, “world enough and time”.

I am hoping to suss out Menlo Girls v. Pinewood Girls at Menlo at least the first half, 6 to 6:30 then PAC 645 to 715 then Titans Falcons in Saratoga –driving past my old abode, it was stucco not adobe, I wish I had an adobe abode, who wood knot? — for second half then back to cuddle with my baby if that is not TMI.

And sorry to learn of passing of John Milton the Shakespearan with the Cowboy Hat and the snakeskin boots, the Commie in the Mercedes again go figure. John joined my little indignant parade that crashed for 3 minutes each the PATC meeting, apropos of Free Speech at Lytton Plaza and a ban on…wait for it..amplifiers.

Evil be though my good >>> gourds be though my speaker cabinet.

And who did or to whom did i lend LEND NOT GIFT my VHS of Barnstormers that has custom painted exterior???

And where is the cord for my self-powered Crosley thru which I will augment my Tana-Franks-McCain panel?

hear this january 17 thru april 12, 2015 (dave ellis not yet appearing) at Palo Alto Art Center on Newell the former City Hall the former Palo Alto Cultural Center

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Terry and I at Cantor lecture imagining dinner

Allison gass and Alyson Shotz

Allison gass and Alyson Shotz


(I will have to update this and despite how it looks –and the vagaries of my handheld — we liked Alyson Shotz and her presentation and did not day dream about dinner. And that is not Terry and I in a 2-selfie but Alison Gass one L and an i and Alyson passing in front of her; I have an even worse or more faux naive shot of them, with a lady in front of me, another artist in residence I gather, obscuring them. I think that was Paul Berg the Nobel laureate sitting behind me, for part of the lecture, had a hand in Shotz installation at a Med School building, my next stop, to see it, for real).

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Laddie and me

IMG_20150122_173646479

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Tana, Franks and McCain confirmed for Palo Alto jazz panel

And then, neutralizing gravity with love and pure will, they remained suspended in air inches below the ceiling and they kissed each other for a long, long timeK.V.

Akira Tana, former Gunn QB and current producer of Grammy nominee jazz record, at Gunn 50-50 event, fall, 2015, semi-selfie by Mark Weiss, that's me not quite in frame

Akira Tana, former Gunn QB and current producer of Grammy nominee jazz record, at Gunn 50-50 event, fall, 2014, semi-selfie by Mark Weiss, that’s me not quite in frame

Three jazz musicians with local ties headline a panel discussion for the Palo Alto Historical Association (PAHA) monthly meeting Sunday, Jan. 25, 2015 at Lucie Stern ballroom on Middlefield, 2 to 4 p.m: Akira Tana, drummer, composer and producer; Rebecca Coupe Franks, trumpet, composer; and Seward McCain, bassist, composer. I am the producer of the event and will moderate the discussion (Mark Weiss, Earthwise Productions).

I promised myself I would do less blogging this week and more prep time and wood-shedding for the event. The event is fruition from a stint 18 months ago as “junior historian” or a type of residency when in fall, 2013 I spent every Tuesday and Thursday for a month combing thru the Guy Miller Archives “Music–Jazz” file at Cubberley and taking notes, then composing in a somewhat methodical albeit bombastic manner my thoughts on these topics, as one might find here, below, “Jazz time travels or jazz scribe contrafacts: From Fregulia to Full Faith and Credit or Back: The Geography of Hep” or something (“The Palo Alto Jazz Quintessence”). I am also, as a caveat, recalling David Shapiro telling us, Freshman Seminar on Christopher Marlowe, 1983 spring, that if you get to the point of titling your paper and you do not come up with a good title, maybe you have not said anything. Anyone?

Clearly it is interesting, for me at least, and jazz fans, to hear Akira Tana, Rebecca Coupe Franks and Seward McCain talk about their work, and maybe to try, as a moderator to draw them out in reference to each other — riffing on each other. But that is not necessarily the same thing as whether they are helpful or not in answering these questions: Is there a Palo Alto jazz sound? Or, is there a significant role in Palo Alto history for jazz? Or, even, is there a significant story about the role of Palo Alto in jazz history? Is it merely a set of unrelated data points or anecdotes? I mean, I hope there is, I have spent uncountable hours on this. I have written 20,000 words, or have cut and paste that many.

And yes I would rather be producing a concert per se, from 2 to 4 Sunday. I would rather listen to Akira Tana, Rebecca Coupe Franks and Seward McCain play together, not talk about playing. I’m sure they would, too. (In partial remedy, Rebecca is bringing her tool, her axe, her instrument, a trumpet, and will demonstrate it, if not a performance per se, a sounding or clarion call).

Rebecca Coupe Franks is a New York based musician and educator whose Dad went to Stanford and spent formative years here.

Rebecca Coupe Franks is a New York based musician and educator whose Dad went to Stanford and spent formative years here.

And you can see Akira Tana’s band Saturday, the night before, in San Jose, at Cafe Stritch (the former Eulipia, the former B-Hive), and Rebecca Coupe Franks apparently will sit in. And you can hear, in a not entirely unrelated matter, a concert Sunday night in Menlo Park, at M-A, a Woody Herman tribute band, including Seward McCain, produced by PAJA (sic, not PAHA), a tribute to Herb Wong, who did as much as anyone for Jazz in Palo Alto.

great club, great band

great club, great band

I am hoping that their respective and overlapping stories augment and not refute my work so far and suppositions about Palo Alto / Jazz history. I hope that people will contribute their recollections and insights and I can expand, before cutting back, like at Jazz For Hair, my shaggy-dog-story of a history. I can picture a chap book, like their publications on Parks, Street names, and libraries, by the history association about jazz here. I am generating, even if merely as an exercise or type of brain storming, a list of 500 Palo Alto “jazz memes” or tropes, or units of meaning: artists, visiting artists, educators, functionaries, journalists, venues and concepts. I have about 270 and counting. (My list doesn’t include yet Seward McCain — which says something about the role of a sideman, or just the arbitrary or preliminary nature of this; my bad; that I admit this here rather than sneaking him into the list says something: I consider the project less than half done, and want additions, corrections and expansion. No disrespect to Seward. I met him briefly at the Guaraldi event at CSMA Mountain View, Akira introduced us quickly).

Thanks in advance to the panelists and PAHA honchos Steve Staiger, Brian George (the technical producer of event, and its filmographer) Patty McKee and Beth Bunnenberg. And we are trying to synergize not cannibalize the Herb Wong event that evening.

I am saying, subjectively, — esoterically, even — that jazz history started in Palo Alto in 1968 when 16-year-old Danny Scher brought Thelonious Monk to play the Paly Theatre, weeks after MLK was slain, and ended the night that Nancy Shepherd, City Council, said from the dias how do we get people to stop asking us to intervene, to bring jazz back to the Varsity?. By that reckoning, what happened or heppened between 1769 and winter, 1968, was Palo Alto’s “prehistory of jazz” and what we are currently in –clearly this is true, that there is no real jazz scene here, no venues, no normal and ongoing experience and opportunity here for jazz music and jazz musickers , not that we cannot change and renew and Rebirth — is a “post-history of Palo alto jazz”. It’s a short summer, Charlie Blues. Hepdo?

Maybe that’s my title: “The Post-History of Palo Alto Jazz”. Or “Je Suis Charlie Blues”.

History is prologue, peoples.

Dig?

Seward McCain the prolific jazzman, from Palo Alto

Seward McCain the prolific jazzman, from Palo Alto


edit to add: and not that they actually need my take, in an hour each, on their three considerable stories, but I will try to update here a brief cheat sheet on Akira Tana, Rebecca Coupe Franks and Seward McCain, geared toward the PAHA regular who perhaps does not recall having heard them before. For now I just have links to their sites and photos. On Seward’s home page he has a gallery of 30 photos of he and roughly 30 people he plays with that serves as a type of visual history of jazz.

Akira Tana jazz musician is also one of only 2 or 3 people in the 50 year history of Gunn, maybe 20,000 people who can claim to have quarterbacked a league champion football team, Don Briggs being the other.

Akira Tana jazz musician is also one of only 2 or 3 people in the 50 year history of Gunn, maybe 20,000 people who can claim to have quarterbacked a league champion football team, Don Briggs being the other.

contextuals:
1) Danilo Perez in The New York Times, for his festival and ed efforts, reminds of his concert here, at Cub and amazing clinic for middle school kids Music For Minors, RWC. Archived at Cubberley here and here, by future fitness guru Renee Canada. A good example of the distinction between a Palo Alto artist, like Akira, RCF or Seward and “visiting artist”, Monk 1968 or Perez 2000 which contributes to jazz here, I believe.
2) postcard in mail from YBCA, Ben Goldberg Orphic Machine, only live play, he tells me, coming up in two weeks, curated by Myra Melford in residence;
3) Cafe Stritch has Marcus Shelby tonight, Akira Tana and New Friend RCF tomorrow, duly noted;
4) may sneak out to “Whiplash” to riff on that, but also boning up on Snoopy, Schroeder, “Franklin” et al, and my cords where are my cords? let alone chords. Richard Brody of the The New Yorker brutalizes it, but has info on comparables, and it does show at nice early 12:50 in Santa Clara and I should mention that I like the jazz score of “Birdman” if either of these are relevant to Akira Tana, or Dan Adams or Mike Clark, who knows? I gave a flyer to Tom McGannon, not a jazzbo but another Titan legend, and put one up at Cafe Zoe — that should be my trip today, putting flyers.
5) meanwhile in New York, The Times recommends these 18 shows: Charles Altura, Marc Cary, Mario Castro, Jimmy Cobb, Dan Weiss no relation, Dena Derose teaches at Stanford Jazz Workshop, Harris Eisenstadt, Connie Crothers born in Palo Alto and part of Evolving Music Series in Loisida; Vijay Iyer residency at Stone, but maligned in The Jazz Buff, Nettwork with Cyrus Chestnut, Northern Spy label at Sugarcube lower Manhattan Marc Ribot; Chris Potter including Mark Feldman I drove from Lytton Garden Hotel to Mem Aud, at Jazz Standard; vibraphonist Mark Sherman and in truth I only know about half these people; Wallace Roney, Pharaoh I mean Pharoah Sanders at dizzys; Christian Scott somebody’s nephew I actually called their to get the price $35 but $20 if you stand at the bar, Blue Note club, where I spent my 40th birthday with INT listening to Patti Barber; Vinnie Sperrazza, Colin Stranahan young buck drummer with Mark Turner fly met at Stanford; Vanguard Jazz Orchestra and I quote “Typically this big band — I could be pasting this in but I am not — holds court only on Monday nights, but next week it will celebrate its 49th anniversary — i.e. it’s as old as I am circa 1964 — drawing from a repertory fortified by some of the smartest composer-arrangers ever to ply the form. Case in point it’s current album ‘OverTime: The Music of Bob Brookmeyer — I met briefly at IAJE 2003 at suggestion of Ingrid Jensen — which is nominated –going against Akira Tana / Rufus Reid / Elizabeth Catlett / Jana Herzenberg in bigs cat — for a Grammy Award. The long run is welcome, because it presents the musicians with a chance to
6) I did a Memphis stop above because something disrupted me here at Peet’s but then left it because I really have prepped all I can at this point, 2 hours before my hit and I likes me some verismiitue but there was also supposed to be a weird pomo section where I quote from peoples greetings regrets and advice like Paul DeBarros saying he played with Seward and MG thusly:
1/it is ME who is traveling, starting tomorrow noon
2/I alerted Stuart Brewster, PAJA’s Chair, to your event, and yes, he knows Rebecca Franks and will attempt to be at the Sunday gig
3/you can mention me by name as long as you say that “Michael Griffin is a founding board member of the Palo Alto Jazz Alliance.”
4/PAJA is looking for a Talent Booker to find bands to perform at our twice-yearly concerts. Caveat: as a 501[c]3 non-profit, we are needing someone to do this job on a pro-bono basis. Sorry… Michael G excuse the sophist iced form of counting
7) that photo, me in reportage, that somehow got bounced for the photo of me holding a Mateo Romero painting:

by Steve Cohen, with Me, Terrigal Burn and David Brigham, at Dana Street 20014ish

by Steve Cohen, with Me, Terrigal Burn and David Brigham, at Dana Street 20014ish

edit to addle:
My cheat sheet for Sunday:

Akira
3/14/52, Pisces, 62
drums
(San Carlos, CA)
2004: Moon Over The World
150 recordings has played on, his website says
Harvard, New England Conservatory
adjunct professor at two colleges
producer, “Quiet Pride: The Elizabeth Catlett — 1915-2012 — Project” Rufus Reid f/ Tanya Darby, on Jana Herzen(berg)’s Motema Records
AMG lists 5 cds as leader and 223 total credits
also: Ontonowa Sound Circle co-led 2013 benefit cd for victims of 2011 earthquake and tsunami in Northern Japan with Art Hirahara and Masura Koga; he traveled there twice since then

Rebecca (& Her Groovemobile, RCF)
trumpet
(Stone Ridge, New York — Hudson Valley)
3 cds as a leader “Two Oceans” 2013 plus is recording now
New School
daughter Ella Sky Coupe Franks
All Music Guide lists short bio and 6 cds as a leader
“All of A Sudden” (1992) w/ Scott Colley (b), Javon Jackson (guest, ts), Donny McCaslin; Justice Records. This was Donny McCaslin’s first credit, or one of 3 that year, and he now has 291, 12 as a leader. They met in Santa Cruz. I think she also said she and Steven Bernstein competed for same seat in Monterrey Jazz Festival student all star band, or were both honored. Also: Jeff Ballard, drums. Knows from coast the 831.

Seward
bass
PALO ALTO, CALIFORNIA
“Seward’s Folly” (2010)
AMG lists 38 credits
plays with Mose Allison, Maria Muldaur, Full Faith and Credit Big Band, Vince Guaraldi
married to vocalist Wendy McCain
AT drums on his cd.
#2 Vic’s Tricks – – who is Vic?
#5 Sacrophagus — about Stanfords? I posted this somewhere that it was.
Peanuts Portraits, at Children’s Library

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Jack Del Rio and Lisa M. Snyder

Raider coach jack Del Rio

Raider coach jack Del Rio


Vic Tafur page 1 the Chron has a puff piece on former Hayward High great Jack Del Rio, 51, the new Raiders head coach. I distinctly recall asking my former The Dartmouth colleague Lisa M. Sndyer, a Hayward ’83 about Jack, back in the day. I first heard of Jack Del Rio because he was on an all-star team, real or journalistic, with my teammate Kent Lockhart.

I actually rang Lisa Snyder, now an attorney in Boston, to try to get her reminiscences about Jack. Or just to hear myself talk on her voice mail play-back. I may have seen Lisa at the 200th anniversary of student press at Dartmouth, circa 1997 or the reunion of “The D” staffers in New York circa 1998, or at one of the two reunions I went to that include my and her classes, more or less.

Someone once said journalism or writing is sitting down, taking out a razor and letting yourself (metaphorically, not literally) bleed; that plus a certain amount of sussing around the internet and free long distance cell phone calling, well I get a kick out of this.

I wish I could say I thought of Lisa Snyder while watching Kathleen Turner portray Molly Ivans at Berkeley Rep but that might be what Mark Twain would call “a stretcher”.

edit to add: here are links to the article and also to a law firm page connected to Lisa. I hope she at least does not object to me writing about her, even so indirectly. The best would be if, despite her busy schedule, she wants to call me back —

and1, or the heart of the matter: I did hear back from Lisa Snyder, managing partner of her law firm, married for 20 years to our schoolmate Jeff Foster (not Jeff Hoover and not Foster the musician in Shaggy and the Hackers) who shared, for 20 minutes (costing her firm about $300 or more dollars, I’m sure) warm and vivid memories of overlapping even for two years, Jack Del Rio at Hayward High. She is not a sports fan, but said her uncle mentioned to her Jack’s big news. She knew him not, as surmised, via the student newspaper — Tafur reports that in addition to 3 sports Del Rio was sports editor — but Spanish class.

“He wrote in my yearbook, ‘Gracias, Isabella’ — that’s my name in Spanish — ‘for helping me get thru Spanish!'” Snyder says, 34 years later. I made a joke about Chaos Theory and the Butterfly Effect, positing that if not for that there might be no USC scholarship, no Saints, Chiefs, Cowboys, Vikings and Jaquars and Jack Del Rio might be merely a popular P.E. Teacher at his Alma Mater. (Actually, what I did not get to, but it flashed thru my mind — and although we quickly glossed our colleagues Scott Rafshoon, Ellen Glaser, Esther Schrader, Keith Boykin, Stevie Losee, Ben Clements, Mike Pinneault, — and it is a bit of a red herring, even by Plastic Alto standards, but The Dartmouth Alumni Magazine reports that Brad Ausmus, Dartmouth ’91, that is to say, not overlapping with Lisa or I, now a Major League Baseball manager, was called by Professor Roger Masters one of the ten most memorable students, that even though he was a jock — and signed to the bigs, and did not play for Dartmouth — I am talking Brad Ausmus not Jack Del Rio, if you excuse me, and Del Rio did catch Randy Johnson, of Livermore, at USC baseball — Ausmus was very scholarly, and definitely fit to manage athletes and sport as a business.

I am sure that Jack Del Rio has a lot of those same qualities, of Lisa, the law firm manager, and Ausmus the former A-cite govy student, and wish him all the best. I may actually take in a game, first time since Alex Cheng, Jim Gonzales and I took in Raider-Broncos circa 1988. My dad took me to about 20 Raiders games between 1974 and 1978, and I have an autograph book to prove that.

I suggest Lisa Snyder hit up Jack Del Rio for seats to the next Raiders-Pats game in Foxboro — even if she’s not a fan, it could in theory generate business for her firm. Or more immediately hit him up when you come back to visit family here in the Bay Area and your firm’s Manion Gaynor Manning’s SF office. That how we roll, sister.

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