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Earthwise / Cubberley sax legend joins Rolling Stones tour

A hot young girl, on the phone with her friend, over the counter, somewhere on Castro exclaimed “This is a sick poster!” I recall, after 18 years; the photo was ripped from NYT Sunday Mag
In fall of 2014, down under, Denson did a series of shows with Rolling Stones, precipitating a few cancellations of his Tiny Universe in San Diego.
Yes I know that is actually Savion Glover in the poster. Worse than that, this is actually an obituary for Bobby Keys, 70.
edita: update on Savion from 2005
George Varga with San Diego U-T and the skinny.
off the top o fmy heard other sax legends who played my Cub shows: David Ellis, Kenny Brooks, Steve Lacy, Jacques Swartz-black, Lester “Ska” Sterling, Dayna Stephens at age 16 sitting in with Rob Lederer’s Number Nine or Numba Nine, Donny McCaslin with Danilo Perez, NOKAS featuring Galactic Ben Ellman, David Boyce broun fellini, shit even Pat Monahan of Train whipped out his axe January 27, 1999.
good on Ska my fellow Aquarius skankin’ on at age 78 — I recall him curled up on two folding chairs in the kitchen slash green room of Cubberley Auditorium the former high school cafeteria The Toasters show, 1996 summer and here is sad words about his drummer some:
A self-taught musician who started out playing two condensed milk tins between his feet, their drummer Lloyd Knibb was credited with inventing the shuffling, syncopated “ska beat” when recording with the legendary Studio One producer Coxsone Dodd, who encouraged him to really push the horn section. “I go in the studio and I start with the burru style [of Rasta drumming] until I get on the second and fourth beat, everything down, and putting the rest of the stuff in there,” Knibb recalled. “The second and fourth beat was the direct beat, and Coxsone say ‘Yeah’ and that was it.”
His trademark rimshots, Latin-inspired rolls and hi-hat figures propelled the Skatalites’ sole UK hit, their joyous adaptation of the film theme to The Guns Of Navarone, later revived by The Special AKA on their 1980 chart-topping Live EP. Indeed, the Skatalites often drew on the cinema for their repertoire, and recorded versions of the Exodus, The Third Man and the James Bond themes, and covers of the Beatles – “I Should Have Known Better”, “This Boy” – alongside their own exotically-named compositions, “Addis Ababa”, “China Town”, “Confucius” and “Eastern Standard Time”.
Knibb also helped name the group after his space-age suggestion, Satellites, was trumped by the tenor saxophonist Tommy McCook who stated: “No, we play ska – the Skatalites.”
Between 1962 and 1966, Knibb was said to have played on 90 per centof the records coming out of Jamaica, slowing the tempo down from skato rock steady and again into the reggae era. “Same kind of beat, second and fourth. The three stages of the music,” he said. Knibb hit the drums so hard that he developed a large callus, or “corn” as he called it, on his hand. “Anyone seriously playing the ska for a long time must have a corn like this,” he remarked.
Born in Kingston in 1931, he spent much of his teens working with his aunt making and selling patties and puddings. Living in the Trenchtown area he became fascinated by the Rastafarians playing goat skin drums on street corners. He also followed Donald Jarrett, drummer with the jazz band led by the trumpeter Sonny Bradshaw. In the late 1940s he began playing professionally, with the Val Bennett Orchestra and then with Eric Deans, another dance band leader mixing big-band jazz, calypso, rumba, Cha-cha-cha and bolero to entertain foreign visitors.
This versatility would stand Knibb in good stead. “I put everything in the ska music,” he said. “From rock’n’roll and rhythm and blues, we just change to ska. And everybody just catch on to the beat and like the beat. And everybody record, everybody from Bob Marley – ‘One Cup of Coffee’ – I remember that. All them, Owen Gray, Delroy Wilson, Alton Ellis, you name them all, they pass through our hands.”
By the time the Skatalites made their live debut, at the Hi-Hat Club in June 1964, they were effectively a supergroup of the session musicians used by the sound system operators-turned- producers Dodd and Duke Reid, as well as by many of their competitors, Prince Buster, Leslie Kong, Lyndon Pottinger and Justin Yap.
Led by McCook, who had been the most reluctant to join, they comprised Don Drummond (trombone), Johnny “Dizzy” Moore (trumpet) and Lester “Ska” Sterling (alto saxophone) – all four had attended the Alpha Boys School run by Sister Mary Ignatius Davies, the “nun who nurtured reggae” – as well as Roland Alphonso (tenor saxophone), Lloyd Brevett (double bass), “Jah Jerry” Haynes (guitar), Jackie Mittoo (keyboards) and Knibb. In between recording sessions,the Skatalites played all over theisland, often with the featured vocalists Jackie Opel, Doreen Schaefer and Lord Tanamo.
Sadly, their progress was interrupted when the mentally unstable Drummond stabbed his girlfriend Marguerita Mahfood to death on New Year’s Day 1965 (he died in an institution four years later). The Skatalites soldiered on until August that year but splintered into two groups, Rolando Alphonso and the Soul Vendors, and Tommy McCook & the Supersonics, the one Knibb chose. However, he then spent nigh on two decades drumming on Caribbean cruise ships and in the holiday resorts of Montego Bay and Ocho Rios.
The ska revival of the late 1970s and early ’80s saw the British 2-Tone acts – the Specials, Madness, The Selecter – cover tunes originated by the Skatalites, and introduced the group to a new generation of fans, including the US ska-core acts that followed, Fishbone, No Doubt and the Mighty Mighty Bosstones. The Skatalites duly reformed to play the Reggae Sunsplash concert in Montego Bay in July 1983, appeared in London the following year, and began recording again.
Knibb was one of the prime movers behind their Grammy-nominated albums Hi-Bop Ska and Greetings From Skamania in the 1990s and their on-going popularity as a worldwide touring act. He played his last concert with them last month, leaving Sterling as the only founder member still in the group. Brevett, the other surviving Skatalite, quit in 2005.
In recent years, Knibb lived in Massachusetts. After being told by doctors in Boston that he had three days to live, he travelled back to Jamaica to be among family and friends and succumbed to cancer of the liver there. His son leads the Boston-based ska band Dion Knibb & The Agitators.
Lloyd Knibb, drummer: born Kingston, Jamaica 8 March 1931; married (five children); died Kingston 12 May 2011.
and back to Denson, here is PAW of the day, the concert was on Sept. 11:
Earthwise Productions has done quite well with young, pop-oriented jazz bands–and, hey, why mess with success? After scoring with the likes of the Charlie Hunter Quartet, T.J. Kirk, Broun Fellinis and Medeski, Martin and Wood, Earthwise chief Mark Weiss has booked the Greyboy All-Stars into the Cubberley Community Center, 4000 Middlefield Road, Palo Alto, for Wednesday, Sept. 11. The Greyboy All-Stars are a San Diego-based jazz unit which appeared on the “Get Shorty” soundtrack. The band features young lion Karl Denson on sax, flute and vocals.
As Earthwise kicks into the Fall of ’96, the stakes have been raised. Weiss said that last year, the goal was to sell out one show. Now, the goal is to sell out every show. Advance tickets are $8. Tickets sold at the door will be $10. Music starts at 9 p.m. For more information, call 949-xxxx.
(well, we sold out our share….#@&^)
and by the way, Charlie Hunter had 5 Cubberley hits with five different combos: Trio, Quartet, Quintet, Pound for Pound and TJ Kirk — look for an update with actual personnel, ok will try: Charlie Hunter, Dave Ellis, Scott Amendola, Will Bernard, John Schott, Calder Spanier, Stephon Harris, John Santos, Stanton Moore, Charles McKinnon — I am giving Scotty every drum hit except for Pound for Pound. Def this was the only venue, fall, 1995 that had on same bill TJ Kirk and CHT.
Palo Alto Times shout
Inhabiture site is also original home of Palo Alto Times which the Weekly never mentions because they want to pretend there is no such thing as real journalism just their kowtowing to the powers that be, mostly the landlords.
Darryl Savage I think is talking about retail but most of the posters are talking land use, density, ARB.
I worked for the Peninsula Times Tribune twice. As a stringer, $20 per story covering high school not Gunn football in fall 1981 and then 10 weeks as intern in 1984, winter, actually six weeks as intern and “Nelson Rockefeller Center Fellow for Public Policy from Dartmouth” and then hired on for $100/ week after that.
Also, my classmates from Gunn Nancy Sarpa and Marsh McCall both worked for PTT at the end. Nancy is now assistant city manager in Palm Springs or nearby and Marsh is comedy writer and producer in Hollywood, “Just Shoot Me” his biggest yet far from only claim to fame.
I should try to write more about those 10 weeks at PTT. I think I can name 30 people I met there. The other writers.
Cyber-attack on Jon Wurster, Hey-ahh!!!
A couple days ago a younger person asked me if I had heard of Har Mar Superstar. Of course: kind of writes songs, kind of on a label , had a cameo in a movie, a dance-off. (I had to search-injun to fill in the actual detes, frinstance “starsky and hutch”, kill rock stars).
Well, in all seriousness, Jon Wurster may be a better dancer than Har Mar. There was something at the end of one of the earlier Superchunk videos, an all dance at lib moment, and I recall saying, and this is before I knew he was funny “Jon’s a a pretty good dancer.”
Obviosly, if he is the drummer he is reasonably fit and has some rhythm. Natch.
It reminds, in the typical Plastic Alto Shaggy Dog style, that there was a band in Sf in the indie heyday called Pee, lead by Kelley Green, kind of a hottie, not quite pure Colma Deena, and they were managed by Kevin Arnold, who went on to co-found, with Jordan Kurland, back when Jordan had dreadlocks, Noise Pop. Anyways, Kelly was interviewed, maybe by Bill Crandall in Big Whoop! — damn, I’m good! — and she said that when auditioning drummers she looked for the guy who looks like he is boning, you know, having sex. (Some people call it the “O-face”, fyi, N.B. omg). Well, she chose, Andy or Andee Conner of A Minor Forest, a real banger.
Anyways, Jon kinda looks like that.
I think I slept in Jon’s bed once. He was on the road. Maybe Lane did not clear this with Jon. There was also a guy named Ed from Firehose or something whose day job was selling soccer gear by mail. They sent me a Christmas card with just their faces, and their pets: Greetings from the Cats from Cavender. Out on ol’86. Jon had next to his bed a poster from France with caricatures of the four Superchunks as seen by the French: he, Mac, Laura and Jon Wilbur, a school teacher from Connecticutt who joined the band after Jack McCook killed Kurt Cobain and ran away to be Richard Kimball’s roadie, in the off-Broadway traveling version of “The Fugitive” music by Judah Bauer.
Is this is good place to strip in that I want to hear a band Called Hairy Who because John Corbett in Chicago made a doc about them? It played the Roxie on 16th and Valencia last month but I just heard about it yesterday, saw the flyer or old catalog actually.
I will probably have to redact the really bad taste joke about McCook, but it is true that Cobain was listening to Superchunk when he offed himself, firing two shotgun blasts into his head and then Courtney Love the harpie did call around Chapel Hill trying to find McCook, who actually does look like Cobain if you squint a bit.
Jon Wurster has a new project, The Jon Wurster Grey Explosion. It’s also known as Drumb and Drumber with Jon Wurster. I thought of both of those in the shower, this very a.m. Terry asked me to drive her to work on the account of the showers, real showers, she normally rides her bike. I was up a few minutes earlier than usual so I look tired. And oddly, she said I was talking in my sleep. I know I was dreaming, but I didn’t know that I was perturbed. I’m usually the last to know. I know I wanted to say or do something about the PAPD who was caught sexting pictures of a sexy or at least laughably trashy suspect – he searched her phone. I think we should fire him and our police auditor. So it took me 3 tries to get this selfie:
Here is the “Dancing Rick” video, which at the time made me think of Jon Wurster, of Starsky and Wuster fame.
I may also strip in is it Jon Heder of Napoleon Dynamite? who dances well and someone always makes me think of Jon Wurster. There is something I am not quite recalling or matching the feeling at the time, the cluelessness to my actual state of wisdom: when I heard about Superchunk, first from McCook, who I met thanks to or trying to help Jim Yardley, and then I caught a glimpse of them surprisingly on MTV — I don’t really watch MTV — and then The New York Times had an article — maybe by Neil Strauss, before he became the Makeout King — about indie rock and i somehow found a number for Bob Lawton and Jim Romeo in New York, the original Twin Towers Touring – and this was before I got the idea of putting on shows, but was merely a frustrated advertising writer who thought he needed to stay current, and could ring whoever and bug them – I called the agency and Jon Wurster happened to be there, only I didn’t understand that at first, and in fact I thought I was talking to a girl. I mean yeah, sometimes I talk high in my register, especially if I am tapping some kind of Yiddish Vaudeville “recessive gene” — did Jim Harbaugh actually say he has a recessive gene for worry? — but and now I cannot recall if I asked Lane about this or not. I used to underestimate Jon Wurster to say the least. I mean really, I like Jon Wurster. I want him to play a solo show here, part of Earthwise@20, just he and his kit, no jokes even. I did something like this for Leon Parker; maybe Jon Wurster can study that tape for ideas. So here is a second selfie, not to be self-absorbed but in humility because I look stupid; it took me six takes to get the one I put above, the keeper. The shirt says “fear the tree” about Stanford basketball although paid for by a bank. It also says “art” if you cover up the first two and the last six characters.
Maybe I can have Jon Wurster Drum Machine or whatever –I’m sure he can find a better name, now that I’ve got him started — “whats so funny about that?” is a lyric from the ‘chunk cd I did find last night in my messy apartment / man cave /office, from “hyper enough” headline a show and get Bob Mould to open, maybe unbilled, both for scale both for MFN and then, as part of the rider it says that Earthwise will pay for mani-pedis. For all three of us. Such is the stuff of dreams.
Posted in chapel hill
Tagged hairy who, har mar superstar, jon wurter, starsky and hutch
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Betty Soo new sounds and buzz out of Austin
My friend and colleague Laura Thomas of ComboPlate booking in Austin, Texas sends glad tidings about Betty Soo new cd.
Stay tuned.
edit to add, two months later, although I still have not had the chance to hear this, or Jan. 25, 2015 or three days before my birthday i.e. my “birthday week” and I’ll cry if I want to, cry out vox clamantis en caffeine-frenzy: I thought of you, BettySoo because later today I am interviewing in front of an audience jazz musician Seward McCain — and Akira Tana, and Rebecca Coupe Franks — and flashed to your joke about your brother being a boy named Sue in the proverbial Johnny Cash Shel Silverstein sense and I am wondering if I can get away with calling him “Sew”or asking if he had thought of arranging for jazz “ABNS”, but I also hedged my bet by texting Akira “Do you think he will mind if I dub him ‘Love Sew-preme’??” — it’s a Coltrane reference. Also, I see that you are playing this week at Gruene with Michael Fracasso and Curtis McMurtry two other Combo Plate acts I have promoted here, and it reminds me I am derelict in never having do the same with or for you. You might recall meeting me at Flipnotics and or that I bought two copies of your benefit cd in honor of my doctor friends in the Midwest.
Here’s another pic, which could be the cover of a Brian Wilson Beach Boys cover album:
and this link is to a recent, SXSW 2014 — to my most recent SXSW2009 — showcase, “Still Small Voice” albeit slightly upstaged by her slide guitar player, name of ______ (check back to fill that blank)
and1, and this is probably a non-sequiter but I do know another Korean-American performing artist that this does apply to plus I briefly managed the blues singer Lara Price who was adopted from Vietnam and returned eventually to find her roots, The New York Times Magazine, cover story on this topic. Maybe BettySoo not that she needs A&R ideas from me can do a song suite derivative of this study or topic or work, or maybe, since I admit I have not heard her new cd, she already has. Link. By Maggie Jones
Posted in austistic, media, music, sex
Tagged austin, betty soo, comboplate, laura thomas, maggie jones, seward mccain
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No Harbaugh, no cry
”I don’t worry about my future,” Harbaugh said. ”Haven’t participated in any of that speculation. I think I have a recessive gene for worrying about my own future.”
This makes no sense unless you have been reading about the Plastic Alto version of Jim Harbaugh, which is influenced by the 1982 Gunn of Palo Alto Oracle (aka The Crapanile, on April 1, 1982);
Harbaugh may end up quitting football to join Don Carlos band and become Reggae Angel Golden Eagle Harbaugh also known as “Rage”.
my professional opinion, 20 years in music biz (“earthwise@20” or for you porn-heads “e@rhthXXise”) and watching Harbaugh but never actually swatting him for 35 years, he could easily hold down the Beadbrain Purple Skull Shaker slot in Yasmin’s band:

Posted in Plato's Republic, Uncategorized
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From The Gefilte Files
just so you know, i am not taking credit for coining the term “gefilte files” actually what we need is a bad spellcheck function that terms common english typos into suggested dirty yiddish jokes
An apres-travaille treat!
I’ll have you know I busted a nut making this, just to be Jew-Cool. Oh, and dig the Miami Plate!
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Sexting cases and PAPD
If you follow the link the auditors’ report states that the PAPD officer’s actions “easily left someone with the impression that it was sent as a joke.” Worse than that, it would be reasonable to assume from that act that our police are involved in a corrupt conspiracy to recruit women for human trafficking rings.
For more on the topic:
Web Link
The Weekly’s report:
Palo Alto police officer disciplined for texting photo of ‘scantily clad’ arrestee by GS, November, 2014
Global Initiative to Fight Human Trafficking
http://www.ungift.org link
I searched the terms “police involved in sex trafficking” and got this cite pretty quickly: the implication is that the rings involve bribery of law enforcement.
Click to access TI-Working_Paper_Human_Trafficking_28_Jun_2011.pdf
Not that she is involved in this case, or that this is a case of trafficking or corruption – the auditor Michael Gennaco says this is under control – but the wife of the former mayor of Palo Alto, I am talking about Yiaway Yeh and Cecilia Mo , she wrote her thesis on sex trafficking, more on an international level than in the U.S. They moved to Nashville where he works for their mayor and she teaches at Vandy — might be interesting to see what she or they think here.
Another article, i.e. not The Weekly, quotes Molly Stump Palo Alto city attorney as claiming that this case is distinct in certain ways as in less troublesome than the case involving California Highway Patrol Sean Harrington of Martinez. That link, about the CHP.
Matthias Gafni, a former Editor of UC Davis Aggie, wrote about both cases, Harrington and PAPD recently for The Mercury News.
Posted in media, Plato's Republic, sex
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Schapling and Wurster stole their act from me
A whiles ago I sent a fake fan letter to Superchunk:
Dear Mac-
Enclosed is my toe nail. Can you use it as a guitar pick on “Hyper Enough?
Thanks. Your biggest fan.
Elton X. Schmerk
Fairloaf, California
I wrote about three of these (discontinuing the body parts theme). I wrote the exact fake return address in my real address book, to ensure some consistency. I read somewhere that Jon mentioned this “we have a guy writing us fake fan letters” in a real fanzine, maybe the one run by Scharpling.
Oddly, I never even realized Jon was super-funny until his work for WFMU. I am not saying Jon is not funny. Certainly he is funnier than me, and a better drummer. But who knows where ideas come from, right?
And truth be told I tell a lot of people that I got the idea of being a concert promoter from Superchunk. Jim Yardley called me out of the (tar heel) blue and asked me to show leaving-member Jack McCook in about 1992 around SF, and that’s one of the reasons I started following Superchunk2 (the one with Jim Wilbur, that still exists).
Anyhow if anyone besides my 33 readers reads this and wants to chime in, under real or fake names, in characters or au natural, that would be super-great.
I’m working I am just not working for you >>> I am not working for you, you are just stealing my ideas.
We cool because Mac wore my Cubberley Sessions shirt at GAMH, the one with the old or possibly ersatz Chicago Cub logo circa 1910 the one on the Mordecai “Three-Finger” Brown Gold Border.
edit to add, a few minutes later: i check, using internal search function, to learn that I mention “wurster” 18 times in the first 1,080 posts although most of them are lame. There is one from Feb, 2012 about a Russian linguist at Stanford named Lera where I digress to something where I pretend to confuse Scharpling and Wurster with Coyle and Sharpe.
and1:
Posted in chapel hill, ethniceities, media, music
Tagged chuck berry, jon wurster, mal sharpe, scharpling, superchunk, wfmu
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