Do Talking Dogs enjoy the First Amendment?

After the excellent Kiwanis’-sponsored Palo Alto May Fete Parade (90th) and Fair(1st) Saturday, I had lunch with Council Member Karen Holman at Peninsula Creamery. As a convenience to our server, I had what she’s having, a BLT on rye with extra pickles. Actually she had six pickle chips and I had two as I thought I did not like pickles on my BLT and gave away mine to her. (We otherwise had separate checks and I paid my own way and did not try to bribe her, nor did I even bring up either TLPW456 – -the Save the Varsity Theatre campaign — nor music at Lytton Plaza, the two debates I am most known for talking about here; I almost make a joke about becoming a lobbyist in that I believe that the Gunn High School gym and the Cubberley Theatre should have nicer lobbies).

What we did talk about was the viral Youtube video about the talking dog, the one who enjoys bacon, especially “the maple kind.” She had not seen it but said she would open the link if I sent it to her. She had said that she could possibly live on a diet of vegetables and bacon, as a modified vegetarian.

Our conversation if not our meal per se was joined by Dennis Backlund of the City of Palo Alto, a planner and preservationist. We did not discuss that it was Dennis who saved the Varsity from worse desecration in 1995 when it was converted to a chain bookstore. (I think Dennis was an activist at the time, although Karen was not yet a Planning Commissioner; council voted narrowly to give the landlord a variance and permit the conversion of the historic and beloved theatre).

We talked about a small article in a local paper about what I call although the article did not “limited public forum” under which we the people have the right to stop, for example, a white supremacist from disrupting Palo Alto Players at Lucie Stern, in the house or in the lobby, and that I think it is the same doctrine that thankfully prevents us from being solicited on our way to catch our flights, at the airport; there “freedom of speech” is limited to a booth or counter so designated.

I said I saw something in The New York Times about Occupy protests at Lincoln Center in New York City being restricted even though the message of the protesters dovetailed nicely with the message of the performance. Actually, if you search the terms “Satyagraha” plus “limited pubic forum” I am only the third author to discuss this topic. “Satyagraha” is a work by Philip Glass and means “truth force.” It’s an opera about Gandhi.

Karen Holman was impressed that I recalled that Brown vs. The Board of Education, from 1954, was set in Topeka, Kansas, which we thought, us three, was the same city from which those rather mean-spirited church-goers sent a delegation to protest recently in front of Gunn High; I have no idea how to further connect the coincidence, even though I brought it up.

I did say that I would rather live in a country that, for example, permitted the Nazis to march or gather in Skokie, Illinois than one wherein a panel would discuss and decide who could talk and who would be gagged.

The talking dog is cute when he talks but I do not believe he is therefore a person, nor does he enjoy the First Amendment right to speak.

Similarly, at least in Plastic Alto logic, I do not think corporations are people. They should not enjoy the First Amendment rights.

Further Palo Alto should join Mountain View and many, many other local municipalities and issue a resolution about Citizen’s United, a Supreme Court case that seems to want to give corporations the rights that I enjoy and in their case (but not in mine) let them give millions and billions of dollars to affect elections and undermine democracy (more so than my two small pickle-chips).

Briefly put (and see Jeff Clements and his book “Corporations Are Not People” for a better description), in 2003, with Sandra Day O’Conner and William Rehnquist and not John Roberts nor Alito, the Supreme Court said corporations could not give unlimited soft money to influences elections. In 2010 the Supreme Court said the opposite, and many many Americans find this troubling, or a huge pernicious threat to the Republic.

It is quite a pickle.

edit to add: this is slightly off topic, but as a lagniappe I offer Palo Altan George Packer in  The New Yorker, on Occupy “All the Angry People” from December, 2011.

edit to add, a few minutes later: if you are a lawyer or a teacher, you are probably giving me partial credit for my use of “limited pubic forum”. Wiki I think has a more thorough and more accurate set of distinctions.  And to break it down I am comparing in a whimsical way the utterances of a dog, a dog owner, a giant-media-owned content service and device, the Supreme Court, a large web-based market for books, a prosecutor turned author and activist, a white supremacist, a local newspaper, past and present Chief Justices and Associate Justices, a local resolution on a national issue, an opera, some protestors, among others, and Yours Truly.

And last I found an author and activist in Detroit named Adrienne Maree Brown who wrote about Citizens United and calls her blog “the Luscious Satyagraha“.

edit to add, October, 2o12: I write about Citizens United briefly on my Palo Alto City Council campaign blog — I am running for office — “Svayambh-PA: Or, The New Residentialist Platform“. I also commented on Palo Alto Weekly article on such.

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Harbaugh Monologue debut at Philz

I am not actually a comedian just a guy trying to work out my issues with Jim Harbaugh, who is or was a great athlete but I had to guard him in basketball in 1982 and just never really got him.

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Can’t stand it…sabotage

At first, 1988, living at Montgomery and Vallejo, I did not like or get The Beastie Boys, and they made me feel kind of embarrassed, especially as a Jew. By the time I saw them at Oakland Coliseum, around 2000 or so, (1998)I thought that, like the Beatles, every single performance or even layer-of-track was signficant.

New York Times breaking the news of the death to cancer of Adam Yauch, at 47.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z5rRZdiu1UE

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Chip Hoopers top 100

I only recently checked out the Billboard Power 100 top people in the music biz and found that I think I have heard of 29 of them.

Cannot say I have relationship with any of them but I want to shout out to Chip Hooper the founder of Monterey Peninsula Agency which became part of Paradigm.

Chip Hooper is also the name of a famous tennis player from here in Palo Alto and Gunn High.

There is also a photographer named Chip Hooper who may or may not be the same guy as the agent.

I named my Fantasy Football team The Chip Hoopers for a while, mainly because two or three of the guys in our league are tennis pros, and know or knew the real Chip Hooper (plus, Chip’s brother played football for Stanford; plus a couple of us played high school hoops together; plus I am from Chi-town and am kind of phoopy: my Chip Hoopers the team sometimes went by The Chi Phoopers).

For a while I had a list of sound alike cultural forces: Steve McQueen actor and black director; Penelope Houston the punk lady American and British film critic, et cetera. I thought the list could be the basis for an interesting Errol Morris type film. (Almost everything I do has a little “Fast Cheap and Out of Control”).

I might be in the data base of the former MPA that Chip Hooper runs; I bought some stuff from Frank Riley when he was part of their enterprise; his assistants maybe two of them rose to be agents and I have met or sent offers to, those of Frank.

When Shia Geminder was on City of Palo Alto special events staff I always said I was going to figure out a way to get his favorite band some kind of a special date here, but it never happened. Sorry, Shia and good luck wherever you are, and thanks for all your public service here. His band is a Chip Hooper client named O.A.R. of a revolution:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HnGY9-xqKpc

edit to add: Chip Hooper the agent is #43 in the world, according to Billboard, while Chip Hooper the tennis star was once #17 in the world, although he was only #4 on this high school team at Gunn High in Palo Alto, California, during Gunn’s national record 200 match ten-season unbeaten streak, around 1977. The agents who are still with Paradigm that I claim to have met or sent offers to our named Lynn Cingari and Jackie Nalpant.

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Bird is the word effigy Cochiti

(this does not work at all but for a minute there, for 1:21, there was what I found a charming effect where the woman would demonstrate a Bird Effigy while, if you open both videos, the band would play “Bird is the Word” song…not sure why it now loads to Santa Domingo Dough bowls video…)

 

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Sharon Jones please help Sharon Jones

I am writing the artist manager Alex Kadvan to suggest that his client Sharon Jones (of The Dap Kings) appear or speak out on behalf of Sharon Jones of Arkansas who apparently is being swindled out of her lottery winnings by corrupt and greedy store owner, in cahoots with corrupt and greedy lawyers and one judge.
Meanwhile, here is the luckier Sharon singing a Guthrie cover, here in SF, at Amoeba. Thirteen thousand people have already commented on this at Yahoo news. A thousand people and one hot in house newsreader comment on Huffington Post, but how many have come up with this happy ending? (They can agree to split the money but give some to Sharon Jones and the Dap Kings for a big free concert, uniting the Battling Sharons on stage the way Bob Marley brought together the two warring rulers of Jamaica; I am digressing from digressing but somebody smarter than me, or Stew and Uri Caine together, should write about Jamaica in the 1970s but as a Shakespeare history knock-off, with music, Bob and bob-ish, and maybe Dap-ish; Marley as Othello, with Manley as Iago; or Marley as Hamlet; but I said history not tragedy).

I met Kadvan when Antibalas played Makor, circa 2001, and then again a year or so later at Yerba Buena in SF, outdoors. More of an inspiration than a peer; I just realized, however, thanks to the magic of the search-machers, that he is also an accomplished cellist –unless, of course, there are two Alex Kadvans which brings us full circle to the Sharon and the not-so-sharing keeping-up-with-the-dumpster-diving Joneses.

edit to add, a few minutes later: Mazel tov to Alex Kadvan and his business nuptials with the uber-agent David “Boche Billions” Viecelli, who is secretly Canadian. They formed in New York a management entity called Lever and Beam which does almost sound a like a Jewish law firm.  There is also a useful interview with Boche here. Boche wouldn’t remember me either, not likely, although Earthwise is probably in their database for one or two small shows, booked by Tom Windish, who spun off later. A few years ago in a Pollstar interview Boche said that after ten or twenty years as an agent he then only talked to about 20 buyers, big buyers, which probably got indie promoters 21 through 200 like me somewhat miffed. Pollstar could probably tabulate this exactly but Earthwise in its busiest years, doing like 30 shows, was never more than top 20 in Bay Area, but had a high concentration of inspired bookings and lucky finds — plus it payed everybody, including staff . But it is also true that well before Michael Johnson of Em Johnson Interest partnered with Yoshi’s in SF his staff polled apparently everybody in the Pollstar book including me I remember well, just to glean insight into the promoter world. When Steven Bernstein’s Diaspora Suite Band did its cd release at Bottom of the Hill in 2008, the Earthwise 10th anniversary show, Ramona Downey on my behalf extended an offer to Boche for Sharon Jones to play because they were routed through the area, but whatever cred or merit that may have had was too little or too late. Any how god bless all the Sharon Joneses out there…

I am inventing a new category for this column and ongoing called “filthy lucre”.

edit to add,  a few minutes after that: come to think of it, I mention Alex Kadvan earlier here, in reference to the tall Nigerian singer-songwriter-producer Ugonna Onyekwe; I say that Ugonna should try to meet Alex Kadvan. Who u gonna call? Lever and Beam!

edit to add, six hours later:

Legendary agent David “Boche Billions” Viecelli actually read this post and wrote back that I had misquoted him or misremembered his interview with Pollstar. Gilbert Lopez of the Fresno-based trade pub, and a former sax player with Let’s Go Bowling, was kind enough to find the actual interview, from the 1999 Agents Directory, so that I could fix what I got wrong. What Boche actually said was that, a propos of the format wherein many agencies divide the work territorially, he and notable indie exceptionals (like Little Big Man, which is now folded into Paradigm, and Legends of the 21st Century, which is now on the other hand fractured into two different Ground Control Tourings) work the entire waterfront, talk to the managers, the whole nine yards. What he actually said, and what stuck with me because I still felt it slightly exclusive — with me outside that circle — was:

I don’t think that the value of my relationships would increase if I were talking to 20 promoters instead of 70 promoters, so I don’t see the point of territories.

I guess it was like a cold December breeze off of Lake Michigan when I realized I was probably not even in the top 70, that I was more likely somewhere between promoter 71 and promoter 1 Billions. But of course to his credit, and even as his agency and stature grew, Boche did correspond with me a few years later briefly about Laura Veirs, who I had been tracking before she had agent or label (but she already had a relationship with an excellent producer, and had Bill Frisell on her demo); I revisited that exchange with the unsigned Laura Veirs here.

As I explained this to Gilbert Lopez of Pollstar, who delivered my info within 20 minutes, amazingly, he said he had heard of the Sharon Jones lottery fiasco, and chuckled at my suggestion that Arkansas could get a Dap-Kings show out of it; Richard Bach said that inside of every problem there is a  gift.

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I am mining Dylan for insights into Palo Alto parking debates

Tonight there is a meeting about parking issues in downtown north. I just pasted this classic Bob Dylan track into the debate, on another site.

“Don’t follow leaders, watch the pawking metaws” to me means both get involved and stay low tech. I think the idea of feeding a coin into a machine was repugnant to the hipsters of the day. Why should we accept it any more now, just because the meters are smarter (than we are — soon you can either pay for four hours of time or bet your fee on a game of chess, and lose).
Not sure exactly what I think about residential parking permits; my inclination is to try to get commercial real estate interests (landlords) to pay for the problem, and pass it on to their tenants (local business) who should pay their employees enough so that they can afford pay parking closer to their jobs. Or at least residents of Palo Alto can and should ask this of Council and commissioners.

In a related matter, I am researching a minimum wage for workers here well above the state and federal level. What about $50 per hour barristas pouring my what, $7 cappucino? So that even the lowly barrista, making $50 x 20 hours a week ($50,000 per year), can afford to rent here? Would that work its way up to the billion-dollar excess of the landlords (Palo Alto Weekly “Info Palo Alto” said that between 1985 and 2010 value of commercial real estate rose from $5 B to $25 B, a delta of $20 B, closely held, but to whose gain is the growth?

LOOK OUT! as the kid in the vid says.

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My sloppy Cake transcript sans typos

The rock band Cake performed at a benefit event last weekend at the Fox Theatre in Oakland and a few days prior their leader John McCrea appeared on KQED Forum with Michael Krasny. Frida and I sat rapt in the kitchen listening, and typing (me at least; Frida got in the spirit by letting her chin become caked with a fish and potato mush). I posted this already but am compelled to remount it thus:

We don’t have in our music the equivalent of deforestation.

Turning the amp to 11 is not subversive; it’s what Exxon is doing.

I grew up in Berkeley and had to move to Sacramento as a tennagaer and hated it at first.
I appreciate the humility of it, the sort of matte finish approach to life there; it’s not a glamourous place. (NB: McCrea also lived in England as well so does indeed say “glamourous” not “glamorous”).

Bekrekey is more glamourous than Sacramento. Ideals,  intellect.

Working farm town, half-hazardly converted to political hub.

Not cynical, sincerely housed within same song. Comedy and tragedy sitting on the same sofa.

Phonetics. Marie Antoinettes. Phonetic power of a word you cannot say on radio,  without the baggage. (The mention of that French name reminds me, and compels me to add here, like croutons on my word salad, that tap tap tap, as Michael Wolfe surely knows, the great New Orleans piano player and pop song Titan Fats Domino is known to us cognescenti as Antoine, in the way that Dr. John is Mac, and this all comes out of Henry Butler and I side-stage at Cake at Greek and John calculating how to fit Henry’s sound into his own; the next day, as a step in that direction, walkin’ down the street, there debuted — that sounds French — and dissolved a duo of Etienne DeRocher and Henry Butler, at Cafe DuNord. See, there is a whole lotta shakin’ in that one loaded, caked word).

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VefXPh31HM4&feature=related

We didn’t cultivate another more flashy image. (Or he might have said “We didn’t cultivate another, flashier image”).

Distance. Turning point. (As in, It was a turning point, the success of the single, “The Distance”)
Didn’t make a dent in other countires. Sports encouragement anthem for some people.

We visited Turkey and it was “Perhaps, Perhaps Perhaps” that the people wanted to hear.

(The two mentioned that Cake’s breakthrough hit, “The Distance” was actually written by guitar player Greg Brown, a founding member who, like original bassist Vic Damiani, left the band shortly thereafter. But John noted that Greg played on the recent album, which they, after stints on Capricorn and Sony, released on their own label).

Folks told us we’d be crushed like a bug if we did that, but happilty we are not.
Given precipous decline we could trust somebody else who works at a label.
We were number 1 for a minute. Unusual for us.
What is was about for me is that we have a relationhsp with our listeners and thry trusted us to purchase from us.

Content workers generally have to fgure out who they are and wehre they stand and wther they need to organize or not.

Mexico. Stately rhtym ¾ country song.

10:35
I have amtathc she had lighter.
I had a flmae she had a fire…
I was high but she was the sky.
Obyay I was bound for meixo.
Oh, baby, I was bound to let you go, oh oh wow. Ah ha ha bad a dum

I don’t know much aougt cinco de mayo
Im neer shure what its all about.
I say I want you and you don’t believe me.
You say you want me but I’ve go my doubts

I was bound to let you go. Oh, etc
I was bound for mexico

I had a match she had a lighter
I had a flame but she had a fire.
I was bright but she was much brihter
I was high but she was the sky.

Bound for mexico.

To let you go.

10:35 John McCrea on KQED

epic narrative : Krasny

sad love song not cynical.

Opens the phones at 10:35

866n 733 6786
forumat kqed dot org

dancing around with vibarslap – but not today.

Facets of the human psyche – rabbits and bears in videos

Sardonic part sad part funny I think

Phyllis diller and rick james and frugal gourmet in “Love You Madly” video
We were trying to avoid doing a video with five white guys in an urban decay and it occurred that we could do a cooking show.

Youtube – great to have such easy access to culture. Great that people are feeling creative to make own videos to songs they like. But content providers have to eat food.

War pigs?
Joined by Kelli Corrigan of Notes and Words Benefit for Children’s Hospital, and a former student of Krasny – last year they had Beth Lisick, Hyim and Megan Slankard.
Michael Chabon, Cavilier and Clay
Anne Lamott
Some dude with a page on NY Times.

My husband and I have seen them five times and my kids know the words.
“Icing on the cake’ Krasny

We are pro medicine and pro hospital and Oakland as well. And I knew you would say “icing on the cake”.

Shadow Stabbing. Old song I wrote yearsa go. At 19, it’s a chesnut.
10:45
I don’t thik I know this

Adjectives on the typewriter.
He moves his words like a prizefighter.

The man on the street might just as well be 3x
Outside the world you don’t hear the echos and calls.
Steel eye say it all
White paint plastic XXX
Somebody got to say it all.
I’m so nervous I’m so tense.
I can’t forget selfdefence.
I know this can’t last.
Steel eye tight jaw say it all
White paint plastic saint

Some body got to say it all.
Adjectives
Frenzy face of the mind inside in the cell.

(I have not heard this before, but I’ve seen Cake 20 times and presented them twice)

Playing around on the guitar and putting things together that don’t go together and some times they fit, like a puzzle.

A caller said she was in the “Winter” video. And then asked about the social media page. And motivations. “Are you upset?’ John asks. Vitrol?

We don’t tell people what we think we ask questions, although they are perhaps pointed questions. I am not sure if people, do we have a list of occupations that are not allowed to be political? Yes, there are silly things said by Hollywood stars.

Itn’s not that I care about he envirornent more than other issues, but its fundamental. You need clean air in order to protest other issues. And its generally ignored.

Birds falling, tortes and cakes and the differences….are you foodies?
I do keep chickens. Cake as a verb, cake dried banana on your corduroy trousers or mud is on your shoes.

By the way, you can see John McCrea and Cake on April 28 at Fox Theatre.

We will probably make one more album then see what happens. On our own label.

edit to add: Oh baby I was bound for Mexico

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Good luck to SF Offside music series and logo

The esteemed blogger, college radio dj and music nut Wedge (CM) was my source to the incipient “figuring out” of another “dynamo-and-virgin” named Laura something, from Dublin, who produces blogs and concerts under two pseudonyms including Fenderhardt or something.

I will edit to add to get this straight.

I like the logo with the S F O F F.

I am not the only one who is deliberately confusing in cyberspace. Also, I enjoyed Joyce Randolph‘s concert yesterday at St. Thomas Aquinas, a benefit for St. Elizabeth Seton School. Randolph, like Laura, has a Stanford connection. I liked pushing the soulclap/gospel clap into something — and I drew a collaborator — more NOLA-esque, doubling on some claps, filling, moving the beat around in my admittedly clumsy and offbeat way, but I was also thinking about the Hebrew notion of “confusing Satan” which is the term that explains a Hebrew word about blowing the shofar on Yom Kippur in weird and unpredictable bursts, that pre-date Steve Lacy and Don Cherry by a considerable amount of well-spent breath. I like to think of Steve and Don leading a large all-shofar group somewheres. Maybe they will be channeled at this SF Offside, my mouth or blog to God’s ear or MacBook.

Somewhere I mentioned to someone my esteem for the bassist, composer, Stanford culture affiliate and featured attraction at this Laura Fenderhardt-produced shindig, S F O F, I am talking about Lisa Mezzacappa:

edit to add: Wedge’s blog is called “Memory Select” which is a Tim Berne reference. Here is what he wrote:

http://wedgeradio.wordpress.com/2012/04/28/sf-offside-festival/

edit to add, four hours later: her name is Laura Maguire, is from Dublin, has a PhD from Stanford, worked recently there as staff, is affiliated with “Philosophy Talk” the radio show, and is producing with a partner this new music festival featuring mostly local artists, of broad acclaim. (And had me digressing into Irish Pat Lawler, the Maguire boxing clan and the Lower — not Outer — Sunset).

Posted in ethniceities, jazz, music, sex | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

Plastic Alto welcomes “Palo Alto” and “The Set of All Blind Piano Players”

1. A whiles back I ran into Jim Keene, the City Manager for City of Palo Alto, at a chain coffee house on El Camino, near Stanford Avenue, the place that us old timers think of as the former Mountain Mike’s Pizza — where we went after Gunn basketball home games — and I dropped an idea on him: what if the City of Palo Alto used a recording of the Lee Konitz song “Palo Alto” as the “music on hold” that you hear when you ring City Hall? I’m still holding on to that one, but not holding my breath. He wrote the idea in his notebook.

Somewhere in there I also ran this by the New York based jazz musician Jacob Garchik, who is a trombonist and plays tuba, and plays with Konitz. I thought maybe we could custom order a session rather than just licensing a version we could find at the library. I thought also (there I go again, thoughting) that someone could modify and simplify the riff to make it catchier and more memorable, and slightly more hummable. I find “Palo Alto” pretty subtle. And it’s also probably true that it was written about a different Palo Alto, but so what?

Just for yucks here is a bad picture of Jacob Garchik playing with Stew at Yoshi’s SF in March, 2012. Jacob is the little cluster of pixels next to and behind the slightly darker and larger cluster known as Stew. He is playing a tuba not a trombone, in case you cannot tell. (unlike me, who cannot keep a secret). 

2.

Honorable mention: Dick Fregulia, John Coltrane, Dave Brubeck, Gerry Mulligan, Paul Desmond, Lennie Tristano, Marcus Roberts, Lee Konitz, Henry Butler, Jack Walrath. (Note: not all these people are blind. Not all these people are pianists, but we mention them to honor them ok? Not entirely off-topic but Walrath told me that the arrangements of Mingus by the various tribute groups play more simplified versions of what Charles and them use to play)

*****

I started this blog one Sunday morning not unlike today because I wanted to post a comment on a site run by Anna Cervantes about her father the late jazz pianist Federico Cervantes aka Freddie Gambrell. I had only just learned of Freddie Gambrell based on reading an excellent article on Matt Bowling’s Palo Alto history by Dick Fregulia called “I Got Jazzed in Palo Alto” or something; the link is no longer active, although Matt is releasing a book with excerpts from his numerous postings, and it features Greg Brown on the cover, from back in the day, but I digress. Also, coincidentally, I found a violinist in Mill Valley named Patti Weiss who once was a student of Mr. Fregulia when he taught at Tamalpais High. That’s how my brain works, and that’s how the search-injuns fire.

Dick Fregulia is a Palo Altan (by some definitions) who played piano for many years at Washington Street Bar and Grill in San Francisco.  Another digression lead me to read an obituary from last year of the late great Ed Moose, the founder of Washington Square Bar and Grill (the WashBag as Herb Caen call it) and Moose’s, who died at at age 81.

The post I was trying to send Anna was in response to something where she gave away cds to fans at the Salt Lake Jazz Festival in July 2009 it seems. I wanted to say (and posted somewheres):

Hi, Anna. I am writing about your father Federico Cervantes aka Freddie Gambrell, who I only just learned about by reading Dick Fregulia’s excellent article about the history of jazz in Palo Alto. http://www.paloaltohistory.com/jazz.html. Would you like to donate a cd to the Palo Alto Historical society? We are creating an archive of artists from here or who were associated with our city.

Anna writes back: I am just now seeing these messages (I wrote her in September, 2010 and she replied on her own site in April of last year, but I only saw it today, if you follow me). If you are still interested in some music, perhaps I can find something for you. A lot of his music has now been placed in storage in the state of Washington. Get in touch with me and we can figure something out!! Thank you.

I got started that morning because Terry Acebo Davis my girlfriend  the artist and former arts commissioner asked me to guess what music was coming out of her computer. It was a sax solo and I lazily said “Coltrane?” and she said “No, that’s Dave Brubeck” and then  I tried to correct her a little by telling her the name of the alto player being featured, whose name was escaping me. She suggested Gerry Mulligan. I had to boot up her little iMac — the same one I am using now 18 months and 380 posts later —  to find but of course Paul Desmond. Something in the wiki on Desmond led me to search for Band Box or Bandbox which was apparently a little club on El Camino but actually probably in Menlo Park. It said Desmond’s first steady gig was at the Bandbox in Palo Alto. I am always hungry for information about jazz in Palo Alto back in the day, people’s anecdotes, or random mentions in publications. One of these days I should search the Palo Alto Times archives, or interview Herb Wong. Also I recently traded a few emails with Ted Gioia who is extremely knowledgeable, and also snagged a copy of his recent book:

Still want to suss out Lee Konitz “Palo Alto” — is it about here? Probably about New Jersey. It was the street his piano player lived on. Forgetting his name, Lennie Tristano? Also, I think, a blind pianist? If I ever see Konitz live — he’s in his 80s — it would probably be the most parochial thing to ask him about that song.

Meanwhile, I was trying to read LogicComix by Doxiadis and Papdimitriou when this digression occured. (about Bertrand Russell, A.N. Whitehead, Wittgenstein etc). A paraphrase: a useful definition of insanity is confusing a map or model of the world for the world itself. Or confusing Plastic Alto with Ornette Coleman. For a minute I understood the logic book and quite often I ring Steve and or either or Eric Cohen to get some pretty good answers to math questions I think every educated people should know. Including myself, or at least advertising for my self. Borges y Yo kind of way. Just when I thought I was making this up, I found the link to Russell’s Paradox.

Then Terry or a robot who I mistake sometimes for human started playing Marcus Roberts “Blue Monk” funny segue or full circle, Euclidian trick, is what I recall thinking, then writing about in the very first chapter of this here Plastic Alto the blog. We almost saw a Marcus Roberts show once while in Santa Fe for Indian Market, as opposed to the new Broadway show “Once”. The self-referential bit above is also a Bertrand Russell allusion, about the set of all sets, does it include itself. Apparently not. Sometimes we long for the days when we could ask our parents.

Note: a version of this appeared previously in “Plastic Alto” hereabouts. And I just want to mention for no obvious reason Jack Walrath, Henry Butler and John Ellis, three former clients.

3. Continuing my morning — it’s 11:53 so I have about 7 minutes yet — of advertisements for myself, I took the liberty of analyzing the readership summaries of “Plastic Alto” my blog. It is still only modestly followed or read — and I consider it a notebook to myself as much as a conversation with readers — but about 300 people saw the thing last week. More striking is the fact — if I can believe wordpress, my overlords — that readers found their way to 89 different pages, of the 373 posts herein. Fifty-one different pages were viewed exactly once, which is what they call “the long tail” effect. The top six pages in popularity accounted for 73 of the 207 views, plus 98 home page views, which includes the most recent article, and more if you scroll down.

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