School of Ben

Hi Everyone,

Sorry for the mass email. Or is this a blog now?

Just wanted to let you know that my new group, Ben Goldberg School, will be playing this Saturday, January 14, in Berkeley at the Berkeley Arts Festival.

The address is 2133 University Ave. in Berkeley, and we’ll start at 8 pm.

I wrote a bunch of new compositions — come on by and you will hear truly inspired playing by some amazing musicians:

Ben Goldberg School

Jeff Cressman – trombone
Kasey Knudsen – alto saxophone
Rob Reich – accordion
David Ewell – bass
Hamir Atwal – drums
Ben Goldberg – clarinet

Plus a couple of rumored guests!

Hope to see you there.

Plus, I know I already posted this but I’m still crazy about it so here is a link to a lovely video of my song “xcpf” from a concert by Myra Melford, Scott Amendola, John Shifflett, and me at the Freight and Salvage last month.

http://vimeo.com/34702665

Peace,

Ben

(Ben Goldberg, our guest Plastic Alto blogger, play with Clarinet Thing, Go Home, Charlie Hunter, Plays Monk and Tin Hat — that’s a list I’m partial to — plus his own own own projects, like Ben Goldberg School — I will have to find, transfer and post the fine pictures of him taken at Bottom of the Hill in the Steven Bernstein Diaspora at the Earthwise 10th Anniv show — Mark Ben Weiss, editor, head plastician  — I was meaning to post something about the time Joe Dariensburg and Louis Armstrong All Stars played the Venetian Room — in January, 1962 — but I guess will have to make do with Goldiensburg instead)

edit to add, about twenty bars in: it might just be me, but I could not get the vimeo to play and switched to a different track:

http://vimeo.com/34554643

and this is probably totally just me, or my lack of coffee, and still, as I noted above, probably need to trim my fingernails, somehow affects my concentration and total Zeitgeist — cue the schadenfreude — but does that Israel Perez dude look suspiciously like….Peter Apfelbaum? Have they ever been seen in same room? Puzzling. Like Beth was saying, Custer that is, appropos of something I decided not to elaborate on, some people have asked her if she is part black. Is Perez a jew? Does he not bleed if you prick him?

I think at this point Ben Goldberg is going to be mighty confused and irritated — or the reader is — one guy — no more than one person will ever see this — to figure out when it switches back from guest blogger BG to MW. Like John Berryman dreamsongs. Quick Henry the flit. Bones. And reeds. All that. And rumored guests (not former members of Fleetwood Mac).

Ben Goldberg is also playing a big show for Jewish Music Festival March 4 at Freight and Salvage.

edit to add: big story on Tin Hat featuring Ben Goldberg in March 29, 2012 Chron by Jessie Hamlin

Posted in ethniceities, jazz | Tagged | Leave a comment

In Another Mental Universe…LAMI LIVES

reportage regarding lami@50, mostly by Pinky Kushner, who met Alden Van Buskirk at Washington University in St. Louis and married his Dartmouth friend Peter Kushner, now a scientist in San Francisco:

LAMI@50 event in San Francisco, by Mark Weiss (c)(p)2011 Earthwise Productions

i am forwarding this to a dr. donald miller in seattle, a dartmouth alum whose post i found trying to fact check a point someone made that richard eberhart had attended the “howl” reading in sf (and wrote for ny times about it) and then jack hirschman had done his own reading of “howl” in hanover — which presumably made an impression on Alden Van Buskirk.
also, i noted that recent DAM alumni mag has article on jazz group from that period — i am curious if any of them knew Van. (blurring distinction between straight jazz and the new thing)
for pinky’s account below my only quibble is that it overstates matson’s role in the event and underplays those of matt gonzalez and bob rosen, who guided my actions. john paige and i had several conversations and a meeting. also, garrett caples — brought in by highsmith — i think coordinated the speakers unless he delegated that to matson.
i’m more concerned with the idea that we can, as peter, pinky and i discussed recently, keep some momentum going with more events and readings, and hopefully get some interest in a reissue of “lami” or a new pub with some of “lami”, the two or three early poems paige/ceeley has, some letters perhaps and a bio. Andrew Hoyem the publisher is thriving since 1965 mostly as Arion Press; knows of recent activity.
Dartmouth club of bay area (james von rittman) may help promote local follow up events.
I am also interested in the jazz angle. Lauren says she has a recording of Van playing piano.
Also, and this is esoteric and for Peter and Pinky primarily, I passed on news of Rachel Kushner to Dartmouth classmate 1986 (which by the way is 25 years ago, hardly “recent”) Melinda Lopez a Cuban American playwright who says she then immediately ordered Rachel’s book.
mark weiss
dartmouth1986
in san francisco/palo alto
(650) XXX-XXXX
—– Forwarded Message —–
From: Pinky Kushner <pXXXXXXXX@mac.com>
To:
Sent: Sunday, January 8, 2012 2:47 PM
Subject: lami@50
Greetings 2012!
Below is an informal write-up by me with help from Peter of the event lami@50 that occurred here in San Francisco, December 20, 2011.   Separately I will send out a pdf file of David Rattray’s story “Van”, published in Bomb many years ago put into pdf form through Olga (BOMB No. 40, Summer 1992, pp. 66-69). If you haven’t received a copy of the dvd and want one, let me know and I will send it.
All the best,
Pinky (and Peter)
Lami@50
As many of you know, Peter was contacted by his longtime friend from Dartmouth College, John Ceeley, a poet writer, who told him of a wonderful surprise.  A group unknown to John or Peter had become fans of the poems in the book called “Lami” written by Alden Van Buskirk, a mutual friend from Dartmouth, who died December, 1961, a year after graduation. To celebrate the 50 years since the poems were created, this group was planning an event of readings and remembrances called lami@50.
The principal instigator was another Dartmouth alum, Mark Weiss, who graduated only recently but had curiously made a connection to Lami.  Apparently, Mark had gone to an event last spring where Ferlinghetti was present.  Mark, being always the Dartmouth enthusiast, asked Ferlinghetti if he had ever been to Dartmouth.
Ferlinghetti replied he had, to visit Jack Hirschman. Jack was poet laureate for San Francisco in 2006 and had taught at Dartmouth College during Alden’s time there.  Jack, we think, then told Mark about Lami and Alden Van Buskirk.  Later and now it was just before the event, Jack asked Mark if he had contacted Clive Matson.  And Clive then told Mark to contact Martha Muhs, Alden’s girlfriend from St. Louis, and Ceeley, who then contacted Peter.  Both Ceeley and Martha live in the Oakland/Berkeley area.  (John Ceeley is now officially John Paige, having taken on his mother’s maiden name.)
lami@50 was to be a poetry reading on December 20, at Books & Bookshelves, the bookstore of another San Francisco poet, David Highsmith.  (As its name implies, the friendly little bookstore sells books, almost exclusively poetry books, and bookshelves.)   Ceeley said he was lining up readers for the poems and for MC, the poet Clive Matson, who—as it came out during the event—had years previously been the one who painstakingly taken Alden’s scraps of papers with handwritten poems on them and put them into type for David Rattray, who then organized these poems into the volume Lami, published by the Auerhahn Society press in 1965, with 1,000 copies printed.
The story of how these poems got into press is actually quite interesting and involved the forthright—some might say pushy—ingenuity and dedication of Allen Ginsberg.  Apparently, Ginsberg thought the best way to force its publication was to get individual poems in press.  He then worked hard until an impressive list of journals agreed—Evergreen ReviewCity Lights Journal (2), The Second Coming MagazineEco ComtemporaneoIntrepidFuck YouThe Moving Times and Poetry.  With such a fine publication list, Lami could not be refused.
Back to the event planning, Peter and I began hunting down other friends of Alden’s who might be interested in attending the event, mostly folks from very far away. That task involved quite a bit of google searching.  Peter contacted Dartmouth friends, Seth Zimmerman, Dave Greenspan, Francis Dauer.  Some Dartmouth buddies Peter discovered had passed away, GV, LH and DS.  Another friend of Alden’s from high school, Stan Munsat, also could not make it.  Peter found a likely candidate for Alden’s younger brother, Rob, is a professor at SUNY, at Oswego, NY, who confirmed that he was indeed Alden’s brother, Robert Van Buskirk.  Rob passed the message along to Alden’s sister Lauren.
Peter, I am Lauren Van Buskirk Pike, Alden’s younger sister.   My brother Rob forwarded your email re: the fiftieth celebration of my brother’s book.I would love to hear more about the event  (location, attendees, etc) and am interested if anyone has thought about making a video to share.  I remember a few of my brother’s friends, especially David Rattray, but many others I never met.so any information or visuals you could provide would be appreciated.
Would love to know where you and my brother Alden met..    Dartmouth??    St Louis??  California???
Look forward to hearing from you…..
 Yours,
Lauren
We were elated and Lauren did come.
My own connection to the event was that Alden, after graduating from Dartmouth College, came to Washington University in St. Louis, where I was an undergraduate.   Alden was in several of my classes, which because they were graduate level courses, were small, allowing all of us to get to know one another.
I took on contacting friends of mine who had been part of the group in St. Louis.  Gary and Marilyn Merritt, Bill Sutherland, Olga Bornstein Wise, and Jim Bryan.  Jim was a difficult google search, but he was found and came.
Wow! Pinky, this is amazing.   A surprise out of the past.  I rode with Alden and David Rattray from St. Louis to Texas where they dropped me off that summer. Then didn’t we meet out of nowhere in Paris that fall in a hostel at Pigalle?  And then again in Tubingen the next spring?  Am I imagining these things?  I don’t see how I could possibly go to San Francisco next week.  But if I could be in St. Louis and Texas and Paris and Tubingen all in one year, well, I better take a deep breath and get a little younger.  Do you have frequent flyer miles?  I don’t anymore.  Will you be home this evening?  Can I call you at 9 here, 6:00 there? It’s wonderful to be back in touch.   I’ve been missing those olden days.
 Love,
Jim.
I also contacted Craig Dworkin, a professor at the University of Utah, whom I had discovered a few years back had put a scanned version of Lami up on his website.  I got a nice response.
Dear Pinky,
Thank you so much for writing — and for thinking of me!
It’s a fine coincidence, because I’ve been thinking of LAMI all last week, as it happens.  Getting a reading-copy PDF of the poems on-line has long been on my to-do list and I’m finally — miraculously — getting around to it.
So this gives me a good excuse of a deadline — I’ll have it up before the 20th in sympathetic celebration!
Sadly, I won’t be able to make it in person — my stepdaughter will be recovering from surgery then (nothing major, but she’ll need me around)
Hoping that this finds you happy and well,
::Craig
John Ceeley worked on the speakers, collecting them, organizing them, making sure we all didn’t read the same selection fromLami.  Garrett Caples of City Lights put together a flyer announcing the event.
For us, the event began in the afternoon of the 20th with a phone call from Lauren, who said she had arrived by plane from Florida, would be here only for the event and would leave early the next morning.   Jim Bryan had already arrived from Virginia the night before, with a backpack and a computer bag in hand.  Lauren caught a cab to our house, walked in, full of light and energy.   We exchanged tales from long ago.
Lauren was a young teenager when her brother had died.  She recalled his funeral in their hometown of Rutland, VT and how David Rattray was so bereaved and had wept and wept.  She didn’t remember Peter at the funeral, but he was there.   We had a bite to eat on Irving Street before we were due at the bookstore.  And then we walked into the bookstore.
During the day, in its wonderful natural daylight, the lighting in the store is a bit subdued.   That night, it was full of light and had a good number of people already assembled, a full 40 minutes before the event was to begin officially.  Lauren asked Peter, “How will I know Jack Hirschman.” Peter told her that would be no problem as Jack could be relied on to come and give her a huge hug as soon as he discovered her.  Without any prompting Jack met expectations.
Lots of people came, perhaps 50.  We sat around on benches and chairs that David Highsmith sells there, arranged into rows.  Jim was especially pleased to be sitting between the lovely Martha and John Ceely.  I sat across from Lauren towards the front.
Peter sat next to me and beside Jack Hirschman.
The luminaries who read besides the poets Hirschman, Matson and Ceely, were Matt Gonzalez, a well-known progressive and former supervisor in San Francisco, student of literature and long-time fan of the book Lami, and the poets, David Highsmith, Garrett Caples, and Diamond Dave Whitaker. Clive Matson was also MC and did a wonderful job.
Peter, Martha, Jim, the organizer Mark Weiss, and I also read.
Photos of the event have been posted by David Highsmith on flickr and a leading social media format.
STATE POPCORN
As a postscript to the event, those of us who knew Alden met over at Martha’s house a week later.  This included Jim Bryan, who was still in the Bay Area.  We exchanged various tales.  We were joined by Tony Sargent, who in a poem in Lami is referred to as the biophysicist.  Alden knew him and Jim Reinhardt in Oakland in 1961.  Tony told how he had been interested in psychedelic drugs and had shared with Alden how a psychedelic compound is found in heavenly blue morning glories and how to take it.  According to Tony, the description of this process first appeared in press in a poem by Alden (entitled 9-17-61).
Here’s the link to the on-line version of Lami, on Craig Dworkin’s website at the University of Utah:
An interview with Jack Hirschman that gives the fuller picture of how Dartmouth College was the East Coast connection to the West Coast poetry of the Beat Generation:
Here’s the link describing Jack’s anointment as poet laureate:
Here’s Mark Weiss’ announcement of lami@50 with his description of how the event came about:
By the way, PNH is not a kidney disease.  Here’s more information about PNH:
And attached is a description of Alden Van Buskirk’s actual disease that was written up and published by his doctor in St. Louis, who at the time was a young medical student, probably on a hematology rotation, where he died.
At one point during the event, Jack referred to Alden as a possible Olympic skier. Alden had grown up skiing and was a superb and stylish downhill skier, who teasingly would imitate Stein Eriksen, but his skiing declined in the years as his disease inexorably progressed.  Peter was his ski buddy.
 Stay Tuned!! Wah Hoo Wah! And “FY” lives, too!
edit to add, January 12, 2012: I met Andrew Hoyem, the founder of Arion Press of San Francisco, who published Alden Van Buskirk “LAMI” in 1965, and among other things, he pointed out that The New York Times published today an article on Ed Sanders whose “Fuck You” literary magazine published previously parts of “LAMI.”
Posted in art, ethniceities, film, jazz, media, music, Plato's Republic, sex, sf moma, words | Tagged , | 2 Comments

Giant Soft Opening for Robert Syrett at Caffe Centro Friday, Jan. 13, 2012 featuring DJ Mia ^1

One of several new works by Robert Syrett at Caffe Centro in South Park

Earthwise of Palo Alto (earwopa) welcomes the New Year by hosting or at least no-hosting a happy hour party Friday, January 13, 2012 at Caffe Centro in San Francisco, 4 to 6 p.m. The event is a giant soft opening for the art exhibit hung by and featuring Robert Syrett — giant soft opening means it’s gonna be huge but so far no one knows about it, and it’s been up since mid-December. And not to be confused with, but not not influenced by Claes Oldenburg’s giant soft fan. (I’m a big fan of Robert’s and kind of a softie; Disclosure: I not only collect and sometimes commission Robert Syrett, but I arranged for this show, up through end of January in one of SF’s coolest cafes, and by far its coolest caffe, in one of its coolest neighborhoods, South Park, in the greater SOMA, near the new ballpark, near the big Oldenburg of a bow and arrow).

The event — for which Erwin and crew at the cafe will stay open an extra hour — will feature the usual yummy assortment of foods, coffees and even beer and wine and will also feature music by DJ Mia ^ 1, a rising star on the underground scene — and close personal friend of the artist Robert Syrett (More disclosures: Mark Weiss, Plastic Alto, Earthwise Productions and Earwopa all are also kind of soft on this Mia ^ 1,– pronounced either “mia won” or “me uh one” or “mee uh carrot one” or “mia to the power of one” — it’s a work in progress —  who excels — under various pseudonyms — in a variety of  creative and performing arts. She will be spinning discs on a Crosley (one turntable, no microphone) of the 7-  and 10-inch varieties ranging from speeds of 33 rpm to 45 rpm, and if things really get going, all the way up to 78 perhaps (no guarantees; you can’t push the muse, you know).

I met Robert Syrett — this is Mark Weiss of Earthwise Productions talking, or at least tapping the keys quite loudly – -I should probably trim my fingernails, while watching a basketball game, UNC Tar Heels, where Superchunk came from, but I digress —

This is my second event in San Francisco in a row, following the hugely successful Alden Van Buskirk event in Duboce Triangle last month — and it  makes me think about announcing a new programming theme — Earwopa-San– like the Japanese term of respect.  “Earwopa” meaning “earthwise of palo alto” but also in SF. Ok, I did that thingy with Tommy Jordan at Lytton Plaza in between, but that was not actually promoted like this is.

I met Rob while putting up a Joey Piziali poster at Accent Arts in Palo Alto and Rob said “I can do anything he can do.” So he did art work and or posters for Vienna Teng /Austin Willacy at Bol Park, for my 2009 Palo Alto City Council race and art show, for the 2009 Earthwise 15th Year Event at Bottom of the Hill, and more. I also helped him get his recent gig at Public Works in SF, last April. Actually, it’s Mia ^ 1 who could probably get the “Annie Get Your Gun” draw on Rob, at this event; she deserves some love, too, from the hipper SF galleries.

In indie rock and classical realms, Syrett is known for his cover art for two cds by Matmos.

He created seven new works for the Caffe Centro show, plus he has re-mounted or at least re-hung a couple pieces that were shown at the “Characters” show at Public Works. Rob will be on hand at the event to answer questions or sign autographs or to solve arguments about the nuances of art and music. He once taught yours truly how to pronounce OWN MARTIN OWE, an early synthesizer featured in works by Radiohead and Messiaen. (This works better in radio). Rob put me in charge of finding good homes for a set of his works, about 200 works on paper, including a group of works, which we will probably bring to event and show on request, of about a dozen sketches and color tests that were used to create the Matmos cover “Supreme Balloon”, to be sold as a set, price on request.

We are hoping to draw a review from the likes of Chronicle writers like Kim Chun or Leigh Garchik, and Kenneth Baker, or Peter Selz, or Rachel Kushner in Los Angeles, whose parents live in SF and came to the Alden Van Buskirk event.

This will be the first real workout for my new Crosley turntable, which my girlfriend the artist and arts administrator Terry Acebo Davis got me for Chanukah. It replaces a NuMark I bought in 2008 at Streetlight but that was pilfered in a burglary. It’s a CR249 Keepsake model, featured recently in Rolling Stone and Spin. Actually I’m using as a crate a square bookshelf I got from David Highsmith at Books and Bookshelves at the Dec. 20 event.

Caffe Centro is located at 102 South Park in San Francisco, between 2nd and 3rd Streets, and Bryant and Brannan. The normal business hours are Monday through Friday, 7 to 4, and Saturdays 8 to 5. Info: (415) 882-1500 or (650) 305-0701.

##30##

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Is Richard Cory one of us or one of them?

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A Wealth of Ideas to Examine Poverty via Literature at Foothill

PYRAMID OF THE PALO ALTO SOL

OR HOW I ATE TOO MUCH SOUP AND TOO MANY CHIPS AND TRIED TO PASS IT OFF AS HOMEWORK

Jordana Finnegan’s English class 1B at Foothill College in Los Altos Hills, California uses two main texts to frame a series of mini-debates and rhetorical exercises pointed towards a churn of fresh ideas regarding a distinctly Western take on the disparity between rich and poor and North and South: John Steinbeck’s quasi-classic “Tortilla Flats” and the recent and still being digested, perhaps like a giant bowl of Sopa Azteca from Hector and Helena Sol’s nearby restaurante, “Tortilla Curtain” by T. C. Boyle.

The title of the course, taught by Dr. Finnegan, who holds a doctoral degree and only recently created the offering, is “Poverty, Inequality, and the American Dream”.

I don’t know anything about Boyle’s book although the teacher hinted that it is controversial; an online reviewer compared it to Dubus’ “Sand and Fog” which I know of only as a film adaptation. I, perhaps superficially, thought of a Wallace Stegner story called “Pop Goes the Weasel” about a white photographer trying to work with blacks and Latinos in 1940s SoCal, and also because of the opening device of hitting someone, Wolf’s “Bonfire of the Vanities.” I also recently read (most of) William T. Vollman’s “Imperial”.

I hope to chronicle my progress through this course here in Plastic Alto, or Plastic Altlandia (but not Plastic Aztlan — that would be going too far, or too far south). Likewise I hope somewhere along the line MAYBE NOW to start swapping my actual assignments for these less structured missives. If I continue to write about the class in real time, I will try to do so within the parameters of respecting the academic environment of the student; when I was at Dartmouth Laura Ingraham the future right wing commentator famously outed professor Bill Cole for his unorthodox viewpoints and techniques, creating a disruptive furor that culminated in Cole leaving the Ivy League school. I’m no Laura Ingraham.

I’m more of a Bill Cole, frankly. “Plastic Alto” is a jazz riff. O K ?

In terms of the homework assignment of bringing in content, here is a picture of my mom, Barbara Weiss, 81, hiding behind what seems to be an Aztec Mask. I am using it here — in the context of my classroom assignment — to symbolize “wealth”. Not everybody, I admit, has the luxury of storing artworks (even ones of dubious authenticity — I assume we got this on the beach of a resort and it is for the tourist market, meaning not a museum piece. But even the phrase “on the beach” connotes a certain amount of privilege. Barbara probably does not remember where she got the piece, owing partly to her age but also due to the fact that she traveled extensively in her life). It is more useful on the subtopic of authenticity of the Mexican culture — comparing that of Steinbeck in 1935 to that of Boyle in 1996, for examples, as staples, like tortillas at a meal — than as depiction of squalor or surfeit. (I have been looking for an excuse to upload it; I mainly think it’s quaint).

I am also importing here, although slightly off topic, a picture I took today called “Pirimida” referencing the Pyraminds of the Sun and Moon near Mexico City, but also, again, abundance – these were leftovers from my lunch at Palo Alto Sol. Further, I am eating them as I compose this blog entry, in fat.

I am also importing from a previous post two of my shots of Orozco’s murals, from Dartmouth College’s Baker Library. I shot these at my 25th class reunion held in July, 2010; the murals are from 1939 or so.

detail of Orozco mural

I said in classroom introductions that one of my rationale for taking the course is to find context for understanding and talking about Occupy. I am generally interested in expanding my concept of this hemisphere, especially regarding Mexico. In Spain the uprising was called “Los Indignatos” — the indignant — as opposed to the Bunuel film in DF called “Los Olivados” — the forgotten.

My neighbor Otto Slater — former neighbor I mean — says that in the 1950 or early 1960s Mexican workers would gather in front of what eventually became my parents house to dry apricots and sing songs into the evenings. More of a “apricot flats” than “tortilla flats”. Meanwhile, to continue my run of associations or prejudices, my Oaxacan exchange brother (from Palo Alto’s Sister City), Guillermo Gomez Abascal reminded me that his state is famous for having the world’s best tortillas.

Slightly off topic, but a nice segue, Dr. Finnegan lent me her copy of a Guillermo Gomez Pena collection called “The New World Border” (City Lights, 1996). But the English 1B homework readings so far are more about the economic jargon per se; they dovetail nicely with my research on Brian Evans’ macroeconomics course — which I am distilling down to a John Maynard Keynes reading list — I described below.

On the matter of close-reading per se the class today included an exercise built around E. A. Robinson short poem “Richard Cory”, which deals with class issues, self-concept and perspective.

“YO QUIERO TACO BELL”

This is becoming more of a chop suey than “the whole enchillada” but here is an excerpt — per my actual homework instructions — and a brief reaction, from a or to a article by former New York governor and attorney general Elliot Spitzer in Slate:

Spitzer says:

These numbers portray an unraveling of the social safety net.  The convergence of multiple polices—reduced taxation of the wealthy at all levels of government and greater dependence on taxes that fall on the poor (sales and payroll taxes, in particular)—has weakened government programs that help the poor and the young.

My response is that while framing the issues nicely it makes it sound like these things just happen, like a megatrend, force of nature of the weather, when in reality people forward ideas and the ideas lead to choices and actions by other people and that causes change, forward or backward, for better or for worse. For instance, (and I am indebted to a recent Rolling Stone article) a man named Grover Norquist is behind the pledge by congressmen and -women to not raise taxes and that is a set of choices that leads to the supposed crisis in the public sector. On top of that people in power are bashing Keynes and ideals of society wherein people are committed to each other, and to the least fortunate. It doesn’t make me a communist to not want desperately poor people and angry people in my midst. I’m not so much an altruist and ethical egoist: it is in my best interest not to want to fight for food. I’d rather share.

And here is a list of ideas that popped into my mind while devoting all of 40 minutes to skim the Gomez-Pena — reminds me that I have a related text with art by Enrique Chagoya and I think some of the same work or words by GGP. See also my essays with cameos by Juvenal Acosta, especially “Mere Surmise Slur”. To wit:

It also reminds me that at the gallery show (I wrote about below, at Nina Dresden Gallery) I ran into a recent acquaintance the Mexican poet, writer and professor Juvenal Acosta and he said the Michele King’s work “was a nicer price.” They were about $3,000 each for her paintings, but since we had been discussing a $110,000 painting at a gallery across the street, that would be “nicer” meaning within reach of more people, perhaps even Juvenal or myself. What he actually said was that he had met Michele previously and liked her as a person and was relieved that he liked her work likewise; it was a “nice surprise.” I told him this story, my mistake in hearing. (Juvenal’s English is appreciably better than my Spanish. His Spanish I’m certain is better than my English).

El Mexterminator, Mad Mex, Aztlan, “I Could Only Fight Back In My Poetry”, “poetic confrontation”, Wadsworth McBee, Prop 187, NAFTA, “Quebeqization of the entire Southwest”, Louis Malle Shoots GGP, velvet art, performance artist Hugo Sanchez (p. 92), glossary of borderisms, Saint Frida. Because I reference it below, I want to say the Gomez-Pena dressing in various garb made me think about the story that when Rev. Eleazer Wheelock wanted to start what became Dartmouth College he convinced Native American Samsom Occum to dress in ceremonial garb despite the fact that Occum was supposedly westernized and would have preferred to do the same pitches and appeals in normal street clothes, at least according to my professor Michael Dorris.

Always beware of too much cheese on your enchillada, hermanos y hermanas.

and outro from Manu Chau “Me Gustas Tu” for Jordana Finnegan’s class:

edit to add: despite my giddy enthusiasm for the blogosphere, I am going to pull this until I get permission from Dr. Finnegan and develop some ground rules for how to treat my fellow students, etc. (again, not being Ingraham)

edit to add, January 29, 2012: I published this after setting this to private for three weeks. The class is going well, I got an A, 99 out of 100, for an oral report I did with three other students. I like the text, Steinbeck’s “Tortilla Flat” and the class room discussions, although I have had a hard time balancing work projects and all the course requirements. I continue to appreciate and admire the instructor Dr. Jordanna Finnegan; my first impressions are holding. I chuckled when I thought about the old Rodney Dangerfield movie “Back to School” and whether or not I am now Rodney Dangerfield. I may write additionally about the class, but not blending course work and hopefully not invading the teacher-students bond or privacy or pact. I met briefly another teacher whose office is near Jordanna’s, Sarah Huerta, whose Latino art caught my eye and, somewhat obnoxiously perhaps, offered her my list of influences including: Matt Gonzalez, Guillermo Gomez Pena, Guillermo Gomez Abascal, Juvenal Acosta, Gustavo Ramos Rivera, Enrique Chagoya and Kara Marie.

I noticed a reference in the text to “enchillada” as opposed to tortilla flat; also, I bought at the Jewish Community Center Cafe, from a German-Brazilian Yannick an Armenian-Mexican flat burritto de pollo, from Marilu, I think her name was; I hope to check or straighten that out. The Foothill class will quickly move on to Glass Walls by Jeannette Castle no I mean Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls — reminds me of my line about being more about John Cage than Bill Gates. Then on to “Tortilla Curtain” by T.C. Boyle. Also, “Black Men Ski” my Stew is reminding me of Kent Manske at Foothill the art teacher who did a “Tortila Curtain” print project, that included my girl friend Terry Acebo Davis. I also chat up longtime student government director at Foothill Tricia Davoren.

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Ups from Samsom to Brent

After two hundred forty two years, Samsom Occum, in heaven, finally forgives the Reverend Eleazar Wheelock for making him dress up like a sissy and wave a tin cup like a monkey to raise money from even richer white folks for the founding of what became Dartmouth College, when he saw this film, by the the 200,000th beneficiary of the arrangement, Brent Knopf pka Ramona Falls:

edit to add, May, 2012: I want to thank fellow Dartmouth grad Eric Lindley (pka careful) for bringing the Dartmouth connection of Memomena and Ramona Falls to my attention. Also, Ramona Falls has a brand new cd, “Prophet” out on Barsuk as of May, 1, 2012 and will play Cafe Du Nord in SF on May 11 and are booked by Lisa O’Hara of High Road Touring. And he or they made this amazing little comic book about the making of the cd.

There is also this:

this is a little off topic but:

 

 

Hootie and Dartmouth: Sorry, no connection

By Justin A. Steinman, Senior Editor

Published on Tuesday, July 25, 1995

Let’s put the rumors to rest: Darius Rucker, lead singer of the rock group Hootie and the Blowfish, did not attend Dartmouth College. He did not apply to Dartmouth, or even want to come here.

So why is Rucker, a University of South Carolina graduate, wearing a Dartmouth sweatshirt in “Let Her Cry,” the band’s chart-topping video?

“Comfort. It’s his favorite sweatshirt,” explains Jim Lawrence, a spokesman for the band. “Before [Rucker] lost it in a bet, he used to wear the sweatshirt all the time.”

About three years ago, back when the band was still relatively unknown, Hootie and the Blowfish performed at a concert in New England. A female Dartmouth student attending the concert gave Rucker her sweatshirt, Lawrence said. Apparently, Rucker really liked the sweatshirt, so he wore it all the time.

When the band recorded its first video single, “Let Her Cry,” it was only natural for Rucker to wear his favorite sweatshirt, Lawrence said.

Hootie fans may have noticed that Rucker has not been seen in his sweatshirt recently, however.

In a questionable move, Rucker bet the sweatshirt on the Miami Dolphins-San Diego Chargers play-off game in January. When the Dolphins lost, Rucker lost his sweatshirt, Lawrence said.

Rucker has been attempting to regain possession of the sweatshirt, but to no avail, Lawrence said.

Rucker, currently on tour, could not be reached for comment.

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Man in the Arena

These famous words are by Teddy Roosevelt from 1910 but also are echoed in Nixon’s resignation, the actual events portrayed in the rugby movie “Invictus” and in the 1999 film “That Championship Season” in a speech by Paul Sorvino playing a deposed high school basketball coach — the play is actually more about the Nixon era than Clinton or Obama.
I caught the Gunn game Friday which triggered a series of ideas and reveries, and which framed my viewing of the film — I caught only the last half or so. I don’t think I had heard much about the play when it came out in the early Eighties. I saw reference to it after I organized a reunion of 10 of the 20 men who were part of Gunn’s 1980 and1981 seasons. (When Gunn finally won again, in 2009 –28 years later –their administrator thanked us for our small role in breaking the glass ceiling, like Darryl Dawkins).

For me of course, I was more of a sports reporter embedded on the end of the bench that an actual combatant; for me “That Championship Season” could be condensed down to “that championship season basket” — I scored only one field goal, plus two free throws — I was like George Plimpton in “Paper Lion” or Forrest Gump of Zelig or something. I was a practice player. I scored 5,000 baskets on my driveway of course, but only one for the Alma Mater. I’ve gotten a lot of mileage out of that basket — and it’s not like it was a game-winner, like Marc Ford of Paly beating Gunn in 1980, Gunn’s only league loss that year. (Or Joseph Lin buzzer-beating the Titans in 2009). I only got into the blowouts, as a scrub.

Maybe I can map out the relationships, for constructive effect, between those 20 or more men, “we” that is. I see a tiny amount of overlap with the Broadway drama — and we have the tragedy years later of losing Danny McCallister at 45, just months after the reunion, which in itself provoked some unpredictable reactions.

I wrote a fable in my head about a high school basketball player putting his admission chances on the line in a wager with a college president, about sinking one shot, like in “H-O-R-S-E” based on a conversation I had with one of the Gunn moms.

Sports and sports lore can be the source of entertainment and the buidling of character but we should be cautioned about taking any of it too seriously; power corrupts. We all start and end by crawling.

The speech, about half of which is excerpted in the drama:
It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, who comes short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat.

edit to add, or this just in, speaking of “cold” or perhaps giving new meaning to “soul on ice”: congrats to Jarome “Iggy” Iginla of the Calgary Flames who became the 42nd NHL player all-time to amass 500 goals, the 15th to do it for one team.  Iginla has roots in Nigeria, Yoruba tribe.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jarome_Iginla

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The black jews of Spain; or, can a Tzadik walk the tal’k?

something about: jewlia eisenberg, tanya haden and aisha tyler, with special guest apearances by beth custer and alden van buskirk

Big ups to sista Jew

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Clare Rojas at Paule Anglim

It was Kim Chun who told me about Clare Rojas and her music under the name Peggy Honeywell

Clare Rojas

Piecemeal
January 4 – 28, 2012
Reception: January 7, 4 – 6pm

Swann’s Way, 2011   acrylic on linen, 49″ x 73″ 
Gallery Paule Anglim is pleased to announce an exhibition of new paintings by Clare Rojas.In “Piecemeal”, her third exhibition at the gallery, Rojas will present a group of paintings on stretched linen. Rojas has painted precise and colorful compositions using the traditional format of a free-hanging painting. Stepping back in her perspective from the tight, detailed narrations of previous bodies of work, the artist has taken a hard-edged view of interior spaces and the abstract shapes produced by architecture and shadow.Clare Rojas studied at the Rhode Island School of Design and the Chicago Art Institute before moving to the Bay Area where she lives and maintains her studio. She has exhibited internationally, including solo shows at the Rose Art Museum at Brandeis University, the Museo De Arte Contemporaneo de Castillo y Leon in Spain and the Museum Het Doemien in the Netherlands, She received awards from the Joan Mitchell Foundation, The Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation, Artadia and the Fleishhacker Foundation’s Eureka Fellowship.. An accomplished musician and performer, she has several books and music CD’s published.

There’s a bunch of stuff I am trying to remember to do, like David Jacobs-Strain at Hotel Utah, Essence at California Academy of Science, Beth Custer at Throckmorton and our own event at Caffe Centro, for Rob Syrett’s soft art opening, maybe with a special guest spinning on the little self-powered Crosley Terry got me for Festivus.

Meanwhile here is Clare Rojas pka Peggy Honeywell:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0KlEIH8-_Rc&feature=related

 

edit to add, January 17, 2012: on my way to the opening I passed by the flower kiosk near Union Square and asked the clerk if she knew Emily Palen, who busked there. I asked her to recommend a friendship rose, and walked away with a lavender rose, if not the purple rose of cairo. When I got to the Gallery, I was getting to know Paule’s new clerk Jessica from Manchester and Paule herself walked by.  She inquired about the rose and I said it was for the artist (Rojas, there was additional work by Annabeth Rosen, I had not realized). Anglim encouraged me to proceed with my plan but when I got to the artist, I panicked and asked “Which one of you is Clare?”. She accepted the gesture not too awkwardly. Later I also visited with her partner Barry McGee.

Today I think it was Vanessa Blakely from Romer Young who said, apropos of Clare, that there is also a big piece of hers at the airport. Vanessa, who was home with her mother in law and son (Bhodi), gave me a brochure from a recent show in Singapore which I ended up getting signed by two of her neighbors, the fellow visual artists Zhanna and Sarima. I later visited Vanessa’s former employer, met her replacement Kate Meacham, and also had a brief encounter with their artist Carol Selter. I told Carol I shared a birthday with her fellow San Jose State luminary Tony May.  Somewhere in all this, I also left a voice mail with a gossip columnist identifying the toddlers at the soiree as the brood of my Gunn High classmate Peter Kirkeby.  I also ran into artist manager extraordinaire Jordan Kurland who said he owned a Rojas (and someone later pointed out that Noise Pop, Jordan’s baby, commissioned CR for a poster recent past year  — I’ve been churning the experience of the opening in various ways in the ensuing days.

Logo
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Genes of geniuses: cousins Helen Sung and Joyce Yu-Jean Lee

A little birdie tipped me off to these two women on the rise in their respective artistic fields, Helen Sung, of New York by way of Houston and Austin, a piano player who has recorded for Sunnyside and Steeplechase, and her first cousin Joyce Yu-Jean Lee, of Baltimore by way of Dallas, who does installation art and video. Tip of the iceberg, here is a video of Helen Sung playing with Ron Carter at the Rubin Museum of New York, in the the former Barney’s store that specializes in Himalayan Art.

I am hitting some technological turbulence in terms of putting Joyce’s work on an equal plane here with that of Helen, but I recommend reading this online journal article and following their cues for a deeper immersion into her work.

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