Happy anniversary to Terry and I

Radius artist Terry Acebo Davis of Palo Alto

I woke up this morning with a dream that Sedge Thomson’s West Coast Live show was soundchecking nearby and I could throw on my clothes and attend the live taping. Actually, Sedge and Sylvia Brownrigg, his beautiful wife, 2/3 baby-mom to his brood, Gunn graduate and little sister to Burlingame council member Michael Brownrigg, are on vacation so his show is a repeat. In honor of that, I am running a “best of” column with excerpts from some of my previous 151 (like the rum proof) posts. I am quoting from the nine posts that mention my sweetie, the visual artist, arts administrator and all-around goddess Terry Acebo Davis.

1. “Jump Around” from 9/9/10

https://markweiss86.wordpress.com/2010/09/09/jump-around/

In this post, which includes a picture of us with our favorite Santa Fe arts couple, Mateo Romero and Melissa Talachy, I describe our travels in the Southwest, and sundry other arts topics.

Mateo Romero, Mark Weiss, Terry Acebo Davis, Melissa Talachy Romero

It actually talks about Matt Gonzalez and Alden Van Buskirk as much it does Terry but it’s also true that so much of my view on the visual arts is catalyzed by my relationship with Terry, who I’ve been dating since summer, 2009. I also link to her semi-recent show at Triton.

Then around New Year’s 2011 I posted a brief entry that was mainly a picture I snapped of her with my cell as we were going to Santa Fe for the holidays, plus some links to another of her shows, plus some random Flip-related links

Terry Acebo Davis on flight to or from San Jose or Albuquerque, Dec., 2010

. All and all, this blog is probably the best source for info on Terry Acebo Davis. Most of her considerable arts output predates the internet era, which is also probably true of Earthwise Productions and “The Cubberley Sessions.”

3. “Terry Acebo Davis backlit New Year’s Santa Fe flight” from 2/23/11

https://markweiss86.wordpress.com/2011/02/23/terry-acebo-davis-back-li/

4. “PA(tch): or, PA!!!” from 5/2/11

Next, from Spring, 2011, is actually a verbatim re-pasting of my cover letter and query to become a contributor to Patch Palo Alto but I had shot its editor Aaron Selverston

Aaron Selverston, editor of the new local media outlet Patch.com, a part of AOL, interviews sculptor James Moore and PAPAC commissioner Terry Acebo Davis on Earth Day, April 22, 2011 at the Bill Bliss Memorial installation in Palo Alto, Calif.

speaking to Terry and artist James Moore at the Earth Day event at Baylands.

(note to self, as if my blog is anything beyond a note to self, maybe I can re-post some of these photos in thumbnail here)

https://markweiss86.wordpress.com/2011/05/02/patch-or-pa/ Now Terry wants to go to Farmers’ Market so I will have to stop here. Relationship, 1; Blog, 0. (which is a lot better sounding that Paly 45, Gunn 14).

talk among yourselves until i get back to edit to add

edit to add, Saturday, September 24, 2011, noonish: Terry and I paid a visit to the Farmers’ Market. Highlights include: seeing our favorite plumber/drummer sitting in the Naomi and Friends klezmer, explaining or correcting someone who confused the terms “clave” and “klezmer”, seeing Alexandra Ippolite, her husband and babygirl Paige, and her upping my group discount to “Page One” group viewing on Saturday, October 1 at 11:00 a.m. part of Palo Alto International Film Festival; spotting ex-49ers lineman Harris Barton, who I secretly stalk, and watching him order four plates from Oaxaca Kitchen, presumably to share with his family; buying a croissant afterwards from the new Kim family Paris Baguette bakery at Uni and Waverley. Terry is off to try to salvage old bowling pins from the former Fiesta Lanes while I am back to blogsville.

5.  “Terry Acebo Davis as virtual open studio installation” from 5/19/11

https://markweiss86.wordpress.com/2011/05/19/terry-acebo-davis-as-4030-transport-kienholz-virtual-open-studio-installation/ In May Terry was too busy to show or sell her works at Open Studio but I shot three photos and made her a virtual studio tour, for Open Studios.

Terry Davis plus her work plus her studio equal installation

6. “Mia Ollikainen George Herms diptych” from 7/6/11

This one is actually more about Mia Ollikainen than Terry Acebo Davis, but it mentions Terry in a couple places, AND she logs on (albeit under my name — confusing, I know, hence the John Berryman “Dreamsongs” digression) to comment.

https://markweiss86.wordpress.com/2011/07/06/mia-ollikainen-george-herms-diptych/

7.  “Please slug yourselfs to SF to see Terry Allen” from 8/27/11

This one is about Terry Allen not Terry Acebo Davis, and references Dizzy Dean as much as our arts commission outgoing chair, but Terry Davis did read this post closely enough to win, hands down, the Sled Allen baseball card contest. Terry made a set of 100, a box set nonetheless, on the obscure baseball player whose son we were honoring. In lieu of a cash prize I ended up paying for Frida’s little sojourn at the vets/boarding. Frida being her Cocker Spaniel that I walk three times a day, not the actual Frida,

Frida the cocker spaniel enjoying a sunny Palo Alto afternoon walk

Kahlo her namesake. Sometimes we call her Lady Boo-zine-GaGa, not sure why. (Maybe I can do a similar omnibus of Frida at “Plastic Alto”)

https://markweiss86.wordpress.com/2011/08/27/please-slud-yourselfs-to-sf-to-see-terry-allen-sept-first/ I would say overall my baseball card contest was more actualized than my Giants-Rangers proposed tribute record (“Humm Rhyme Derby”) but less so that TLPW456, my Smith-Andersen one day art show in honor of my campaign for City Council in 2009 or my Wallace Stegner tribute. If any stragglers turn in cards I will forward them to Paule Anglim. Terry Acebo Davis, in the comments, posted a link to see her card, but I think it only works from her home computer.

8. “Marcus Shelby and Howard Wiley at Cafe Claude” from 9/2/11

https://markweiss86.wordpress.com/2011/09/02/marcus-shelby-and-howard-wiley-at-cafe-claude/ This one is about Marcus Shelby but it mentions Terry Acebo Davis in the first sentence because we met Marcus and Howard Wiley at Cafe Claude after the Terry Allen show, and I ended up hiring Marcus to play the Mildred Howard event at Palo Alto City Hall, for “Clear Story” a project Terry was involved in (although it was Karen Kienzle’s baby, more than 2/3).

9. “Happy anniversary to Terry and I” from today, September 14, 2011

Okay now we are back to this, whose prologue reads:

happy anniversary to my girlfriend Terry Acebo Davis and I. Thanks, Terry for two such beautiful and exciting years. Continue reading →

Posted in art, sex, sf moma, this blue marble | Tagged | 5 Comments

Jody Naranjo announces The Pueblo Girls label and band

The Pueblo Girls projected from imagination to clay and soon to flesh and a theatre near you.

At Indian Market I met Jody Naranjo, a renowned potter from Santa Clara Pueblo living in Albuquerque. She and I decided to take the fictitious rock band The Pueblo Girls, seen on this red ribbon winning vase, and turn the concept into an actual band. We hope to recruit female musicians in training from her pueblo and train them to conquer the world with rock music.
Stay tuned.

Posted in art, music, sex | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

New New Varsity Revival blog on WordPress

Here is the gist of the first post there, by Tasha Brooks:

The Varsity Revival Project is a group of people who are concerned about the fate of downtown Palo Alto’s iconic historic landmark The Varsity Theater. The Varsity  maintained a  long standing role in this community beginning with it’s 1927  Grand Opening. The Varsity’s strong presencc continued for 84 long years, until NOW. The recent demise of the Varsity’s last tenants, Borders Books and Music has left the Varsity vacant. The bright lights and neon from it’s marquee no longer shine upon the city street.

The Varsity is a truly beautiful, iconic structure of historical significance; The building is Landmark category 1- the most important in historic inventory of the  city and considered a major bldg at regional or state level. This status promises that the integrity of the structure’s most basic features- the framing and  courtyard, as well as it’s many unique asthetic embellishments are protected by Federal Law which overrides even the private owner of the property in it’s authority. This protection does not extend it’s  limitations in terms of  purpose and intended use for the structure. The iconic gathering spot where people of all ages  experienced  and exchanged  culture and ideas, shared generations of live music, and the arts that colored the spectrum and in this way, the Varsity facilitated our sense of community and heritage.  The Varsity acted as a magnet, attracting from all corners of the Peninsula, and beyond, in every incarnation; as a single show movie house, to bar and restaurant, to live afternoon music in the courtyard from the likes of Tuck and Patti to Michael Hedges, to sold out live shows featuring local bands along with the most influential rock bands of the punk generation and beyond. The movie schedule was as eclectic as the patrons; bringing to it’s doors disney loving youngsters, indie foreign fans, and Rocky Horror fanatics- all beneath one roof in an atmosphere of acceptance and acknowledgment.  This unique structure, that by design, allowed the crossing of  paths of spirits as diverse as can be:  the creative, the innovative, the artists and the observers of art, the youth and the young adults, parents of up and coming  generations, and the generations who preceded remained in attendance.
The  legends that color our city were,  in this way, born and that gave life to the  Spirit of  Community that became a beacon for all  the world to see; drawing into Palo Alto the  true makers of today: the first creators of the high tech, dot com generation. What better depicts the values that attracted this generation of brilliant, young, creative, individualist, the  pushers of technology and culture than the diverse, open minded, accepting, globally and locally active and aware folks  that gathered at the Varsity? There has not been, nor is there now, any place in or around downtown Palo Alto that welcomed equally,  paying patrons and non- paying company who gathered together regularly in the courtyard  as well as indoors, depending upon seating accommodations (which changed with eras). This welcoming practice propagated an ambiance of inclusiveness and gave inertia to lines of open communication and the exchanging of ideas and values.

The City of Palo Alto has received plans submitted by the owner of the Varsity that will transform two thirds of the existing space into offices. This will forever change the flow of pedestrian traffic through the building, and put an end to what remained true to the spirit of the Varsity Theater and remained as such even in it’s final generation as a retail store. The culture of Palo Alto will be a reflection of the homogenized, high rent, establishments that populate University Avenue.It is truly a sad day for this once diverse, innovative, and welcoming city.

My personal vision for the Varsity is simply having the structure revived if not restored and the theater active as a venue for more than just films, but also for live performance, community speakers and interactions, for Tedtalks and for children’s poetry slams…I see endless possibilities for the theater…The restaurant/bar/cafe would allow the beauty and unique historical significance that exists in the courtyard to really shine as the crown jewel of University Ave- taking the spotlight off the gaudy, ostentatious, enormity that is the current structure of note on University- the Cheesecake Factory. I think there would be an enormous draw for all sects of the community in opening the courtyard allowing a welcoming of diverse patrons by making whatever the retail spin on services provided have a inclusive scope. Serve coffee with  free refills, along with pricey polenta or what have you… I don’t know how to put my thoughts into business terms- but I hope you understand my point. Given that atmosphere of  a cultural arts magnet, and a place to spend time within the means of both poles of economic states I believe the community will have a gift, a serendipitous new option for how and  where they spend time. Whether this is a for profit business is not even a question, it must be. That is the only choice just in terms of gaining access to the building! The idea of using space for office space or meeting space is doesn’t bother me. The fact is a profit must be made. Any additional ways to use the site for profit would help support the less financially stable but more community oriented retail uses. I had some thoughts on renting space upstairs to groups of self publishing authors, maybe providing computers in the office space. There are,  again, endless possibilities for that aspect. The truth is I just want to see the building protected from being further defaced and to be open for use as it was intended to be, that is my agenda.

Tasha Brooks

Thanks, Tasha. Well said. My notes from the meeting include these names, for follow up: Gail Price, Laura Surma, Michael Brownrigg, Michael Dieden, Devi at Palo Alto Film Festival(after Oct. 2), Tim Draper, Mary Morgan, Sam Lardner, Nancy Shepherd and Arthur Keller.

edit to add: Tasha and Becky, let me know if I have the correct link. Meanwhile, apropos of the situation, I could not help link to this, filed under “stink, stank, stunk”:

Posted in ethniceities, film, la la, media, Plato's Republic, sex | Tagged , , , | 6 Comments

Scuba checks in with “Fall OF not OFF The Bike Palo Alto”

Sandra Wang and Crocket Bodelson, of Santa Fe New Mexico and San Francisco, are offering to let us use this image for what I am calling “Fall OF Not OFF The Bike Palo Alto” meaning let’s all try to use our bikes as much as we can while the weather is nice, and support the Bike PA or whatever its called coming up, Susan Stamsbury supports.

I’ll check back with them about whether we can turn this into t-shirts.

I imagine that someday we can have a concert at The Varsity where people will try to all bike or use Caltrain or both. When Blink 182 played Cubberley in 1998, I gave people 2-for-1 if they came on bike. I called it “Earthday Rock N Bike” — wonder if it’s too late to arrange something like that for their upcoming show at Shoreline.

PROGRAM NOTE: WHILE WE ARE WAITING TO HEAR BACK FROM CROCKETT AND SANDRA SCUBA ABOUT THEIR BICYCLE PAINTING, PLEASE ENJOY THIS VIDEO, I HEARD ABOUT ON DAYTROTTER “CALIFORNIA” BY ERIKA M. ANDERSON OF SOUTH DAKOTA PKA EMA:

THANK YOU.

Posted in Plato's Republic, sex, this blue marble | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

Caroleen Beatty and Sunshine Haire are back, as The Upsets, kinda sorta

http://www.facebook.com/video/video.php?v=1483245395048

This is the third time I’ve tried to write about Caroleen Beatty on the internet, including briefly in my post “I remember NOLAthing” and also, if you click through to Amazon, there for her Runt Records release of covers, “You’re Only as Pretty As You Feel”, I posted that in 2006.

I’ve been watching Caroleen and Sunny (am I the only person who still calls her Sunshine?) since December of 1994. I wrote a letter to someone in Bedlam Rovers asking them if they want to play my new concert series at Cubberley. They had basically broken up. I saw what I believed to be Sunny’s debut with them, on Haight Street, she was subbing for Marko who had tinnitis, I think it was. Caroleen told me later, in passing, that the band was from DC and had in fact once bought Ian MacKaye’s van, or borrowed it or rented it, for a tour (a propos of the show I did with The Evens, in 2007, I think). Caroleen probably hates having her career discussed in terms of her many better-known admirers. But let me just say that one of her biggest fans, who I met only because she suggested that, if I had to shop her demos he was worth checking with, Howard Greynolds of Overcoat Records in Chicago. Greynolds meanwhile has been pretty darn busy helping his other discoveries like Swell Season (who won the Academy Award, for “Once” and “Falling Slowly”) and Iron and Wine (what hasn’t he done?).

I also met Andrea Troolin through Howard; she works with Andrew Bird.

I will always remember, as I mentioned here, that on my 40th birthday, while visiting New York, I took the train and a couple cabs to watch Jon Langford’s soundcheck at North Moore in Philly, then I hustled back to keep my actual plan, to see Patricia Barber at Birdland (I had a date). It was my very first visit and I had no idea I would be falling in and out of love with a Philly-emigrant and would be spending so much of my 40s it seems in the 215.

So to the extent that Caroleen’s work is, what?, assuaging pain, I really do feel her, although she told someone once I don’t get it.

“I am a happy person” I heard her say once, on stage, at The Oakland Metro, opening for Stew (who had a pretty good run shortly thereafter, with “Passing Strange”) “it’s only my songs that are sad.” (That night the venue paid her fifty bucks and she kicked me back a sawbuck, the only commission I made during my two years or so managing the artists “individually, collectively and professionally known as Waycross.” — there was some verbiage about sunset clauses that I’ve never enforced but I’m not upset).

I remember when I played the demo of some of these same songs, including here “Boys Boys Boys” (“bluer than blue”) for Craig Ruda in LA, my cousin, and a running partner with David Immergluck, of the Counting Crows, who was quoted somewhere as saying his Christmas list included having Caroleen Beatty sit on his lap — he was enamored, Immergluck –that he made a pantomine of someone tieing off — it was sad, very sad music.

I think if you got these songs to Ry Cooder for instance he might want to re-cut “Paris, Texas” by Wim Winders — this fits that whole zeitgeist of love’s labour lost and powerlessness; maybe these tracks will end up on a special directors cut DVD.

Of course Eno is a fan of Caroleen, thanks to the work she and Doug did making their own version of “Taking Tiger Mountain.”

Although these five or so songs were shot more than a year ago, in August, 2010, they are a relevation and currency for me; I haven’t seen or talked to Caroleen in much longer, plus, as I said, I’ve been watching her over 18 years or so. She also used to play the flute on stage, some early reviews of Bedlam Rovers describe.

Well, she should be getting paid, not “fucked.”

“Satisfaction equals desire” a snatch of lyrics from Bedlam Rovers old song, maybe recorded live at KZSU, worked into my decision to drop out of mainstream advertising.

Anyhow, much respect and fondest best wishes to Caroleen and Sunny; not quite sure if its appropriate to invite them to play somewhere down here, for International Congress of Buskers or Palo Alto (ICOBOPA), at Lytton Plaza, at Zoe Cafe, in Mildred Howards “Clear Story” art installation, or what.

Ian Brennan is their supporter, and took them to East Coast on his Brainwash group tour; he’s a wheel as a producer now with Tiniarawen and Ramblin’ Jack Elliot. He could at least get them heard, for instance, at Anti.

Not sure if Caroleen wants to be heard by anyone but her close friends.

I once had a notion to suggest Wilbur Woodas a pseudonym in that she has a lyric about “down on her knuckles” and it sounds rural. She owns a gardening service and or is a gardener.

Topher Delaney

She is the Topher Delaney of folk punk. Wilbur Wood, who turns 70 next month, was known for his endurance and resilience — like Caroleen – and is the last pitcher to both win and lose 20 games in a season, in 1974. The Upsets is a fine name, too.

Check out the parallax view of this performance shot by two different people; the social media page, linked at very top, is public so people like me who are dissidents can check it, for now at least.

Posted in music, sex, sf moma | 10 Comments

Shana tova to Essence Goldman

I shot this picture of Essence at Caffe Centro in South Park, SF

Shana tova to Essence Goldman

edit to add, January 1, 2012, the Julian New Year: essence is doing a children’s show at the California Academy of Sciences on Saturday, Jan. 7, 2012 at noon and I may have to check it out, followed perhaps by a peek at the Anderson Collection of Prints across the way at the De Young. I was saddened to hear of John Buchanan’s passing. I never met him but heard good things about him from my De Young people. Here is Es recently at Green Apple Books, where I once worked:

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

The Lisen Stromberg Center for The Performing Arts

Lisen Stromberg hosted author Carol Edgarian in her Palo Alto home Tuesday. As her series grows, and her influential blog postings (which dwarf mine) expand, she might play the pivotal role in the rekindling of culture at 456 University.

When I clicked on Carol’s press page to check out the review Janet Maslin wrote of “Three Stages of Amazement” which has to do with family and careers in Silicon Valley, I noticed that the MacArthur Grants were announced. As I do every year, I excitedly clicked through to scan the article for anyone I have even the slightest connection with (and I apologize to Lisen and Carol for this digression away from their works — they are geniuses — and hotties – in my book). In previous years I was happy for Steve Lacy, although he won well before I knew him, and Corey Harris, for example, I toured with, and mentioned in my previous post about Josh Roseman’s study of the relationship between jazz and ska. Although I don’t know well Dafnis Prieto, the 37 year old Cuban jazz drummer living in New York, I had met him at the Painted Bride a couple years back, playing with Peter Apfelbaum, and rang some congratulatory greetings to the Berkeley office of Hans Wendl, his manager and one of my mentors and inspirations in that realm. (I had done shows with his clients such as Faun Fables, Tin Hat Trio, Bill Frisell publishing, and we both work with Beth Custer, usually me riffing off the melody lines he establishes for her, so to speak).

As I heard Carol read, and Lisen either ask or moderate questions from the group, for Carol, I also flipped through Carol’s Narrative.com anthology, and read a few pages from an Ann Packer story, about a teenager meeting new friends in a new school. It took place in Palo Alto — Terman I presume is the model — and reminded me of my first days here, in fall of 1974, although I was a fifth grader not an eighth grader. Lisen and I discussed our mutual admiration for Ann Packer – for all the Packers, actually — and about trying to get Ann Packer — who has a new book of short stories — to the salon, or parlour.

Carol Edgarian is a Stanford grad who prepped at Andover; she and her husband Tom Jenks live in San Francisco where they also produce Narrative Magazine an online literary journal.

I posted elsewhere that if Lisen’s project grows it could someday fill The Varsity Theatre, which is 900 capacity. Now I am saying she has the power  — especially coupled with her network, including a marcom whiz I met last night — to get the thing named for her.

Actually, Dafnis Prieto’s show at the Painted Bride, from October, 2005, is archived here and I conjure it to say that if Philly can have the Painted Bride we can have The Varsity:

http://www.myspace.com/video/dafnis-prieto/dafnis-prieto-small-big-band/34510642

Posted in Plato's Republic, sex, sf moma, words | Tagged , , , | 4 Comments

Jazz Ska Attack 2011

I am hoping to get some cell time, in the Governor Moonbeam not Cool Hand Luke sense, with jazz musician Josh Roseman in advance of his Nov. 12 show at Jen Bilfield’s Stanford Lively Up Your Arts series.

I booked Josh into the Agenda Nightclub in San Jose in 2002 during my short-lived time as a talent buyer there; the rest of the series was a disaster with the club owner asking instrumental bands to bring vocalists and then people outright refusing to play. I called the series “Din-din Din” meaning it was not your typical supper jazz (although I should have called it “Din-din dun” because the same club owner that dissed so many bands also refused to pay me as promised).

I ran into Josh at Stanford Jazz Workshop a few years ago, but never followed up with whatever I had wanted to accomplish. I recall bumping into him a couple times at Printer’s Ink during a time that he had an ongoing project here; he’s based in New York or Brooklyn. My impression is that Josh Roseman, the trombone player, is part Jewish along the lines of Josh Shedroff Redman or Dave Ellis; I was actually a little surprised, therefore, when I saw the listings describing Josh as Jamaican. (His mother is from Jamaica, it says somewhere. I sometimes tell people I was once, for a few years even, an honorary or aspiring Dominican, of the Roseau kind. I had two girlfriends in a row from the same tiny West Indian and former British colony nation; I guess I was a “josh Roseau-man”).

I was a josh, meaning fake, Roseau-man, meaning I was in love with a West Indian woman, from Dominica

I saw a flyer for a ska band forming at Stanford and briefly corresponded with its author, a Stanford Marching Band horn player of no little ambition who is engrossed in travel in and study of Japan and has therefore punted the project which I was hoping to rename for her Skankford or Stanford Ska Project — I wrote her about Josh.

When the Toasters played Cubberley in 1997 or so, they brought along Lester “Ska” Sterling, one of the original Skatalites. I recall him sleeping on two folding chairs in the cafeteria, the green room, of the former high school multipurpose room, waiting his hit. The link at the end to the Don Drummond video tribute is due to Josh saying elsewhere that Don Drummond not Don Cherry is the main influence here although the 2002 album is called “Cherry”:

I spoke to Josh’s label guy, Harvard grad and Either Orchestra leader Russ Gershon, himself a reeds player, about sundry topics and his work with Ethiopian music and jazz — now that’s a project for SLA. (I checked his avails the year I brought Steve Bernstein’s Diaspora suite cd release show to Bottom of the Hill; I also checked Tim Berne Bloodcount, on a tip from Wedge Craig Matsumoto, who flew out to Mark Christman’s Ars Nova in Philly to check it);

I am reasonably certifiable that the book for Josh’s upcoming show, if not all the personnel, draw from, color or inform, shoot across the universe as if, this 2007 session on Accurate (which is actually done live in Austria?):

This might be a good time to check or checker out once and for all and learn to describe the distinction between reggae and ska. It would be interesting to check in with Corey Harris, the MacArthur Fellow, and see how he compares the path of the blues from West Africa to New Orleans to the evolution of jazz, ska and reggae – how does it all fit together? He and Josh should talk.

There’s some cute videos of young people “skanking” (or are they “skankin’ “?), the straight-legged dance associated with ska.

I once did a show with a Japanese ska band with a Korean-American producer, Kemura, on Roadrunner Records, who were added to a bill that already had The Electrocutes (aka The Donnas), the Peechees (featuring Molly Neuman and Chris Appelgren, who ended up signing then managing the Donnas), J Church (featuring who couldn’t play but came anyways to check it out — a class move). We could have let Kemuri play longer if we knew that The Electrocutes — who were only 16 at the time — were only gonna go 25 minutes of their hour — isn’t that often the case?)

Josh’s bigger band includes Jacob Garchik, the son of Chronicle gossip columnist Leah Garchik, both of whom I now pepper or pester with sundry ideas and observations. I saw Jacob’s accordion project was given 62 word preview in Sunday Times by Nate Chinen. (I had asked Garchik to make a demo of Lee Konitz’ “Palo Alto” which I want used as hold-music when we call City Hall).

Liberty Ellman, Charlie Hunter and Peter Apfelbaum — all of whom I’ve interviewed either live for KZSU or for Palo Alto Patch AOL — play with Josh, or play Josh’s music.

Josh was the most indie member of the first SFJAZZ Festival All-Star band when it formed in 2004.

Josh does a mean version of “Don’t Be Cruel.”

When I managed John Ellis we got a lot of traction following in certain ways in the tracks of Josh Roseman, and his then-manager Erica Jacobson was a fount of ideas and inspiration. It seems that Josh played some of John’s music recently at Jazz Gallery in New York.

Rob Syrett and I are doing a poster on spec for the Matmos So Percussion show next month at Stanford Lively Arts — Rob did their album cover — and we considered creating a concept that would bridge Matmos So Percussion with the November 12 ska show by JRU; I think I was also thinking of “Up” the animated movie as Matmos album is called “Supreme Balloon” and again upsessed by this pun on the Bob Marley line “Lively Up” versus “Lively Arts.”

I ran into Jay Thorwaldsen and Sue Dremann at Palo Alto Sol last night and resisted giving them the doctored Palo Alto Weekly fall arts preview cover in which I took a sharpie to Etienne Charles and made him into Josh Roseman. But I also left what I hoped was a constructive voice mail for Rebecca Wallace suggesting that there is still time to give Josh a cover; they gave me one once for Jah’s sake. (which is reminding me that I mean to post a mean but not cruel riff at Paul Loesh’s column about Bob Dylan and blowing the shofar to confuse Satan.)

I guess it’s fair to ask Josh about his hair — the press page shows him shaved, not dreaded. I booked a show once of Stanford’s Venus Opal Reese doing nothing but talking about hair. Speaking of having booked shows at the Cub featuring both Medeski and Lester “Ska” Sterling, I also recently unearthed an old flyer for the Femi Kuti show that also touted an upcoming Steve Lacy gig.

Satan can you hear me now? Satan, now can you hear me? Satan, what is the frequency? Satan, how many kegs of beer can they drink at a Phish concert (250) versus Palo Alto Gran Fondo (6)? Can Josh Roseman, Satan, blow a shofar? Will Josh, Satan, be chauffeured? Is all the music in four, or who, Satan, is counting?

I thought that Vince Difiore of Cake, on “Prolonging The Magic”– currently this very day back in my car cd player —  did a good impression of a shofar. I recall when Cake played Cubberley in 1995 a teenager read my description of the show and said she liked jazz. They put blues bands and beyond indie bands like Deerhoof at jazz (even Ornette’s) festivals, but can they put Jamaican Ska Jazz bands in a mariachi show, and why not? Because sales will plunger?

I guess my main questions for Josh would be who you bringin’, have you ever blown a shofar, and something about The Varsity Theatre?

The little staccato-like blasts of the shofar I think (because I admit, I’ve only been to the Talmud study class twice, but can probably squeeze in one or two more visits by the time I see Josh Roseman) are called teruah. There are also sounds called Tekiah which tempt me to want to split the difference between klezmer and lounge music and do a special Rosh Hashana or Yom Kippur version of “Tequila” — I am the poor-man’s Hal Willner. (I founded with Beth Custer and Glenn Hartman Drone and Bone — Al Williams on trombone — that morphed Ravel’s Bolero with “George of the Jungle” and now am working on something with basically the same cast called “Sussman Can’t Sleep” a tribute to Coen Brother’s and Hendrix — hey, maybe Josh Roseman can sit in?)

I would ask Josh Roseman about Don Byron’s interest in Mickey Katz.

Also, maybe I’d ask him about the young female sax player, I recall her name as Eisner of Eisner of Chicago, in the band that played Montalvo a few years back. Also, not that it has anything to do with Josh, Jazz or Jamaica, but I am meaning to know the name of the Asian trumpet player in Matt Nathanson’s band, that was on Leno. Maybe as Dave Douglas has a festival of new trumpet music (FONT), Josh can have a festival of new trombone that is FONTR, ie even more font than Dave’s.

That is pretty wack that I call this an interview and a) I don’t even talk to the dude — I am trying, PICK UP, JOSH, — and b) I use it to brainstorm or throw out or suggest new material. Mind your own business, young man!

Or Lively Up Yourself!

This reminds me of the Woody Allen joke about he was teaching a class on masturbation but if he got there late the class would start without him.

Posted in ethniceities, jazz, this blue marble | Tagged , , , , | 16 Comments

consortium views arts as engines of recovery

consortium views arts as engines of recovery

hallelujah, hosanna and sho nuff mazel mabuhay huh-huh-huh-HA!

winning! gambei!!! or, make that “kanpai” for Satomi!! And Jeff!!!

gambei satomi

These are Jack Lemmon's books, after some gravity problems at Landfall Press in Santa Fe, NM, home to works by Terry Allen, Christo and Claes Oldenburg

edit to add, Monday, Sept. 19, 2011: Here is a link to ArtPlace, the so-called venture capital firm for arts. The New York Times article lauded NEA chair Rocco Landesman, the Broadway promoter, for his role in finding creative ways to support the arts. The local papers listed Intersection for the Arts as one of several local recipients.

OR: 12-STEP PROGRAM TO COOK UP THE WINNING FORMULA IN PITCHED FIGHT BETWEEN DEVELOPER AND THE PEOPLE

I of course am hoping that this news is seen by commissioners and council members in Palo Alto who are considering being pro-active and creative on how to lift the curtain at The Varsity Theatre. I took the night off from City Council. I am writing several drafts and plans for future documents and tactics.1) I went to Freight and Salvage Saturday, for Country Joe McDonald’s tribute to Woody Guthrie and a quick pow wow with Steve Baker, all informing and inspiring my work on TLPW456.

2)I saw James McMurtry at Slim’s on Friday and invited him into my Stegner tribute project, and incidentally gave him a “The Last Picture Waltz” business card as my contact info. He said “Wallace Stegner was my dad’s teacher when he [Larry McMurtry] wrote his first book.” He added that he had recently read “Recapitulation” but found it lacking compared to “Angle of Repose”. I said “but can you turn that into a song?” and he indicated that you cannot force such things.

Texas songwriter and avid reader James McMurtry, at Slim's

3)On Saturday I also went to the Echelon Gran Fondo of Palo Alto bike event and food tasting, made a small donation to Kiwanis of Palo Alto, and spent about five hours schmoozing and brainstorming on various interrelated arts projects, not limited to TLPW456.

Borders is gone gone gone. Good riddance! Although I guess that means the clock is running for the grass roots proposal to stop the office space proposal in favor of something with a public benefit like concerts, films and public meetings.

4) On Sunday I went to a Midtown Residents Association annual party, as a guest, I guess, or inter-loafer, and had several illuminating and generally invigorating talks with people on these issues. Also, 5) I saw Alex Ippolite of Palo Alto International Film Festival and furthered my idea about either taking a group to a showing, or maybe helping to find a panel or host for a film.

6) Last week, I went up to SF and ended up doing an installment of Beat Hotel Rm 32 Performs Howl with a young singer-songwriter I met there named Jim Byron. We were in front of Caffe Trieste. I ran down to City Lights to procure yet another edition of “Howl.”

7)I went to a Giants game to meet my childhood friend from Saratoga, Calif., Andrew Dieden, who was organizing a pre-game event on a recovery theme, and saw his cousin perform, Colin Dieden of the Mowglis, an LA-based pop band that reminds me a little of Camper Van Beethoven. Colin’s dad, I sat with for a few innings of a Tim Lincecum win, Michael Dieden is an Bishop O’Dowd alum (and hoopster — he’s a hoopster hipster) who helped develop the properties surrounding two East Bay BART stations and worked for an early Jerry Brown campaign.

Colin Dieden center of Moglies

8) Back here in PA, I met a neighbor’s daughter, Nora Williams, a Stanford and M-A grad who is violin with Red Riding Hood and a symphony in Chicago.

9) I popped in on Jeff Adachi’s kickoff event, at Verdi Club in SF, and also went by their campaign HQ. I am hoping to put in a wee bit of time for his bid for Mayor of San Francisco. At the Palo Alto picnic I told Chief Dennis Burns that I saw some real leadership potential in our agent Robert Parham, a Dartmouth grad with tenure in the U.S. Marines, but admitted “I am no kingmaker.” I said there was a particularly well-known in SF political circles Dartmouth alum who I thought would be interested in meeting Agent Parham.

10) I rang the former Dartmouth lineman and now builder Greg Hulbert of San Mateo and had him re-tell his stories of his days as a concert promoter working with Jerry Jeff Walker.

11) Am meaning to get some progress on the proposed 50th Anniversary of “Lami” by Alden Van Buskirk, tentatively scheduled to include Matt Gonzalez, Jack Hirshman and David Highsmith. I also am going to design a flyer for Aleta Hayes’ fall class and arts project Chocolate Heads and try to get off academic probation at Foothill Project by enrolling in the macro economics class taught by Brian Evans (my Gunn basketball teammate, SCVAL champion, and co-founder of our Fantasy Football league).

I have to prep for my interview for Palo Alto Planning Commission, and prepare for the Historic Resources Board hearing on 456 University, which is October 5. My talmud class is off until later that month, after the New Year.

12)Rob Syrett and I are doing on spec a poster for Matmos So Percussion, at Stanford coming up. Reminds me that I also caught Donny McCaslin with Uri Caine at Pete Douglas’ Bach Dancing and Dynamite Society. Rob will have a show at years end at Caffe Central in South Park in SF (near the ballpark).

Uri Caine gale force pianist

My unread books stack is way up there again; my magazines look like kudzu.

Posted in art, la la, media, Plato's Republic, sex | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments

Deerhoof at SFMOMA

Satomi

Satomi Matsuzaki of Deerhoof, obscured by a guy whose photos came out much crisper than this, at San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Thursday, September 15, 2011.

I spoke to Ed Rodriguez, who I met previously at 21 Grand in Oaktown, with Weasel Walter, and we spoke about Hal Russell, John Corbett, Flying Luttenbachers, Bruce Beasley, Radiohead, Ornette Coleman and The Varsity Theatre.

The show also featured a founding member of The Black Panther Party, David Hilliard, in conversation with Adam Pendleton. I tried to text my photo of them to Ian MacKaye, who “rejected” the incoming information bundle. (My relationship with Ian is alas complicated and probably compromised). My phone suggested a title “Black Paothers” which I am looking into thinking of us “PA” for “Palo Alto” + “others”. I am suggesting, like “Let’s Go Bowling”, that “The Black Paothers” (sic) or “The Green Paothers” could be a working title for a Palo Alto based group of grass roots arts and social justice activists, who feel like “other” or marginalized, or outsiders. But I will have to research the topic a little more thoroughly. In my mind The Black Panther Party is almost indistinguishable from MC5 — I saw John Sinclair speak at SXSW.

I also met a marketing associate at SFMOMA named Sierra Gonzalez who said she was Esther Wojcicki’s student at Paly and a Stanford industrial design grad.

I ran into Francisco Fernandez of The Ferocious Few who was one of the inspirations for ICOBOPA, and got his digits again.

In a related story (all things are connected, according to Chief Seattle), Intersection of the Arts in SF announced they received a $700,000 grant from a consortium of foundations and that it was linked to the New York Times story I was meaning to find, clip and save yesterday about Rocco Landesman and the NEA; more omens for the success of TLPW456 The Last Picture Waltz Save The Varsity — a rose smells like mcgowan no matter if there is a jawbreaker in your mouth, doc.

Posted in art, austistic, chapel hill, ethniceities, film, media, music, Plato's Republic, sex, sf moma, this blue marble | Tagged , , | Leave a comment