All that jazz

I don’t mean to sound snitty or disrespectful and in fact I am a donor for the first time in 50 years, and I bought three or four sets of tickets but as a former journalist—who in fact wrote about the 10th anniversary of the stanford Jazz camp— it does still trip me out that a good story is still sometimes contorted. 

 

I had this exact conversation with Adam Klipple my fellow Dartmouthian a wonderful organ player who was with the Will Bernard band at Lytton Plaza this week that there’s a really interesting confluence of Jim’s jazz camp, Stan Getz coming to town to dry out and Nathan Oliveira putting jazz into his paint that catalyzed Stanford incorporating jazz as an academic pursuit—for example recruiting Larry grenadier—And the camp becoming a series and a workshop etc.
I mean I spoke to Mr. Klipple 10 minutes ago on this point  and we’re looking for some shows to go to together and suggested he should sit in on the jam. (He Moved to Palo Alto four years ago with wife and two kids —the kids are actually enrolled in the camp..) 

 

It’s kind of a shibboleth  but if the term “stanford Jazz camp” does not appear in the article I think the article is a bit off. 

 

Neither Taylor Eigsti nor Josh Redman are exemplars; one was a protégé and getting professional gigs at age 8 and the other is the son of a legend—- incidentally the Shedroffs have family in Palo Alto; I’m not sure if that influenced Josh’s enrollment. 

 

Ethan Iverson who by the way  recorded a Monk program  with Dayna Stephens —bass— recently in Rudy Van Gelder’s studio — told me in 2004 that he too was a SJW camper but Jim was not aware that that was the same Ethan Iverson.

 

I think a big part of the program is the jobs created for mid-level professionals, and people like Josh Milgrom and Ivor Holloway.  

 

See you soon.

 

Yes I do have a Marta Sanchez Quintet show that conflicts with both the city of Palo Alto’s world music day, the city of Palo Alto’s Beatles cover band in the park, and an Indian jazz show at Stanford; so I’m adding three more acts to the bill and going from 12 to 9 at Lytton, sat 6/25.[in honor of George Orwell’s birthday I am double plus good producing a Sylvie Simmons concert simultaneously to the Marta Sanchez sound check  Sylvie’s set includes David Bowie’s “1984” from 1974 in about 96 hours. I will 72 hours ahead of the load in put up NO PARKING signs, which is where Sylvia and Marta will park. 

 

Mark Weiss Dba Earthwise 1994-

 

Former stringer Stanford Daily

II

You write:

While performance had
always been an important
component since the early
jam days, Nadel said it wasn’t until sometime in the late 1980s or early
1990s that the SJW’s concert series started being referred to as the
Stanford Jazz Festival.
Actually it was a camp for its first 15 or so years and then the freak coincidence of gets being on campus hanging with Nathan Oliveira led to the series being added to the camp. I know this because I interviewed Jim Nadel in 1982— my first six professional/adult years I was trained as a journalist.

I point this out every five years — although this year I also gave a donation and bought three or four sets of tickets— several of the people who have appeared in my series also teach at the jazz workshop at Stanford: Josh Milgrom, Dayna Stephens, Caroline Davis…

2011, Plastic Alto, my blog: At the event Thursday at Stanford shopping center, I button-holed Jim Nadel, the founder of the Stanford Jazz Workshop. I showed him an article I had written, from June 27, 1982 for the Stanford Daily. “Jazz in the Summer” was the headline. I had interviewed him in honor of his tenth season at what was then more of a camp than a concert series. There were jam sessions between pros and students, and they were excited about special guest instructors Lanny Morgan and Stan Getz. A public lecture by Getz — probably billed as such to avoid going through his normal booking agency fee structure  — is what has evolved years later into a truly world-class schedule of 36 ticketed events this season. The festival’s new marketing director, keyboardist, writer and editor Ernie Rideout, has arranged for banners in downtown Palo Alto that proclaim “Stanford Jazz Festival: Our 40th season”. “Festival” versus “series” versus “camp” versus “workshop,” Nadel and company have accomplished a “coliseum” of jazz and jazz education, semantics and “stretchers” aside: they’re the tops! Of lamp-poles, but also of the hierarchy of jazz presenters and educators.

IOO

I have tickets to Ben Goldbergs show but might be going away that weekend its my wife’s 35th birthday. 

Weiss, Nadel 10 years ago

 

pS heard from Thomas Pridgen a former stanford jazz camp asset who was once the youngest endorsee of a certain drum company 

 

TIME LOVES A HAIR-o 

probably doesn’t go here but my wife took two pictures of my head:

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Marta Sanchez 5 on deck for Earthwise

It’s funny if a little bit sloppy that I bought Marta Sanchez to return to Palo Alto she is doing a free show in Lytton Plaza Saturday, June 25 about 100 hours from now with her Quintet she had played right before the Covid January 2020 but just as a duo with Roman. It says here that you can see them Friday at the Jazz school in Berkeley for $25 where is our show is free the next day. Sylvie Simmons the author and ukulele whiz is doing either an opening said at five or you can think of it as a separate show I recommend both events course I am the promoter so I am biased. I would say it is double plus good to come to the show because it is also George Orwells birthday there’s a rumor that Sylvie will play a ukulele version of the David Bowie song 1984. 
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Poitier at Stanford Theatre in September


Stanford Theatre the movie palace has announced a summer fall schedule after two years being shutter due to the epidemic a highlight is a September 2 day run of two movies featuring the late Sidney Poitier.

meanwhile Earthwise will resume September 28 with Steve Poltz and September 29 with Mads Tolling both events directly across from the theater at Lytton Plaza .

A modern Japanese movie called “ran” from 1985 will also play in the series .

The announced a total of 40 films maybe someone will see the whole set . i’m good for a bakers dozen or so.

edit to add: here is an alphabetical list of some upcoming shows at Stanford theatre and their Halliwell ratings — * one star means worth seeing; ** two stars means twice as worthy, two reasons to see it; *** means this is a very good film and you should see it rather than not; **** four stars in Halliwell means a classic, do not miss it, you are not film-literate if you have not seen this; you should see it multiple times.

Beat The Devil 1953

Bread, Love and Dreams 1953 *

Casablanca 1942

Dinner at Eight 1933

The Gay Divorcee 1934

Hidden Fortress 1958

In a Lonely Place 1950

It Started With Eve 1941

In The Heat Of The Night 1967

Meet Me in St Louis 1944

Miracle of Morgan’s Creek 1944

My Fair Lady 1964

100 Men and a Girl 1937

North by Northwest 1959

Notorious 1946 ***

Philadelphia Story 1940

Roman Holiday 1953

To Sir With Love 1967

Sabrina 1954

Top Hat 1935

Yojimbo 1961

Wizard of Oz 1939

That’s 22 out of the 40 shows Stanford Theatre announced as summer fall series. Ideally I would see all 40, or at least see parts of all programs and not necessarily both shows of the double feature. I’ve definitely seen seven of those 22. I may have seen the bulk of them, but not well enough to discuss. There’s also Ran from 1985 and I wonder if it was part of the 2020 March announced Kurosawa series. It’s very recent — 1985– by Packard standards. “To Sir with Love” is also recent by Packard’s standards – -someone had to die to get it booked here. If you are a film programmer and were plotting for two years to do  this, you would not be doing much better than this list as a microcosm of the Stanford Theater Story. 

Have they announced a new wrinkle in ticketing beyond line up give them your $7 in cash? I recall the rare times that David P would take tickets he would wear gloves — he is known as a germophobe. 

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Not sure why Kamasi Washington charges $142 per ticket for a club show in Menlo Park except possibly, as the New York Times reports, he is seen in society pages wearing a dashiki spun with real gold

filed under “filthy lucre”

 

bw

Rose Simpson, who is Roxanne Swentzell’s child, is featured in today’s Sunday Times but also turned down the chance to spit for Lions With Wings, my bandcamp label

 

note: Kamasi Washington is booked by Mitch Blackman of ICM, who also books Robert Glasper and Macy Gray — both of whom played the new venue, The Guild. Kamasi has 187K social media followers, god bless.

note2: I texted Rose a picture of the tearsheet and she wrote back “Rad!”

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Jimmy Wilsey VS Dede Wilsey

 

 

There’s an article in today’s Chronicle that Michael Goldberg has a biography of Jimmy Calvin Wilsey the Chris Isaak founding guitarist and former member of the punk band the avengers, Who died three years ago. I never met him but I saw him play several times. coincidentally I am a childhood friend with Chris Isaak’s current guitarist Hershel Yatovitz who has been with Chris more than 20 years now.
I have met Dede Wilsey because my parents and my siblings and I are all in kind donors to the DeYoung museum where she was the long time board  president. I would have to report I have a slightly unfavorable opinion of her because the Deyoung essentially reneged on the deal my parents made before they died; It seems that a wealthier donor scuttled our deal to make his gift look more impressive.
For a while I wondered if the two people the guitarist and the philanthropist were related.

This wicked game you play it makes me feel this way/ this wicked thing you do…

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Awesome

-30-
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Happy birthdays, Weezer and droogs

A chillng singing scene from Kubrick’s A clockwork orange with Malcolm McDowell, now 79

sweater song is cool but I heard that rivers cuomo 52 today is such a pill that he fired his tour manager for merely making eye contact
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Thank you, Zoe Lofgren, my fellow Gunn alumnus, for leadership in the insurrection hearings

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Credits to their genders

My phone died during soundcheck yesterday at the show but luckily a friend of the artist named Terry Dudley shot the show and sent me these photos today. It was my first time hearing Sony Holland. I caught her interview on KCSM jazz radio with Chris Cortez years ago then noticed while exploring the North Bay that she had an ad in the local paper about her Linda Ronstadt tribute show.

So I am saying – to the crowd and now here — that my concert series is a push-back against the media but I did use cues from terrestial radio and a weekly rag to add Sony Holland to my eclectic music series in a public plaza here (or two public forums, if you include my series at Mitch Bowl).

The duo ran thru about 12 of her classic songs, including one in Spanish. Sony had brief intro’s to most of the songs; she knew the authors of the songs and the producers of the albums. I had seen the recent documentary about Ronstadt. To two different people, I had mentioned that Linda was once partnered to our governor, Jerry Brown. To another I emphasized that she was Latina. Linda has Parkinson’s or a variation thereof so cannot speak for herself these days.

Jerry Holland is actually a Jewish songwriter from Connecticutt and New York who was on staff at the Nashville studios for a while. Sony is a former midwestern farm girl – -her maiden name is Einerson or Eisenhower — and she is a jazzbo. They played three originals for an encore and I think that those songs can find an audience.

I’m hoping to bring them back as soon as appropriate, and maybe sponsor them in the studio to put on tape their takes of “Blue Bayou”, “Poor Pitiful Me” and “Just One Look”. 

I don’t Gary White’s “Long Long Time” meant much to me at the time it was on KYA or KFRC or KLIV but somehow it pulls the heartstrings today. 

Jerry had an anecdote about Mike Reid the former NFL Bengal turned Nashville singer-songwriter and a hit he had — slang for popular song, not separating Roman Gabriel from his chinstrap — about writing something in one mood, looking at it later, confusedly then finding the right tone for it.

Story of my life, actually.

It’s a hit

 

note an earlier version had a headline referencing a song that was not part of Sony  and Jerry Holland‘s Ronstadt tribute at Lytton Plaza Thursday the ninth.

 

 

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Hey, Jay, nice to see you. That guy David is the one who turned me on or out as a Dead head, we recalled that I bought his NYE tix in 1989. Question: what is that random but lovely photo of drummer Ali Miller, you file and tag as ‘corporate’ – is she the poster child for the Jazz School or something? Is it okay i.e. fair use that I randomly run it on my blog next to the color version of Bob Dylan by Tony Frank: I tag the photo ali jay bob which sounds like a Kevin Smith character

Yonder or I wonder
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