Hot Rog Gibbons

Passed ’em by like they were standing still

 

Gunn beat Paly in basketball last night because in the final possession, on the last touch of the game, in the final two seconds, Gunn senior Rogan Gibbons blew by three Vikings, numbers 22, 23 AND 24, to score a layup. Final score 33-31, Gunn’s first and only lead of the game.

Kind of reminds me of that old song “Hot Rod Lincoln”. Let’s call him “Hot Rod Rogan”. Or Hot Rog…Gibbons.

 

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Greer the stone: I’ve written to this so-called representative 212 times and he only responded three times

Worse than that: I gave his campaign $500 — the one response he gave me was to say that although many many people consider Pat Burt a bully, Pat has never bullied him!

—– Forwarded Message —–

From: Greer Stone <gstone22@gmail.com>

To: mark weiss <earwopa@yahoo.com>

Sent: Saturday, January 9, 2021, 12:54:49 PM PST

Subject: Re: Bullying

Hi Mark,

As we discussed during the campaign, we both have different impressions of Pat. I have a history of working well with him and know him to be an effective advocate for similar issues that I support. And where I strongly believe that character matters with our elected officials, I have never observed Pat be prejudice or a bully. I respect you have a different opinion of him and this is not intended to dismiss your feelings. I hope you understand why I continue to support him. 

Be well,

Greer 

On Wed, Jan 6, 2021 at 4:16 PM mark weiss <earwopa@yahoo.com> wrote:

Mark Weiss 

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Titans beat Vikings

Rogan Gibbons beat his man to the baseline for a reverse layup as time expired to propel Gunn to a come from behind victory over Paly Its first win in the new gym, 33-31. Gunn’s tenacious defense held Paly scoreless the final five minutes including three turnovers and five missed shots. First Gunn win versus Paly since 2016.
ons beats Lucas Black and Mert Yanar for the decisive bucket
Rogan Gibb

 

 

 

Clutch free-throw by number 51 who was also a stalwart on defense. I don’t know his name but if the titans win out their final three they have an outside chance to reach 20 wins only the seventh time in school history. 
That is the third buzzer beater I’ve seen in gunn versus Paly. 1980 at Paly Marc Ford From the corner 20 feet — gunn’s only league loss. 2008 Joseph Lin from 25 feet, extending Gunns agony one more year; and now Rogan Gibbons history will remember his name.

Gunn beats Palo Alto for only Third time in last 18 season. Redfield once, Williams twice. My coach Hans was 3-1 vs Paly for Gunn, and 47-8 overall.  Brandynn 123 wins for Gunn; Redfield 106; 

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Doja Cat v el Anatsui

I got to be the only person reading about Doja Cat and am I sweet
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Please welcome the SF VZ NYC Albuquerque Baltimore Kalamazoo jazz collective

SF Jazz collective members’ home towns:

Chris Potter music director, tenor & soprano saxophonesChicago/South Carolina/NYC

David Sánchez tenor saxophone Puerto Rico/NYC

Etienne Charles trumpet Trinidad/Detroit

Warren Wolf vibraphone Baltimore/Boston/NYC

Edward Simon piano Venezuela/Philadelphia/NYC/Kalamazoo/maybe Bay Area these days?

Matt Brewer bass OKC/ALBQ/NYC/Toronto

Kendrick Scott drums Houston/Boston

Martin Luther McCoy vocals/guitar San Francisco

Gretchen Parlato Los Angeles/NYC vocals

By the time he was 19, Edward was in New York City playing jazz. Soon he’d be recording with emerging jazz stars like Greg Osby, Bobby Watson, David Binney, and Kevin Eubanks. More recently, he has paid tribute to his home country with his Venezuela Suite (2014) and his Latin American Songbook (Sunnyside 2015). He’s also been the pianist on the SFJazz Collective’s tributes to Miles Davis, Michael Jackson, Joe Henderson, Ornette Coleman, Stevie Wonder, and Thelonious Monk. (Michael Ullman, 2021)

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Music is truthful

This is the Caroline Davis Quartet at soundcheck on Saturday, January 29, 2022, at 7:19 pm. The band features Julian Shore, piano, Christopher Tordini, bass, Caroline Davis, leader, composer, alto sax, Allan Mednard, drums:

Briefly recreating my monologue from last night show:

  1. Portals — its the name of Caroline Davis album. She played three shows here, Thursday, Friday, Saturday. Four or five tracks from that album, arranged for alto sax, piano. bass and drums. the album has trumpet and string section, however, and spoken word. Four musicians three nights, residency here, versus nine musicians on the cd. She threw in some Mary Lou Williams, “Capricorn” — from a cycle about the zodiac — and Geri Allen. She says her father died and this is for him. 
  2. She said, Friday: this is called portals. Not like on your computer, but a natural portal. I asked her in the green room then kept it in my monologue: she said “natural” but I think she meant “supernatural”. 
  3. The shows were in Palo Alto (at the Mitchell Park Community Center, or “The Mitch”). Palo Alto was discovered by the Spanish in 1769, 250 years ago or so, and named for a large tree, a Palo alto. Or so they say. We say. 
  4. I didn’t get to, for the sake of brevity that my blog meanwhile is “plastic alto” named for an acrylic saxophone played by Ornette Coleman. I mean “plastic” in the sense of modern, like since the 1950s — sometimes they say “midcentury modern” — and in the way “silicon” started to be a thing around that time. Because it semiconductors and does not resist or conduct. And in the way the character in the movie has one word for Benjamin “plastics”. 
  5. I have it on tape I can update.
  6. My notes said, on my handheld, portals- alto sax – Caroline Davis; virtual, natural, supernatural; Plastic Alto; acrylic Grafton; Ornette Coleman; Lee Konitz; Palo Alto; 1769; Portola; 2019; incorporation 125 years before; Ford a crick; cut down; Leland Stanford; Dos Palos; et cetera.
  7. The Spanish noted a tree and wrote down “Palo Alto” and supposed Leland Stanford 120 years later bought a farm down here that included the tree; and supposed we water the tree and its right across from the Stanford Shopping center, near the train station, marking the border of Santa Clara and San Mateo counties. But because we know locally that around 1900 our tree call “El Palo Alto” had a second trunk and it fell into the creek – -it was a double trunk or twin pine — I would think the Spanish would have called it “Dos Palos” or something. And somewhere there is a narrative that the tree might have been closer to Middlefield but they cut it down a few years later, to help ford or cross the crick. And they were looking for Monterey when they discovered Palo Alto and Mayfield, Portola, the Spanish guy. 
  8. I said that music and especially that of Caroline Davis group was truthful, and healing but not antiviral and centering. And I hoped Saturday’s audience would enjoy it as much as I did that music from the first two nights.

9. People laughed at parts of the above. 

10. There’s actually a site on Stanford campus that addresses by story here: there are two pines and they are called Dos Palos by a professor who planted them. 


Andrew Gilbert wrote a fine preview of our show, for the San Jose Mercury (which is no longer Knight Ridder nor Hayes Family publication — not sure who owns it). But it is not true that Julian Shore was once Caroline Davis’ student at Litchfield Jazz Camp. They were both both students there and later faculty there. Julian is however married to Carmen Staaf the pianist, whose band Parlour Game was the first casualty of the covid-19, on March 15, 2020. Chistopher Tordini returns to the Bay Area with Miguel Zenon at SFJazz; Allan Mednard returns to somewhere East Bay with Michael Wolff. Not to tip my hand or jinx it but I’d like to bring this group back, with a trumpet and or a violin or cello, to play The Mitch and maybe Occidental and Livermore. Check your portals. Also: I have Wayne Horvitz piano Sara Schoenbeck bassoon in May and Todd Sickafoose, Beng Oldberg, Scott Amendola on April 28 or so. But not Femi Kuti “Beng Beng Beng Again”. 

 

PS or edit to add, a couple hours later: there is a private version of this that corrects the minor errors and ads another musician and more backstory to Earthwise w. Davis (or Lions With Wings w Davis). Private in the sense of an email to 5 people. Also, I am reading Daniel Kahneman with Sibony and Sunstein and on page 165 there is a story about a jazz pianist. And also the times had a mention of a new club Nines and a guy name Yosef Munro. 

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Woo hoo wah

Kudos to Stanford grad Erin Woo for injecting a bit of hard truth into her obit of John Arrillaga. Like, as I noticed, he is not listed on the NBA all time roster He lived in Portola Valley not Palo Alto; he was known for two big fails in recent years. It was reported that his 2006 cash out was a sovereign wealth fund — she says Deutschebank Great man, flaws like San Andreas.

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Tanaka calls for police putsch

Greg Tanaka a technocrat who seems pretty much on the spectrum socially and is constantly seeing the most inane things and somehow Aspiras to Congress says he opposes the business tax except if it means having a greater police presence especially downtown to deter the underclass from either descent or crime or revolution; Distant it means having a different opinion decent goddamn this fucked up handheld changing my words he also Bragg during the campaign that he was close to the victims of the satanic night stalker Richard Ramirez
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Ring of bone versus hall of fame

Not sure this fits, except in Plastic Alto

Ring of bone v hall of fame

I was at the Paly gym last night and I took another look at the set of oil paintings, on board, by Mr Kerr. Actually there are now a couple murals by his daughter, maybe frescoes.

There were three or four of track and field, men and women. Spanning several generations.

I am interested in seeing either at that wall or by the same artist or by a similar technique and production value Lew Welch. He was a track champion but better known as a Beat poet. He was the step father of the famous musician Huey Lewis. That’s a stage name and references Lew Welch of Palo Alto and Marin.

Ring of bone might be his most famous work. The sound of a bone. When you strike it. Or it is struck. 

Speaking of span, I met TJ Martin, Cubberley ’80 but also Paly ’80. He played for Paly, and we were watching his son Jackson Martin #3 play. I think Jackson took the long miss to end the third quarter, where B_ and I left. Paly was up 40-20 and finished up 22. 53-21 or so. Jackson’s grandfather I believe was assistant superintendent of schools here at PAUSD – -I am the beneficiary of his hard work. Martin was mentioned previous but by last name only – he is an honorable mention in the Cubberley Hoops hall of fame. He played with Lockhart and Tim Ruff. Plus my teammate John Ehrlich and Jerry Chang. Paly was 1-3 vs Gunn in Martin’s time there in Gunn’s 22-5 season, Paly beat Gunn at Paly — the old gym, the pit — a buzzer beater by Marc Ford, Henry Ford, Henry and Rochelle’s son. So the father never played on the new gym but the son never played in the classic pit. I wonder how many father-son combos have played hoops for Paly , or any Palo Alto double like that? (Matt Passell and Josh Passell). In the essay or oral history by David Meltzer Welch says that his mother was the last of a tremendous issue. I will edita his exact wording. Issue meaning how many brothers and sisters. 

He says he was good at a game of tag. That’s how he busted his novice, socially. He said there was a teacher named Robert Rideout in seventh grade that also suggested that if he likes one book to try another book by the same author. So he played football and track. Good at tag meaning no one could catch him. 

It was his seventh grade teacher, Robert Rideout, who stimulated his interest in reading. Attended junior high school and high school in Palo Alto, …

he ran the 400 in 49.7. What was Bill Green’s time? Class of 1944. He died in 1970 or so. In his forties. It says Green ran the 100 yards in 9.56 still a CCS record – -they switched to meters. He switched to middle distance. He also died young. 

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Paly routs Tino

Seb Chancellor leads transition as Vikings beat Cupertino by 22 Tuesday at the Peery


Actually this is a better crop:
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