The royal Nonesuch

I bought a Sam Gendel cd on bandcamp both download and on vinyl, because he was in a year-end LA Times story.
It looks like he got signed to Nonesuch — a supreme imprimateur — through a chance association and later touring duties with Joachim Cooder and Ry Cooder. His rubbery (their word) version of Mingus et al adds to the story.

My take, for your perusal — see also Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

There are 225 artists listed on the Nonesuch website which includes catalog and front list current projects.

I wasn’t aware of ever booking a current Nonesuch act but there are five listed that I work with: bill Frisell, jimmie dale gilmore, jeff parker as a sideman in 3 different gropes, wayne horvitz, robin Holcomb though just in one of waynes project and only as a spec consultant; oliver lake solo (member of wsq);  nicholas payton only that he guested on a john ellis record i successfully shopped to a different label; mark morris or bad plus only that i booked an ethan iverson solo show — literally stealing him out of a mmdc bubble for a couple hours for a matinee. Don byron only that I interviewed him phoner for KZSU jewish music show within a show; natalie merchant only that allison miller was in her band; i met christian mcbride at iaje and daftly asked him something about stagger lee, plus took Aaron luis levinsons course at Philadelphia school of the arts extension — wait im confusing him with andy blackman ropeadope experiment; im discussing a site specific event concept with a composer i met at sea ranch a Kronos benefit; i managed a brian eno tribute or repertory band that won best cover band in the sf weekly; i announced a free blind boys show but they had to cancel (replaced by such acts as Henry Butler Basin street and femi kuti beng beng beng)

 

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Three short films about fm

1.
Leslie Marie Cook of Los Angeles and Brooklyn, December, 2020, original song “Women On The Wall” making of video in her home studio;



2.
Monica Walker, of Palo Alto, busking or singing for fun in the new parking garage near California Avenue, the “Phil Carter” version of “Amazing Grace” — I’m a songcatcher more than producer. I have two versions, one approaching her before she knew she had an audience, and this one, an example of the “observer effect”.

3.

Camila Meza at Stanford in a trio at Bing studio (under ground, so to speak, or literally) — she is from Chile and New York and more to the point is part of a Dave Douglas Overcome project that I sponsored (part of Lions with Wings, my Bandcamp platform, subbing for being a concert promoter, although in this case its on Greenleaf Music’s platform and not Lions with Wings)

“fm” in my headline stands for “female” + “music” — no static at all

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Sam Gendel 1964 Impala VS Mateo Romero, 1969 SS

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Wah hoo wah to Cleveland baseball franchise for changing its racist name and mascot

In a related matter, I paid $40 at Bell’s Books for a Better little book about Big Chief Wahoo “based on the famous comic strip”.

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Willie Mays, Ted Williams, Kent Lockhart, Danny McCalister, LenRay McCalister

LenRay McCalister has died, age 49. His brother Stanley was my teammate for Gunn basketball, and his oldest brother Danny McCalister was a star of the Gunn Titans first championship basketball team, 22-5 in 1979-1980.

There were six McCalister brothers who excelled in football, basketball, track or wrestling for Gunn: Dan, Stanley, LenRay, Shawn, Mark and Lamont.

When Danny died, around Halloween, 2007, in a work accident in Saratoga, CA, there was a huge memorial for him in East Palo Alto. His father officiated.

At the Gunn-Paly basketball game in January, 2008 the school awarded Danny’s mother with a plaque, naming him Hall of Fame – -in some ways it was acknowledging the whole family, or the brothers as a set. Meanwhile, their cousin Mike Scott was the star of the Paly teams, and he stood at halftime with some of the family.

Kent Lockhart, a pro basketball player, knew Danny well, and from Melbourne, Australia sent four jerseys and two baseball cards back home. There was talk of creating a fund to honor Danny, to identify student athletes who had his qualities, who reminded us of him. (There was also a fund for the family at Archbishop Mitty where Danny helped coach girls’ basketball, his daughter Kassandra being a star for the Lady Monarchs).

One of Lock’s jersies was entrusted to Tom Jacoubowsky – it was to be displayed in the new gym. Another jersey I gave to Hans Delannoy, our coach (a Cubberley grad, himself named to the San Ramon High hall).

Maybe with the sad passing of LenRay we can resume the discussion of how to honor the McCalisters.

Just this week there was a meeting about Ventura as a neighborhood; it is being targeted by Sobrato and other real estate dynasties for dense housing, maybe a park.

Not to disrupt the family grieving process, but I hope that any serious planning about changing the character of the neighborhood should consider Black Lives Matter and the history of families like the McCalisters.

What is the Black history of Palo Alto? I have a sense, but I want a better telling of the story.

I am going to try to reach Kent and ask if I should pass on these two sports valuables to LenRay’s family — maybe they can be sold on EBay and the proceeds pay for an obituary in the paper or defray funeral costs per se.

LenRay had a son named Tully McCalister who played for one of Earl Hanson’s championship Vikings teams, and also at Cal Poly Mustangs. LenRay’s first cousin Richard Scott, Gunn 1979, is one of only five baseball players in the history of Gunn High School (founded, 1964) to play pro baseball, in the Pirates’ system.

The internet says this token of our respect might be worth about $500
“Football friends (JG and DM)” by Stacey Carter, 2008, acrylic painting

Edit to add, two days later: I’m watching NFL on a Sunday — both the Niners and the Raiders lose, but there is some solace in the fact that former Gunn quarterback Chris Strausser is probably having one of the best days of his coaching career in that his Colts have run for more than 200 yards. I’ve added this painting by Stacey Carter which was created in 2008 as part of the discussions of the loss of Danny McCalister, the former Gunn football and basketball star. The painting is based on a photo from the 1980 Gunn Olympian yearbook; it depicts Javier Gil and Danny McCalister. (Stacey had created a suite of realistic paintings for the Baltimore Ravens, and I commissioned her to paint something about Danny; the original idea was that Gunn would put it in the boys locker room or the library, as a memorial and to raise awareness about the fund).

I had a talk yesterday with someone who works in educational foundation work. I think when the family of LenRay has a chance to mourn, maybe there can be a discussion of whether these potential initiatives would have meaning to them. My recollection is that 20 people came to a pizza parlor after the Gunn-Paly game 13 years ago, in support of this concept. In 2008, it seemed significant to celebrate a Gunn star because Palo Alto High would get more publicity. Now I think it would be more about just helping Palo Alto kids navigate the road from high school to interesting work, especially those who are sports stars in high school and also college. As a sports fan who knows something of the local scene, I would wonder how to tap into the success story of Davante Adams, who also mentored Keesean Johnson.

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Double ‘chai’ Fay Victor and Bandcamp

I paid 18$ to Fay Victor via bandcamp, on the prompting of Dave Douglas’ Greenleaf Music blast. It is the 18th project I have supported in this very convenient manner. I think it is three clicks, maybe four.
Meanwhile, I am making some progress with my bandcamp project, Lions With Wings.
There is some thought to abandoning the internet altogether and just make my seed money for Lions With Wings into grants for grants sake, in the hopes that someday we will be doing live shows again.

Note: Fay Victor appears with Dave Douglas and others in a project called Overcome that Mark Weiss, Earthwise Productions and Lions with Wings sponsored, but it is available thru Grandleaf Music bandcamp and not Lions with Wings bandcamp.

In Jewish liturgy and culture the number 18 is “chai” which means life. (like in the known expression “l’chaim”, like when we drink a toast); the letters, the “chet” and the “yud” add to 18– numerology. So paying Fay eighteen dollars and hers being the eighteenth such transaction, I am saying is double chai. Meanwhile, and not to totally confused you I am drinking at home from my home office, sitting on a Rauschenberg inspired couch drinking or sipping Philz coffee from a mug I bought from Jan Schacter. I first heard about Fay, I believe, because she has a project with Marika Hughes who once played in my series or twice perhaps with Austin Willacy and Tin Hat. If it was Tin Hat it was the Starewich sequence at the Museum of American Heritage on Channing, circa 2000. I’m also remembering Victor Zenoff z’l who had a sister named Fay. There

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Lance Hahn, 1967-2007

rest in piece, punk (VDJ2020 for Earthwise)

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Rachel Garlin VS J Church

Rachel Garlin is a modern folk singer who lives in Noe Valley and J Church goes past her house.
Lance Hahn founded the influential and surely missed punk pop band called J Church.
I’d love to hear Rachel Garlin cover “My Favorite Place” or “Ivy League College”.

Molly Tuttle meanwhile covered “Olympia” by Rancid.

This is Rachel’s latest; I think its on a compilation curated by Little Village:

The Days are Long

This is a really catchy song, caught in Carolina a few years back:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Prjthhm6Eoo

RIP (art by Veronica De Jesus,well known in the Mission)
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When Harpo played his harp it was a mystery

I got a post card from Jonathan Richman and it stopped me dead in my tracks, to take out my handheld computer and order #4 on his bandcamp bundle. I had to pulldown my mask to make this happen.

When I got home I ran to my computer to hear what is new in JR’s world. The computer told me that not to be confused but Jonathan Richman does not use computers, a company called Blue Arrow in Cleveland does, for him, however.

 

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Steve Lacy twice

I’m not going to fault Veronica DeJesus for embellishing Steve Lacy’s resume: “played w/Muddy Waters”. I don’t think Steve played with Muddy — the person who might know is Bob Margolin, or Eric Hanson.
More people think of Steve as the first person other than Monk who played the music of Monk.
Other sources say that an attribute of Steve is not just his versatility but that he kept evolving over a 50-year career. So maybe there was a blues deep dive that I am forgetting about. (I think in her production — she made 10 portraits of musicians for me, she is confusing Pinetop Perkins and Steve).
Steve played two shows for Earthwise. The first was around 1999 with his trio plus Roswell Rudd, the basic set and arrangements was later recorded live at Sweet Basil and released on Verve — or at least the Sweet Basil show was reviewed in the Times and then the album was cut in NYC. But it started in a warehouse space in San Carlos where Andy Heller was storing his gear. I didn’t know if Steve would fill the 300 capacity Cubberley Theatre here in Palo Alto — plus Andy was fixing to have a party anyhow so we somehow booked Steve Lacy the Genius Grant winner to play there.
I watched the band rehearse – this was the first show of the tour. My memory is that Roswell and Steve had not played together in a while.
I also recall Steve, JJ and John chilling in a bar on El Camino — maybe its the one with the neon marquee the former Carlos Theatre — and that as my brain wandered, Steve turned to me and invited me back in to the conversation: We are discussing Don Cherry, he said. Maybe for a bonus I should ask Veronica to do Don.

The second time it was Steve and Irene, at Cubberley. Will Bernard and Miya Masaoka were the opening act. I first thought of Carla Kihlstedt – the violinist, taking a cue from Irene Aebi’s role. But she was not available until the following night at Berkeley, St. Johns. I recall Irene whispering to me: that is unusual, someone singing and playing at the same time, for violin.

Steve did not drive so you had to drive him the next day. I know I also saw he and Mal Waldron duo at the Kaplan Penthouse. Maybe I met him five times, if I was lucky. Eric said that Steve rememembered me and was appreciative of the gigs.

I remember standing with Steve Lacy at Foothill College outside of KFJC and he took a puff from a little pipe but first he did some sort of Jedi trick to very briefly become invisible.

My headline refers to the expression that you cannot step into the same river twice; if I met Steve Lacy five times, it was mos def five different artists, each better than the previous. He not dead, he a jew-gitive. (“fugitive” plus “Jew” — his words).

May his memory be a blessing. And thanks Veronica for this painting.

and: I categorize this “jazz” natch and “ethnicities” sic which means “jewish”; this is not the second but the 44th time I write about or mention “Steve Lacy” at Plastic Alto. 

andand: fairly random, but yesterday I ran into my Gunn classmate Monica Walker who was singing a “phil carter” version of “Amazing Grace”, tapping a tambourince and walking her dog at the new parking structure near California Ave. It was the first time I had ever spoken to her, I reckon. (There were 410 people in our graduating class and I can recall about 375 of them, but didn’t recall any particular memory of Monica, alas).  She also sang a bit or at least mentioned “Bridge Over Troubled Water” but was familiar with the Aretha Franklin version, not Simon and Garfunkel original — they wrote it with Ernie Griffin I think it is. I’m listening to the Aretha version on a loop this am for about the last 30 min as I peck away here at the Plasty. “Still waters run deep” and “don’t trouble the waters” are enhancements to this version that were not in the original. I have to deliberately stop the player to inspect our text thread and fact check those two points — the author of the song and the arranger of the Amazing Grace. Well there is a sax i am just noticing in the Aretha version, and a chorus of chorus — not a soprano, closer to bari. The original version was recorded in 1970, won the 1971 Grammy for Record of the Year and Song of the Year. Wiki says 50 others including Aretha and Elvis and Johnny Cash have covered the song. It says that the song borrows from Claude Jeter’s “Mary Don’t You Weep” 1958 I’ll be your bridge over troubled water if you trust in my name”. Aretha’s version came out shortly thereafter, in March, 1971. That won best female R&B performance at the 1972 Grammy’s. I’ve been listeing to the 5 minute version, not the 3:20 commercial radio single. But, it says she played it at the 1971 Grammy’s. My connection to Aretha is only that Henry Butler and I played Houston with “Front Porch Blues Tour” the day before Aretha was coming for 2 or 3 nights, on the marquee, circa 2002. 

Ernie Freeman 1922-1981 won the Grammy with Paul Simon for “BOTW”, as arranger; he also won the same for Frank Sinatra “Strangers in the Night”. 

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