Saturday, 6 December 2014

Keep your minds open

Yet another RIP birthday went by this week which reminded me to follow up on my mention of bass-oriented YouTube discoveries back on the Maine vacation in August...  John Francis Anthony (Jaco) Pastorius, y'all, b, Dec 1, 1951.

I really do love the bass as an instrument. I own one, a very nice late 90's Fender Jazz in a classy tuxedo black/white scheme  and yes I can hack away in clumsy "it's the bottom four strings of a guitar, except lower" fashion but I can hardly claim to actually PLAY bass, for real.   I have a deep regard for those who truly can. 

I'm not even sure what I was originally looking for but in a stream-of-consciousness Youtube session one night on vacation I ran across an old Hot Licks instructional/demo video of Jaco, from 1986:


[sorry all, original link to video is dead, will replace if/when it becomes available again]


I started in casually watching but quickly realized what an astonishing, historic document this really was.  Jaco, arguably the most innovative bass player ever to live interviewed by towering bass legend Jerry Jemmot, and a live jam with John Scofield and Ken Dennard!  It is heart rending viewing knowing that within a year of filming Jaco would be living on and off the streets in the throes of mental illness before being beaten into a coma and eventual death in a Miami alley. 
I really started taking notice after the blaze of technical command and precision at 14:03... and another breathtaking display at 18:10 and an amazing off the cuff jam duet at 21:46...  Maybe this wasn't Jaco in his absolute prime but it is such a joy to watch one of the greatest that ever was.  One thing I found striking in the discussion on influences (54:11) it boiled down to Elvis, whatever was on the radio; eventually Jerry himself in the Atlantic era, Bernard Odum, Bootsy Collins, James Jamerson, Paul Chambers, Gary Peacock.  So in other words, nothing out of the ordinary - same people and things that influenced everyone else at the time, but he just took it way out into outer space. 
Jaco seems just a hair "behind the beat" here on the questions, a trifle hesitant but lucid and together.  Tons of great content for any stringed instrument player, and worth the watch just to see Jaco grinning madly in full command going toe to toe with John Scofield.  It blows my mind to think that he came to such a tragic end; just shows you it could happen to anyone. 

Saturday, 22 November 2014

You don't really care for music, do ya?

I missed posting this earlier in the week so it's a belated birthday RIP to Jeff Buckley for Tuesday Nov 17th.  Felt odd to learn that we were so close in age - that he would have been 48. It's one of those nearly alone in a dark house in the gloomy early winter pondering mortality kind of nights; I say nearly as daughter no 1 is locked away upstairs in self imposed isolation and no 2 is with Mom in Cincinnati on the first US Cheer competition of her season.  Today/tomorrow would also be brother JP's birthday; first one for which is no longer with us.
I went through a  Jeff Buckley bender a few years ago after an extremely emotional reaction to his iconic "Hallelujah" that just rotated in at random on the iPod one day - I didn't even know I had the track, which came in the "Rolling Stone Top 500 Songs" collection gifted me by younger brother PW.  The song seems to be everywhere these days.   Most recently I was aghast to be attending a school band concert and the junior choir launched into it.... a heavily sanitized and lyrically dumbed-down version as it turns out, though nonetheless made me want to laugh and scream at the same time.  I was holding my breath and squirming to have to hear a bunch of children actually singing "There was a time when you let me know.... What's really going on below....But now you never show it to me, do you?"  but thankfully they never went there.  I love everything about his "Grace" version, from the exhalation into the mic at the very beginning through the great playing with what I consider to be the best guitar sound ever.  Speaking of which, I was astonished to run across this video on YouTube and find I was too late to buy THAT guitar!  I would have wavered at the $60,000 it went for, especially some crazy '83 top-loader of all things, but was cool to think it was out there and available for a short while...

Of course the hilarious thing about it, for those wise to the Jeff Buckley lore, is that it wasn't even his.  It was a semi-permanent loner from Janine Nichols, one of the artistic directors for NYC's St Ann's, who finally got it back at Jeff's memorial service following his death (see definitive article at http://www.mojopin.org/pages/telecaster.php).  I think it is a great example of the artist being far more important than his tools, an extraordinary player shining on a rather ordinary instrument that no collector would give a second glance.  For those who have actually read this far and are still thinking "Jeff who....?" I refer you to the fine BBC 4 doc linked below.



(photo above top from Premier Guitar FB feed; no available credit)

Friday, 26 September 2014

The pride of Chapel Hill breaks my heart

I had yet another "satellite radio moment" in the car the other day when a song I'd never heard came on, from NC indie legends Superchunk.  The song was identified on my display as "Slack Mother" though it quickly became evident by first chorus that the title had been selectively abbreviated.  As far as songs worth screaming along to at a red light with the windows down in the last days before fall sets in, I don't think you can do much better.  Another one I totally missed back in the day, and this one considered to be one of the seminal indie hits of the '90s??  Well, better late than never.  A quick YouTube search revealed many worthy live versions but this one is my fave so far -


In any event, as is always the case with YouTube I was pulled down the "related link" rabbit hole and hit on a cover that Superchunk did for the AV Club program "AV Undercover".  AV creates a list of 25 songs every year and invites bands in to perform a song of their choosing in their Chicago office.  As a song is performed it's crossed off, so the later a band comes in the fewer songs they have to pick from.  As the program is in its 5th year there is quite a collection of on their website, and I spent several days working my way through them.  For the first couple of seasons they had the bands perform in a little round room a bit larger than an ensuite bathroom, which I thought was really great, though recently they have moved to a "bigger" venue.  Some highlights for me were They Might Be Giants doing "Tub Thumping", Nada Surf's beautiful melancholy "Bizarre Love Triangle" and a terrific cover of M Jackson's "PYT" by the Wood Bothers.  The hit that started me down the path though was the aforementioned Superchunk cover of the Cure's heart-breakingly great "In Between Days", one of my favorite songs of all time :


If the embedded video isn't working trip over to the AV site and burn a few hours watching through some great tunes,

http://www.avclub.com/video/superchunk-covers-the-cure-38884

Wednesday, 3 September 2014

Let me tell you something... children


So the Maine vacation is over - this year with some additional drama by way of an emergency appendectomy for older daughter T (all is well thankfully, and our sincere kudos to the fine folks at Midcoast Maine Hospital in Bath).  I always bring a guitar and have best of intentions for major woodshedding and iPad recording while I'm there but never seems to materialize according to plan.  Despite this, some inspiration came from unexpected, non-playing sources.  Before the hospital adventure kicked in I received word through facebook that Guided by Voices was simulcasting their show from the legendary Stone Pony in Asbury Park NJ on August 23rd via LiveNation.... I managed to catch a good chunk of the 2.5h + set in real time before flaming out, but caught the rest the next day, luckily, as LiveNation only kept the complete show up for a few days.  Only clips remain, though I will try to update if someone posts a complete version.

  https://screen.yahoo.com/live/event/guided-by-voices

What a great, great show - some cosmic moments as Bob kicked in "I Am A Scientist" twice, but even more freakishly,  I was thinking at one point "wow, it would be great to hear them do "My Valuable Hunting Knife"...." and it was literally the next song they played!! Rob drank himself into a stumbling collapse towards the end - I suppose this is part of the GBV legend but I wish he would take better care of himself.  There are not many artists that I truly admire and respect while having a deep internal resonance to their music, and Bob Pollard would be up at the top of that short list.  My introduction to the band came only a couple of years ago after a mention on the masterpiece TV show "The IT Crowd", followed by a purchase of the "Human Amusements at Hourly Rates" "best of" collection.  If you know anything about Bob you'll know what a joke it is to think his output could be surveyed on 2CDs, however it was enough to knock me over completely, and it became an ever-present soundtrack to what I think of now as the "2288" era, pre-2013.  Beyond the music itself though, I concur with Jason Wendleton who stated on his blog that "the band is a symbol for what it means to be an artist".  Jason does a great job running down some of the essentials in his tribute so I'll just refer the interested to it here:

http://defendingaxlrose.com/2012/05/06/your-next-favorite-band-guided-by-voices/


I've been thinking of putting a picture of Bob sternly frowning down on me in the studio for when I get lazy, tired, and complacent to remind myself of what true creative discipline is all about.  More on vacation inspiration in subsequent posts with a couple of thrilling discoveries in the low register vein, amazing archival videos of the late Jaco Pastorius and Larry Graham.


(Sorry, no photo credit available for above but it was taken from GBV's Facebook feed)








Wednesday, 9 July 2014

NAD, a North Carolina gem


Swart, 3 Monkeys, Megatone, Carr, Evans, Splawn, TopHat.... seems to be an improbably high number of "boo-teek" amp builders with roots in North Carolina these days.  I have been on the amp hunt for a while, after selling my '80s Mesa Mark IIB (finally...) and '79 Deluxe Reverb, followed by a couple of years of detour through modeling "solutions" (Avid Eleven Rack, Amplitube 3 and Zoom G3X).  I enjoy the modelers but I thought it was time for the "real thing" again.  As usual a few items slipped through my net, including a great Fryette Memphis 30, a Carr Sportsman (for only $999, aaaarggghhh!), a cheap George Benson Hot Rod deluxe, and most recently a Marshall JVM 215c.  I also actually pulled the trigger on a Mesa 5:50 Express (returned, not quite "it") and another HRD special edition (DOA??? No sound - another return).  So, all in all very frustrating and discouraging.  Another net slip was a TopHat Super deluxe Mk.2 that appeared on consignment at one of my local haunts.  Very rare on the used market up here but I've had TopHat on my radar since reading a Builder Profile on Brian Gerhard in Premier Guitar some time back and was very impressed with his philosophy and attitude.  See:

http://www.premierguitar.com/articles/Builder_Profile_Top_Hat_Amps

Annoyingly it was gone before I got around to checking it out, but in a freakish coincidence a month or so later another one appeared on the Guitars Canada sell/buy forum and as it turned out the seller lived just a few minutes from me, and I pulled the trigger.  Basically brand new, in a lovely blue tolex/white sparkle.  I was hesitant about an amp with no reverb but it at least gave me an excuse to buy a Strymon Flint!  Still in early days with it, but it has a throaty, clean, Vox-ish jangle - not overly loud at 30W (though, the rest of the family would surely debate me on that point!); sounds tremendous with the Timmy-Flint combination into the front end.  Reminds me of a really fine two-seater car - I may still need to get an SUV for daily business but it's a pleasure having such a refined example of hand-built craftsmanship.  Maybe I should work on a NC amp collection - back to the Splawn website for more research.....
 

Monday, 9 June 2014

In Memoriam updated, and a ray of light from a Hardcore Troubadour

My previous post on brother Paul's passing has now been updated to the text of the actual eulogy I gave at his memorial service on May 17th. 

Was flipping through XM stations in the car on the weekend and hit a tune that gave me an involuntary chill, it was so great!  Made me realize that doesn't happen very often.  Analyzing "why" is kind of pointless but now that I've downloaded from iTunes and listened to it about 1000 times in 2 days I understand a bit better.  

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=trYtqya9MjU 

Clocks in at a perfect 2:42 and recording sounds wonderful, but Steve's vocal is a sputtering sneer that blurs and runs together in places in a masterwork of phrasing and timing.  Just try to sing along and deliver that line in verse 2 ("wherefore art thou Romeo you son of a Bit-chhh").  Same delivery but even more pronounced in the "live" shot prison concert video,

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NyRmz4jJb9I

On the list it goes of perfect Steve Earle gems, along with "Someday" and "My Old Friend the Blues"....

Wednesday, 30 April 2014

Wall bound and silent

Spent the weekend after JP's passing and my 48th birthday in South Carolina, at All-star Cheer bloodbath "Battle on the Beach".  Five days of travel for a grand total of 5 min of competition, so needless to say being a Cheer Dad involves a LOT of standing around, gamely holding a glittery Nfinity backpack covered with bows and of course those few minutes of nail-biting, heart-pounding hysteria.  On top of it all, a couple of weeks later at Nationals back home my fierce little competitor SJ got a concussion, we think mainly from buddy MS bashing her in the back of the head while going down a water slide in tandem at the hotel, but getting kicked in the head during day 2's run as well didn't help either. Yes, getting kicked in the face and head comes with the territory, along with vomit, blood, sprains and eyelid glitter. For those who know nothing of which I speak I refer you to the excellent documentary available in full on Youtube "The Twinkles: Chasing Perfection": (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cWGPCVMDmXE).
Did a lunch at Hard Rock Myrtle Beach and there were some interesting items (one of Dee Dee Ramone's basses!!) but this one caught my attention: Stratocaster, labelled as used by Clapton in the recording of Derek and the Dominoes "Layla and Assorted Love Songs".  Certainly not "Brownie" or "Blackie" or the other infamous one now belonging to Chris Duarte (http://www.chrisduartegroupfans.org/2nd%20strat.html) but I felt the pull nonetheless.  Not that I've ever been a big Clapton fan per se - I'm more on the Marc Ribot/Adrian Belew/Johnny Greenwood end of things though I do consider that album to be one of the high water marks of the 70's, and it's always resonated with me.  I tried to find out more about this particular guitar but nothing much on the net.   Very cool to see -  

Monday, 7 April 2014

RIP my dear brother JP 1963-2014

Almost exactly 48 years ago, to the day:

And a bit more recently, in the 90's


 My eulogy from the memorial service, May 17 2014:

It has now been over a month and a half since we got that call in middle of the night no one ever wants to get, my father to say that Paul had just slipped away quietly and was gone.  It seemed so unlike him, I don’t fully believe it even now.  He was always one for grand entrances, and if I had been asked at any time in the past how I thought Paul would go I honestly don’t think I would have ever guessed like this.  Paul is naturally wound up in my earliest and most vivid memories growing up and he loomed large in my young life as the ever dominant big brother, bursting with ideas and always pushing the envelope, driving the needle to the red line of “danger” and beyond even then.  He was the voice from the top bunk late into the night; long conversations I hardly recall the content of but still feel the deep and lasting impression from even now. I trailed along in his wake through the adventures of our early lives as the sidekick and occasional victim of his creative exploits.  The question “why would we do this” was never voiced with him, and I have a feeling the answer would be simply “why wouldn’t we”?  Why wouldn’t we – extract gunpowder from boxes of Dad’s shotgun shells to construct a makeshift bomb?  Why wouldn’t we – shoot arrows blindly through the neighbor’s opaque 12 foot plastic fence into their backyard?  And in one of the most shameful incidents I recall, why wouldn’t we ambush poor cousin Craig and paint him with glue found in a can at the construction site next door? [].  It was music that forever defined him to me, though.  He was always immersed in music from as early as I can remember, early on with the Acton Citizen’s Band then eventually on to tenures with the Oakville Symphony, performances with the Hamilton Philharmonic, a national youth band tour of Europe, and a long run of success in competition.  Clarinet was his early instrument but Paul seemed to be able to play anything.  We have a hilarious example of this natural ability on a video of Christmas around 2001, when Paul demonstrates for the camera an almost instant,  near-virtuostic command of a novelty stocking stuffer, a flute played entirely by air forced out of his nose.  He was far beyond comedic musical parlor tricks of course.  As his close friend Chris F, himself a formidable pianist, wrote in a kind note of condolence,
His knowledge of music was wide and deep, and he wanted greatly to be immersed in a musical career. He could generate compositions easily, with little effort. He would infuriate us other musicians because he wouldn't practice, but could rely on his copious improvisation skills to save each performance, and outshine us all. 
He settled into jazz and tenor sax by his teen years. His record collection was my exposure to "real" music, and his opinions sunk deep into me.  It was only much later that I began to break free from his intimidating influence, and never really did completely.   
I saw him most consistently here in Guelph while I was in graduate school. In this period he kept a ground floor apartment and you could go to Paul’s around noon or so and sit there for hours and hours, while a constant revolving stream of characters came wandering in and out and the energy would build into the late night. Paul loved to cook and host, though I learned quickly when he said "come for dinner, it's going to be at 7" meant that you had to eat before you go, since no way food was going to be before 11pm - and then it was usually some lavish, meticulous meal hours in preparation and Paul in full tilt, always the consummate entertainer. As Chris points out of this time
Paul was gifted with rare intelligence and clear insight into all our human weaknesses, and could be hilariously funny when pointing them out. He was always ready with jokes and costumes, and really loved childish pranks. He would hold court in his apartment and endlessly entertain all his many guests. He was always generous with food and drink, and never turned away anyone who came to his door.
One of his most requested skits of the time was something he called "Polish Interpretive Dancing", performed in costume usually to Herbie Hancock's "Rockit".  These days it would have been captured on 20 iPhones, but unfortunately these performances now survive only in the foggy memories of those who witnessed it live.  I have a wonderful picture I treasure from one of these gatherings that really resonates to me as Paul at his best, with a kid on each arm and laughing, surrounded by friends [I hope you can come see it after…] 

Paul never showed any inclination to move from Guelph where he spent all of his adult life.  As many of you here know he developed strong ties to community organizations [ Masons, Legion ] and left a long legacy of students in the area.  His great love of vocal music led him to lend his time and talents to various choirs at the University as well as several churches. He continued performing and composing throughout his life.  After I finished grad school, and we settled into our careers and the demands of our own kids and family, it became hard to connect outside of the major holidays.  It seemed at times that Paul operated on a different planet from the rest of us in our 9-5 worlds.
I would often find myself wondering why Paul didn’t do things differently;  move away, continue his education, pursue a more ambitious career – until a decade or so ago when I gained enough maturity to realize that such questions were more about me than him.  I was really asking:  why was he not more like me.  As it happens, I’ve never met anyone who so relentlessly refused to play anyone’s game but his own, and so resolved to live his life directed by his own inner compass.  He had a deep devotion and loyalty to family and friends that I believe became more intense as he became older, and more sick than any of us ever realized as we now know.  His friend and roommate Willy W kindly shared with us that
While living with Paul, Not a day went by without Paul talking about how
proud he was about his family. His mom, his father, his brothers and especially
the apple of his eye, his sister Mel. 
I will forever remember the iron grip of his hand, the laugh – sometimes the big bass room-filling one and sometimes the smirking giggle.  He was always the one with the big hug, not afraid to say "I love you”, and he never failed to push for he and I to see each other more, to connect with the family, to work harder to pull us all closer together in the future. If I have to have a last memory of Paul I’m grateful that it is the one I have, from the past Christmas holidays in Acton - we had arranged to bring instruments and played jazz standards together, really for the first time ever – me hacking along to keep up, and him weaving on and off the grid, leading the way like when we were kids. I left him that day thinking how great it would be to do more of that, and of course it was the last time I saw him.  It makes me so sad that he never seemed to grasp what he wanted in his life, either in his musical career or with respect to a family and children of his own. I imagine he thought there was still time for all that, which is a lesson to take to heart for all of us.   

Wednesday, 12 February 2014

Breathe

Nearly worked my way through the pile of music-oriented material acquired over the holidays: biography of Lenny Breau, David Byrne's "How Music Works", Ken Caillat's "Making Rumours" and finally a riotous and often hilarious, exuberant "I'm With The Band", via Pamela Des Barres.  After trying to find a source to buy it was delighted to find the Big Star documentary "Nothing Can Hurt Me" appearing on Netflix, which I finally found time to watch.  The whole thing was great but the last scene before credits rolled just killed me, John Fry at the board pulling up faders on what soon became apparent was "September Gurls", and the look on his face said it all.  I was in tears..... paraphrasing something I think that came from a set of Rhino compilation liner notes (from "Poptopia, the 70s" ??), "what's that sound... oh yeah, it's the breaking of my heart....."   

Speaking of tears, was jamming with the boyz the other weekend and hit on what I thought of as the verse to "Breathe" (Pink Floyd) as a vamp thing, but then we realized trying to sing along it also fit the verse to "Down by the River" (Neil Young).  Checked on it later and sure enough they are pretty much the same, but looking closer at "Breathe" was just devastating.  Backing up a bit - I don't focus a lot on lyrics ordinarily, but you would think I would at least have ingrained those to a song I have heard a million times and that I have integrated into my rock n' roll DNA??  Apparently not.  It's just an offshoot of what you could call the "Auld Lang Syne" syndrome though I suppose.  The four lines of the first chorus really shook me up:

For long you live and high you fly
And smiles you'll give and tears you'll cry
And all you touch and all you see
Is all your life will ever be


Uh huh.

Thursday, 2 January 2014

No doubt about it, it's 2014



First post of 2014 and this would be the natural time to reflect, publicize the resolutions, etc but not going to go there.  Managed to get an appalled rehearsal in and put most of one brand new song together over the holidays, called "No Doubt About It".  We even managed to pull off a run through of the ancient and venerable appalled chestnut "Free to Bleed", and got a clean take of the notoriously unrecorded "Fake".  Other musical events of the holidays:  DC and yours truly executed the Great 2013 Amp Bake-Off between a tweed Fender HRD and a Mesa Express plus 5:50 within the confines of Crazy Stranger.  Conclusion(s) - both are VERY LOUD.   Played standards with my brother JP for the first time... ever, really....on Christmas Eve, and it went really well! Our history of playing together has been spotty to say the least.  I have been inspired by the fabulous Lenny Breau/Brad Terry recordings ("Complete Living Room Tapes") so I was optimistic that a guitar/clarinet combo would work, and it was surprisingly good.  We even had some impromptu dancing going on for a while. 

Shout out to:
NYC guitarist Sean Driscoll and his most excellent blog somuchsound.blogspot.com!

somuchsound.blogspot.com 

I ran into this while watching, for approximately the millionth time, the video lessons Wayne Krantz did for Guitar World in 2012 on expanding chord vocabulary (see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vqJp-0PmHPo).  One of Sean's instructional videos on using ideas for using the metronome was included as a "suggested" link, and I really enjoyed his direct instructional style and wonderful sound/playing. His blog is very cleanly done and info-rich without being overly wordy (hint hint, note to self....).  One entry in particular resonated with me when Sean mentions being exposed to John McLaughlin through his older brother's record collection, which is exactly how I was exposed to him.  My early musical life was dominated by JP's polarized opinions and heavy leanings at the time into 70s fusion (George Duke, Mahavishnu, Herbie Hancock, etc).  Like Sean I came later to some kind of context for how great a player McLaughlin really is, but JM for me has been less about the playing (which I love, don't get me wrong) but more about his work ethic and relentless drive to improve and cut an individual and unique path.   In a lifetime of consuming millions of words about music and guitars a handful of things remain with me.  One was a wonderful interview of JM, by Robert Fripp, in the July '82 issue of Musician magazine - I read this in hard copy, so was 16 years old when it came out.  I searched recently online for this and was astonished to find the archive "Pages of Fire" (http://www.cs.cf.ac.uk/Dave/mclaughlin/art/index.html).  The archive includes the Fripp interview, but also the Guitar Player April 1996 cover interview with Matt Resnicoff that included a quote that was like a knife going through me at the time that I still turn to for inspiration when things get low.   Will leave it there for now:


When did you discover how dedicated you were to music?
I left home when I was 15 or 16 and never went back. I wasn't doing too good at 16. I've been playing guitar since I was 11, and I had to work on that, but at the same time I did a lot of jobs just to survive. You have to live in hope that when you're up at six in the morning driving a truck and you get back at night just shattered, you can still make the extra effort to pick up the guitar and work. [Laughs.] Did somebody tell you it was easy when you came down here to this planet? They didn't tell me! And it's still not. But who wants it easy? If it was, everybody would be doing it. That's what makes it interesting, because you go for it and discover what you're made of. We underestimate our own capacities so dreadfully. I know that spiritually we have infinite capacity. We can do so much more than we think. And that's from the heart, man. Don't ever forget it.