tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-272215722009-07-04T23:04:46.833-07:00audiologo...where sounds, words, and sights hopefully comingle, in the sensical and non-sensical terrainaudiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.comBlogger264125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-18965543915163474212009-06-30T09:25:00.000-07:002009-07-01T11:37:46.565-07:00Upcoming...Incoming...July 2009: Films + MusicLong time away, woodshedding takes what it takes, and it takes, and makes, and makes, and takes...<br /><br />Some stuff in July I'm wanting to keep in the forefront of the memory bank:<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">• <a href="http://www.state.nj.us/state/museum/do_nbff.htm">Newark Black Film Fest in Trenton</a></span> <span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="font-weight: bold;"><br /></span><span style="font-size:100%;">Thursdays, June 25 through July 31, 2009</span></span><br />New Jersey State Museum<br /><span style="font-size:130%;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">FREE</span></span><strong><br />Pre-Screening Receptions at 5 pm<br />Feature Films at 6pm</strong><strong><br />Youth Cinema at 1 pm </strong><br /><br />Filmmaker Q&amp;A follows each Feature Film screening<br />Includes a Youth Film Festival!<br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Some Highlights</span><span style="font-size:100%;"><strong><em><strong><em>:<br /><span style="font-weight: normal;"> This is My Africa</span></em></strong></em></strong></span><span style="font-style: italic;"></span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;"> Dreams Deferred: The Sakia Gunn Film Project</span><span style="font-style: italic;font-size:100%;" ><strong><em><strong><em></em></strong></em></strong></span><span style="font-size:100%;"><strong><em><strong><em><br /><span style="font-weight: normal;"> Medicine for Melancholy</span></em></strong></em></strong></span><br />and more...!<br /><br />• <a href="http://www.bam.org/view.aspx?pid=1321&amp;utm_source=film&amp;utm_medium=email&amp;utm_campaign=BAMcinemaFEST"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Afro-Punk Film Festival at BAM</span></a><br />July 3-8, 2009<br />Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAMcinématek)<br />BAM Rose Cinema<br />Adult Tix $11, BAM Members, $7<br />Showtimes Various, check <a href="http://www.bam.org/view.aspx?pid=1321&amp;utm_source=film&amp;utm_medium=email&amp;utm_campaign=BAMcinemaFEST">schedule</a> for details<br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Some Highlights</span>:<br /><a style="font-style: italic;" href="http://www.bam.org/view.aspx?pid=1340">The Night James Brown Saved Boston</a><br /><a style="font-style: italic;" href="http://www.bam.org/view.aspx?pid=1348">Medicine for Melancholy</a><br /><a style="font-style: italic;" href="http://www.bam.org/view.aspx?pid=1339">What's On Your Plate?</a><br /><a style="font-style: italic;" href="http://www.bam.org/view.aspx?pid=1325">Favela Rising </a><a href="http://www.bam.org/view.aspx?pid=1325">with</a><a style="font-style: italic;" href="http://www.bam.org/view.aspx?pid=1325"> Hoods to Woods</a><br /><a style="font-style: italic;" href="http://www.bam.org/view.aspx?pid=1324">Eventual Salvation</a><br /><span style="font-style: italic;"> </span><a style="font-style: italic;" href="http://www.bam.org/view.aspx?pid=1323">A Man Named Pearl</a><br /><span style="font-style: italic;"> </span><a style="font-style: italic;" href="http://www.bam.org/view.aspx?pid=1322">Adjust Your Color: Petey Green with Fauboug Treme: The Untold Story of Black New Orleans</a><div class="name"> ...and a lot more!<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">• <a href="http://www.afropunk.com/">Afro-Punk Concerts</a></span> In the skatepark (converted parking lot) next to BAM<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SkuqcL5v6xI/AAAAAAAAB5U/ecnJek24Y6k/s1600-h/JIMI_WEB_FRONT_v3.gif"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 214px; height: 320px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SkuqcL5v6xI/AAAAAAAAB5U/ecnJek24Y6k/s320/JIMI_WEB_FRONT_v3.gif" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5353559983268031250" border="0" /></a><br />Saturday, July 4<br />Live music by Whole Wheat Bread, Pure Hell, Game Rebellion, American Fangs, The Objex, Funk Face, oOohh Baby Gimme, Jesse Nobody.<br /><br />Sunday, July 5<br />Live music by Earl Grey Hound, Tamar Kali, The London Souls, Apollo Heights, Sabatta, Sweetie, Peekaboo Theory, Blackie.<br /><br />Monday, July 6<br />Live music by Saul Williams, Janelle Monae, Elevator Flight, Millsted, Chewing Pics, Echo Jinx, Blackie, The Freshman. <br /><br />Sunday, July 12<br />Block Party: Closing Event<br />Clinton Ave btwn Myrtle &amp; Willoughby<br />Brooklyn<br /> </div><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">• Friday, July 3 </span><br /><a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.joespub.com/component/option,com_shows/task,view/Itemid,40/id,4040">Dionne Farris</a><br /><a href="http://www.joespub.com/content/view/24/44/">Joe's Pub</a><br />Price: $15.00 in advance; $20.00 at the door<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/Skushurb6GI/AAAAAAAAB5k/nS_Hkq0U_LE/s1600-h/str-asp-n.Dionne_Farris_-_For_U_first_single_from_the_New_CD_SIGNS_OF_LIFE_Music_Popular_-end-42851_detail.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 180px; height: 180px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/Skushurb6GI/AAAAAAAAB5k/nS_Hkq0U_LE/s320/str-asp-n.Dionne_Farris_-_For_U_first_single_from_the_New_CD_SIGNS_OF_LIFE_Music_Popular_-end-42851_detail.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5353562277525842018" border="0" /></a><br />9:30pm<br /><br /><a href="http://www.joespub.com/component/option,com_shows/task,view/Itemid,40/id,4647"><span style="font-weight: bold;">BelO</span></a> (Haitian vocalist)<br /><a href="http://www.joespub.com/content/view/24/44/">Joe's Pub</a><br />Price: $15<br />11:30pm<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">• Sunday, July 5</span><br /><a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.joespub.com/component/option,com_shows/task,view/Itemid,40/id,4361">Allan Toussaint</a><br /><a href="http://www.joespub.com/content/view/24/44/">Joe's Pub</a> Monthly New Orleans Brunch Series<br />Price: $30 / $15 for children 12 and under<br />12pm noon<br /><a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.joespub.com/component/option,com_shows/task,view/Itemid,40/id,4592"><span style="font-size:100%;"><br />JACK Quartet: Iannis Xenakis: Complete String Quartets CD Release</span></a><br /><a href="http://www.joespub.com/content/view/24/44/">Joe's Pub</a><br />Price: $12<br />7:30pm<br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/Skur6SnOCqI/AAAAAAAAB5c/hadKyUyKbe4/s1600-h/club4-1.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 320px; height: 261px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/Skur6SnOCqI/AAAAAAAAB5c/hadKyUyKbe4/s320/club4-1.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5353561599977065122" border="0" /></a><br /><a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.joespub.com/component/option,com_shows/task,view/Itemid,40/id,4614">Astillero Tango Orchestra</a><br /><a href="http://www.joespub.com/content/view/24/44/">Joe's Pub</a><br />Price: $15<br />9:30pm<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-1896554391516347421?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-22229700354972707552009-06-06T13:25:00.000-07:002009-07-01T11:40:46.947-07:00Summer Reading & Listening 2009Usually I try to read one book at a time. But if my mood changes,or as deadlines approach a book may be put aside for another. Then of course there's also the thrill of finding something you'd wished for and didn't even know existed. So far my reading has encompassed young adult (the British kind, for which I refuse to feel embarrassment), summer/winter mystery, and a book it'll likely take the whole summer to read. Once again Fran Ross's Oreo, was on my summer reading mental list, but I haven't even taken it out of the library (and now I find the only circulating copy has been lost!)...<br /><br />In no particular order:<br /><br />1. <span style="font-style: italic;">The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo</span> (2008) - <span style="font-weight: bold;">Stieg Larsson (trans. Reg Keeland)</span>. Intriguing mystery. The late Larsson's work as an investigative reporter publishing exposés of Nazism and publisher of an anti-racism magazine in Sweden. I had to keep myself from reading it in one day. Even though the male protagnist happened to have an easy-going manner that made him the object of desire (misplaced, tragic, and shared) of each of the major female characters in the book which seemed a bit over-the-top, yet Larsson worked this major staple of the genre in a manner that wasn't just about sex, but primarly allowed for character development and some insight into the emotional culture of middle and upper class Swedes.<br /><br />2. <span style="font-style: italic;">Dead and Gone: A Sookie Stackhouse Mystery</span> (2009) - <span style="font-weight: bold;">Charlaine Harris</span>. Yep, I'm addicted to this series. I blame my friend Q who got me started. Harris' narrative capabilities are getting richer. The last installment focused on familial dynamics sacrificing some of the action and hotness that typifies the series. In this installment Harris found a bridge between the two, and wrote what is probably the best of the lot.<br /><br />3. <span style="font-style: italic;">The Broken Bridge</span> (1995) - <span style="font-weight: bold;">Philip Pullman</span>. Who would have imagined that the guy who wrote the <span style="font-style: italic;">His Dark Materials</span> series would have an ear for the inner thoughts of a biracial black girl and aspiring visual artist living in Wales. This is one for any young artist because it gets inside that mindset like few works I've ever read.<br /><br />4. <span style="font-style: italic;">The World that Made New Orleans</span> (2007) - <span style="font-weight: bold;">Ned Sublette</span>. Still reading, so not writing until I've finished.<br /><br />6. <span style="font-style: italic;">My Life In the Bush of Ghosts</span> (195 ) - Amos Tutuola. I'd been meaning to read this for about 20 years, but it took a new multi-media performance by <span style="font-weight: bold;">Mendi + Keith Obadike</span>, <a href="http://carlagirl.net/2009/05/04/mendikeith-obadike-four-electric-ghosts/"><span style="font-style: italic;">4 Electric Ghosts</span></a>, based on Tutuola's novel and designer <span style="font-weight: bold;">Tōru Iwatani</span>'s legendary <span style="font-style: italic;">Pac-Man </span>video game (designed with the help of Shigeo Funaki (programmer) and Toshio Kai (sound design and music), and I believe called Puck-Man in Japan) to get me to finally read it.(Read <span style="font-weight: bold;">J's Theater</span>'s write up <a href="http://jstheater.blogspot.com/2009/05/four-electric-ghosts-italian-poets.html">here</a>.) I can see the link between a game set up as a maze of consumption and Tutuola's sometime humorous, often surreally horrifying epic trip or bildungsroman through various towns and countries of ghosts of varying type and character collectively known as the bush of ghosts into which his barely adolescent Yoruba protagonist accidentally stumbles in his attempt to escape the advancing civil war in 1950s Nigeria. I read this mostly on train trips, it somehow seemed appropriate to always be in motion as I was reading, as the protagonist is constantly traveling between towns and some terrifying sensorial experiences (which speak to the incredible imagination of Tutuola and/or some truly inhuman war memories) as he attempts to find his way back to the world of the living, and his own village. Much was made of Tutuola's "Nigerian English" or his "primitive English" both assessments underestimate the rich new meanings, layers of meaning, and simultaneously varied perspectives that Tutuola is able to bring to the fore that wouldn't be otherwise available through an employ of "standard English" in the novel's narrative. I wouldn't hesitate to read it again.<br /><br />5. <span style="font-style: italic;">Open the Door: The Life and Music of Betty Carter</span> (2002) - <span style="font-weight: bold;">William R. Bauer</span>. This is on the 'books that I dreamed of and didn't even know existed' list. Yes, there's a lot to be said for perusing library shelves. Still reading, so not writing until finished.<br /><br />6. <span style="font-style: italic;">Kinky Gazpacho: Life, Love, and Spain</span> (2008) - Lori L. Tharps. This book operates in layers. I think Tharps' sometimes understated writing must be the Midwestern influence emerging as Tharps was born and raised in Wisconsin, though now claims Philly as her home. It was definitely a richer experience reading the book a second time. I do think this understated quality, especially when it comes to issues of race and identity and racism are what has made this memoir a success: no one need feel alienated from or implicated by hurtful episodes in Tharp's narrative if you don't read it too deeply. However, the flipside of this is some people may not readily identify with her experiences, or her response to them. The story amiably follows her development from invisible chameleon into a woman comfortable with herself, and the life she builds with her husband, a Spainard who rediscovers his country through her journey.<br /><br />6. <span style="font-style: italic;">Goodbye, Little Rock and Roller</span> (2004) - <span style="font-weight: bold;">Marshall Chapman</span>. This memoir by prolific songwriter Chapman, a would-be southern debutant gone bad, made clear to me particular aspects of the dynamics of gender, sexuality, race and rock 'n' roll in the southern United States.<br /><br />7. <span style="font-style: italic;">Mozart in the Jungle: Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music</span> (2005) - <span style="font-weight: bold;">Blair Tindall</span>. I read this in one day, and finally began to comprehend the bitterness I sometimes pick up on from western concert music conservatory trained musicians. Whew!<br /><br />8. <span style="font-style: italic;">Shadow in the North: A Sally Lockhart Mystery</span> (2008, reprint) - <span style="font-weight: bold;">Philip Pullman</span>. (see below)<br /><br />9. <span style="font-style: italic;">The Tiger in the Well: A Sally Lockhart Mystery</span> (2008, reprint) - <span style="font-weight: bold;">Philip Pullman</span>. A "penny-dreadful" romp. This revisit of a bygone era of British-spawned pulp-fiction is enjoyable escapist fare, except--and this is the big exception--the casting of the "strange man from the orient" or the "Chinaman" in the role of evil villian. Oddly, Chinese women come off a lot better, and there is a finely nuanced portrait of socialism and the emerging Jewish immigrant community in London at the turn of the 20th century evidencing Pullman as capable of better than resorting to tired stereotypes to create plot twists and drama.<br /><br />10. <span style="font-style: italic;">Rythm Oil: A Journey Through the Music of the American South</span> (2000) - <span style="font-weight: bold;">Stanley Booth</span>. Another good text for insight into 'particular aspects of the dynamics of gender, sexuality, race and rock 'n' roll in the southern United States.'<br /><br />10. <span style="font-style: italic;">2666</span> (2008) - <span style="font-weight: bold;">Roberto Bolaño (trans. Natasha Wimmer)</span>. Let's see if I can get through this by the end of the summer. Not sure if I can maintain focus for 912 pages of layered and sometimes experimental narrative, but I'm game to try!<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-2222970035497270755?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-19141483706242724602009-04-04T22:16:00.000-07:002009-04-04T22:34:27.362-07:00Listening In: Haitian Music RoundtableThe inestimable music writer and musician <span style="font-weight: bold;">Ned Sublette</span> hipped a bunch of us to this 24 March 2009 <a href="http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/sashafrerejones/2009/03/roundtable-hait.html">roundtable on Haitian music</a> at <span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;">The New Yorker</span> moderated by writer <span style="font-weight: bold;">Sasha Frere-Jones</span> on his <span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;">New Yorker </span>blog. Here's Frere-Jones description of the roundtable and its origins:<br /><blockquote><br />The idea for this roundtable started with <a href="http://faculty.goucher.edu/mbell/">Madison Smartt Bell</a>, and <a href="http://papercuts.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/01/07/living-with-music-madison-smartt-bell/">a post he<br />wrote about Haitian music for the <span style="font-style: italic;">New York Times</span>’s Paper Cuts blog</a>.<br />I knew Wyclef’s music and a few other names on Bell’s list, but I found<br />myself feeling woefully short on context. I wanted to know what’s going on<br />now in Haiti. What are the big struggles within and behind Haitian music?<br />What should people be listening to? To answer these questions, and others, I<br />enlisted the help of music scholar <span style="font-weight: bold;">Garnette Cadogan</span> and brought together<br />Bell with:<br /><br />Laurent DuBois, who is the author of “<a href="http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog/DUBAVE.html">Avengers of the New World: The Story<br />of the Haitian Revolution</a>,” and is working on a history of the banjo.<br /><br /><a href="http://emcalister.faculty.wesleyan.edu/">Elizabeth McAlister</a>, who writes about Haitian music and religious culture.<br />She is the author of “<a href="http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/9291.php">Rara! Vodou, Power, and Performance in Haiti and its<br />Diaspora</a>,” and produced the Smithsonian Folkways CD “<a href="http://www.folkways.si.edu/albumdetails.aspx?itemid=2364">Rhythms of Rapture:<br />Sacred Musics of Haitian Vodou</a>.”<br /><br />Ned Sublette, the author of “<a href="http://www.amazon.com/World-That-Made-New-Orleans/dp/1556527306">The World That Made New Orleans</a>,” “<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Cuba-Its-Music-First-Drums/dp/1556526326/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1238909069&amp;sr=1-2">Cuba and Its<br />Music</a>,” and the forthcoming “<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Year-Before-Flood-Story-Orleans/dp/1556528248/ref=sr_1_9?ie=UTF8&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1238909100&amp;sr=1-9">The Year Before the Flood</a>.”<br /><br />Edwidge Danticat, a novelist and author of the memoir “<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Brother-Im-Dying-Vintage-Contemporaries/dp/1400034302/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1238909158&amp;sr=1-1">Brother, I’m Dying</a>.”<br /><br />Garnette Cadogan himself, who is at work on a book about rock-reggae<br />superstar Bob Marley.<br /><br />The conversation is theirs. I’m here only as student and moderator</blockquote><br /><a href="http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/sashafrerejones/2009/03/roundtable-hait.html">Read on</a>... Frere-Jones indicates there's "More to come." I certainly hope so!<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-1914148370624272460?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-13084936457515734122009-03-30T21:08:00.000-07:002009-03-30T21:51:43.690-07:00Film/Video, Acting & Writing Workshops - NYCYes, it's that time when the ice melts and similarly thoughts and creative energies start to unthaw, and one's mind turns to that project that's been nagging at the back of the brain. Or the one that's sitting on shelf somewhere, waiting for when there's more time...<br /><br />Well, if you're in the NYC-area the time might be now since both <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.twn.org/">Third World Newsreel (TWN)</a> and <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.fdcac.org/">The Frederick Douglass Creative Arts Center</a> are starting their Spring workshops in filmmaking, acting, directing for the stage, and creative writing (including playwriting, writing for television, and screenwriting). It's a long listing, but dive in...you won't know if you like it until you get a little wet! If after reading you're still hesitant, or holding your cash to pay for essentials, you can still read about the filmmaking side of things at <a href="http://www.aivf.org/"><span style="font-style: italic; font-weight: bold;">The Independent</span></a> (formerly the <span style="font-style: italic;">Independent Film &amp; Video Monthly</span>, published by the Association of Independent Video &amp; Filmmakers).<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; color: rgb(255, 102, 0);">• <a href="http://www.twn.org/twnpages/news/news.aspx">Spring TWN Evening Workshops</a></span><br />"The Spring TWN Wednesday Night Workshops are starting on March 25th! Register now!"<br /><br />Wednesday Night Workshop Series (But not always on Wednesdays!)<br />Walk-in seminars on production topics you need - from production management, podcasting and new media production, sound recording and new camera technology. All classes are $20 ($10 for low income) unless otherwise noted. The workshops take place at Third World Newsreel. Package rate available: $80 for all six sessions ($40 for low income). Register now atworkshop@twn.org.<br /><br />The Spring season starts March 25th with 2 Free Work-in-Progress screenings. The goals of the screenings are to solicit feedback and lively discussion with the filmmaker to help shape the films' direction before final cuts. Limited seating, so you must RSVP at workshop@twn.org by March 21. Screenings begin at 6:30 PM at the TWN office, 545 Eighth Avenue, 10th Floor.<br /><br />Wednesday, March 25, 6:30 PM<br />Work-In-Progress Screening: White: A Study in Color by Joel Katz<br />Please join TWN Board member Joel Katz (director of Strange Fruit, 2002) for a documentary/essay about what it means to be white in America. Both a personal memoir and a sociological study, White: A Study in Color will put the notion of "post-racial" America under a critical lens. From the Obama ascendancy to the predictions of population demographers that by the year 2042 whites will become America's largest minority, the very notion of being white is ripe for scrutiny. Where has 'white' come from, and where is it going? FREE, Limited Seating, RSVP Req.<br /><br />Wednesday, April 1, 6:30 PM<br />Work-In-Progress Screening: Changing Face of Harlem by Shawn Batey<br />TWN Production Workshop alumna, Shawn Batey presents a one-hour documentary that reviews development in Harlem over the last twenty years and ponders the future of the community. From the voices of residents, business owners, politicians, developers and clergy, this documentary reveals feelings of betrayal and hope, deferred dreams, and struggles of a neighborhood. The film illustrates how, in the years of the 1980s and 1990s, the New York City government along with non-profit faith based organizations saved and revamped the abandoned vacant housing stock that became synonymous with Harlem. FREE, Limited Seating, RSVP Req.<br /><br />Wednesday, April 8, 6:30 PM<br />Sound Recording: Tips for better results, and a look at New Gear! With JT Takagi<br />One thing that a lot of indie projects suffer from: problematic sound. An intro to getting decent sound and a look at some of the most popular mixers, hard drive recorders and radio mikes, courtesy of Professional Sound Services. $20 ($10 for low income).<br /><br />Tuesday, April 28, 6:30 PM<br />Guerilla Web 2.0 with Andreas Jackson<br />Do you have an intriguing message, product, or service but don't know where to start to connect to the global audience of the World Wide Web? Andreas Jackson, Director of On-Line and Business Development for the Hip-Hop Association presents a one-stop shop of social media and technology to create and disseminate a compelling campaign throughout the blogosphere. Topics including blogging, podcasting, RSS, e-mail blast, search engine optimization and more are discussed and demonstrated in an interactive environment. A must for filmmakers! $20 ($10 for low income).<br /><br />Wednesday, May 6, 6:30 PM<br />Vision, Cinematography and the RED Camera with Arthur Jafa<br />You can get 35mm quality with this camera - at a fraction of the cost. Features like CHE have been shot with it. But, as always, it's not just the gear - it's your vision and concept that makes the difference. Jafa, cultural critic/worker and visual artist - is also a DP and filmmaker with credits ranging from Spike Lee's Crooklyn, to his and Julie Dash's Daughters of the Dust and Manthia Diawara's Rouch in Reverse. He'll show his RED, but also talk about envisioning the captured image. $20 ($10 for low income).<br /><br />Wednesday, May 13th, 6:30 PM<br />Master Class with Thomas Allen Harris: Presenting His New Film and Multimedia Project Through The Lens Darkly<br />Thomas Allen Harris, the founder and President of Chimpanzee Productions, will discuss the evolution of his work and the new direction of his company into the realm of new media. Chimpanzee's innovative and award-winning films have received critical acclaim at International film festivals such as Sundance, Berlin, Toronto, FESPACO, Outfest, Flaherty and Cape Town and have been broadcast on PBS, the Sundance Channel, ARTE, as well as CBC, Swedish broadcasting Network and New Zealand Television.<br /><br />To Be Scheduled:<br />Producing New Media with Ann Bennett<br />Production Planning and Budgeting<br />NYSCA Application with Don Palmer<br /><br />All classes at:<br />Third World Newsreel<br />545 Eighth Avenue, 10th Flr<br />between 37th and 38th Streets<br />1, 2, 3, A, C, E to Times Square<br /><br /><br />Final Cut Pro and DVD Studio Pro Workshop - 6 week course on Saturday Afternoons - Class begins in mid April<br />Learn to edit through examining films, exploring media literacy principles - and learning Final Cut Pro and DVD Studio Pro, in a 6 week course on Saturday afternoons from 1-3 PM. The class costs $300 and pre-registration is required. Register today! Deadline is March 31st. Email: workshop@twn.org.<br /><br />All editing classes on Saturdays at 1 PM at:<br />Third World Newsreel<br />545 Eighth Avenue, 10th Flr<br />between 37th and 38th Streets<br />1, 2, 3, A, C, E to Times Square<br /><br /><tt><hr /> </tt><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; color: rgb(255, 102, 0);">• <a href="http://www.fdcac.org/">The Frederick Douglass Creative Arts Center</a></span><br />"Spring is here with an Open Houses, Readings and <a href="http://www.fdcac.org/docs/workshop.html">Workshops</a>. Hoping you can join us! As part of our Open House, we will be hosting aCelebration of the Life and Work of Ihsan Bracy. A short bio for Ihsan is at the bottom of this e-mail."<br /><br />Saturday, April 4th, 2009<br />From 12:30 to 2:30, Celebration of the Life and Work of Ihsan Bracy<br />From 3:00 to 6:00pm Open House for Spring Workshop Cycle<br />Spring '09 Open House<br />An opportunity to learn more about the 8-week workshops and classes being offered this Spring beginning the week of April 13th and meet some of the instructors.<br />more info at www.fdcac.org<br />Wednesday, April 15th<br />7:00 pm - 9:00 pm<br />Free Staged Reading of Prodigal Blood By Jaymes Jorsling at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture located at 135th Street and Malcolm X Boulevard.<br /><br />More Info at http://www.classicaltheatreofharlem.org/future-classics..html<br />Monday, April 11<br />7:00 pm - 9:00 pm<br />8-SESSION CLASS BEGINS<br />Writing and Re-Writing the Novel<br />Led by the award winning author Grace Edwards<br />An emphasis in this class on those who have already their first draft but also open to those looking to get started. Sponsored in part by NYSCA/ Literature Grant.<br /><br />Monday, April 13<br />6:00 pm - 8:00 pm<br />8-SESSION CLASS BEGINS<br />Advanced Acting Workshop<br />Led by the award winning director/co-founder of the Classical Theatre of Harlem<br />Alfred Preisser. Monologue, scene study, and audition technique. Includes play and character analysis, and uses of improvisation and theatre games to explore character and encourage creative freedom.This workshop is sponsored in part by funding from NYSCA/Special Arts Services.<br /><br /><br />Monday, April 13<br />7:00 pm - 9:00 pm<br />8-SESSION CLASS BEGINS<br />Writing for Daytime Television<br />Sojourna Collier<br />A workshop for those interested in drafting a daytime television pilot or with an interest in learning to write for that field. This workshop is made possible in part by support from NYSCA/Electronic Media and Film.<br /><br />Monday, April 13<br />7:00 pm - 9:00 pm<br />8-SESSION CLASS BEGINS<br />Advanced Playwriting<br />Leslie Lee<br />A workshop directed to those who have at least begun the first draft of their play or have a good idea of what they want to write and have finished a draft of a play previously. This class is supported in part by funding from NYSCA/Special Arts Services.<br /><br />Tuesday, April 14<br />7:00 - 9:00 pm<br />8-SESSION CLASS BEGINS<br />Creative Writing<br />TBA<br />Prize-Winning author and editor and also former FDCAC student, Ms. Thomas takes the class through a selection of writing exercises that include the short story and non-fiction essays, with an eye to assisting in the process of selecting the style of writing most appropriate for the individual students goals. This workshop is sponsored in part by support from NYSCA/Literature.<br /><br />Tuesday, April 14<br />7:00 - 9:00 pm<br />8-SESSION CLASS BEGINS<br />Short Story<br />Nathasha Brooks-Harris<br />A workshop involved in not only writing and polishing your short stories, but also in offering guidance in where and how to get your stories published. This workshop is sponsored in part by support from NYSCA/Literature.<br /><br />Tuesday, April 14<br />6:00 pm - 8:00 pm<br />8-SESSION CLASS BEGINS<br />Shakespeare Performance Workshop<br />Led by the award winning director/co-founder of the Classical Theatre of Harlem<br />Alfred Preisser. An intensive class dealing with Shakespearean text from the actor's viewpoint. Introduction to scansion and script analysis, the style and form of Elizabethan Theatre, and in-depth scene and monologue work.This workshop is sponsored in part by funding from NYSCA/Special Arts Services.<br /><br />Tuesday, April 14<br />7:00 - 9:00 pm<br />8-SESSION CLASS BEGINS<br />Childrens Books<br />Laura Pegram<br />This fiction workshop AND craft class includes a close reading of excerpts from diverse voices within the genre (e.g., Angela Johnson, Cristina Garcia, Sherman Alexie, Christopher Paul Curtis, Karen Hesse, etc.), as well as a structured written commentary. Emerging writers at all levels will learn to develop their craft and the language of critique during this intensive workshop. This workshop is sponsored in part by support from NYSCA/Literature.<br /><br />Tuesday, April 14<br />7:00 - 9:00 pm<br />8-SESSION CLASS BEGINS<br />Acting Jacqueline Wade<br />A workshop for all levels of actors. Sponsored in part by support from NYSCA/Special Arts Services.<br /><br />Tuesday, April 14 (tentatively scheduled)<br />7:00 pm - 9:00pm<br />8-SESSION CLASS BEGINS<br />Fusion Film Writing<br />Alan Zatkow<br />In this workshop for which the Screen 1 workshop is a prerequisite, the class will work on reworking their film scripts, and get an understanding of how the industry works. This workshop is made possible in part by support from NYSCA/Electronic Media and Film.<br /><br />Wednesday, April 15<br />7:00 - 9:00 pm<br />8-SESSION CLASS BEGINS<br />Poetry<br />Jacqueline Johnson<br />A workshop devoted to the structure and creation of the poem with insight on where and how to get published. Made possible in part by support from NYSCA/Literature.<br /><br />Wednesday, April 15<br />7:00 pm - 9:00pm<br />8-SESSION CLASS BEGINS<br />Screenwriting<br />Alan Zatkow<br />In this workshop the class will begin the first draft of their screenplay getting feedback from both the class and the instructor with insights into what to do once the screenplay is completed. This workshop is made possible in part by support from NYSCA/Electronic Media and Film.<br /><br />Wednesday, April 15<br />7:00 pm - 9:00pm<br />8-SESSION CLASS BEGINS<br />Beginning Playwriting<br />Sophia Romma<br />In this workshop the class will begin the first draft of their play getting feedback from both the class and the instructor. There will also be discussions of individual goals for the completed works. Sponsored in part by support from NYSCA/Special Arts Services.<br /><br />Wednesday, April 15<br />7:00 pm - 9:00pm<br />8-SESSION CLASS BEGINS<br />Literary Non-Fiction/Memoir<br />Michel Marriott<br />In this workshop the class will explore all forms of non-fiction writing, including journalism. Sponsored in part by support from NYSCA/Literature.<br /><br />Wednesday, April 15<br />7:00 pm - 9:00pm<br />8-SESSION CLASS BEGINS<br />Beginning your Novel<br />Jaira Placide<br />In this workshop the class will begin the process of taking that idea for a novel and transfer it onto the page. Sponsored in part by support from NYSCA/Literature.<br /><br />Thursday, April 16<br />6:00 pm - 8:00pm<br />8-SESSION CLASS BEGINS<br />Directing<br />Led by the award winning director/co-founder of the Classical Theatre of Harlem<br />Alfred Preisser. An introduction to the role of the director in creating work for the stage. Covers choice and analysis of play, working with the actor to shape a performance, use of physical elements (scenic, costume, music) to strengthen interpretation and expression of the "director's voice". Sponsored in part by support from NYSCA/Special Arts Services.<br /><br />Thursday, April 16<br />7:00 pm - 9:00pm<br />8-SESSION CLASS BEGINS<br />Advanced Screenwriting<br />Myla Churchill<br />In this workshop the class will edit their screenplay, getting feedback from both the class and the instructor with insights into what to do to improve their work. Sponsored in part by support from NYSCA/Special Arts Services.<br /><br />Thursday, April 16<br />7:00 pm - 9:00pm<br />8-SESSION CLASS BEGINS<br />Crafting the Novel-From Concept to Publication by Donna Hill<br />This class is for those who have a story concept or draft of their novel and those who wish to flesh out their novel in progress. Made possible in part by support from NYSCA/Literature.<br /><br />Frederick Douglass Creative Arts Center<br />270 West 96th Street<br />New York, NY 10025<br />212-864-3375<br />Fax 212-864-3474<br />E-mail: Fdcac@aol.com<br />Web Site: www.Fdcac.org<br /><br />About ihsan bracy<br />Paths of Sanctuary is author Ihsan Bracy's second work of fiction with Cool Grove Press (Feb. 2008). His first book Ibo Landing: an offering of short stories, (CGP 1998) is scheduled to be work-shopped by NYU in preparation for an upcoming Broadway run by The Mirror Repertory Company where Ihsan is the Arts and Education Coordinator. As artistic Director and Founder of The Tribe Ensemble, a multi-ethnic theatre repertory company based out of the Jamaica Arts Center for thirteen years, Ihsan authored and directed Against the Sun, the Southampton Slave Revolt of 1831. A former member of The Family (La Familia) Inc., his credits include prolonged theatre workshops at Bayview Correctional Facility for Women, the Spofford Home for Juveniles and Riker's Island, which culminated in a forty prison inner city tour. Ihsan directed Juan Shamsul Alam's Benpires which received a Pulitzer Prize nomination in theatre.<br /><br />A graduate of Bennington College, Ihsan Bracy was former member of the New York State Council on the Arts and former chair of the Theatre Department of Talent Unlimited High School, NYC's second largest performing arts high school. Ihsan's major educational credits include directing five Manhattan, three NYC and a third place National Shakespeare Championship as well as an ARTS National Finalist in Theatre. As a Brooklyn based spoken word artist, Ihsan performed all across the city including a long running appearance at The Triad as part of composer Michael Raye's Soul Gathering. Author of two volumes of poetry, cadre and the ubangi files, Ihsan has twice been a CAPS Finalist and has been elected to the New Renaissance Writer's Guild.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-1308493645751573412?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-46704791115711434412009-03-28T18:53:00.000-07:002009-03-28T20:00:07.841-07:00Coming Up...Jazz Fest & Odetta Tribute<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/Sc7fFjv92WI/AAAAAAAAB5M/2bAxqp9aXIs/s1600-h/cbjc-logo-3.gif"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 245px; height: 179px;" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/Sc7fFjv92WI/AAAAAAAAB5M/2bAxqp9aXIs/s320/cbjc-logo-3.gif" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5318433496559901026" border="0" /></a><br /><br />You know summer is around the corner when the month-long Jazz Festivals start occurring. Do jazz and summer go together? Well, probably no more than the idea of music, fun, and hot nights going together. So here comes the <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.centralbrooklynjazzconsortium.org/">Central Brooklyn Jazz Consortium</a>'s <a href="http://www.centralbrooklynjazzconsortium.org/new_pages/April%20CBJC%20Calendar.html"><span style="font-weight: bold;">10th Annual Jazz Festival April 1 - 30, 2009</span></a>.<br /><br /><blockquote>CBJC's 10th jubilee celebration of an American original art form will feature: Opening Day Free Community Concert (April 1st), jazz drum legend Roy Haynes (April 4th), Brooklyn Jazz Hall of Fame induction ceremony, Dave Valentin (April 16th), Houston Person (April 17th), Jazz: The Women's View Point (April 18th), Melba Moore (April 18th), Ronnie Mathews/Freddie Hubbard Tribute (April 19th), Jazz &amp; The Fine Arts concert, <a href="http://www.bam.org/view.aspx?pid=976&amp;utm_source=all&amp;utm_medium=email&amp;utm_content=032709&amp;utm_campaign=TWAB">BAMcafe Live weekend</a> (April 24/25), Youth Jazz Jamboree/Wellness Day (April 25th), educational symposiums, programming for senior citizens and individuals with development disabilities, jazz performances, and conferences in churches, restaurants, clubs, and cultural institutions throughout Brooklyn.</blockquote><div style="text-align: left;">A note: I don't see Melba Moore on the festival calendar on 4/18, a featuring <span style="font-size:100%;"><span style="font-family:georgia;">"</span></span><span style=";font-family:georgia;font-size:100%;" ><strong>Jazz: The Women's View Point</strong></span><span style=";font-family:Trebuchet MS,Geneva,Arial,Helvetica,SunSans-Regular,sans-serif;font-size:100%;" > </span><span style="font-size:100%;"><strong style="font-family: georgia;">Panel Discussion &amp; Performance </strong></span><span style="font-size:100%;">with Ntozake Shange, Mickey Davidson, Akua Dixon, Carline Ray, and Camile Yarborough</span>. However, I do see The Melba Joyce Quartet on 4/24, so I don't know if that's a typo or what. </div><br />The name "<a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.centralbrooklynjazzconsortium.org/">Central Brooklyn Jazz Consortium</a>" does beg the question of if there's also a non-Central Brooklyn Jazz organization with a competing festival--well, it's Brooklyn, home of <span style="font-weight: bold;">a lot</span> of musicians and other artist. So yes, there's the six year old <a href="http://www.brooklynjazzfestival.org/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Brooklyn Jazz Festival</span></a><br />(formerly <span style="font-weight: bold;">Williamsburg Jazz Festival</span>) and the <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.brooklynjazz.org/index.php">Brooklyn Jazz Underground</a> which also has a two-year old festival. What's notable about these other two festivals is their emphasis on featuring both work by younger artists and work that pushes the boundaries of jazz, as well as their ethnic make-up. There is a greater European and European American presence in both organizations and as well as in their festivals, particularly in the membership of the Brooklyn Jazz Underground. Generational and multi-national and multi-ethnic tensions are a part of the history of jazz, although that wasn't always the case. Still it's no surprise to see these elements evidenced and/or responded to in the ethos of various organizations. Arguably, no one organization should have to bear the responsibility for defining what jazz is--past, present or future--since the history of what gets/got counted as jazz and who gets/got counted as jazz musicians is so complicated anyway.<br /><br /><span style="font-size:130%;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Odetta Tribute: Princeton University, Thursday April 9, 2009</span></span> <a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/Sc7e6q7nJ_I/AAAAAAAAB5E/aE7aVn2uYNc/s1600-h/INBOX%3E23528"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 320px; height: 224px;" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/Sc7e6q7nJ_I/AAAAAAAAB5E/aE7aVn2uYNc/s320/INBOX%3E23528" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5318433309509232626" border="0" /></a><br />Perhaps not the most obvious locale for an Odetta tribute, but the way was paved with the James Brown Symposium in 2007. Plus Princeton is becoming a hotbed of performance studies scholars. Filmmaker <span style="font-weight: bold;">Ela Troyano</span> was just there with her "documentary bolero" on the phenomenal <span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;">La Lupe: Queen of Latin Soul</span>, hosted by <span style="font-weight: bold;">Alex Vazquez</span>, performance studies scholar, new faculty in English and <span style="font-weight: bold;">Oh! Industry</span> blog founder/contributor. <span style="font-weight: bold;">Dr. Judith Casselberry</span>, cultural anthropologist and currently a visiting scholar at the institution, also is a long-time member of <a href="http://www.toshireagon.com/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Toshi Reagon</span></a>'s band <span style="font-weight: bold;">Big Lovely</span>. <span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="color: rgb(153, 0, 0);">(Odetta Memorial image by Stephen Alcorn ©2008)</span></span><br /><br />This Odetta event is a two-parter, with an afternoon symposium and an evening concert featuring <span style="font-weight: bold;">Dr. Bernice Johnson Reago</span>n, <span style="font-weight: bold;">Sonia Sanchez</span>, <span style="font-weight: bold;">Lizz Wright</span> and <span style="font-weight: bold;">Toshi Reagon</span>, among others. Tickets to the concert are free, but you have to get them in advance, and I'm not sure they're going to be available online. You may have to bribe a New Jersey friend or relative to go over to the Princeton, New Jersey campus and get them. Here's the info:<br /><br /><a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.princeton.edu/africanamericanstudies/news/events/odetta.xml">A TRIBUTE TO ODETTA</a><br />APRIL 9, 2009<br /><br />4:30pm • McCosh Hall 10 • Panel Discussion<br /><br />“Odetta, Folk Music, and Social Activism”<br /><br />• Dr. Bernice Johnson Reagon • Professor Matthew Frye Jacobson • Mr. Oscar Brand • Ms. Olivia Greer • Professor Albert J. Raboteau • Dr. Judith Casselberry • Moderatored by Professor Judith Weisenfeld<br /><br /><br />8:30pm • Richardson Auditorium • Concert*<br /><br />• Professor Matt Frye Jacobson • Geoffrey Holder • Lizz Wright • Ruby Dee • Guy Davis • Sonia Sanchez • Dr. Bernice Johnson Reagon • Toshi Reagon<br /><br /><br />*Tickets are complimentary and required for admission to the concert.<br /><br />Ticket Availability:<br />• General Public<br /><a href="http://www.princeton.edu/frist/services.html#film">Frist Campus Center Ticket Office</a><br />Available: Friday, March 27 <br />Limit of two tickets per person.<br /><br />Doors open at 8:00pm for ticket holders. Open admission at 8:20pm for any remaining seats.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-4670479111571143441?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-71685859997891754512009-03-26T04:58:00.000-07:002009-03-26T05:16:28.774-07:00R.I.P. John Hope Franklin<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SctvCsgBhcI/AAAAAAAAB48/kQES73MHGFs/s1600-h/18freedomx.jpeg.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 207px; height: 320px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SctvCsgBhcI/AAAAAAAAB48/kQES73MHGFs/s320/18freedomx.jpeg.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5317465877136901570" border="0" /></a><br />John Hope Franklin, Scholar of African-American History, Is Dead at 94 [1915 -2009]<br /><br />By ANDREW L. YARROW<br />Published: March 25, 2009<br />[from <span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;">NYT</span> http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/26/us/26franklin.html?ref=todayspaper ]<br /><br />John Hope Franklin, a prolific scholar of African-American history who profoundly influenced thinking about slavery and Reconstruction while helping to further the civil rights struggle, died Wednesday in Durham, N.C. He was 94.<br /><br />A spokeswoman for Duke University, where Dr. Franklin taught, said he died of congestive heart failure at the university’s hospital.<br /><br />During a career of scholarship, teaching and advocacy that spanned more than70 years, Dr. Franklin was deeply involved in the painful debates that helped reshape America’s racial identity, working with the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., W. E. B. Du Bois, Thurgood Marshall and other major civil rights figures of the 20th century.<br /><br />“I will always think of John Hope as the historian of the South who grasped the complexity of Southern public life as shaped by the horror of personal slavery,” said Nell Irvin Painter, the Princeton University historian. “Franklin was the first great American historian to reckon the price owed in violence, autocracy and militarism.”<br /><br />It was a theme Dr. Franklin wrestled with into his last years. In an article in The Atlantic Monthly in 2007, he wrote, “If the American idea was to fight every war from the beginning of colonization to the middle of the 20th century with Jim Crow armed forces, in the belief that this would promote the American idea of justice and equality, then the American idea was an<br />unmitigated disaster and a denial of the very principles that this country claimed as its rightful heritage.”<br /><br />Dr. Franklin combined idealism with rigorous research, producing such classic works as “From Slavery to Freedom: A History of African-Americans,” first published in 1947. Considered one of the definitive historical surveys of the American black experience, it has sold more than three million copies and has been translated into Japanese, German, French, Chinese and other<br />languages.<br /><br />Robert W. Fogel, a Nobel Prize-winning economist at the University of Chicago, called it “a landmark in the interpretation of American civilization.”<br /><br />Dr. Franklin also taught at some of the nation’s leading institutions, including Harvard and the University of Chicago in addition to Duke, and as a scholar he personally broke several racial barriers.<br /><br />He often argued that historians have an important role in shaping policy, a position he put into practice when he worked with Marshall’s team of lawyers in their effort to strike down segregation in the landmark 1954 case Brown v. Board of Education, which outlawed the doctrine of “separate but equal” in the nation’s public schools.<br /><br />“Using the findings of the historians,” Dr. Franklin recalled in a 1974 lecture, “the lawyers argued that the history of segregation laws reveals that their main purpose was to organize the community upon the basis of a superior white and an inferior Negro caste.”<br /><br />Dr. Franklin also participated in the 1965 march from Selma to Montgomery, Ala., with Dr. King.<br /><br />“One might argue that the historian is the conscience of the nation, if honesty and consistency are factors that nurture the conscience,” Dr. Franklin said. Still, he warned, if scholars engage in advocacy as well as scholarship they must “make it clear which activity they are engaging in at<br />any given time.”<br /><br />President Bill Clinton, in awarding him the Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor, in 1995, said Dr. Franklin had never confused “his role as an advocate with his role as a scholar,” adding that he had held “to the conviction that integration is a national necessity.”<br /><br />Yet even on so august an occasion, Dr. Franklin could not escape the legacy of discrimination. In a talk he gave in North Carolina 10 years later, he recalled that on the evening before he received the medal at the White House, a woman at a Washington club asked him to fetch her coat, mistaking him for an attendant, and that a man at his hotel had handed him car keys and told him to get his car.<br /><br />Dr. Franklin’s prestige led Mr. Clinton to select him in 1997 to head the Advisory Board to the President’s Initiative on Race, which was formed to promote dialogue about the country’s race problems.<br /><br />The panel, however, drew criticism. White supremacists protested at some of its forums, and at others American Indians and other minorities complained that they were being left out of the process. A group of conservative scholars repudiated the panel and formed their own.<br /><br />And when Dr. Franklin’s group finally issued its report after 15 months, the document was criticized as, in one disillusioned scholar’s words, “a list of platitudes.”<br /><br />The controversy did little to dim Dr. Franklin’s standing as a groundbreaking historian, however. He was the first African-American president of the American Historical Association; the first black department chairman at a predominantly white institution, Brooklyn College; the first black professor to hold an endowed chair at Duke; the first black chairman of the University of Chicago’s history department; and the first African-American to present a paper at the segregated Southern Historical Association, one of many groups that later elected him its president.<br /><br /> John Hope Franklin was born on Jan. 2, 1915, in Rentiesville, Okla., the son of Buck Colbert Franklin, a lawyer, and Molly Parker Franklin, an elementary school teacher. His parents had moved to Rentiesville, an all-black town, after his father was not allowed to practice law in<br />Louisiana.<br /><br /> In the 1920s, the family moved to Tulsa, and at age 11 he was taken to hear the great civil rights leader W. E. B. Du Bois, with whom Dr. Franklin later became friends.<br /><br /> His youth was marked by frequent brushes with racism. He was forced off an all-white train and made to sit in a segregated section of the Tulsa opera house. He watched black neighborhoods of Tulsa — including the one where his father had his office — being burned during the infamous 1921 race riot, and he was barred from admission to the University of Oklahoma.<br /><br /> Instead, Dr. Franklin attended historically black Fisk University in Nashville, receiving his B.A. in 1935. There he met Aurelia E. Whittington, who would become his wife, and sometime editor, of almost 60 years. They had one son, John Whittington Franklin, who survives him. Mrs. Franklin died in 1999.<br /><br /> In 1997, Dr. Franklin and his son edited an autobiography of his father, Buck Franklin. The book told the tale of free blacks in the Southwestern Indian territories in the late 1800s. Buck Franklin’s father, a former slave owned by Indians, became a cowboy and rancher, while Buck, who taught himself law by mail, was an advocate of black pride and nonviolence.<br /><br /> Before graduating from Fisk, Dr. Franklin considered following his father into law but was persuaded by a white professor, Ted Currier, to make history his field. Professor Currier was said to have borrowed $500 to help Dr. Franklin pursue graduate studies at Harvard. There, Dr. Franklin later recalled, he felt the isolation of being one of only a handful of blacks on campus. He received his master’s degree in 1936 and his Ph.D. in 1941.<br /><br /> Two years later he published his first book, “The Free Negro in North Carolina, 1790-1860,” which explored slaveholders’ hatred and fear of the quarter-million free blacks in the antebellum South. Almost 20 other books followed, either written or edited by Dr. Franklin.<br /><br /> In “The Militant South, 1800-1861” (1956), he described Southern whites’ “martial spirit” and “will to fight,” which he said gave the pre-Civil-War South its reputation for violence. He approvingly quoted Tocqueville’s observation that, because of slavery, “the citizen of the Southern states becomes a sort of domestic dictator from infancy.”<br /><br /> In “Reconstruction After the Civil War” (1961), he wrote that the end of Reconstruction reforms left “the South more than ever attached to the values and outlook that had shaped its history.” He lamented that “in the postwar years, the Union had not made the achievements of the war a foundation for the healthy advancement of the political, social and economic life” of the nation.<br /><br /> “The Emancipation Proclamation” (1963), written a century after the proclamation was issued, examined how it evolved in Lincoln’s mind and its impact on the Civil War and later generations. Dr. Franklin concluded hopefully, “Perhaps in its second century, it would give real meaning and purpose to the Declaration of Independence.”<br /><br /> And in “The Color Line: Legacy for the 21st Century” (1993) he argued that race would remain America’s great problem in the 21st century.<br /><br /> Despite his acute awareness of the South’s troubled racial history, Dr. Franklin was often angrier about Northern racism and frequently defended his adopted home state, North Carolina.<br /><br /> His major biographical project was a 1985 study of George Washington Williams, a self-educated black Civil War veteran and author of a 1,000-page 1882 history of blacks in America from 1619 to 1880. He said he spent nearly 40 years of intermittent research on the project, calling Williams “one of the small heroes of the world.”<br /><br /> Dr. Franklin’s first passion was teaching, and he continued to log classroom time despite his increasing prominence. His teaching career began at Fisk in 1936 and continued over the next 20 years at St. Augustine’s College in Raleigh, N.C., North Carolina College in Durham and Howard University in Washington.<br /><br /> As his first books drew national notice, Dr. Franklin left the world of historically black colleges and went to Brooklyn College, where from 1956 to 1964 he served as chairman of what had been an all-white department.<br /><br />“Having John Hope Franklin at Brooklyn College in the 1960’s was like having a real star in our midst,” said Senator Barbara Boxer, Democrat of California, who was a student of Dr. Franklin’s. “Students who were lucky enough to get into his class bragged about him from morning until night.”<br /><br /> Dr. Franklin later taught at the University of Chicago before returning to North Carolina in 1982 to teach at Duke and at the Duke Law School.<br /><br /> Dr. Franklin was also a Fulbright professor in Australia and had teaching stints in China and Zimbabwe. He taught at Cambridge University in England; Harvard; Cornell; the University of Wisconsin; the University of Hawaii; the University of California, Berkeley; and other institutions. Since 1992, he had been James B. Duke professor emeritus of history at Duke. A John Hope Franklin Research Center was established in his honor at Duke.<br /><br /> At his home in Durham, Dr. Franklin continued a lifelong hobby of cultivating hundreds of orchids; one species was named for him, the Phalaenopsis John Hope Franklin.<br /><br /> His honors, awards, and professional and civic affiliations were so numerous as to fill several single-spaced pages of a long curriculum vitae. He received more than 100 honorary degrees.<br /><br /> In 2006, he received the John W. Kluge Prize for the Study of Humanities in a ceremony at the Library of Congress. In his prepared remarks he said he had long struggled “to understand how it is that we could seek a land of freedom for the people of Europe and, at the very same time, establish a social and economic system that enslaved people who happen not to be from Europe.”<br /><br /> “I have struggled to understand,” he went on, “how it is that we could fight for independence and, at the very same time, use that newly won independence to enslave many who had joined in the fight for independence.<br /><br /> “As a student of history, I have attempted to explain it historically, but that explanation has not been all that satisfactory. That has left me no alternative but to use my knowledge of history, and whatever other knowledge and skills I have, to present the case for change in keeping with the<br />express purpose of attaining the promised goals of equality for all peoples.”<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-7168585999789175451?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-37350341853572097072009-02-15T12:32:00.000-08:002009-02-15T14:51:44.370-08:00More on Love...<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SZiEF-sbMxI/AAAAAAAAB40/ZsWfs4c3NFY/s1600-h/41prCjvPXhL._SS500_.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 320px; height: 320px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SZiEF-sbMxI/AAAAAAAAB40/ZsWfs4c3NFY/s320/41prCjvPXhL._SS500_.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5303133799492301586" border="0" /></a><br />This week I received <a href="http://www.jonathanbaumbach.com/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Jonathan Baumbach</span></a>'s lastest novel <a href="http://www.amazon.com/You-Invention-Memory-Jonathan-Baumbach/dp/0979209188/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1234731230&amp;sr=1-1"><span style="font-style: italic; font-weight: bold;">YOU or The Invention of Memory</span></a> (Akron, Ohio: Rager Media, 2007).<br /><br />It was a free gift sent as part of <a href="http://newyouproject.wordpress.com/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">The New You Project</span></a> started by public relations innovator <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.laurencerand.com/">Lauren Cerand</a>, which Cerand engineered to give the novel a second lease on life as its initial release turned out to be rather underwhelming, receiving very little press coverage. Apparently Baumbach is something of a writers' writer, with his "underappreciated" status confirmed by none less than the Gray Lady (<span style="font-style: italic;">The New York Times Book Review</span>).<br /><br />Cerand took on Baumbach's novel in defiance of the notion that after the initial release there's nothing that can be done on behalf of book that's fallen through the cracks. Instead Cerand created <span style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="http://newyouproject.wordpress.com/">The New You Project</a> </span>which started with 200 books, and an offer to send one free of charge to anyone who requested one. You weren't assigned the onus of any specific action--you could read the book, sell it at your local used bookstore or on Amazon or Powells, or give it away to a friend. Cerand just felt the book was valuable and that it should be "out in the world," she details her ethos in the website's first post: "<a href="http://www.blogger.com/which%20she%20details%20in%20%22The%20Rules%20of%20the%20Game%20in%20Paris%20%28and%20Publishing%29.%22">The Rules of the Game in Paris (and Publishing)</a>." She started a regularly updated blog to document any interesting news associated with the book, new public readings for Baumbach, reviews, the furthest the book had yet traveled, etc. (Thanks to writer <a href="http://www.tayarijones.com/blog/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Tayari Jones</span></a> for the heads up on this!)<br /><br />The success of Cerand's efforts really shows what a difference <span style="font-style: italic;">love</span>, for a book <span style="font-style: italic;">about love</span> and its various complexities, and a willingness to think outside of the box can make. The free book giveaway ended at midnight on Valentine's Day. But the book is available in bookstores, and you can always lobby your public library to buy a copy.<br /><br />Spread the love!<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-3735034185357209707?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-5899428656826644082009-02-15T10:59:00.000-08:002009-02-15T11:23:43.923-08:00Happy Valentines Day!<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SZhmTaE4jyI/AAAAAAAAB4c/S56RfJ0nFSM/s1600-h/oh+fuck.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 320px; height: 216px;" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SZhmTaE4jyI/AAAAAAAAB4c/S56RfJ0nFSM/s320/oh+fuck.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5303101044832112418" border="0" /></a><br />But seriously, my first love was a Pee Wee League football player. So it's true that I haven't forgotten him. Well, not completely; I still can't remember his name.<br /><br />It may say something about my warped sense of humor that I deeply appreciate <span style="font-weight: bold;">Al Green</span>'s tender and vulnerable songs about love (with all their tension and inner conflict jonesin'), as well as a thoughtful <span style="font-weight: bold;">Quiet Storm</span> mix, and the <a href="http://audiologo.blogspot.com/2009/02/what-more-can-be-said.html">verité love shots of the president and first lady</a>, and yet still find the below image rather hilarious (courtesy <span style="font-weight: bold;">33 Jones</span>), and feel for <span style="font-weight: bold;">Fresh</span> at <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://33jones.com/">33 Jones</a> who penned the accompanying blog entry, "<a href="http://souledonmusic.blogspot.com/2009/02/love-lockdown-33-jones-edition.html">I Used to Love H.E.R.</a>" at <a href="http://souledonmusic.blogspot.com/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Souled On</span></a> - a contemporary music scholar's philosophical and audiophilic haven (above image thanks to <span style="font-weight: bold;">Souled On</span>).<br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">That hip hop love can be a hot mess</span>...<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SZhpaTN6BiI/AAAAAAAAB4s/6GWJ_nKFCFc/s1600-h/souledonlove33jones.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 320px; height: 222px;" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SZhpaTN6BiI/AAAAAAAAB4s/6GWJ_nKFCFc/s320/souledonlove33jones.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5303104461784876578" border="0" /></a><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-589942865682664408?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-71885595409317960192009-02-11T20:44:00.000-08:002009-02-12T07:17:40.772-08:00Coming up for air...<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SZPCHeTFsiI/AAAAAAAAB4M/jqNp5ZbLt-4/s1600-h/danai_gurira8.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 360px; height: 241px;" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SZPCHeTFsiI/AAAAAAAAB4M/jqNp5ZbLt-4/s400/danai_gurira8.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5301794619993207330" border="0" /></a><br />...for a hot minute. I was fortunate to get one of the last 7 tickets to Obie-award winning Zimbabwean American actor/playwright <span style="font-weight: bold;">Danai Gurira</span>'s <span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;">Eclipsed</span>, produced this February as part of the <span style="font-weight: bold;">In-Festival 2009</span> at <span style="font-weight: bold;">McCarter Theatre</span> on Princeton University's campus. Some folks may be familiar with Gurira from <span style="font-weight: bold;">Tom McCarthy</span>'s recent film, <span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;">The Visitor </span>(2007), where she plays Zainab, the Senegalese artist girlfriend of a Syrian musician (Haaz Sleiman) who is detained by immigration, both characters are in the US illegally. Zainab is an internal character as compared to her more outgoing boyfriend, still Gurira plays her in a way that shows her complexity--her guardedness, her intelligence, and wondrously her strength and then her sense of unmoored loss that surprises us because her hard-won guardedness seemed to ground the more spontaneous and life-embracing Tarek, but it becomes apparent that there's more balance in the relationship than was immediately obvious, Gurira communicates this in a scene not with Tarek, but in her first meeting with his mother (Hiam Abbass).<br /><br />But I digress, <span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;">Eclipsed</span> knocked me out. The play focuses on the lives of five women during the <a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SZPB9bjV42I/AAAAAAAAB4E/2073OADA_SQ/s1600-h/eclipsed-bg.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 200px; height: 225px;" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SZPB9bjV42I/AAAAAAAAB4E/2073OADA_SQ/s400/eclipsed-bg.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5301794447457379170" border="0" /></a>last year of the <span style="font-weight: bold;">Liberia's Second Civil War</span>. The characters are based on multiple interviews Gurira conducted with Liberian women in 2007 while she was there on a TCG New Generations Grant in November of 2008. When she asked one interview subject <em><span style="color: rgb(0, 128, 0);">"</span></em>what she felt must be included in a story about Liberian women during this time. Without hesitation she said 'Rape'. That was the main thing. You were either fearful of that most of all or living in its devastating aftermath." Gurira directly references the vulnerability of having a vagina: "I remembered Wanda Sykes talking about how much better life would be for a woman if the vagina were detachable. If sometimes we could hide it or leave it at home." The play is about more than that violation, it centers on the resiliency of these women, facing impossible choices and how war effectively devastates those caught up in it physically, emotionally, economically, psychologically, and intellectually: women dealing with the aftermath of rape, of children barely out of "knee pants" and barrettes lost to forced military conscription, women who lost opportunity to attend school, and as a result are illiterate and have grave difficulty being economically self-sufficient. But I'm not really doing it justice. It's focus is on women, as Gurira is committed to telling the stories of African women. Still the story deals with our common humanity and how complex maintaining it in times of extreme struggle can be.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; color: rgb(0, 0, 153);">Update 2/12/09</span> : MacArthur Award winning playwright <a href="http://lynnnottage.net/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Lynn Nottage</span></a> has just opened her play, <a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SZQ7YF3P1cI/AAAAAAAAB4U/pFhRZvna2oQ/s1600-h/Ruined_04.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 320px; height: 240px;" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SZQ7YF3P1cI/AAAAAAAAB4U/pFhRZvna2oQ/s320/Ruined_04.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5301927946398717378" border="0" /></a><a href="http://www.mtc-nyc.org/current-season/ruined/index.htm"><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;">Ruined</span></a>, about women living during the current war in the <span style="font-weight: bold;">Democratic Republic of the Congo</span>, where similar to Liberia rape has become a tool of war. According to an NPR profile of the play Nottage and her director started work on this project several years ago and went to neighboring Uganda which shares a border with the Congo to interview women affected by the war, and again the key issue was rape and its aftermath both physical and emotional. You can hear/read the NPR story <a href="http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=100348726">here</a>. Ruined is playing off-Broadway at the <a href="http://www.mtc-nyc.org/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Manhattan Theatre Club</span></a> you can see scenes from the play and an interview with Lynn Nottage about writing the play <a href="http://www.mtc-nyc.org/current-season/ruined/video1.htm">here</a>.<br /><br />I just finished <span style="font-weight: bold;">Kirsten Dinnall Hoyte</span>'s novel <a href="http://www.akashicbooks.com/blackmarks.htm"><span style="font-style: italic; font-weight: bold;">Black Marks</span></a> (Akashic Books, 2006) which I believe I found indirectly through <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://reggieh.blogspot.com/">Reggie H.'s Noctuary</a>. I just felt called to track down this book, so I did. Probably what got me was its focus on memory. The protagonist is Georgette, a young woman of Jamaican and African American descent who has lost her memory and is <a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SZPBkQtJkII/AAAAAAAAB38/AAy0qeWSMpA/s1600-h/BlackMarks1.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 95px; height: 150px;" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SZPBkQtJkII/AAAAAAAAB38/AAy0qeWSMpA/s400/BlackMarks1.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5301794015048994946" border="0" /></a>attempting to piece together her life from assorted artifacts. The novel moves around in time and voice. Georgette's voice and life come into greater and lesser focus depending on when in her history the narrative takes place and her corresponding psychological state. What I really appreciate is that Hoyte doesn't create any easy A + B = C equations when it comes to Georgette's troubled emotional terrain. There are gaps in her memory, but also gaps in her stability, plenty of instances of protective silences, passive aggressive destructive behavior, and a history (and histories) at odds with itself, the contradictions of human beings and within that powerful human aggregate, family, are all in effect here. All through one is aware of Hoyte's skill and intelligence as a writer. Nothing is simple in this novel, but that's never expressed in a belabored or self-conscious manner. I almost read this whole novel in one day, and yeah, I shoulda/coulda been doing a bunch of other work. But I couldn't put it down.<br /><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; color: rgb(153, 51, 153);">Endnotes</span>:<br />In preparation for the play's run, the McCarter Theatre put a number of resources online for people to educate themselves about various subjects pertinent to the work: Liberian History, War and Sexual Violence, and the playwright Danai Gurira and her creative process.<br />• <span style="font-weight: bold;">Danai Gurira, Liberian Journals</span> <a href="http://www.mccarter.org/blog/?p=181">Part I</a>, <a href="http://www.mccarter.org/blog/?p=182">Part II</a>, <a href="http://www.mccarter.org/blog/?p=183">Part III</a><br />• <a href="http://www.mccarter.org/blog/?p=432">Essential Knowledge: Women, War and Sexual Violence in Liberia (and Other Conflict Zones)</a> by Paula Alekson<br />• <a href="http://www.mccarter.org/blog/?p=434">Contemporary Liberian History</a> by Patrick McKelvey<br />• A collection of <a href="http://www.mccarter.org/blog/?p=436">Articles About Liberia</a> by Partick McKelvey<br />• <a href="http://www.mccarter.org/blog/?p=435">Interview with Danai Gurira</a>, by Carrie Hughes<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-7188559540931796019?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-7854678005266896162009-02-11T20:40:00.001-08:002009-02-11T20:44:10.641-08:00What more can be said...?<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SZOoXz2ZoOI/AAAAAAAAB30/1PZQL97hwp8/s1600-h/Awwwwwww.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 291px;" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SZOoXz2ZoOI/AAAAAAAAB30/1PZQL97hwp8/s400/Awwwwwww.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5301766313354043618" border="0" /></a>OK, a lot, but really isn't this picture worth a thousand words? <span style="font-style: italic;">The president and first lady on a freight elevator on their way to an inaugural ball, while the secret service agents attempt to fade into the background. Click on image for the large view. </span><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-785467800526689616?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-32481945832482773592009-01-21T18:18:00.000-08:002009-01-21T18:48:44.087-08:00Pictures of the Day: January 20, 2009<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SXfaYgBnVHI/AAAAAAAAB3U/mscqpbXCm14/s1600-h/26565055.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 267px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SXfaYgBnVHI/AAAAAAAAB3U/mscqpbXCm14/s400/26565055.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5293940001445729394" border="0" /></a>Despite watching and talking about it, this unprecedented event still hasn't sunk in. So here are some of my favorite images thusfar, since I'm rather speechless on the subject.<br /><br />Then President-Elect Obama approaching the podium (Damon Winters/New York Times)<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SXfbKvHbteI/AAAAAAAAB3c/gjNf__8cxjY/s1600-h/26564542.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 255px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SXfbKvHbteI/AAAAAAAAB3c/gjNf__8cxjY/s400/26564542.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5293940864490124770" border="0" /></a><br />The millions of attendees stretching a full 2 miles from the podium witness the swearing in. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SXfbupGTSFI/AAAAAAAAB3k/ly15zMfL0wg/s1600-h/26565107.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 267px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SXfbupGTSFI/AAAAAAAAB3k/ly15zMfL0wg/s400/26565107.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5293941481350056018" border="0" /></a><br /><br />Taking the Oath of the Office of the President of the United States of America (Damon Winters/The New York Times)<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SXfcHsjVf-I/AAAAAAAAB3s/AjGaQHdCu4Y/s1600-h/20sasha2_600.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 363px; height: 400px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SXfcHsjVf-I/AAAAAAAAB3s/AjGaQHdCu4Y/s400/20sasha2_600.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5293941911773872098" border="0" /></a>The younger of the First Daughters, Sasha Obama, giving her father, President Barack Hussein Obama, a thumbs up after his swearing in. First Lady Michelle Obama holding Abraham Lincoln's bible. Eldest First Daughter Malia Obama smiling and facing the podium crowd. (Susan Walsh/Associated Press)<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SXfYVLMsRnI/AAAAAAAAB3E/Wh_cgBUaxE8/s1600-h/TuskegeeAirmen.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 267px;" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SXfYVLMsRnI/AAAAAAAAB3E/Wh_cgBUaxE8/s400/TuskegeeAirmen.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5293937745292183154" border="0" /></a><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />Surviving Tuskegee Airmen bear witness to history. (Ozier Muhammad/The New York Times)<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SXfZucc4UcI/AAAAAAAAB3M/1a3ljvASpTo/s1600-h/Snapshot+2009-01-21+21-24-30.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer; width: 210px; height: 400px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SXfZucc4UcI/AAAAAAAAB3M/1a3ljvASpTo/s400/Snapshot+2009-01-21+21-24-30.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5293939278931841474" border="0" /></a><br />The Anniston Star, which proudly declares itself "A home-owned newspaper" on its masthead. Published in Anniston, Alabama. Click on the image to get the full effect, and read the eloquent text.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-3248194583248277359?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-35437638300375115802009-01-16T15:46:00.000-08:002009-01-16T16:04:45.522-08:00James Moody's "Moody's Mood for Love"<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SXEgTAa-bpI/AAAAAAAAB2o/BKze0SF7Z2k/s1600-h/F-jamesmoody.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer; width: 266px; height: 400px;" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SXEgTAa-bpI/AAAAAAAAB2o/BKze0SF7Z2k/s400/F-jamesmoody.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5292046548039790226" border="0" /></a><br />A great video of saxophonist/flautist/composer/bandleader <a href="http://www.jamesmoody.com/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">James Moody</span></a> giving a playful and animated performance of his composition "Moody's Mood for Love" with <span style="font-weight: bold;">Dizzy Gillespie</span> and a rather sober United Nations Orchestra. I can only imagine that given the presence of Gillespie and Moody, the musicians were too terrified of messing up to even crack a smile during the song.<br /><br /><object height="344" width="425"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/bQl9RVMNtw4&amp;hl=en&amp;fs=1"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/bQl9RVMNtw4&amp;hl=en&amp;fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" height="344" width="425"></embed></object><br /><br />And from <a href="http://www.blackademics.org/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">blackademics.org</span></a> an instructive August 15, 2008 interview with then 82-year-old <span style="font-weight: bold;">James Moody</span>. (Sometimes you really need a musician to interview another musician, still the young interviewer admirably keeps recouping, staying open, and going forward with the interview). Informative and humbling. Note Moody's comments about why he doesn't like gospel:<br /><br /><object height="344" width="425"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/cha--SH80kY&amp;hl=en&amp;fs=1"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/cha--SH80kY&amp;hl=en&amp;fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" height="344" width="425"></embed></object><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-3543763830037511580?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-53493472098214322892009-01-16T00:45:00.000-08:002009-01-16T00:53:55.271-08:00Countdown... 3 Days...<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SXBJfIci96I/AAAAAAAAB2g/r2AF-gxr2lk/s1600-h/R-218127-1137757518.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer; width: 320px; height: 243px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SXBJfIci96I/AAAAAAAAB2g/r2AF-gxr2lk/s400/R-218127-1137757518.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5291810361352320930" border="0" /></a><br />OK, clearly I'm being playfully reductive.<br /><br />After all, the Bipartisan President may crank up the George Clinton after all the staff has gone home for the night, but it's not going to be a <span style="font-style: italic;">24-7</span> "One Nation Under A Groove" kind of a party.<br /><br />But let's hope there'll be at least a dose-a-day of "Free You Mind (And Your Ass Will Follow)" to keep the audacious hope and openness to innovative approaches flowing.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-5349347209821432289?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-2737017609351424032009-01-15T22:33:00.000-08:002009-01-15T23:27:11.630-08:00Secretary of the Arts: Ask Obama for What You Want<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SXAx7__xA_I/AAAAAAAAB2Y/noBii4yivts/s1600-h/33421457.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 291px; height: 320px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SXAx7__xA_I/AAAAAAAAB2Y/noBii4yivts/s320/33421457.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5291784469021262834" border="0" /></a><br />Yes Viginia, folks still do listen to Public Radio, at least the programs that haven't yet been canceled. How do I know? Because <a href="http://www.quincyjones.com/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Quincy Jones</span></a> was interviewed on <a href="http://www.wnyc.org/shows/soundcheck/episodes/2008/11/14/segments/115299">November 14, 2008</a> in conjunction with the publication of his new book, <a style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;" href="http://www.amazon.com/Complete-Quincy-Jones-Passions-Collection/dp/1933784679">The Complete Quincy Jones: My Journey &amp; Passions</a> (Insight Editions, 2008) by <span style="font-weight: bold;">John Schaefer</span> on <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.wnyc.org/shows/soundcheck/">WNYC's Soundcheck</a>. During the interview Jones apparently said, "...next conversation I have with President Obama is to beg for a Secretary of Arts."<br /><br />Bassist <a href="http://open.salon.com/user_blog.php?uid=13150">Jaime Austria </a>took Jones seriously and created a petition asking soon-to-be President Obama for just that. Austria plays bass with the <span style="font-weight: bold;">American Ballet Theatre Orchestra</span> and the <span style="font-weight: bold;">New York City Opera</span>, the latter which recently suffered through some <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/15/arts/music/15oper.html?_r=1">major personnel changes</a> and <a href="http://www.wnyc.org/shows/soundcheck/episodes/2009/01/15">like other companies</a>, great and small, is struggling with a sharply declining annual budget resulting from the current international economic crisis.<br /><br />Austria's effort seems to have the blessing of Quincy Jones. Jones' homepage indicates as of January 15, 2008, the petition's signatures have surpassed the 100,000 mark, and gone global with coverage from Ireland and Norway.<br /><br />To sign the petition, go <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.petitiononline.com/esnyc/petition.html">here</a><br /><br />Listen to the Jones interview here:<br /><object height="36" width="350"><param name="movie" value="http://www.wnyc.org/flashplayer/mp3player.swf?config=http://www.wnyc.org/flashplayer/config_share.xml&amp;file=http://www.wnyc.org/stream/xspf/115299"><param name="wmode" value="transparent"><embed type="application/x-shockwave-flash" src="http://www.wnyc.org/flashplayer/mp3player.swf?config=http://www.wnyc.org/flashplayer/config_share.xml&amp;file=http://www.wnyc.org/stream/xspf/115299" id="WNYC_Mp3_Player_115299" name="WNYC_Mp3_Player_115299" bgcolor="#FFFFFF" wmode="transparent" height="36" width="350"></embed></object><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-273701760935142403?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-59202123099731787502009-01-15T15:21:00.000-08:002009-01-16T13:07:51.741-08:00the local and the global...I was going to write that I don't usually write about politics, but that's not really true. I just think <a href="http://www.jstheater.blogspot.com/">others</a> do it <a href="http://rodonline.typepad.com/">better</a> than I do. Often I prefer to read what they've written and learn something.<br /><br /><div style="text-align: left;">But this week I realized there were three issues that people had sent me info about, and I wanted to put them down here, so I can think about them. Or at least give them a moment of silence.<br /></div><br /><div style="text-align: center;">•••<br /></div><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">• Proposition 8 Backlash in Northern California</span><br />Richmond, California: On December 13th of last year, <a href="http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/12/20/BAV714SBA1.DTL">a twenty-eight year-old Black lesbian was gang-rapped by four Black and Latino young males</a>. She was originally sexually assaulted after getting out of her car. After someone was heard approaching, the 4 males forced the woman back into the car and drove her to a second location and continued to take turns raping her. Finally, they left her beaten, robbed, and naked outside an apartment building, and drove off in her car. The car was later recovered. The woman is an out lesbian and her license plate had a Rainbow Pride sticker.<br /><br />This story has been circulating via email, online forums, blogs, websites such as GLAAD, and AfterEllen, as well as Facebook. The young males ages 31, 21, 16 and 15 <a href="http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2009/01/01/3_arrested_in_n_california_gang_rape_of_lesbian/">have all been arrested by Richmond police</a>. The 21-year old male, Josue Gonzalez, turned himself in to police after his mother "saw TV coverage of the police announcement, which included the arrests Wednesday of three other suspects in the case, and his family brought him to the police station." The police are considering this a hate crime as a result of the comments the males made during the assault.<br /><br />This woman's identity is being protected for the time being. It seems that details she remembered from the assault, like the nicknames of the some of her assailants, their physical descriptions, and their use of negative comments about her sexual orientation aided in apprehension of the assailants. The Richmond Police Department's offer of a $10,000 reward for information leading to arrest, probably helped as well. On December 27, there was a candlelight vigil held in support of the woman near the scene of the crime. You can see video of the vigil <a href="http://cbs2.com/local/lesbian.gang.rape.2.898376.html">here</a>. Various sites (<a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://queersunited.blogspot.com/2008/12/help-sister-out-benefit-for-lesbian.html">Queers United</a> and notably public scholar <span style="font-weight: bold;">Melissa Harris-Lacewell</span> on <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://princetonprofs.blogspot.com/2009/01/violence-against-gay-americans.html">The Kitchen Table</a>) and a <span style="font-weight: bold;">Facebook</span> page have listed efforts organized to address the survivor's need for support, both of words and of funds:<br /><blockquote><br />The woman will need months to recover physically and years and years to recover psychologically. She needs our emotional and financial support.<br /><br />If you would like to send a card, please mail it to:<br /><br />Richmond Police Department<br />Attn: Sgt. Brian Dickerson<br />1701 Regatta Blvd.<br />Richmond, CA 94804<br /><br />If you can send a financial contribution (even a few dollars) to help her pay her medical bills and other costs associated with her recovery, please mail a check payable to Community Violence Solutions to:<br /><br />Community Violence Solutions<br />2101 Van Ness Ave.,<br />San Pablo, CA 94806<br />Attn: Mrs. Joanne Douglas<br /><br />In the memo section of the check please write: Richmond Jane Doe.<br />For details and to show support join the <a href="http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=40712604850" target="_blank">Facebook </a>group.</blockquote> <p class="post-footer-line post-footer-line-3"><br /></p><p class="post-footer-line post-footer-line-3">It has been argued that this is fallout from California's <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_Proposition_8_%282008%29">Proposition 8</a>, which seems ironic since the measure seeking to "restrict the definition of marriage to opposite-sex couples" actually passed, rendering null the same-sex marriages that had previously taken place in the state. But perhaps just the fact that same-sex marriage has become a public question that isn't going away, was enough to discomfort these males. Is it the case that these boys and men were so insecure about their masculinity, and so out of touch with their own humanity that they felt this ritualized brutality would result in some affirmation of their manhood? Perhaps their motives will be revealed in court if their case goes to trial, or in their signed confessions if it doesn't.<br /></p><p class="post-footer-line post-footer-line-3"></p><hr /><br /><p></p><p style="font-weight: bold;" class="post-footer-line post-footer-line-3">• "Child Witches" of Nigeria</p><p class="post-footer-line post-footer-line-3">I wish this were only the bad B-movie the title seems to suggest. Sadly there are children in economically depressed areas of south-east Nigeria who are being murdered and abused, because some Pentacostal Christian leaders are supporting belief in witchcraft, specifically the existence of "child witches". The resulting violence against randomly accused children, some only infants, and enacted during the course of "excorcisms" has left children mutilated, abandonned by their families, and in some cases dead. One man, Sunday Ulup-Aya , who has given himself the moniker of "Bishop" claimed to have killed 110 "child witches." He recanted after he was arrested, and "<a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7764575.stm">reportedly told the police he had only killed the 'witches' inside, not the children</a>." The so-called "child witches" are deemed responsible for a range of hardships: e.g. unemployment, failed crops, etc. The government has taken legislative action, <a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7764575.stm">following the airing of a British documentary</a> on <span style="font-weight: bold;">Channel 4</span>: <a href="http://www.channel4.com/news/articles/dispatches/saving+africas+witch+children/2780062"><span style="font-style: italic; font-weight: bold;">Dispatches: Saving Africa's Witch Children</span></a>. However, there seems to be little implementation of the measures meant to protect children at risk. The documentary indicates that the problem has also emerged in the UK Nigerian community, with 6o cases of child abuse related to witchcraft having been reported to Scotland Yard in the past two years.</p><p class="post-footer-line post-footer-line-3">If you want to get more information about this situation, and to contact activists who are organizing efforts for greater Nigerian media address of this practice, check out this <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://chikaokeke-agulu.blogspot.com/2008/11/pentecostal-christianity-infanticide.html">Ofudunka blog post</a>.</p><p class="post-footer-line post-footer-line-3"></p><hr /><br /><p></p><p class="post-footer-line post-footer-line-3"><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">•Murder of Oakland Man by Oakland Police</span><br /></p>In the midst of conflicting reports of this New Years Day tragedy in Oakland, California: 'the suspect was harassing passengers' 'the officer in question mistook his gun for his taser,' one thing does seem clear, the 22-year-old Black male suspect, <span style="font-weight: bold;">Oscar Grant III,</span> was "prone, unarmed, and detained" when the White police officer, <span style="font-weight: bold;">Johannes Mehserle,</span> discharged a fatal bullet into his body. J's Theater has written about it briefly and thoughtfully <a href="http://jstheater.blogspot.com/2009/01/pretty-invitation-to-nowhere-and.html">here</a>, and supplied a link to what he calls "<a href="http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/01/10/weekend-opinionator-oaklands-tragedy-and-black-americas/?ref=opinion">an engaging, aggregating post</a>" by <span style="font-weight: bold;">Tobin Harshaw</span> in last Saturday's <span style="font-style: italic; font-weight: bold;">New York Times</span>. <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://jstheater.blogspot.com/2009/01/pretty-invitation-to-nowhere-and.html">J's Theater</a> links to video of the murder, as does Harshaw, but please note that by watching it, you will be signing on to watch the extinguishing of the life of another human being--those images can't always just be blinked away.<br /><br />Or at least they shouldn't be.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; color: rgb(102, 0, 204);">• Update January 16, 2009</span>:<br /><br /><a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.colorofchange.org/">Color of Change.org</a> is circulating an online petition demanding justice in this case. Oakland has a long history of police brutality and abuses against African American men, history that made it one of the places where the phrase "Driving While Black," or "DWB" for short, came into common usage to describe the police practice of pulling over drivers, particularly males, just for being African American.<br /><br />On January 14, the initial pressure from local Oakland activists and community members, as well as the national outcry led to the District Attorney to arrest officer Mehserle and charge him with murder. Reportedly <a href="http://www.ktvu.com/video/18481107/index.html">District Attorney <span style="font-weight: bold;">Tom Orloff</span> admitted</a> that the external pressure led him to take these steps. Mehserle was off-duty at the time of the shooting, apparently, this is the first time in the DAs 14 year tenure that he's charged an off-duty officer in a shooting case.<br /><br />Color of Change.org has gotten more than 20,ooo signatures and is asking that people continue to apply pressure to secure justice in this case. If you want to read and sign the petition go <a href="http://www.colorofchange.org/oscar_update/?id=2152-219967">here</a>.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-5920212309973178750?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-32464039073966764472009-01-04T17:39:00.000-08:002009-01-05T22:41:46.215-08:00Upcoming January: Live Music...JACKPOT!!<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SWLyGyA853I/AAAAAAAAB14/gC9-3nvfq3o/s1600-h/apapad.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 200px; height: 240px;" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SWLyGyA853I/AAAAAAAAB14/gC9-3nvfq3o/s320/apapad.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5288055110805284722" border="0" /></a>Wow, OK, the New Year is bringing some promising musical tidings. Some of this is the result of the annual <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.apapconference.org/">Association of Professional Arts Presenters</a> (APAP) conference which results in a deluge of arts bookers from around the US, and sometimes other countries as well, descending on NYC to check out various musicians playing their hearts out (and butts off) in specially arranged showcases at various venues across the city. If between January 9-13, you notice your favorite hot spot having a greater number of different shows in an evening, then you know they're probably hosting a showcase. The show may be shorter, but it'll be one <span style="font-style: italic;">hot show</span> as artists work to seduce audiences and bookers alike--hopefully securing a number of advance engagements and allowing for a less tenuous economic picture for the upcoming year.<br /><br />So get out there and support artists you admire and love! Show that love to the bookers so those artists can keep working.<br /><br />A few showcases of interest are happening the same night (<span style="font-weight: bold;">JazzFest </span>&amp;<span style="font-weight: bold;"> Mondo Music Fest</span>--what happened there??), but not everyone is playing at the same time:<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SWL5a-Gx4BI/AAAAAAAAB2I/aPmK8ehR97c/s1600-h/bigsambyandygoetz1.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 214px; height: 320px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SWL5a-Gx4BI/AAAAAAAAB2I/aPmK8ehR97c/s320/bigsambyandygoetz1.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5288063154229731346" border="0" /></a><br /><br /><span style="color: rgb(255, 102, 0); font-weight: bold;">• Friday, January 9, 2008 •</span><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;" >Export NOLA</span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;font-size:100%;" ><b style="font-family:georgia;"> @ Sullivan Hall<br /></b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;font-size:100%;" ><b>8pm</b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;font-size:100%;" ><b> </b></span> <a style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0); font-family: georgia;" target="_blank" href="http://www.myspace.com/jonathanbatiste"><span style="font-size:100%;"><b></b></span></a><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;font-size:100%;" ><b><a target="_blank" href="http://www.myspace.com/paulpoppysanchez"> Paul Sanchez</a>, <a target="_blank" href="http://www.johnboutte.com/"> John Boutte</a> &amp; <a target="_blank" href="http://www.satchmo.com/leroyjones/"> Leroy Jones</a></b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;font-size:100%;" ><b> </b></span><a style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0); font-family: georgia;" target="_blank" href="http://www.myspace.com/jonathanbatiste"><span style="font-size:100%;"><b> </b></span></a><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" ><b><br /></b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;font-size:100%;" ><b>9:20pm</b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" ><b> <a target="_blank" href="http://www.myspace.com/jonathanbatiste">Jonathan Batiste Trio</a></b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;font-size:100%;" ><b><br /> </b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;font-size:100%;" ><b>10:40pm</b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;font-size:100%;" ><b> <a target="_blank" href="http://www.christianscott.net/"> Christian Scott Quintet</a> </b></span> <span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;font-size:100%;" ><b style="font-family:georgia;"><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);">11:40pm</span></b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;font-size:100%;" ><b style="font-family: georgia;"><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);"> <a target="_blank" href="http://www.bigsamsfunkynation.com/"> Big Sam's Funky Nation</a>* </span></b><span style="color: rgb(153, 0, 0);font-size:85%;" >(bandleader Big Sam Williams pictured right, courtesy <a href="http://www.monstersandcritics.com/music/news/article_1395969.php/NOLAs_Big_Sams_Funky_Nation_Peace_Love_&amp;_Understanding_">Monstersandcritics.com</a>)</span><b face="georgia"><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);"><br /> </span> </b></span> <span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" > Followed By A Late Night NOLA Jam!</span><b style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);"><span style=";font-family:Verdana;font-size:85%;" ><br /> </span></b> <a href="http://www.sullivanhallnyc.com/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Sullivan Hall</span></a><br />214 Sullivan Street (between Bleeker &amp; W. 3rd St.)<br />Evening starts @ 8pm<br />Tix $18<br /><br />*Noted music writer/musician <span style="font-weight: bold;">Ned Sublette</span> just gave BSFN's new release <a href="http://www.bigsamsfunkynation.com/"><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;">Peace, Love &amp; Understanding</span></a> a rave (but don't expect any Elvis Costello covers on the CD).<br /><br /><div style="text-align: center;">•••<br /></div><span style="font-weight: bold; color: rgb(255, 102, 0);">• Saturday, January 10 •</span><span style="font-size:100%;"><br /></span><p class="style3"> </p><span style="font-weight: bold;">• MONDO MUSIC FESTIVAL •</span><br /><a href="http://www.myspace.com/melvingibbs"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Melvin Gibbs' Elevated Entity</span></a> (w/ <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.mmw.net/john.jsp">John Medeski</a>, <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewProfile&amp;friendID=163151135">Vernon Reid</a> and <span style="font-weight: bold;">Amayo</span> of <a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SWGHvqiLlPI/AAAAAAAAB04/-YJxRvr3r9U/s1600-h/Melvin+Gibbs11-01_DraganTasic.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 320px; height: 225px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SWGHvqiLlPI/AAAAAAAAB04/-YJxRvr3r9U/s320/Melvin+Gibbs11-01_DraganTasic.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5287656690450928882" border="0" /></a><a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewProfile&amp;friendID=34160489">Antibalas</a>)<br />The amazing bassist/composer Melvin Gibbs (Harriet Tubman, Rollins Band, Sonny Sharrock, etc.; <span style="color: rgb(153, 0, 0);font-size:85%;" >pictured right playing with Cindy Blackman and Jean-Paul Bourelly</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 0, 0);font-size:85%;" > ©Dargan Tasic</span>) plays with his group as part of the <span style="font-weight: bold;">Mondo/Mundo Music Festival</span> presented by <a href="http://www.highlineballroom.com/presents.php"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Highline Presents</span></a> (a project of the Highline Ballroom) at the <span style="font-weight: bold;">Hiro Ballroom</span>. The festival line-up includes:<br /><br />• <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.grupofantasma.com/">Groupo Fantasma</a><br />• <a href="http://www.myspace.com/melvingibbs"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Melvin Gibbs' Elevated Entity</span></a><br />• <a href="http://www.blogger.com/www.myspace.com/nationbeat"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Nation Beat</span></a><br />• <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.myspace.com/socalled">SoCalled</a><br /><br /><a href="http://hiroballroom.com/index.php"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Hiro Ballroom at the Maritime Hotel</span></a><br />371 W 16 St.<br />New York, NY 10011<br />A, C, E, and L lines<br />Doors open @ 7pm Bands go on @ 8pm, 9pm, 10pm, 11pm (order TBD)<br />Tix $17 in advance, $20 day of the show<br /><br /><a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.winterjazzfest.com/">• 2009 NYC WINTER JAZZ FEST •</a><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SWGMPEomP0I/AAAAAAAAB1w/NGD5XTC2VZ8/s1600-h/jeff_tain_watts_01_bergamo2007.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 320px; height: 214px;" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SWGMPEomP0I/AAAAAAAAB1w/NGD5XTC2VZ8/s320/jeff_tain_watts_01_bergamo2007.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5287661628079619906" border="0" /></a><br />For complete info go to the JazzFest <a href="http://www.winterjazzfest.com/">site</a>.<br />$25 Winter JazzFest pass<br />$45 THE WATTS PROJECT + Winter JazzFest pass <span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="color: rgb(153, 0, 0);">(pictured right, Jeff "Tain" Watts, photo ©R.Cifarelli©phocus)</span></span><br /><br />Here's the schedule in brief:<br /><br /><a href="http://lepoissonrouge.com/">(Le) Poisson Rouge</a>, 158 Bleecker Street (btwn Sullivan &amp; Thompson)<div align="left"><span style="color: rgb(153, 255, 255);font-size:100%;" ><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);">6p: <a href="http://www.claudiaacuna.com/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Claudia Acuña</span></a></span><br /><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);">7p: Gary Bartz-Ommas Keith</span> <span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);"> Project </span><i style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);"><span style="font-size:78%;">(Jill Newman Productions)</span></i> <span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);"><br />8p: <a href="http://www.jasonmoran.com/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Jason Moran's Bandwagon</span></a></span> <span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);"><br />9p: <a href="http://www.dafnisprieto.com/html/slideshow.php"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Dafnis Prieto Sextet</span></a></span> <span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);"><br />10p: <a href="http://www.donbyron.com/index.html"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Don Byron Ivey-Divey Trio</span></a></span> <span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);"><br />12:00am <a href="http://www.chambersoftain.com/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">The Watts Project</span></a></span> <span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-size:85%;" >feat. Jeff 'Tain' Watts, Terence<br />Blachard, Christian McBride, Prometheus Jenkins</span><br /></span> </div><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SWGIsiuFLoI/AAAAAAAAB1A/IknmVtazzXA/s1600-h/Toshi-Reagon-and-BigLovely1.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 290px; height: 320px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SWGIsiuFLoI/AAAAAAAAB1A/IknmVtazzXA/s320/Toshi-Reagon-and-BigLovely1.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5287657736325377666" border="0" /></a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.sullivanhallnyc.com/">Sullivan Hall</a>, 214 Sullivan (between Bleecker &amp; W. 3rd St.)<br /><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;font-size:100%;" ><a target="_blank" href="http://hanswendl.com/theo_b_prog.html"><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);"><b>7:20pm</b></span></a></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" ><b><a target="_blank" href="http://hanswendl.com/theo_b_prog.html">Theo Bleckmann 'Berlin-Las Vegas'</a><br /> </b>w/ <b> <a target="_blank" href="http://www.myspace.com/toddreynoldsmusic"> Todd Reynolds String Quartet</a> </b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;font-size:100%;" > </span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" ><b><br />8:20pm </b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" ><b><a target="_blank" href="http://www.myspace.com/jonathanbatiste">Jonathan Batiste Trio</a></b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;font-size:100%;" > </span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" ><b> <a target="_blank" href="http://www.myspace.com/sarahmorrow"> </a><br />9:20pm </b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" ><b><a target="_blank" href="http://www.toshireagon.com/">Toshi Reagon &amp; BIGLovely</a></b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;font-size:100%;" > </span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" ><span style="color: rgb(153, 0, 0);font-size:85%;" >(pictured right)</span><b><br />10:20pm </b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" ><b><a target="_blank" href="http://www.marcobenevento.com/Trio"> Marco Benevento Trio</a><br /> </b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;font-size:100%;" ><span style="font-weight: bold;">11:20pm</span> </span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" ><b><a target="_blank" href="http://www.willcalhoun.com/">Will Calhoun Native Land ExperienceGroup</a></b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;font-size:100%;" > </span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" ><b><br />12:20am </b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" ><b><a target="_blank" href="http://www.robertglasper.com/">Robert Glasper Trio</a></b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;font-size:100%;" > <span style="font-weight: bold;"><br />1:20am</span> </span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" ><b><a target="_blank" href="http://www.myspace.com/sarahmorrow">Sarah Morrow 'Elektric Air'</a></b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;font-size:100%;" > <span style="font-weight: bold;"><br />2:00am</span> <b><a target="_blank" href="http://www.myspace.com/aparksmusic">Aaron Parks</a></b> </span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;font-size:100%;" > </span><br /><br /><span style="font-size:100%;"><a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.kennyscastaways.net/">Kenny's Castaways</a>, 157 Bleecker Street (between Sullivan &amp; Thompson)<span class="style3"><span class="style8">: 6:30pm-3am</span></span></span><br />6:40pm <a href="http://www.ayeletrose.com/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Ayelet Rose Gottlieb</span></a><br />7:40pm By Any Means<br />8:40pm <a href="http://www.stevenbernstein.net/sexmobmain/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Sex Mob plays Sexotica</span></a><br />9:40pm <a href="http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&amp;friendID=52359425"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Lafayette Gilchrist</span></a><br />10:40pm <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/news.php?id=26611">Tar Baby</a><br />11:40pm <a href="http://www.jfjo.com/images/mp3Player/index.html"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey</span></a><br />12:40pm <a href="http://www.burntsugarindex.com/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Burnt Sugar the Arkestra Chamber</span></a><span style="font-size:100%;">*</span>*<br /><span style="font-size:100%;">1:40am <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.taylorhobynum.com/poscat.html">Taylor Ho Bynum Positive Catastrophe</a><br /></span><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SWGKe6M8vtI/AAAAAAAAB1I/kiB_1DWyGCU/s1600-h/720_bsugar.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 320px; height: 137px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SWGKe6M8vtI/AAAAAAAAB1I/kiB_1DWyGCU/s320/720_bsugar.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5287659701133950674" border="0" /></a><br />**This should be a great show. The line-up includes: Jared Michael Nickerson: electric bass, Karma Mayet Johnson: vocals, Moist Paula Henderson: baritone sax, Will Martina: cello, Ben Tyree: guitar, Greg Tate: conduction, among a host of stellar performers. <span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="color: rgb(153, 0, 0);">(pictured right, Burnt Sugar the Arkestra Chamber)</span></span><br /><div style="text-align: center;">•••<br /></div><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; color: rgb(255, 102, 0);">• Sunday, January 11th, 2009 •</span><br /><span style="color: rgb(255, 255, 255);font-family:Verdana;font-size:85%;" ><span style="font-weight: bold;font-size:100%;" ><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;" >E</span></span><span style="font-size:100%;"><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;" ><span style="font-weight: bold;">xport NOLA @ Sullivan Hall<br /></span></span></span></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" ><b>8pm</b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" ><b> <a target="_blank" href="http://www.myspace.com/kirkjoseph"> Kirk Joseph's Backyard Groove</a></b> feat. <b> <a target="_blank" href="http://www.myspace.com/thethunderbirdmanagementgroup"> Big Chief Monk Boudreaux</a> </b></span> <span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" > <br /></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" ><b>9pm </b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" > </span> <span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" ><b><a target="_blank" href="http://www.djsoulsister.com/"> DJ Soul Sister</a> </b></span> <span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" ><b><br />9:50pm</b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" ><b> <a target="_blank" href="http://www.christianscott.net/"> Christian Scott </a> </b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;font-size:100%;" ><b> <a target="_blank" href="http://www.christianscott.net/"> Quintet</a></b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" ><b><br /> </b><b></b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" ><b>11pm</b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" ><b> <a target="_blank" href="http://www.bigsamsfunkynation.com/"> Big Sam's Funky Nation</a> @ </b></span> <span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:georgia;font-size:100%;" ><b> <span style="font-size:85%;"> <br /> </span> Meet-And-Greet</b></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0);font-family:Verdana;font-size:100%;" > with New Orleans Treats<br /> (Gumbo, Hubig's Pies, Pralines, and more!)<br /> w/ DJ Soul Sister Spinning - 7pm</span><span style="font-size:100%;"><br /><br /></span><a href="http://www.sullivanhallnyc.com/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Sullivan Hall</span></a><br />214 Sullivan Street (between Bleeker &amp; W. 3rd St.)<br />Evening starts @ 7pm<br />Tix $15 <div style="text-align: center;">•••<br /></div><br /><span style="color: rgb(255, 102, 0); font-weight: bold;">• Tuesday, January 20th, 2009 •</span><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SWL4AAMwM0I/AAAAAAAAB2A/wdLkZOpBfHU/s1600-h/hmsbtp230-1.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 230px; height: 230px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SWL4AAMwM0I/AAAAAAAAB2A/wdLkZOpBfHU/s320/hmsbtp230-1.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5288061591423562562" border="0" /></a><br />Yes, <span style="color: rgb(51, 51, 255); font-weight: bold;">INAUGURATION DAY</span>, and for those not traveling to Washington, D.C. <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://lepoissonrouge.com/">(Le) Poisson Rouge</a> is hosting: <span style="font-weight: bold;"><br />The Inauguration Concert</span> featuring:<br /><a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.myspace.com/apolloheights">Apollo Heights</a><br /><a href="http://www.myspace.com/hms4l"><span style="font-weight: bold;">24-7 Spyz</span></a><br /><a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.blurt-online.com/features/view/197/">HR</a> (of <a href="http://www.myspace.com/badbrains"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Bad Brains</span></a>)<br />(perhaps this booking is an acknowledgement of <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.boldaslove.us/">Rob Field</a>'s February 2007 assertion: "<a href="http://www.boldaslove.us/2007/02/barack_obama_is.html">Barack Obama is Black Rock</a>"?<br /><br /><a href="http://lepoissonrouge.com/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">(Le) Poisson Rouge</span></a><br />158 Bleecker (btwn Sullivan &amp; Thomson)<br />Doors open @ 7:30pm, show @ 8pm<br />Tix $15<br /><div style="text-align: center;">•••<br /></div><br />And if all that black rock retro-to-the-future nostalgia isn't enough for you, here's some more, also at (Le) Poisson Rouge:<br /><br /><span style="color: rgb(255, 102, 0); font-weight: bold;">• Saturday, January 24, 2009 •</span><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SWGFJxg6PdI/AAAAAAAAB0w/V11yEky0Ysk/s1600-h/134.x600.clubs.esg.anitl.photo.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 320px; height: 320px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SWGFJxg6PdI/AAAAAAAAB0w/V11yEky0Ysk/s320/134.x600.clubs.esg.anitl.photo.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5287653840466361810" border="0" /></a><br /><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ESG_%28band%29"><span style="font-weight: bold;">ESG</span></a> (aka "the legenday South Bronx <span style="font-weight: bold;">Scroggin</span> <span style="font-weight: bold;">Sisters</span> no wave, post-punk, hip-hop beat goldmine band" pictured right, photo courtesy Soul Jazz Records)<br /><a href="http://lepoissonrouge.com/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">(Le) Poisson Rouge</span></a><br />158 Bleecker (btwn Sullivan &amp; Thomson)<br />Show @ 10pm<br />Tix $20<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-3246403907396676447?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-52236413372170770012009-01-03T10:43:00.000-08:002009-01-03T11:25:19.534-08:00Audio Geek: Happy New Year + Herbie Hancock's Head Hunters<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SV-6zX3Q9JI/AAAAAAAAB0o/v4K2VQ-yrr4/s1600-h/head-hunters-a.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 320px; height: 320px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SV-6zX3Q9JI/AAAAAAAAB0o/v4K2VQ-yrr4/s320/head-hunters-a.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5287149879298159762" border="0" /></a><span style="font-weight: bold; color: rgb(255, 102, 0);">¡Prospero Año Nuevo! Happy New Year!</span><br /><br />With thanks to music writer/musician <span style="font-weight: bold;">Ned Sublette</span>, I got informed about the fact that <a href="http://www.herbiehancock.com/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Herbie Hancock</span></a>'s <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Head-Hunters-Herbie-Hancock/dp/B000002AGP"><span style="font-style: italic; font-weight: bold;">Headhunters</span></a> (Columbia, 1973) was selected for the <a href="http://www.loc.gov/rr/record/nrpb/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">2007</span> <span style="font-weight: bold;">National Recording Registry</span></a> by the <span style="font-weight: bold;">Library of Congress</span>. They select twenty-five recordings every year, and announced the 2007 selections in 14 May 2008. <span style="font-weight: bold;">NPR</span> has been doing a <a href="http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6392808">series</a> on the 2007 selections; the final installment was about <span style="font-style: italic;">Headhunters</span>. Although it's only a 7.5 minute segment, the information presented is truly fascinating touching on the innovative instrumentation, the engineering of the album, and Hancock's artistic influences in creating the album's sound with the participation of the musicians, the newly formed <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Headhunters"><span style="font-weight: bold;">The Headhunters</span></a>, particularly percussionist <a href="http://www.billsummers.net/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Bill Summers</span></a> (check his recreation of the <span style="font-weight: bold;">Ba-Benzélé</span> (<span style="font-weight: bold;">Central African Republic) </span>ethnic group's <span style="font-weight: bold;">Hindewhu</span> flute sounds on the opening of "Watermelon Man"), and the legendary engineer <a href="http://mixonline.com/bay-area-legends/david-rubinson/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">David Rubinson</span></a>, who all contribute to this profile. Check it out <a href="http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=98723278&amp;ft=1&amp;f=1039">here</a>.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; color: rgb(102, 0, 204);">Endnote:</span><br /><a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.arts.cornell.edu/music/faculty/Pond.html">Steven F. Pond</a>, <a style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;" href="http://books.google.com/books?id=MDhyAAAACAAJ&amp;source=gbs_ViewAPI">Head Hunters : the making of jazz’s first platinum album</a> (Ann Arbor : The University of Michigan Press, 2005). Pond also contributes to the NPR profile.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-5223641337217077001?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-21967307729078526352008-12-29T07:42:00.000-08:002009-01-05T23:52:56.187-08:00Make the Healing Where You Are: Harriet Tubman @ Nublu<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SVjzNi-I_2I/AAAAAAAAB0g/hFWtagDNFgo/s1600-h/l_ccc0974fb8a443a619bedbf52ee067e2.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 257px; height: 320px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SVjzNi-I_2I/AAAAAAAAB0g/hFWtagDNFgo/s320/l_ccc0974fb8a443a619bedbf52ee067e2.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5285241576770568034" border="0" /></a><br />My thoughts, which I'm a bit delayed in posting--blame it on ole man winter... (thanks to <span style="font-weight: bold; color: rgb(255, 102, 0);">J</span> for the nudge)<br /><br /><div style="text-align: center;">• • •<br /></div><br />I should probably say this isn't a review. Truth be told what I write in this blog is never meant as a "review" per se. Arguably my best writing here is an attempt to recreate my wholistic (visceral/aural/visual/emotional/intellectual, etc) experience of being in a certain place at a certain time.<br /><br />Maybe I'm thinking about my response to being at <a href="http://www.nublu.net/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Nublu</span></a> this weekend. The East Village spot was for me a disorienting intersection of the popular, the profane, the sacred, the jam band, and the NY downtown legendary, along with a record company: <span style="font-weight: bold;">Nublu Records</span> (located a few doors up from the club). For those not in the know it's a popular neighborhood spot, where you're as likely to find would-be young hipsters snogging on a couch behind reformulated beats that vinyl-heads will remember from their crate-digging or high school days (nod to Mr. G). Those old vinyl-heads will recognize the connection between Nublu and <span style="font-weight: bold;">Wax Poetics</span>, and the avant garde-minded among them the fact that multi-talented drummer <span style="font-weight: bold;">Kenny Wollesen</span> (Tom Waits, Fred Frith, etc.) often engages his more experimental side there, with <span style="font-weight: bold;">Love Trio</span>, and the composer/conduction pioneer <span style="font-weight: bold;">Lawrence "Butch" Morris</span> leads the <span style="font-weight: bold;">Nublu Orchestra</span> which also includes members of recent performance art/ "it" band phenoms <span style="font-weight: bold;">The Brazilian Girls</span>, members of which who are also fixtures at Nublu. Nublu is a big supporter of Brazilian music, international jazz, and DJ culture with both established folks and emerging spinners dropping whole sets and/or beats in between sets by other artists.<br /><br />Basically, this means you've got serious music-heads, musicians, and artists, along with frat boys and sorority girls, and art school denizens all hanging out in the same room. It makes for an interesting inter-generational and cross-cultural mix of folks.<br /><br />It took a while for things to get started, so <a href="http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&amp;friendid=67926445"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Harriet Tubman</span></a> (l-r above: Melvin Gibbs, bass; JT Lewis, drums; Brandon Ross, guitars, banjo, vocal) didn't go on until midnight. They set up in a performance space that faces and is located maybe two feet from the bar, doing a sound check simultaneous with the DJ doing his thing about two inches away from them. The musical pulse is at a constant at Nublu, and in between sets the DJ's mix is almost louder than your thoughts. That effectively keeps the energy at a certain plateau while people wait for the next act to come on, though it can complicate a set up and sound check.<br /><br />HT began their set with one of their few cuts that feature vocals, "Can't Tarry," which is also on their <a href="http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&amp;friendid=67926445">MySpace page</a>. The song specifically comes out of their field research into Mississippi Delta blues, and reads like a gospel blues, with guitarist Brandon Ross plaintively calling out, "Lord, can't tarry here no more." Trippy, I had been playing that song on my iPod earlier that day. For a while, and perhaps still, you could download the track from their MySpace page as long as you were a MySpace subscriber.<br /><br />The rest of the set was transcendent for me, but that's my experience listening to Harriet Tubman play, particularly live. It's a bio-chemical spiritual reaction. I was mightily aware of this on the third cut when JT Lewis was carving out the beat in that awe-inspiring way he has. You can tell he can hear multiple meter options in what's going around him as well as various sequences of accents; he's a master grammarian on the drums. At some point he hears where he needs/wants to go and locks that meter and a sequence pattern in, and then after about 8-10 measures begins to switch it all up. Interestingly, I always found his choices ones my ear could fall right into it--but they were never obvious. Lewis' MySpace page prominently displays his credo: "RHYTHM IS LIFE!/TIME IS NOT MY ENEMY!" I've long been fascinated by this sentiment. I have no problem with the first part, but the second... While I don't think time is my enemy, I never feel like I have enough of it. I guess I think of it as that fascinating aunt or uncle whom you wish you could see more of, and never seems to stay long enough when they visit.<br /><br />But during the third song in the first set Lewis stopped playing, and I realized that I was so bound up in the rhythm he was creating that I stopped too. Breathing that is, and I was seriously heels over tail, or however that saying goes when you're suddenly just hanging in space, nothing below and nothing beneath, until he brought the beat back in and I knew where to land. It reminded me of jumping off the high dive into a pool as a kid, or flipping off the uneven bars--those few seconds when it feels gravity has no power. It's just your consciousness and your body in space and time. In retrospect I wish I had asked Lewis about it after the set. But who <a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SWMNH9LkZ2I/AAAAAAAAB2Q/ADRnJ52diik/s1600-h/bulova_475kent_5x7_pc_final-2-resize-300x220.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 300px; height: 220px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SWMNH9LkZ2I/AAAAAAAAB2Q/ADRnJ52diik/s320/bulova_475kent_5x7_pc_final-2-resize-300x220.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5288084817796425570" border="0" /></a>knows if my experience would have resonated for him. Lewis was also more vocal this show, talking in between cuts, in one instance about artists and gentrification--a great riff on how artists see possibility where city power brokers see the castoffs or detritus of urban development, but that when artist organize and manifest that possibility then those other folks suddenly notice the value and want it back (I think acknowledging the <a href="http://blog.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=blog.view&amp;friendID=61852695&amp;blogID=358267209&amp;Mytoken=32601AB3-1B94-48CC-972028829ADA66F5308311481">displacement of Gibbs</a> and several other artists from the <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/21/nyregion/21loft.html?_r=1">475 Kent warehouse-lofts in Brooklyn</a> in January 2008), in another asserting the importance of what I'd like to think was <span style="font-style: italic;">constructive</span> anger, and lastly the originating ethos of Harriet Tubman: <span style="font-weight: bold;">healing</span> (hence the title of this post) in this 10th anniversary year of their founding. <span style="color: rgb(153, 0, 0);font-size:85%;" ><span style="color: rgb(102, 0, 0);">(</span>pictured right poster image for an April 2008 mixed media show by 475 Kent artists featuring performances by Melvin Gibbs, and other residents)</span><br /><br />What I noticed this time hearing them was how much they listen to each other. This was probably a function of being quite closer than at their Joe's Pub gig last year, and my own intent listening. There were times when I was listening to Melvin Gibbs and hearing him create patterns and then switch up and change the accents, sometimes creating an accent through an absence of a note. It made me really want to hear him talk about rhythmic and harmonic counterpoint, and reminded me of an anecdote he told about guitarist <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonny_Sharrock"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Sonny Sharrock</span></a> at his solo show in the Out on A Limb series at Rose Cafe last year in Brooklyn. Gibbs played with Sharrock for a number of years. He shared that over that time Sharrock only held one actual rehearsal--he preferred to teach Gibbs about playing through telling jokes, "because it was all about the timing." (this made me think about Sharrock's playing on his own composition "John's Children"--apparently inspired by John Coltrane--which I recently heard on saxophonist <a href="http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=17125"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Byard Lancaster</span></a>'s album, <span style="font-style: italic;">It's Not Up To Us</span>, with Sharrock on guitar, the connections keep going...) Other times when Brandon Ross would start layering a sound bed, Gibbs would create a layer and then Ross would put down another layer using loops and effects pedals, and as usual hitting those high sonics with a fleshy sensual feel rather than an effect that made you curse having forgotten your earplugs. Interestingly too, Ross laid back when Gibbs explored the high end which was kind of fascinating since I hadn't heard Gibbs go there so extensively previously. Ross was creating varied textures, some simultaneously full and porous, others high and keening, as well as series of cyclical voicings (this last aspect more apparent to me than when hearing them live previously) with those high keening tremelos abruptly falling as if to their knees (in prayer? in emotional rapture?) only to rise slowly, again ambulating into some other voice, some other layer.<br /><br />Notably none of HT's members were calling out songs, one or two would start and then another would listen and decide when and how to come in. At a couple of points Lewis and then Ross specifically asked Gibbs to call out a piece, which he did by starting to play a series of rhythms and note motifs. This absence of the traditional "count off" resonated for me when I was watching a clip of jazz pianist/theorist/educator <a href="http://www.georgerussell.com/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">George Russell</span></a> talking to <a href="http://www.ornettecoleman.com/index.html"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Ornette Coleman</span></a>, and the late music writer/musician <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Palmer_%28writer%29"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Robert Palmer</span></a> about that same absence with Coleman's musical ensemble with <span style="font-weight: bold;">Don Cherry</span> (trumpet), <span style="font-weight: bold;">Ed Blackwell</span> (drums) and <span style="font-weight: bold;">Charlie Haden</span> (bass)--Russell was asking the composer/musician how the players knew when to come in. Coleman's response, "...instictive insight." Following up on this Russell talks about the heart as the highest intellect, and how this view--which he suggests as predominant in "Third World" considerations, naming it as a "Third World technology"--is ignored in much of the West which primarily considers music as "entertainment" and has failed to understand this distinct technology (which can only be accessed by <span style="font-style: italic;">being engaged and accessed</span>, i.e.: mindful <span style="font-style: italic;">practice</span>-<span style="font-style: italic;">mindful</span> practice-<span style="font-style: italic;">mindful practice...</span>) instead reducing it to the stereotype of the <span style="font-style: italic;">naturally</span> (read: racially) <span style="font-style: italic;">gifted</span> but <span style="font-style: italic;">non-intellectual</span> black musician. The clip ends with the detailing of an interesting exchange between Russell and renowned architect/visionary <a href="http://www.bfi.org/our_programs/who_is_buckminster_fuller"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Buckminster Fuller</span></a> (1895 -1983) (Coleman wrote a work for Fuller, <span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;">Prime Time/Design Time (for Buckminster Fuller)</span> (1984)). You can check out this conversation in <span style="font-weight: bold;">Shirley Clarke</span>'s (woefully out-of-print) documentary <a href="http://lafilmforum.wordpress.com/2008/02/05/february-7-shirley-clarkes-ornette-made-in-america/"><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;">Ornette: Made In America</span></a> (1985). Unfortunately, the embedding option has been removed from the YouTube video clip, but you can go directly to the <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UHYOCOStIdQ">YouTube clip</a> to check it out. But if you ever get a chance to see Clarke's documentary in its entirety, which sometimes plays film festivals or at art house revivals. <span style="font-weight: bold;">Go</span>.<br /><br />The same goes for the increasingly rare <span style="font-weight: bold;">Harriet Tubman</span> stateside performances, for the entirety of 2008: 2 shows in NY. Hear about a show. <span style="font-weight: bold;">Go</span>.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; color: rgb(102, 0, 204);">Endnote: </span><br />• <span style="font-weight: bold;">American Film Institute'</span>s (AFI) 2000 <a href="http://cool-palimpsest.stanford.edu/byform/mailing-lists/amia-l/2000/06/msg00066.html">response</a> to a query about commercial availability of Clarke's documentary.<br />• <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shirley_Clarke">bio</a> for filmmaker <span style="font-weight: bold;">Shirley Clarke</span> (1919 - 1997)<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-2196730772907852635?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-29807227724088054712008-12-28T08:35:00.000-08:002008-12-30T23:18:59.880-08:00Eartha Kitt: R.I.P.<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SVe2QNUKePI/AAAAAAAAB0I/10xBbtAW4W8/s1600-h/kitt.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 315px; height: 400px;" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SVe2QNUKePI/AAAAAAAAB0I/10xBbtAW4W8/s400/kitt.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5284893077310961906" border="0" /></a><br />I've long had a special place in my heart for <span style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="http://www.earthakitt.com/">Eartha Kitt</a> </span><span>(1927 - 2008)</span>. She was so undeniably a unique presence. Kitt mesmerized as Catwoman, on the 60s <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0059968/">Batman TV show</a>, and couldn't be contained by even by the multiple significations suggested in the kitsch of that show. The all-black cast version of <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0051362/"><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;">Anna Lucasta</span></a> (1959)with her in the title role, is one of the few times she got to show her complex range on screen (<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Anna-Lucasta-Eartha-Kitt/dp/B00066VUAW">thank goodness, MGM finally decided to release it on DVD</a>). She was outspoken and had her convictions, which led to her career being derailed after some frank and none too positive comments about the Vietnam war at a White House luncheon.<br /><br />Whenever I think about Ms. Kitt, I'm reminded of a friend from high school who was a profoundly talented actor and writer. Few people knew what to do with her abilities either. She wasn't just outside the box, she exceeded the box's measurements and labels.<br /><br />Basically, she was ahead of her time. Life isn't easy for those who are ahead of their time. After all, the US has barely caught up to Ms. Kitt.<br /><br />Saw the above photo at <a href="http://www.tayarijones.com/blog/archives/2008/12/rip_eartha_kit.html">Tayara Jones' blog</a>, where she's listed <a href="http://www.tayarijones.com/blog/archives/2008/12/364_days_til_ch.html">a few colleagues' tributes</a> to Ms. Kitt.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; color: rgb(102, 0, 204);">Endnote:</span><br />• Chicago Tribune notice: "<a href="http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-oped1229kittdec29,0,3382842.story">Eartha Kitt: The patriot who was right all along</a>."<br />• Telegraph UK: "<a href="http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/3965130/Tributes-paid-to-Eartha-Kitt.html">Tributes paid to Eartha Kit</a>"<br />• Michael Sleznak on EW.com talking about how <a href="http://popwatch.ew.com/popwatch/2008/12/eartha-kitt-81.html">unforgettable Kitt was</a> "[i]n an era when manufactured 'celebrities' are as common as drab backyard sparrows."<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-2980722772408805471?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-23604725908258720232008-12-24T14:03:00.000-08:002008-12-24T14:25:15.770-08:00Have A Merry Merry: Audio Geek in Space<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SVK0p6NZ0QI/AAAAAAAABz4/5KR4wlhDpoc/s1600-h/tr_stewart_smile_1_sm.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 150px; height: 150px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SVK0p6NZ0QI/AAAAAAAABz4/5KR4wlhDpoc/s320/tr_stewart_smile_1_sm.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5283483944952123650" border="0" /></a>Via <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://newblackman.blogspot.com/">New Black Man</a> and <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://professorkim.blogspot.com/">Professor Kim</a> comes an interview with <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.triciarose.com/">Professor Tricia Rose</a> (African Studies, Brown University, pictured right, photo © Frank Stewart) on <a href="http://www.elrarecords.com/sunra.html"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Sun Ra</span></a> (pictured below, courtesy <a href="http://www.furious.com/perfect/sunra2.html">Perfect Sound Forever</a>), hip hop and Afrofuturism.<br /><br /><object height="36" width="350"><param name="movie" value="http://studio360.org/flashplayer/mp3player.swf?config=http://studio360.org/flashplayer/config_share.xml&amp;file=http://studio360.org/stream/xspf/118077"><param name="wmode" value="transparent"><embed type="application/x-shockwave-flash" src="http://studio360.org/flashplayer/mp3player.swf?config=http://studio360.org/flashplayer/config_share.xml&amp;file=http://studio360.org/stream/xspf/118077" id="STUDIO360_Mp3_Player_118077" name="STUDIO360_Mp3_Player_118077" bgcolor="#FFFFFF" wmode="transparent" height="36" width="350"></embed></object><br /><br />Plus, there's a 1927 song "The White Flyer to Heaven" which <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://studio360.org/episodes/2008/12/12">Studio 360</a> lists as "featuring Reverend A.W. Nix, a black preacher. Some consider this the earliest example of Afro-futurism. (Courtesy of Kevin Nutt.)"<br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SVK17kizz1I/AAAAAAAAB0A/Xzme2n_e6w0/s1600-h/sunra2.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer; width: 294px; height: 258px;" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SVK17kizz1I/AAAAAAAAB0A/Xzme2n_e6w0/s320/sunra2.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5283485347885600594" border="0" /></a><br /><object height="36" width="350"><param name="movie" value="http://studio360.org/flashplayer/mp3player.swf?config=http://studio360.org/flashplayer/config_share.xml&amp;file=http://studio360.org/stream/xspf/118115"><param name="wmode" value="transparent"><embed type="application/x-shockwave-flash" src="http://studio360.org/flashplayer/mp3player.swf?config=http://studio360.org/flashplayer/config_share.xml&amp;file=http://studio360.org/stream/xspf/118115" id="STUDIO360_Mp3_Player_118115" name="STUDIO360_Mp3_Player_118115" bgcolor="#FFFFFF" wmode="transparent" height="36" width="350"></embed></object><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-2360472590825872023?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-41114369628252923562008-12-11T20:00:00.000-08:002008-12-11T21:01:54.453-08:00Black Rock - Urban/Alternative Grammy?<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SUHkCpo2QbI/AAAAAAAABzw/A9R7qsuS7Ew/s1600-h/Snapshot+2008-12-11+23-07-28.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer; width: 320px; height: 241px;" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/SUHkCpo2QbI/AAAAAAAABzw/A9R7qsuS7Ew/s320/Snapshot+2008-12-11+23-07-28.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5278750972442984882" border="0" /></a><br />OK, I'm so deep in some other alternative space I didn't even know there WAS a category called Urban/Alternative. But then again I stopped watching the Grammys moons ago, and have been mostly listening to out-of-print Latin, Funk, and some Hip Hop vinyl for the past few weeks.<br /><br />Thankfully Mr. Fields over at <a href="http://www.boldaslove.us/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Bold As Love</span></a> has my back, and yours too if you want to see/hear offerings from the nominees in this category, who are listed at left. I guess this means <span style="font-weight: bold;">Kenna</span> has accomplished his goal of making himself more memorable in the public's imagination (hence the <span style="font-style: italic; font-weight: bold;">Make Sure They See My Face</span>, album title).<br /><br />I have to agree with <span style="font-weight: bold;">Bold As Love</span> on this one. <span style="font-weight: bold;">Janelle Monae</span> <span style="font-style: italic;">owns</span> this category, and should take home the statue since there's no real competition aside from Kenna. Michele and Wayna have great voices, but the arrangement on <span style="font-weight: bold;">Chrisette Michele</span>'s cut isn't particularly alternative--and the subject matter: been done, to death. I found a version of <span style="font-weight: bold;">Wayna</span> performing Minnie Riperton's "Loving You" live, with hip hop breaks and polyrhythms, as well as some new lyrics, but not the one featuring Kokayi (and yes, Ethiopian vocalist Wayna can hit the <span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;">all</span> the high notes). It basically feels like the Grammy's and music industry are just catching up with actual music-heads, but years late. I mean if <span style="font-weight: bold;">Georgia Anne Muldrew</span> were nominated, that'd be some serious competition. But this Kenna cut just can't compare to what Monae is reaching for: something simultaneously retro and futuristic in a way that isn't wholly easily categorizable as either.<br /><br />Check out Bold As Love for the rest of the nominee's clips as well as the traditional holiday season Gap ads, this year featuring: Janelle Monae (prominently), The Dixie Chicks, Trey Songz, Flo Rida, Jon Heder, Sandra Bernhard, <span style="font-style: italic;">Weed</span>'s Romany Malco, Freddie Rodriguez (<span style="font-style: italic;">Nothing Like the Holidays, </span>"Ugly Betty," "Six Feet Under") Selma Blair, and that guy from "The Office" whose name I forget.<br /><br />Wayna singing Minnie Riperton's "Lovin You" live at the Cadavez in Washington, D.C.<br /><br /><object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/g-7v1aAvewo&amp;hl=en&amp;fs=1"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/g-7v1aAvewo&amp;hl=en&amp;fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-4111436962825292356?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-14705630931334091522008-12-07T10:51:00.000-08:002009-01-01T11:10:32.319-08:00Upcoming: For Living Lovers and Harriet Tubman<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/STwgNd6-R8I/AAAAAAAABS8/t5Lcnhpyy_M/s1600-h/brandonross_pdp.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 320px; height: 214px;" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/STwgNd6-R8I/AAAAAAAABS8/t5Lcnhpyy_M/s320/brandonross_pdp.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5277128279113746370" border="0" /></a>I've been neglecting the posting of upcoming shows, but still going to them. Like <span style="font-weight: bold;">Taylor Ho Bynum</span> <span style="font-weight: bold;">and SpiderMonkey Strings</span> last month at the <span style="font-weight: bold;">Jazz Gallery</span>--which was intriguing, and at points amazing--but unfortunately missing <span style="font-weight: bold;">Henry</span> <span style="font-weight: bold;">Threadgill</span>'s <span style="font-weight: bold;">ZOOID</span> (argh!).<br /><br />This I just found when I was looking up <span style="font-weight: bold;">BAM</span>'s offerings, an increasingly rare US appearance by <a href="http://www.myspace.com/brmuse"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Brandon Ross</span></a> (right) and <a href="http://www.bassplayer.com/article/stomu-takeishi/Jun-03/676"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Stomu Takeishi</span></a>. Ross' ensemble/experiment <span style="font-weight: bold;">For Living Lovers </span>(think on the name for a while, not just the literal implications) features Ross on guitar/banjo/vocal, Takeishi on acoustic bass guitar, and <a href="http://www.myspace.com/tyshawnsorey"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Tyshawn Sorey</span></a> on drums. Ross is known for his work with Henry Threadgill, Leroy Jenkins, Lawrence "Butch" Morris, as well as being musical director for Cassandra Wilson, and his co-leadership of the power trio Harriet Tubman (with Melvin Gibbs, bass; and JT Lewis, drums). Takeishi has also played with Morris and Threadgill; Sorey has led his own groups and recently released an album with the trio <a href="http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewProfile&amp;friendID=160088460">Fieldwork</a>: Vijay Iyer, piano; Steve Lehman, saxophone, and Sorey on drums. You can read my thoughts on one of Ross' other projects, <span style="font-weight: bold;">Theorema</span>, <a href="http://audiologo.blogspot.com/2007/12/brandon-ross-theorema-jalopy-122807.html">here</a>, also featuring Takeishi on acoustic bass guitar, and Gerald Cleaver on drums.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">For Living Lovers</span> is appearing next week at <span style="font-weight: bold;">BAMCaféLive</span>'s BAM Jam series, which I understand as an improvised music performance series (I guess "BAM Jam" is a more marketing friendly term--or younger demographic inviting? Hmm, well could be...).<br /><br />Details:<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">For Living Lovers - Brandon Ross, Stomu Takeishi, Tyshawn Sorey</span><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">BAMCaféLive</span><br />30 Lafayette Ave<br />Brooklyn, NY 11217<br />Friday, December 12, 10pm<http: org="" pid="801"><br />FREE<br /></http:><a href="http://www.bam.org/view.aspx?pid=801">more info</a><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/STwvWF1ZpZI/AAAAAAAABTM/GJLQMTDTdiM/s1600-h/HT_Group.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 320px; height: 240px;" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/STwvWF1ZpZI/AAAAAAAABTM/GJLQMTDTdiM/s320/HT_Group.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5277144919941162386" border="0" /></a><br /><http: org="" pid="801">For those who have been missing the <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewProfile&amp;friendID=67926445">Harriet Tubman</a> sound while its members were playing </http:><http: org="" pid="801">various gigs as a trio, or as sidemen, in Europe, they're back playing a wintertime gig at <span style="font-weight: bold;">Nublu</span>.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Harriet Tubman</span> - </http:><span style="font-weight: bold;">Brandon Ross, Melvin Gibbs, JT Lewis</span><br /><a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.nublu.net/">Nublu</a><br />62 Ave C, between E.4 &amp; E.5th St<strong></strong><br />East Village, Manhattan<br /><s>Friday, December 12, 11:45pm</s><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">!!CORRECTION!!</span><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Friday, December 19, 11:45pm</span><br />$10<br /><br /><http: org="" pid="801">Video excerpt of <span style="font-weight: bold;">Harriet Tubman</span> performance </http:>in the Netherlands, November 24, 2008 at <a href="http://www.cafewilhelmina.nl/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Cafe Wilhelmina</span>.</a> The clip starts with what sounds like the beginning of "Of Passage" (from <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Treasure-Hunt-Prototype-Harriet-Tubman/dp/B00004X0KD/ref=sr_1_23?ie=UTF8&amp;s=music&amp;qid=1230836798&amp;sr=1-23"><span style="font-style: italic; font-weight: bold;">Prototype</span></a>, (Avant Japan, 2000)--now a collector's item) and then there's a cross-fade edit into<http: org="" pid="801"> the first part of the recent work, "I'll Overcome Someday" which begins with a spoken invocation by Brandon Ross.<a href="http://www.cafewilhelmina.nl/"></a><br /><br /><object height="344" width="425"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/EDJ5n--VrMc&amp;hl=en&amp;fs=1"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/EDJ5n--VrMc&amp;hl=en&amp;fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" height="344" width="425"></embed></object><br /><br /><br /><br /></http:><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-1470563093133409152?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-41072481245997851152008-12-02T21:56:00.000-08:002008-12-02T22:14:09.554-08:00R.I.P. Odetta<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/STYgSx9ag1I/AAAAAAAABSs/LAe8BiURUkM/s1600-h/odetta.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 226px; height: 320px;" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/STYgSx9ag1I/AAAAAAAABSs/LAe8BiURUkM/s320/odetta.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5275439520531776338" border="0" /></a><br />Really, I have tears in my eyes.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Odetta</span> (Odetta Holmes) December 31, 1930 - December 2, 2008<br /><br />from the <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/03/arts/music/03odetta.html?_r=2&amp;hp">New York Times</a>:<br />"<span style="font-size:100%;">Odetta, Voice of Civil Rights Movement, Dies at 77" by Tim Weiner<br /></span><h1> </h1><br /><p><a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/o/odetta/index.html?inline=nyt-per" title="More articles about Odetta.">Odetta</a>, the singer whose deep voice wove together the strongest songs of American folk music and the civil rights movement, died Tuesday. She was 77.</p> <!--calling embedded video jsp --> <!--brightcove player begins --> <div class="inlineVideo left brightcove"> <!--NYT video player embed code *starts here* - Build# 2008.09.17 --> <script type="text/javascript" src="http://graphics8.nytimes.com/bcvideo/1.0/iframe/embed.js"></script> <script type="text/javascript"> NYT_VideoPlayerStart( { playerType : "article", videoId : "1194832844841" } ); </script><iframe src="http://graphics8.nytimes.com/bcvideo/1.0/iframe/bcArtIframe.html?z=0&amp;videoId=1194832844841" title="New York Times Video - article player" name="nyt_video_player" id="nyt_video_player" marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" style="margin-left: -1px;" frameborder="0" height="375" scrolling="no" width="318"></iframe><br /></div><script type="text/JavaScript" language="JavaScript">if (acm.rc) acm.rc.write();</script> <p>The cause was heart disease, said her manager, Doug Yeager.</p><p>He added that she had been hoping to sing at <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/o/barack_obama/index.html?inline=nyt-per" title="More articles about Barack Obama">Barack Obama</a>’s <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/p/presidents_and_presidency_us/inaugurations/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier" title="Recent and archival news about presidential inaugurations.">inauguration</a>.</p><p>Odetta — she was born Odetta Holmes — sang at coffeehouses and <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/c/carnegie_hall/index.html?inline=nyt-org" title="More articles about Carnegie Hall">Carnegie Hall</a> and released several albums, becoming one of the most widely known and influential folk-music artists of the 1950s and 60s.</p><p>Her voice was an accompaniment to the black-and-white images of the freedom marchers who walked the roads of Alabama and Mississippi and the boulevards of Washington in quest of an end to racial discrimination. </p><p><a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/p/rosa_parks/index.html?inline=nyt-per" title="More articles about Rosa Parks">Rosa Parks</a>, the woman who started the boycott of segregated buses in Montgomery, Ala., was once asked which songs meant the most to her. She replied, “All of the songs Odetta sings.” </p><p>Odetta sang at the August 1963 march on Washington, a pivotal event in the civil rights movement. Her song that day was “O Freedom,” dating back to slavery days.</p><p>Born in Birmingham on Dec. 31, 1930, Odetta Holmes spent her first six years in the depths of the Depression. The music of that time and place — in particular prison song and work songs recorded in the fields of the deep South — shaped her life. </p><p>“They were liberation songs,” she said in a videotaped interview with The New York Times in 2007, for its online feature “The Last Word.” “You’re walking down life’s road, society’s foot is on your throat, every which way you turn you can’t get from under that foot. And you reach a fork in the road and you can either lie down and die, or insist upon your life.”</p><p>Her father, Reuben Holmes, died when she was young; she and her mother, Flora Sanders, who later remarried, moved to Los Angeles in 1937. Three years later, Odetta discovered she could sing.</p><p> “A teacher told my mother that I had a voice, that maybe I should study,” she recalled. “But I myself didn’t have anything to measure it by.”</p><p> She found her own voice by listening to blues, jazz and folk music from the African-American and Anglo-American traditions. She earned a music degree from Los Angeles City College. Her training in classical music and musical theater was “a nice exercise, but it had nothing to do with my life,” she said.</p><p>“The folk songs were — the anger,” she emphasized.</p><p> In a 2005 <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/n/national_public_radio/index.html?inline=nyt-org" title="More articles about National Public Radio">National Public Radio</a> interview, she said: “School taught me how to count and taught me how to put a sentence together. But as far as the human spirit goes, I learned through folk music.”</p><p>In 1950, Odetta began singing professionally in a West Coast production of the musical “Finian’s Rainbow,” but she found a stronger calling in the bohemian coffeehouses of San Francisco. “We would finish our play, we’d go to the joint, and people would sit around playing guitars and singing songs and it felt like home,” she said in the 2007 interview with The Times. </p><p>She began singing in nightclubs, cutting a striking figure with her guitar and her close-cropped <a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/STYi7zifogI/AAAAAAAABS0/_sBHJw9Frjc/s1600-h/odetta5.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 314px; height: 320px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/STYi7zifogI/AAAAAAAABS0/_sBHJw9Frjc/s320/odetta5.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5275442424353628674" border="0" /></a>hair. (She noted late in life that she was one of the first black performers in the United States to wear an “Afro” hairstyle — “they used to call it ‘the Odetta,’ ” she said.) </p><p>Her voice plunged deep and soared high, and her songs blended the personal and the political, the theatrical and the spiritual. Her first solo album, “Odetta Sings Ballads and Blues,” resonated with an audience hearing old songs made new. </p><p>“The first thing that turned me on to folk singing was Odetta,” <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/d/bob_dylan/index.html?inline=nyt-per" title="More articles about Bob Dylan.">Bob Dylan</a> said, referring to that record, in a 1978 interview with Playboy . He said he heard “something vital and personal. I learned all the songs on that record.” It was her first, and the songs were “Mule Skinner,” “Jack of Diamonds,” “Water Boy,” “ ‘Buked and Scorned.”</p><p>Her blues and spirituals led directly to her work for the civil-rights movement. They were two rivers running together, she said in her interview with The Times. The words and music captured “the fury and frustration that I had growing up.” They were heard by the people who were present at the creation of the civil rights movement, people who “heard on the grapevine about this lady who was singing these songs.” She played countless benefits; the money she raised underwrote the work of keeping the movement alive.</p><p>Her fame hit a peak in 1963, when she marched with <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/k/martin_luther_jr_king/index.html?inline=nyt-per" title="More articles about Martin Luther King Jr..">Martin Luther King</a> in Selma and performed for President <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/k/john_fitzgerald_kennedy/index.html?inline=nyt-per" title="More articles about John Fitzgerald Kennedy.">John F. Kennedy</a>. But after King was assassinated in 1968, the wind went out of the sails of the civil-rights movement and the songs of protest and resistance that had been the movement’s soundtrack. Odetta’s fame flagged for years thereafter. She recorded fewer records, although she performed on stage as a singer and an actor, during the 1970s and 1980s. She revived her career in the 1990s, and thereafter appeared regularly on “A Prairie Home Companion,” the popular public-radio show. In 1999 she recorded her first album in 14 years, and that year President <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/c/bill_clinton/index.html?inline=nyt-per" title="More articles about Bill Clinton.">Bill Clinton</a> awarded her the <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/n/national_endowment_for_the_arts/index.html?inline=nyt-org" title="More articles about National Endowment for The Arts">National Endowment for the Arts</a> Medal of the Arts and Humanities from. In 2003 she received a “Living Legend” tribute from the <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/l/library_of_congress/index.html?inline=nyt-org" title="More articles about Library of Congress">Library of Congress</a> and the <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/k/kennedy_john_f_center_for_the_performing_arts/index.html?inline=nyt-org" title="More articles about John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts">Kennedy Center</a> Visionary Award. </p><p>Odetta was married three times: to Don Gordon, to Gary Shead, and, in 1977, to the blues musician Iverson Minter, known professionally as Louisiana Red. The first marriages ended in divorce; Mr. Minter moved to Germany in 1983 to pursue his performing career. </p><p>She was singing and performing well into the 21st century, and her influence stayed strong through the decades.</p><p> In April 2007, half a century after Mr. Dylan heard her, she was onstage at a Carnegie Hall tribute to <a href="http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/s/bruce_springsteen/index.html?inline=nyt-per" title="More articles about Bruce Springsteen.">Bruce Springsteen</a>. She turned one of his songs, “57 Channels,” into a chanted poem, and Mr. Springsteen came out from the wings to call it “the greatest version” of the song he had ever heard.</p><p>Reviewing a December 2006 performance, James Reed of the Boston Globe wrote: “Odetta’s voice is still a force of nature — something commented upon endlessly as folks exited the auditorium — and her phrasing and sensibility for a song have grown more complex and shaded.” </p>The critic called her “a majestic figure in American music, a direct gateway to bygone generations that feel so foreign today.”<br /><br />Musician/writer Ned Sublette suggests listening to this Odetta performance of "House of the Rising Sun" from 2005, and keep listening past the 1:53 mark when the piano accompaniment temporarily ends.<br /><br /><object height="344" width="425"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/Aaya8jYZBO8&amp;hl=en&amp;fs=1"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/Aaya8jYZBO8&amp;hl=en&amp;fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" height="344" width="425"></embed></object><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-4107248124599785115?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-13765236418959648162008-12-01T21:49:00.000-08:002008-12-02T17:49:40.763-08:00World AIDS Day 2008<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/STTNQckzexI/AAAAAAAABSE/_iR14-1N4CY/s1600-h/world20AIDS20dayBM2381847.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer; width: 288px; height: 267px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/STTNQckzexI/AAAAAAAABSE/_iR14-1N4CY/s320/world20AIDS20dayBM2381847.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5275066745989856018" border="0" /></a><br />J's Theater has a number of <a href="http://jstheater.blogspot.com/2008/12/world-aids-day.html">great links</a> to people thinking, writing, postulating about the history of the AIDS epidemic and where we are now.<br /><br />The theme for World AIDS Day 2007 and 2008 is "Leadership" which is being forwarded by continuing the call to "Stop AIDS. Keep the Promise."<br /><br />Also, NPR has featured a number of stories on the subject:<br /><br />• <a href="http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=97638003">AIDS Epidemic Grows Among Children</a><br />• <a href="http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=95937651">Battling Pediatric AIDS, Saving Lives in Africa</a><br /><br />• <a href="http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=97315837">Many Americans With HIV Don't Know They Have It</a><br /><br />There was also an interesting series of stories about the complexities of setting up a sustainable infrastructure for the delivery of Anti-RetroViral medications to patients on the African continent.<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/STTN-IUGybI/AAAAAAAABSM/YEPPA03egSI/s1600-h/20070316_WAD_poster_300.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 300px; height: 220px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/STTN-IUGybI/AAAAAAAABSM/YEPPA03egSI/s320/20070316_WAD_poster_300.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5275067530825091506" border="0" /></a><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; color: rgb(102, 0, 204);">Update : December 2, 2008</span><br /><br />Today I was checking out one of my fav bloggers <span style="font-weight: bold;">Tayari Jones</span> site. <a href="http://www.unitedstatesartists.org/Public2/Home/index.cfm">Recent United States Artist Foundation Awardee</a> (Congratulations Ms. Jones!), and birthday celebrant (again: Congratulations, 38 is looking good on you!) <a href="http://www.tayarijones.com/blog/archives/2008/12/world_aids_day.html">posted about World AIDS Day</a> and linked to some good stuff, including a post from one of my other fav bloggers, <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://reggieh.blogspot.com/2008/12/world-aids-day-20.html">Reggie H</a>. But most important was the title of the post: "<a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.tayarijones.com/blog/archives/2008/12/world_aids_day.html">World AIDS Day. Get Tested. I Did</a>."<br /><br />I sometimes forget how important it is to say this. Not the "get tested" part, but the "I did."<br /><br />So let me add my voice to the chorus of folks of African descent encouraging others to take care of their health: <span style="font-style: italic;">Get Tested. I Did</span>.<br /><br />In response to the question Jones herself poses on her site, why did I get I get tested, I can second Ms. Jones' response: "Why? Because I needed to know, just like you need to know." That's the truth folks. Most African Americans get diagnosed with full-blown AIDS, not HIV which means they get often get diagnosed after they're already an an acute stage of illness. Full-blown AIDS has fewer treatment options, can necessitate more extreme intervention, and has a shorter life-expectancy than HIV. Also with diagnosis and effective treatment at the HIV stage, the advancement to AIDS and serious opportunistic infections and illness can be delayed considerably. So at the risk of sounding like a parrot on Ms. Jones shoulder, "<a href="http://www.hivtest.org/">find a testing site near you</a>" and get tested. This is not a situation where no news is good news, folks. Along with getting tested find out about how best to protect yourself from HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases (STDs).<br /><br />• <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.scarleteen.com/">Scarleteen</a>: sex education for teenagers, young adults, parents and their allies; now celebrating their 10th Anniversary providing "Sex Education for the Real World."<br />• <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://sfsi.org/wiki/Main_Page">San Francisco Sex Information</a> (SFSI): providing "free, confidential, accurate, non-judgemental information about sex" since 1972. Accessible via phone or email.<br />• <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.ashastd.org/">American Social Health Association</a> (ASHA): "The American Social Health Association is a trusted, non-profit organization that has advocated on behalf of patients to help improve public health outcomes since 1914. We are America's authority for sexually transmitted disease information."<br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">• Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) National STD-AIDS Hotline</span><br />Hours: 24 hours<br />(800) 342-2437 (English &amp; Spanish)<br /><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Some additional thoughts....</span><br />• From Susan Campbell's brief commentary in the Hartford Connecticut <a href="http://blogs.courant.com/susan_campbell/2008/12/aids-still-kills.html">Courant</a>:<br /><span style="color: rgb(0, 153, 0);"></span><span style="color: rgb(0, 153, 0);"></span><blockquote><span style="color: rgb(0, 153, 0);">"Today, on World AIDS Day, remember the 33 million people living with HIV worldwide. Remember also that in this country, AIDS is the number one killer of African American women between the ages of 25 and 34.</span><br /><br /><span style="color: rgb(0, 153, 0);">"And remember the HIV rate in our nation's capital rivals that of sub-Saharan Africa, 1 in 20.</span><br /><br /><span style="color: rgb(0, 153, 0);">"More <a href="http://www.blackaids.org/image_uploads/article_575/08_left_behind.pdf">here</a>."</span></blockquote><br />• The "here" referenced by Campbell is an <a href="http://www.blackaids.org/image_uploads/article_575/08_left_behind.pdf">August 2008 report</a> from the <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.blackaids.org/">Black AIDS Institute</a> a national non-profit policy center located in Los Angeles, California. <span style="font-style: italic;">Some excerpts from the report</span>:<br /><br /><blockquote style="color: rgb(51, 51, 255);">"The number of people living with HIV in Black America exceeds the HIV populations in seven of the 15 focus countries of the U.S. government’s <a href="http://www.pepfar.gov/">PEPFAR</a> [The United States <span style="font-weight: bold;">P</span>resident's <span style="font-weight: bold;">E</span>mergency <span style="font-weight: bold;">P</span>lan <span style="font-weight: bold;">f</span>or <span style="font-weight: bold;">A</span>IDS <span style="font-weight: bold;">R</span>elief] initiative. Many of the factors that make HIV so challenging in other countries are the same ones that drive the epidemic in Black America."(p.5)<br /><br />"If Black America was a country, its AIDS epidemic would be nearly the size of the AIDS<br />epidemic in Côte d’Ivoire."(p.6)<br /><br />"If Black America was a country, its economy would be almost as large as that of South Africa."(p.9)<br /><br />"If Black America were a country, it would have about the same population as New York, Massachuetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Vermont and<br />Maine combined."(p.18)<br /><br />"Representing about one in eight Americans, Blacks account for one in every two people living with HIV in the U.S., and notwithstanding extraordinary improvements in HIV treatment, AIDS remains the leading cause of death among Black women between 25-34 years of age and the second leading cause of death in Black men between 35-44 years of age." (p.11)<br /><br />"Global AIDS leaders should break the silence on AIDS in Black America. Although the U.S. government should be lauded for its landmark PEPFAR initiative, it should also be held accountable for its failure to address the epidemic within its borders. The fact that the U.S. is one of about 40 countries that failed to submit national AIDS progress reports to UNAIDS in 2008 is telling."(13)<br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/STXdrlbp8AI/AAAAAAAABSk/-TTGb36DX6I/s1600-h/NewDiagnos2006.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 0pt 10px 10px; float: right; cursor: pointer; width: 191px; height: 379px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/STXdrlbp8AI/AAAAAAAABSk/-TTGb36DX6I/s400/NewDiagnos2006.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5275366279386624002" border="0" /></a></blockquote><br />You'll note AIDS/HIV is still an issue in Latina/o communities and white/European American communities as well. Here's a chart from the CDC for 2006 numbers (the available rates as of June 10, 2008). The <a href="http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/topics/aa/resources/factsheets/aa.htm">CDC Fact sheet</a> for "<a href="http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/topics/aa/resources/factsheets/pdf/aa.pdf">HIV/AIDS Among African Americans</a>" was revised August, 2008. See Endnote for rates among other ethnic groups.<br /><br /><br /><br /><br />One of the concluding messages of the report is a call to action, see below:<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/STXbcGrm5XI/AAAAAAAABSc/7YRK8Fz7PM8/s1600-h/ActionAgenda.jpg"><img style="margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer; width: 297px; height: 400px;" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/STXbcGrm5XI/AAAAAAAABSc/7YRK8Fz7PM8/s400/ActionAgenda.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5275363814410741106" border="0" /></a><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; color: rgb(102, 0, 204);">Endnote</span>:<br />• AFP coverage: "<a href="http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5jPdTem5IKw-ZZuTgftke08OeWl7A">South African observes silence for World AIDS Day</a>"<br />• MSNBC story "<a href="http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/27983459/">New hope on AIDS in Africa</a>" includes profile of Cape Town Fertility Clinic, and "<span style="font-style: italic;">Access to Life</span> a multimedia project funded by The Global Fund to document efforts to fight HIV/AIDS in nine nations."<br />• CDC Factsheets revised August 2008: <a href="http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/resources/factsheets/API.htm">HIV/AIDS among Asians and Pacific Islanders</a> ,<br />• <a href="http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/hispanics/resources/slidesets/hpls_alvarez.htm">National HIV/AIDS Hispanic/Latino Response: Presentation from the 2008 HIV Prevention Leadership Summit</a>, includes CDC statistics.<br />• Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) <a href="http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/">HIV/AIDS webpag</a>e<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-1376523641895964816?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27221572.post-22537547444176933642008-11-29T00:32:00.000-08:002008-11-29T01:37:51.523-08:00Audio Geek & Turkey...<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/STEG0zRGQGI/AAAAAAAABR8/3oOFv2CMu_c/s1600-h/Studer-A807-Consul.gif"><img style="margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer; width: 271px; height: 320px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_f0FIBvL-O4o/STEG0zRGQGI/AAAAAAAABR8/3oOFv2CMu_c/s320/Studer-A807-Consul.gif" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5274004142812446818" border="0" /></a><br />I hope everyone had a happy <span style="font-weight: bold;">Thanksgiving</span>. Like a lot of folks, I have my ambivalence about this holiday. It's a time for people to come together, sometimes family, sometimes chosen family, other times new friends who find themselves far from home. There's an opportunity for genuine thankfulness and gratitude in these gatherings and sharing of food, stories, laughter, etc. At the same time the popular story of the holiday that most of us get taught in school is problematic to say the least. The arguable victor gets to write the history, and that history has its definite omissions concerning indigenous people on the American continent. So in the spirit of engaging history, and moving towards a more inclusive historical portrait (small pox blankets, genocide, and all), I've included some links in the <span style="font-weight: bold;">Endnote</span> section. I'm sure there are others of which I'm unaware; if there are other better sites it would be great to learn about them.<br /><br /><br />The <a href="http://thirdcoastfestival.org/"><span style="font-weight: bold;">Third Coast International Audio Festival</span></a> takes place each Fall in Chicago, Illinois. Even if you can't get to middle of the USA, the hosts, Chicago Public Radio, post audio and video from a number of the events on the festival website. Also, during the Thanksgiving weekend various NPR stations broadcast the winners of the eighth annual <span style="font-weight: bold;">TCF / Richard H. Driehaus Foundation Competition</span> "represent radio at its finest: moving, insightful, surprising and sometimes even life changing." If you find yourself hooked, no worries. Chicago Public Radio hosts, <a style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;" href="http://thirdcoastfestival.org/re-sound.asp">Re: sound</a>, a weekly program of radio stories "culled from around the world ranging from personal narratives to investigative documentaries, experimental sound art to humorous essays" and is hosted by "independent producer and essayist" <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://thirdcoastfestival.org/about_staff.asp">Gwen Macsai</a> (yea! women in radio/audio! The TCIAP festival staff is comprised of four women, with Macsai among their number). (<span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="color: rgb(153, 0, 0);">above a shot of the vintage Studer A807 Professional reel to reel tape recorder - simply gorgeous!</span></span>)<br /><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; color: rgb(102, 0, 204);">Endnote</span>:<br />Re-examining the popular Thanksgiving Story: the "theme" of Thanksgiving versus the mythologizing of questionable history.<br />• "<a href="http://www.pilgrimhall.org/daymourn.htm">National Day of Morning</a>" from the <span style="font-weight: bold;">Pilgrim Hall Museum in Massachusetts</span> (hotbed of Pilgrim pride)<br />• "<a href="http://www.nativecircle.com/mlmThanksgivingmyth.html">Mistakes, Lies &amp; Misconceptions: The Thanksgiving Myth</a>" by John Two-Hawks from <span style="font-weight: bold;">Native Circle.com</span><br />• "<a href="http://www.2020tech.com/thanks/temp.html">Thanksgiving Information</a>" a highly informative and thoughtful collection of information directed towards educators. From the <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.bowdoin.edu/%7Esamato/IRA/reviews/issues/apr97/fwdp.html">Fourth World Documentation Project</a> , later re-organized as <span style="font-weight: bold;">Fourth World Docu-Program</span> a searchable research database and archive of documents related to indigenous peoples worldwide, and a publications division, <span style="font-weight: bold;">Fourth World Papers Program</span>, both coordinated by <a style="font-weight: bold;" href="http://www.cwis.org/index.php">The Center For World Indigenous Studies</a> (CWIS).<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/27221572-2253754744417693364?l=audiologo.blogspot.com'/></div>audiologohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06599965770258902030noreply@blogger.com0