[AGL] Gerry and Carolyn sound off
Fontaine Maverick
fmaverick at austin.rr.com
Tue Sep 4 10:06:01 EDT 2007
The conversation abt Fletcher, et al made me smile. Curmudgeonlyness came
early to that group - and it was a good thing that Gerry and his ilk were
around to keep things interesting.
I think we here in Austin are spoiled; we have so much good music
available - not to mention good radio - that we get lazy (speaking fer
myself anyway). I too have Rhapsody, and love making the playlists - some
are based on Gerry's musings. But I am out of the house alot, and have much
of my stuff on the little player (Sansadisc E200R) - but am not happy with
wearing earphones. Or maybe I am not desperate enough to make that work.
Wish I could hear you sing in Portugese, G.
Font
----- Original Message -----
From: "Gerry" <mesmo at gilanet.com>
To: "survivors' reminiscences about Austin Ghetto Daze in the 60s"
<austin-ghetto-list at pairlist.net>
Sent: Monday, September 03, 2007 12:51 PM
Subject: Re: [AGL] Gerry and Carolyn sound off
> "No guitars, leave 'em in the car"
>
> I appreciated that sign, made me feel safe from wannabe folk singers.
> However, in the community in which I reside, they are a dime a dozen. Some
> days they are on the public streets (Silver City) dueling it out with one
> another. So far I have not heard one who is worth a damn...mostly children
> of the Rainbow Tribe persuasion. S.C. is not a good place for live music,
> couple of little joints, few if any good musicians among the regulars. But
> they do have a little scene and all the trappings. I generally avoid it.
> There is no jazz at all, no black people in the county and no tradition
> beyond the folk scene...the price one pays for living in the wilderness.
> When I first moved here they had the New Mexico Symphony come in every
> year
> for a concert, but no more, just some traveling shows that are usually not
> what I would like to see. For awhile there was a faculty jazz group at the
> little college which played a few times each year (not so good but it was
> jazz) but the leader got caught screwing one of the students and his
> replacement is not so gung ho. So part of my reason for the elaborate
> personal music habits is that there is nothing live to see.
>
> The stock sound system in the Cressida is quite good, certainly good
> enough
> for my old ears, I can hear the bass and the sticks on the cymbal. But it
> was limited to radio and tape. So I had an XM radio installed (bought it
> on
> sale at Walmart) at an auto sound shop in El Paso. They had a 9 CD changer
> on sale at the time (Sony) so I had them install one of them in the trunk.
> Both new systems are set up to play through the FM, each has a frequency
> dedicated to it. I can play CD's or tapes or radio (conventional FM or
> XM).
> With the quiet ride and the nice seats this makes the Cressie an ideal
> listening environment. For news I generally tune in BBC. All this takes
> miles off my commutes to Silver City and occasionally to El Paso and makes
> the trips pleasurable.
>
> We had our annual Cabaret Night last night here in Gila. Interesting how
> the
> times change, performers grow up, appearances change, etc. We've been
> doing
> this for 14 years now. I did a couple of bossa novas, right hand shaking
> too
> much so I couldn't play much guitar but my voice was in good shape. Do you
> know "Gentle Rain"? It's a Luiz Bonfa classic, great tune. Also did "Eu
> nao
> existo sem voce", a Jobim tune with a very simple and very beautiful 12
> bar
> construction. And one original bossa nova called "October". For this area
> my
> music is very exotic. For years I was the drum circle leader but no
> longer,
> ears taking too big a hit. So my reputation has changed from the high
> energy
> drummer to the old man singing pretty songs from Brazil...I am comfortable
> with it.
>
> As I recall, Fletcher and gang were products of the Beat coffee houses
> where
> there was a little jazz but not so much. Lopez had visited the LA area in
> the mid '50's when the West Coast scene was hot. He was a big fan of Chet
> Baker but not of Trane and the Hard Bop era. We went to see Ella once and
> he
> was not enthralled. While I wouldn't call them racists, they were not big
> fans of black entertainment either, maybe Odetta. They were definitely
> anti
> Rock and Roll.
> G
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Michael Eisenstadt" <mike.eisenstadt at gmail.com>
> To: <austin-ghetto-list at pairlist.net>
> Sent: Monday, September 03, 2007 7:19 AM
> Subject: [AGL] Gerry and Carolyn sound off
>
>
>> When Fletcher was sounding off on how lame jazz was once,
>> at his table in his bar, you and I started chanting 'a love supreme,
>> a love supreme, a love supreme.' no one else at the table had
>> any idea that you and I were doing John Coltranem this to a table
>> of the musically illiterate.
>>
>> remember, Fletcher (g-d bless him) had put a sign above the
>> door to the bar 'Leave your guitars in the car.'
>>
>> so it is interesting that you are still filling your life with music
>> as you drive to Silver City to do the groceries.
>>
>> please explain again how you listen to music in the Cressida.
>>
>> the Swiss station which id's the classical music AFTER it is
>> played, do it first in German then French then English.
>>
>> this one is a keeper along with WHRB, WKCR and, maybe,
>> WBGO. thanks carolyn
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
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