I went to see guitarist Mike Stern and his band play at The Centre last Tuesday. Imagine the jazz equivalent of an all-out frenetic heavy rock band, and that was how the show went, complete with Keith Moonesque drum solos and Clarence Clemonsesque sax playing. Throw in also adjectives like funky, lyrical, and melodic. I'm now a fan.
The opening act was Vancouver's Gordon Grdina. I've never heard of him till the concert, but now that I have, I'm convinced that the man really needs to buy a vowel. Like Stern, Grdina can sound like Pat Metheny. Accompanying him was superstar bassist Gary Peacock. Because Peacock played the bass (not the electric bass guitar) seated on a stool, fully one-third of the instrument's neck was behind his head, so it was entertaining to see Peacock's fingers flying above and behind his left ear.Two observations from this and Monday's concerts:
1) Jazz music keeps its practitioners young—70 year-old Peacock and 60 year-old Hutcherson are trim and carry themselves like men two decades their junior.
2) The most intimate of jazz instruments is the bass, IMHO.
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I bought and watched American Splendor. Very good, though not excellent. If one were curious about what kind of films appeal to me, here's a good example (how can one go wrong with a movie exuding jazz music and books?).***
Took the kids to see Cars. Of the last five animations, by far the best. I was floored by the graphics—incredible overhead racetrack camera views, and mind-blowing freeway/highway and terrain camera angles, lighting and rendering. The storyline was good too. Shaula (9) and Matthew (3) want to see it again. Me too.
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Interesting that I was at the library last Monday trying to track down a Rainer Maria Rilke work when, lo and behold, the Gordon Grdina CD booklet has this Rilke quotation
...No one can advise or help you—no one. There is only one thing you should do. Go into yourself... Confess to yourself whether you would have to die if you were forbidden to write. This most of all: ask yourself in the most silent hour of your night: Must I write?
-from Letters To A Young Poet






































