Sunday, November 10, 2013

Going back - and further back - in time

Okay, there's been a gap in my blogging.  It doesn't mean I fell off the globe, but rather that I'm just an erratic blogger. 

So, to catch up - I've been on a bit of an ECM Records jag lately.  I don't know what it is about ECM, but I've always been intrigued by the label and its roster.  I picked up two recent releases: "In Full View" by the Julia Hulsmann Quartet, and Nik Bartsch's Ronin Live.  The Julia Hulsmann Quartet, now with British trumpeter Thomas Arthurs in the fold, is a nice Sunday morning CD.  The interplay is subtle, the melodies are not too out there, and there's a warmth throughout the whole CD.  Nik Bartsch's Ronin, on the other hand, is a bit more challenging.  Imagine the improvisation of King Crimson in the "Larks' Tongues" era with the polyrhythms of the "Discipline" era.  The music is more groove oriented - if you can discern a groove in the music, that is.  (They seem a bit averse to a straight 4/4 pattern.)  The use of the bass clarinet as more of a rhythmic instrument than a lead instrument is surprising, but it works well in this instance.  And I still have Keith Jarrett's "Hymns/Spheres" to be played for that perfectly dismal autumn day when it's cold, dark, and windy - the music in this album doesn't really have a happy feel to it.

I was called to help out with the Disco Ensemble for the Old Town School's Disco Tribute on Friday.  The drum seat was already ably filled, so I brought a tambourine and cowbell.  This is from the first song of the second set - Heatwave's "Groove Line."  I wasn't too familiar with it, not having heard the song in God knows how many years, but hey - it's disco.  If you can count to four, you can play percussion.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dAzdiM58u70&feature=youtu.be

Saturday, though, had to be the capper.  On what was rather spur of the moment, Judy and I decided to see "Once Upon a Dream" featuring The Rascals.  And by The Rascals, I'm glad to say that it was the original Rascals - Eddie Brigati, Felix Cavaliere, Gene Cornish, and Dino Danelli.  Given that their split in 1970 was legendary (it's one thing to burn bridges, but Brigati used a few thousand pounds of napalm to seal the deal), it's a minor miracle that they are performing on stage again.  But under the tutelage of Miami Steve Van Zandt, he was able to coax them to do some performances in New York and New Jersey and, given the success, took the act out to Chicago for five nights.  It was a multi-media show, including lots of filmed commentary from the band members and some "flashback" film footage showing the Rascals in their early days.  The video part was extraordinary, the music was phenomenal - I can easily file that in one of the five best shows I've ever seen.  Kudos to Miami Steve for getting those guys to put on a great show and not end up strangling each other by the end of the first set.  There aren't many famous 60s bands whose members are on this side of the ground, so it was good to see the four of them playing together - and playing so well, too.  

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Two-gig Weekends and Battling the Wall



The Lost Artists studio, 2630 W Fletcher, Chicago.  Some interesting art coming out of this place.

A week and a half ago I had another two-gig weekend - playing at Fretknot Friday at the Independence Tap, and also with the Twangdogs at the Lost Artists Studio (shown above - you can find more at www.artcolony.info). 

The Friday gig was fun - another round with the Bad Boys Ensemble where we played Steve Winwood and Al Green songs.  It was the debut of sorts of the new sound system at the Independence Tap, a setup monitored in part with an iPad.  Kip, fellow Bad Boy musician and person running the sound, almost had the perfect setup, but when you get some 8-10 musicians on stage, something is bound to feed back.  Kip would break ranks in mid-song to tweak the sound and get us back to a good sound level.  We cut the set a bit short, but we did get to play a medley of "Low Spark of High-Heeled Boys" and "Walking in the Wind" that went well.  "Walking" is a challenge for me - the rhythm is steady, but it's the steady eighth-note on the hi-hat that wears my right thumb out.  I end up switching to the Lenny White open-style of playing, where the left hand is playing hi-hat and the right-hand is on the snare, just to give the right hand a rest.  I never feel comfortable doing that for long, though, so I'll switch back after about 8 bars.

The Saturday gig with the Twangdogs went quite well and we were well received by the audience.  Some people perused the hallways that had the resident artists' work hanging from the walls while we were playing.  We were in a fairly good-sized space, but still we were three tiers deep - Janna, Rich, and Merrie were up front, Jack, Quincy, and Jenny were in the middle row, and I got the last row.  And no matter how we set up, we end up filling about every square inch of space we can.  You could put us in the middle of the Bonneville Salt Flats and we'd still be stepping over each other.  But we read each other well during the songs, our between-song times were kept to a minimum, and I think it gave us all a really good feel going into this Saturday's gig at the Independence Tap.

As pleased as I was about Saturday, and content with Friday's gig, I still had something gnawing at me.  I bought a couple of CDs a month ago, one of which was "And If" by the Anat Fort Trio.  I saw a review of the CD in Downbeat and it piqued my curiosity (as will pretty much anything on ECM Records).  Anat plays piano, Gary Wang is the bassist, and Roland Schneider is the drummer, and in a piano trio you'll find lots of space between the musicians.  The arrangements on "And If" steer the music to even wider spaces, there's great interplay between the musicians, and in listening to it something clicked.  It had been months - years - since I heard a good piano trio, and this CD hit the spot. 

The Anat Fort Trio - for those...contemplative moments.  (It's ECM - what else would you expect?)

Then I thought about the gigs I play.  The Twangdogs, and the various ensembles, aren't the biggest groups I've played with - I think it was the "Fab Forty" Old Town School Beatles Ensemble at a Beatles Convention in Louisville around 2005 and 2006, so that record is pretty safe - but I find myself often playing with at least five or six other musicians, often in a space where I have to do a tai chi routine just to get behind the drum kit.  I certainly won't declare "Hey!  We have too many musicians here!  You, and  you, and...you - get outta here!"  But I mentioned this to John Mead and he is in agreement that guitar playing in an ensemble is as much about when to play as when not to play.  That goes for drums as well - I have no issue being in a band where a couple of songs are drummer-less. 

So the question: how does a drummer who appreciates dynamics in music coexist with 6 to 10 other musicians who want to get heard?  The answer, I think, is to accept things for what they are, and just stay steady.  The last thing I want to do is lead the whole bunch off a cliff.  Now, to find that pianist and bassist to delve into an introspective version of Bill Evans' "Re: Person I Knew"...

Monday, June 3, 2013

From Annapolis to Milwaukee - Avenue, that is...

It's been a while since the last post, I know.  Lots of things have been going on.  First off, my nephew Eric is now an Ensign in the U.S. Navy.  He graduated on May 24 from Annapolis.  We sat through the entire ceremony (in 55-degree weather with rain and wind - eesh), but also got to see him shake Barack Obama's hand. 

The day Judy and I arrived we got to see a concert on the Naval Academy grounds.  The main performer, Monte Maxwell, is the Director of Chapel Music and a phenomenal musician.  The first piece he played, Pagaent by Leo Sowerby, was a workout in itself.  Monte played it on the organ, pulling out stops, hammering block chords, and doing some intricate work on the bass pedals as well.  ("Feets don't fail me now," indeed.) 

He also had five First Class Midshipman (seniors to us non-military folk) play or sing.  One piece, Chopin's Ballad No. 1, Op. 23, was played exceedingly well by Phil Rouse, who two days later graduated with a degree in Oceanography.  (How can someone be *that* smart and talented?)  There were also performances of the old standards "Old Man River" and "Battle Hymn of the Republic" (well, it *is* Annapolis) by some fine vocalists, and two other Midshipmen performed pieces by Debussey ("Premiere Rhapsodie" on clarinet, and "Claire de Lune" on piano).  All in all it was an impressive show - spending a weekend on the Naval Academy campus gave me a large sense of appreciation and respect for the students. 

To more mundane ventures, Friday night was a performance of the "Bad Boys" Ensemble.  It was the "graduation" performance from last session.  The venue was Moe's, a nondescript beer-and-a-bump tavern on Milwaukee Avenue in Chicago's Logan Square neighborhood.  (They do provide the drums, though - I won't complain about that!)  Tired as I was that night, I was looking forward to playing because this outfit put a lot of work into the music over the previous eight or ten weeks, and I had a sense that the music was going to be good. 

We had an opening act - Samantha Church, a young woman who combines soul and r-and-b with, of all things, a banjo.  She busks at the Monroe Street stop on the O'Hare El, and is well worth the dollar in the banjo case.  She has a strong and very expressive voice.  Her set was well-received, and it was great to look around and see people actually listening to the music.

The "Bad Boys" ensemble went up next.  We covered several Steve Winwood-penned tunes: "Can't Find My Way Home," "Dear Mr. Fantasy," "40,000 Headmen," and one of my all-time favorites, "Low Spark of High-Heeled Boys."  That gave me a chance to cross over from jazz to rock and back again.  It's a great song to play with, but I'm realizing that I can't get too hyper or free-wheeling or else I trip myself up and run the risk of throwing everything into a tailspin.

"Walking on the Wind," from Traffic's When the Eagle Flies album, was a highlight.  Our vocalist was having a rather hard time feeling the rhythm of the lyrics, and we played the song three times in a row on Wednesday's practice.  But on Friday it all came together.  He sounded great, and the song came off without a hitch.  In moments like that, one tends to think that the set is a "cinch" - nothing major will go wrong for the rest of the set.  And that was true.  "Time is Running Out" and "Vacant Chair" were both top-notch, the vocalists on "Vacant Chair" doing a great job of reading each other.  I tried to synch the right foot to Lindsay Cochrane's bass line on "Time is Running Out" to give it a little more punch.  (I think I enjoy playing that song as much as, if not more than, "Low Spark.")That was one of the better ensemble performances I've been a part of, but we still had one set to go.

The third act was a bit of a carry-over - John Mead, keyboardist Cathy Goodman, and Lindsay were joined by Peter Manis (a very solid drummer, someone I can learn quite a bit from) and David Argentieri for a set of originals.  The group, named John Cougar Melancholy, were fronted by David and Cathy.  David wears his Springsteen-as-folkie influence on his sleeve, and his songs are slow and soulful.  Cathy has a wider palate and her songs have a bit more range, from two-step to ballad to straight rock.  The songs were all well done, and some studio time for these guys wouldn't be a bad idea - they're worth hearing.

The Bad Boys went up for the final set - Al Green songs.  This gave me a chance to stay in the pocket - find a groove, and keep it.  That was the best thing for me, because at that point (12.30 a.m.) I was getting a little cloudy-headed.  I started relying on John Mead for his cues a bit more often - on "How Can You Mend a Broken Heart" (yeah, yeah, the Bee Gees had the original), I don't think I would have come back in on time from the breaks.  (Al Green's version is slowed down, and as any drummer can attest, slower is often harder.  Playing a slow song, while tired, can lead to unavoidable moments of ritard.)  Kip Plourde did a fantastic job with vocals, especially on "Here I Am."  He's got a voice that's well-suited for r-and-b.

And where was Judy in all this?  Frankfort, a far south-west suburb, listening to a concert by Greg Cahill, Alan Munde, and Don Stiernberg.  The concert was at Down Home Guitars, a music store in a miniature mall.  The store itself has some extremely nice instruments, guitars and banjos mainly, and is well worth the trip if you're a guitar connoisseur who lives in the Chicago area.  It's no surprise, then, that they would get some really top-notch performers like Cahill, Munde, and Stiernberg.  Frankly, I don't blame Judy for going to that concert instead of the gig at Moe's.  She got home a lot earlier than I did, that's for sure. 

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

From barbecue to Chicago's best wine in 48 hours

Why is it that if you are involved in two bands, those bands will somehow manage to book practices and gigs for the same time?  That's what happened to me this past weekend.  It left me with a "good" tired feeling, but tired all the same.

Friday night I had a final practice at the Old Town School with Little Queens, a Heart tribute band with Andrea Bunch, Aerin Tedesco, John Mead, Debbie Kaszinsky, and Greg Nergaard.  We were fortunate enough to get a gig at the City Winery, a place on West Randolph that makes their own wine and has an eye-catching menu as well.  The practice in itself wouldn't have been so bad, but the Twangdogs, the country-Americana outfit that I'm in, had a gig two hours later. 

I loaded up the drums and dropped them off at the Horseshoe Tavern on Lincoln Avenue, then drove to the Old Town School.  I sat down and started playing during "Love Alive" and immediately spilled my Starbucks grande mocha.  Okay, not a great start to the practice.  Rather annoyed, I cleaned up as best as I could.  (I also left a big brown mocha stain on the rug underneath the drums - to the Old Town administration, please take it out of my membership fee.)  We did the run-through of the songs, and I would have liked to play some more, but it was time to hop in the car and head down to the Horseshoe.  John Mead was nice enough to head back to Starbucks and buy another mocha for me.

Thankfully it was a short drive from the Old Town School to the Horseshoe - only half a mile.  I was feeling a bit rushed at that time, and having King Crimson's "Sailor's Tale" on the car stereo didn't help my sense of calm any.  ("Sailor's Tale" is not a song to listen to if you're in need of calm or finding your "happy place" - it's a darkly intense instrumental that pulls me in every time I hear it.)

So, the Horseshoe (http://www.myspace.com/horseshoechicago).  I had reservations about that bar from an experience I had some seven years ago.  I was in a band with some others, and after a year of practicing we got a gig at the Horseshoe.  We ran a practice at my church before leaving, then we all packed up and got to the Horseshoe.  I set up my drums and sat while the others set up their guitars and amps, then I sat as the others tuned and futzed with their effects pedals, then sat as the bassist went on a frantic thirty-minute search for a songbook (which was under a coat the entire time).  We finally started playing, and after five songs the sound man came up and said "Ya gotta stop playing.  We got a phone call from the cops saying the neighbors are complaining."  To this day I believe the sound man really said "We don't want you to play anymore."  Tails between our legs, we tore down and slunk back home.  That was my first gig as a drummer.  But that was seven years ago, and apparently the Horseshoe learned something by putting up sound panels in the front window which made the venue sound surprisingly good for an all-wood barbecue joint.

I got to the Horseshoe to find it surprising empty - there were the other Twangdogs and about six others.  "Where's the other band?"

Fellow Twangdog Rich Gordon answered "Oh, they never showed up."  I found that humorous, having just read an open letter from a bar owner in the Tampa area who had some advice about band professionalism and who said that the band's true purpose was to sell drinks.  (That might be a topic for another day.)  I think the first tip for any band would be: come hell or high water, show up.  Or, if you can't, the reason for not showing up better involve a hospital and/or a police report.

So, it turned out I had considerable time to set up the drums.  I sighed - it looked like things were going to work out after all.  (It's a matter of trust - trust that all will be well in the end.)  We all set up, and did another remarkable Twangdogian job of filling up an entire stage with instruments.  I think you could put us on stage at Symphony Center and we'd still fill the entire stage.  We played our sets, and Andrea Bunch was nice enough to come down and listen after appearing at Fretknot Friday with a student of hers.  There were a few good moments in our sets, but overall I felt as though we still needed a bit of work to sort out the rough spots.  Towards the end of the second set, we started "Best of My Love", the Eagles ballad, and I totally blanked on what the tempo should have been.  Not that I cranked it up to Warp Factor 5, but I was a bit brain-dead at that point.  Ditto our closer, the Decemberists' "Down by the Water."  Fortunately I guessed right on the tempo and the others carried that song quite well.

Sunday's gig at the City Winery was a different story.  We had a slightly larger stage, and one fewer band member, so we had some space to work with.  Instruments set up and sound check run, we went back to the Green Room where one of the staff took food and drink orders.  I wasn't used to that kind of treatment.  "So this is how real music stars are treated," I thought. 

(For a schedule, check out http://www.citywinery.com/chicago/tickets.html.  I'm sure the wine is good, but the food is incredible.)

So I put in my order - mini-sliders and a pork belly coupled with french toast - a strange combo on paper, but not so odd on the taste buds.  I ate my meal with Judy in the audience. 

I went back to the Green Room to join the others.  Debbie and Andrea changed into their stage outfits, John put on his striped 70s pants, and at 7 we took the stage.  Taking the stage with us was a guy we dubbed "Wine Man".  The show was a "wine pairing" - the audience would get a taste of wine for a three song set, then a taste of a different wine for the next three songs, and so on.  So, four glasses of wine for 12 songs. 

I fought off nerves for a good part of the evening.  The City Winery is a venue that is a big step up for folks like me - an attentive audience, no TVs so I can follow the ball game or try to follow the detective story on USA Network while playing.  This was a concert.  Fortunately, the audience couldn't have been more receptive and encouraging.  After a couple of songs, and in spite of a mistake here and there (the perfect gig, I think, is like chasing the horizon), it was a great show.  Aerin was bogged down with laryngitis, so Andrea had to sing all the songs, and she handled it extremely well.  It's like having two Ann Wilsons in the band - Aerin is an outstanding singer in her own right and all the members have a good sense of the arrangements of the songs. 

As a band we acquitted ourselves rather well.  "Even It Up" started off the set, and the first song is always the hardest, though if you get that first song down, it's a big boost for your psyche for the rest of the night.  "Mistral Wind," an extremely tricky song, went off without a hitch.  "White Lightning and Wine" started off at a given tempo and I tried, given Aerin's cues, to slow it down a bit.  (If you think trying to slow down a song as inconspicuously as possible is an easy task, think again.)  The last set had two of my favorites: "Crazy on You" and "Barracuda."  We finished with Led Zeppelin's "Rock and Roll," and we may have stumbled a bit, but the song is enough of a full-throttle rocker that a flub here or there may almost be required to do justice.  But that last set tested my mettle as a drummer - I played about as hard as I could, so much that my solo at the end of "Rock and Roll" sounded to me (as I remember it) to be a bit clumsy, though I did have some fun with one of the roto-toms.

Two gigs in three nights - two paying gigs, though I'd be able to blow through that money on a decent night out with Judy - and a good sense of tired on Monday.  Just give me a few days, and I'll be ready to go.  I think.  Maybe give me a week.



Sunday, May 5, 2013

The Progger's Progress, pt. 2: Smitten by the Mellotron

I think in it was 1972 when I first heard "Stairway to Heaven."  And, if you're honest, you were probably impressed with that song when you first it as well.  Sure, the song is the poster child for radio overexposure and general adulation, but it's range in dynamics, from opening acoustic guitar to all-out rock, is done so subtly that you probably didn't notice the changes.   Sure, the lyrics are a bit over-the-top, but you can't deny the excellence of the instrumental performance.

So, like about 80% of the other kids my age, I became a Zeppelin fan.  And, it was on "The Rain Song" from the Houses of the Holy album (an album whose cover shouldn't be left lying around, unless you wish to give grandmothers a strong bout of arrythmia), that the Mellotron finally stuck in my conscience.  Of course I had heard it used before - the flute opening of "Strawberry Fields Forever," and numerous Moody Blues songs that came across the radio.  In this case, however, the Mellotron was so prominent in that lush, lengthy instrumental passage after the first verse of "The Rain Song" that it would be impossible to forget. 


The Mellotron in all its glory.  It's a sight to behold, isn't it?

Chicago made interesting use of the Mellotron on their seventh album.  The opening track, "Prelude to Aire," featured Walt Parazaider's flute meandering over tom-toms and percussion, then Robert Lamm comes in, adding some odd counterpoint.  At the end, Lamm uses an off-kilter six-note ascending arpeggio.  When I first heard this song, so uncharacteristic of the band that gave us "Saturday in the Park" and "Just You 'n' Me," I was caught by surprise.  Head sandwiched tightly between the two speakers of the crummy record player I had at the time,  I thought "Okay, that worked."  That Chicago VII may be my favorite album of theirs should have told me something - side 1, with "Prelude to Aire," "Aire," and "Devil's Sweet" was a daring bit of jazz-rock fusion that I appreciated from when I first heard it.

A few months later, on a cold and windy Saturday afternoon, I had stumbled across a cassette of "A Question of Balance" by the Moody Blues.  I always liked "Question" and put the cassette in for a listen.  As the song faded, Mike Pinder's "How Is It (We Are Here)" came right in - a standard technique on those Moodies albums.  The song is a bit furrow-browed, as are pretty much all of Pinder's songs, but after the first verse there's a swell of mellotron.  And it hit me.  Psychologists refer to it as a "flash moment" - an otherwise insignificant moment in time that becomes permanently etched in one's memory.  For me, I had my flash moment.

Suffice it to say that I was on a Moody Blues jag for the next six months, buying all their albums, from "Days of Future Passed" to "Seventh Sojourn."  There is no doubt that many would consider the Moodies as prog, but so many of their songs weren't really that difficult to play, technically - hardly anything like Yes or King Crimson.  Anyone with a year or two of guitar under his or her belt could play all of "Seventh Sojourn."  It's a lesson, I guess - prog doesn't have to be 23 minutes of 17/8 music about fairies and elves (though some would say that if it is, then all the better).  Nor does using a Mellotron qualify a song as being prog - if so, then you can put "Freebird" in the prog bin - a sobering thought.  It leaves the question "what is prog?" to which I now answer "decide for yourself."

Somewhere in this time my high school had a dance after a basketball game.  I looked forward to hanging with my friends and being disappointed by a total lack of interest from the girls.  A band was going to perform (no dj's for this upper-crust school), and I got there a little early to watch them load in.  As the band was bringing in their equipment, two of the members lugged in what looked like an organ in a white wooden casing.  Jamie Vogt, who was a friend of mine at the time (and also a Moodies/mellotron fan) and I asked what this strange-looking keyboard was.

The guy carrying it in was nonchalant.  "It's a Mellotron."

You'd have thought it was the Hope Diamond.  ("So...that's...a...mellotron.  Ohhhhhh...")  Jamie and I stood there, wide-eyed and transfixed, while we got an explanation of its workings - a series of tape loops inside that played when the keys were pressed.  (Legend says that the sampling of the string sounds were taken by three elderly women playing violins in a room.  It may be true - who knows for sure?)  We got a small demonstration of its ability, and Jamie and I were pretty much blown away.  Wow - a Mellotron.  Right there in our high school cafeteria.  Why nobody ever cordoned off that area and put up a sign ("Here once stood a Mellotron.  Proper decorum expected.")  was a mystery to me.

And to this day, if I hear what sounds like a Mellotron (I don't know if anyone really uses them anymore - they weighed as much as a diesel engine and often went out of tune), it hits me like a scritch behind a dog's ear.  The head tilts back and a slight expression of reverie comes to the surface.  The sound goes from the ear to some place between the head and heart where music often makes its strongest connection.





Thursday, April 18, 2013

From Donna Summer to Bach in 48 hours

This was another week that ran the gamut in terms of musical styles.  Monday was practice with the Twangdogs minus Janna, who somehow scratched her cornea and was out.  (The woes continued the next day when Jack, our guitarist/bassist/electric banjo player, lopped off the very tip of a finger when a door closed on it and is out four weeks.  We're Chicago's only band with an injured reserve list.)

Wednesday was the "Bad Boys" practice, and we focused on Al Green tunes.  In it we (hopefully) learned that in songs that can meander over a two-chord pattern, learning to play different chord shapes, rhythm patterns, or just dropping out for bars at a time is an admirable goal.  As our instructor John Mead said, "You know the chords.  Now it's a matter of when to play them."  Drummers can even face that challenge - when to do a fill, or a rim-click, or just hi-hat.  One of the more enjoyable tasks for me, when drumming, is to see how many sounds I can get from a drum kit.  Such discoveries come in handy when trying to vary the sound as much as possible within a lengthy jam.

The Disco ensemble on Thursday is an example of that.  Donna Summer's "Love to Love You Baby" went to some 12-15 minutes in our hands, and still fell short of the original 17 minutes on record.  It allowed Cathy Goodman to do some rather humorous improvising on vocals as well (just how many times can someone repeat "Love to Love You Baby" and make it sound interesting?).  So what do I do?  This is pretty much a hi-hat-and-bass-drum song, and I have to find some way to keep things moving.  Who knew disco could be so difficult?

On "Shame Shame Shame," Cathy and Joe Grandolfo shared vocals (Joe's voice nowhere near the falsetto on the original, thank the Lord) and did the bump during the instrumental passages.  It's an image that keeps my eyes glued to the snare drum.  The dance is goofy, not exactly fluid, but if I watch too long I start laughing and everything gets thrown off.

Now - where does Bach come in to all this?  Saturday Judy and I went to the Chicago Symphony and heard them perform "Mass in B Minor."  The pre-concert lecture was done by a Stephen Alltop, professor of music at Northwestern as well as conductor.  (Find out about him at http://www.stephenalltop.com/.  Dude has credentials, that's for sure.)  I was fascinated by how much he knew not only about Bach but of the piece as well.  There are all sorts of nuances in the music that Stephen pointed out, such as Bach's fixation on the number 14 (if A=1, B=2, C=3, then H=8.  B+A+C+H=2+1+3+8=14, just the number of notes in one of the main themes in the piece), and a grand idea that for those in Bach's time (or afterwards, since the piece debuted after his death), a big swell in the music could be the equivalent of our seeing a grand explosion on TV or the movies - or a Kiss concert.  There is so much more to Bach's music - to much of classical music - that escapes our ears, and it's always a great experience to dive in once in a while and experience something on the high end.  And, as Keith Emerson pointed out by incorporating the Brandenburg Concertos in his days with the Nice, are classical and rock really that far apart?

Friday, March 29, 2013

To where so much bluegrass music began

Judy and I took a trip to a place where lots of wonderful bluegrass music got its start.  No, not some remote hillside in the Appalachians where guys in overalls play "Li'l Darlin' Pal of Mine" all day, but to the Deering banjo factory in Spring Valley CA, just east of San Diego.  Judy had just upgraded to a Deering banjo (it does sound great, even to my untrained ear), and since she was in San Diego for a conference, I got to tag along for a long weekend.  (The perks of being married to an academic librarian - oh, the places I get to go!)  The Deering factory gives tours, and we were both interested to see how banjos were made. 

We got there a half-hour early after stopping off at an In-n-Out Burger (they only do two things - burgers and fries - but they do them exceedingly well), and that gave us time to peruse the store.  They had 'em all - four strings, five strings, the long-neck banjos that Pete Seeger and the Kingston Trio made famous (does anyone ever bother with those lower frets?), and six-string banjo-guitars.  They had resonator banjos, open-back banjos, along with song books, hats, picks, CDs, DVDs, straps, about as much as you could ask for in a banjo store.

Our tour guide was Carolina, a 50-ish woman in jeans and red turtleneck.  She showed us the difference in sound between various banjos, answered a few questions, and then took us back into the factory.  Those in our tour group who didn't wear glasses had to wear safety goggles, and I was tempted to get a pair myself.  I've had these new lenses in my glasses for less than a week, and I didn't want to get them scratched up.  It turns out the goggles weren't needed, though.  So we went through the factory pretty much in a random order of assembly rather than starting at "this is where the wood comes in" and finishing at "the banjo has passed inspection, goes into its shipping box, and gets sent to a dealer.  Bye, banjo!"  Carolina's voice was also at the same range as the background noise of the factory, so her voice faded away before it ever hit my ears.  Judy and I nodded, looked interested, and peeked over the shoulders of the men hunkered away at their work stations.  (All men - the women-folk were all working up at the front office.  The division of labor there, like the music, bends toward the traditional.)  There was also time for some questions, and I tried to avoid the usual questions as well as the off-the-wall questions:

"Did'ja ever meet Bela Fleck / Earl Scruggs / Jerry Garcia / (insert name here)?"
"You hardly ever hear banjo in prog rock.  Why is that?"
"How come that one string only goes halfway down the neck?"
"Pete Seeger?  I've heard of him.  He sang 'Night Moves,' didn't he?"
"Know any good banjo jokes?"

We kind of got the bum's rush during the tour because the factory was expecting a local celebrity - Larry Himmel, a long-time local reporter and former south side Chicagoan. He and his camera crew arrived just as the tour finished, and the sight of all those banjos must have jarred his memory. "I grew up with this guy in Oak Lawn who was a really good banjo player. We went to high school together, we went to college together, and he just got nominated for a Grammy!"

I overheard the conversation. "You mean Greg Cahill?"

"Yes! That's him! Greg Cahill!"

"Well, my wife is currently taking banjo lessons with him!" Not only does Greg give great banjo lessons as shown by Judy's sense of excitement when she comes home afterwards, but Greg's band Special Consensus got a Grammy for Best Bluegrass album for Scratch Gravel Road. So I introduced Judy to Larry, and he left her a message to give to Greg, all while the camera was rolling.

Larry Himmel - San Diego local reporter since 1979 who felt
the time has come to tell the banjo's story.
We went back to the showroom and admired the banjos.  The prize banjo was a tenor banjo that had amazing inlay on the back and ran for a cool $38,000.  I was playing with a lesser-prized tenor banjo - only $11,000 - and was able to figure out a C chord, and from there I was playing a rather disjointed version of Neil Diamond's "Song Sung Blue."  (For those trying out an instrument with only a rudimentary knowledge of that instrument, "Song Sung Blue" is a good way to fake a sense of expertise.)

The back of a Deering tenor banjo, complete with gorgeous wood inlay and zirconium jewels.  Thirty-eight grand and it's yours.


All I need is a short-sleeved stiped shirt and I'm ready for the Kingston Trio.


Judy tries her hand with a banjo guitar.
We finished our visit with purchases of a few CDs (Carolina Chocolate Drops and John McEuen) for the rest of the trip, having forgotten to bring any CDs with us.  (Nothing says "incongruous" like an acoustic version of "Mr. Bojangles" booming out of a 2013 black Ford Mustang.)  But Judy was happy to see where her new banjo originated, I tried out a five-figure tenor banjo, so the trip was a big success.  Now if I could get Deering to make some left-handed models.

Do you think Judy is excited to visit?