Sunday, August 23, 2009

Here's my tribute to Les Paul who died last week at the age of 94. This photo was taken at the Iridium Jazz Club in midtown Manhattan in June, 2007. I only met him briefly while he posed for my photos, but what a warm, engaging man he was. We've lost a true genius, the inventor of the electric guitar, multi-track recording, tape looping, and other innovations. I think he was an underrated guitar player as well. RIP Les Paul.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

After the Gold Rush




These photos, part of my non-fiction story "The Time Machine in My Garage", are from my visit to the past in Silverton Colorado. In the photo above, you can see the town of Silverton in the reflection of the locomotive's headlight. Is it 1993 or 1923? Hard to tell but you can click on the photo to get a closer look.


The top photo is the Model T Ford that I photographed as it rushed to meet the train pulling into the Silverton Station from Durango.


Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Monday, March 2, 2009

Kind of Blue

Today, March 2, 2009 is the 50th anniversary of the recording of Miles Davis' "Kind of Blue", possibly the most influential LP recording ever made. Those who say that distinction belongs to The Beatles "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" have a point, but in my opinion, it's a hard one to make.

In the 1950's, jazz had evolved from its role as the popular music of the 30's and 40's. Big band swing was replaced by smaller combos playing bebop, hard bop and free form jazz as pioneered by Charlie Parker and John Coltrane. The saxophone had replaced the clarinet, coronet and trumpet as the primary lead instrument. The sax even became the icon of the avant-garde jazz movement, being shaped as it is like the letter "J".

By 1959, those at the leading edge of jazz had intentionaly distanced themselves from commercial popular music. Hard bop was frantic, complex, unstructured (or may have sounded so) and difficult for all but the illuminated to make an emotional connection to. Songs had become improvisations based on chord progressions. If there was a melody, it was left to the listener to find it.

Then on March 2, Miles Davis, never one to be comfortable in the current vernacular of jazz, picked up all of the rests, half-notes and whole notes that others left on the studio floor and began playing and improvising off of melodies. Modal Jazz. Birth of the Cool.

Within a couple years, Miles moved on again, leaving modal jazz to Brubeck and the "West Coast Sound", but "Kind of Blue" remains as the highest selling jazz record of all time. And for good reason. Miles helped millions reconnect to jazz. I'm glad to be one of them

God bless you Miles, and thank you.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Model: Plain Jayne Jones

Thursday, February 19, 2009

The Octave

Musician and composer, Steve Fentriss

Monday, February 16, 2009

Mauna Kea

Japanese climbers ascend to the highest spot in the Pacific Ocean, Mauna Kea on the island of Hawai'i.

Sunday, February 15, 2009

My Hometown

The old school house in Dixboro, Michigan