Rousseau and Brockman

image Brother at arms, saxophonists extraordinaire Eugene Rousseau and Michael Brockman were captured in this picture at my sax instructors’ Master’s of Music program in Oregon in 2004. Both men are educators as well as world-class saxophonists. And I’ve long had this on my computer but not shared it.

I’ve met Michael in person but not Eugene. I’ve heard more of Eugene’s stuff and even have worked on some of the music he made famous. I have no excuse for not hearing more by Michael.

For example yesterday Michael joined some other Seattle renown saxophonists to perform as part of the Seattle Sax Orchestra’s debut concert. I can’t complain too much, I was at a big band gig and one that I was paid to participate in. Truth be known, had I not already been booked when I got the invite to hear the SSO, I would have turned down the paid gig.

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This picture by Bill Stickney captures one of the practice sessions. I know Paul Woltz, Scott Granlund, and Jay Easton. I’ve met the others in this picture but they probably wouldn’t recognize me if I walked by them on the street. I hope to hear and see the video recordings that were going to be taken. I hope that worked out.

Posted in Classical, Music, Music Instruments, Saxophone, soprillo | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Sundays are for recharging your batteries

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In the morning a man walks with his whole body; in the evening, only with his legs. ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson

My Sunday don’t vary much and is designed by me to be relaxing. It starts with a late wake up where I finally grab my glasses and Amelia wanders up from the end of the bed to lick my face. She really likes her head to be scratched.

Speed ahead 30 minutes and I am in the library, watching CBS Sunday Morning, sipping a cup o’ joe, and catching up on the Internet places like Hotmail, Facebook, and some choice blogs. Amelia is a sleep at my feet. Walking her every morning benefits both of us.

SavannahBdayLife’s little pleasures are appreciated even more if most of the week is about work, chores, and other activities. I do tend to keep a busy schedule and even schedule long overdue special projects for the weekends. But I refuse to give up my Sundays to any of this stuff.

Lunch time will bring the family together for lunch at our favorite place. Food, drink, and kids, this is a special time. I usually give each grandchild a dollar and then dutifully follow them around as they make the often hard thought out purchases. Suzy and Josie spend the time talking while the rest of us wander the mall.

The day will end with Suzy and me sharing some of our favorite TV shows that we recorded earlier in the week; Survivor, Castle, and the Mentalist for example. I often wonder if I will enjoy weekends as much when I retire and don’t have work to go to Monday. Does the threat of  work make Sunday that much more delicious. I should ask my retired sister.

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Time Enough for Love

A friend of mine sent me a pointer to a real nice article about body paint which lead me to this NSFW article. Like the Fremont Solstice Parade, there are a lot of people who would rather sport paint than clothing.

One of my favorite science fiction writers was Robert Heinlein. IIRC, in one of his books, Time Enough for Love, he predicted the use of paint for shirts in the work place. I applaud his vision, but suspect that any company that allowed that fashion would find a lot of personnel issues crop up. Distraction would most like be the least of their worries.

The Sports Illustrated magazine’s now famous Swimsuit edition features body paint swimsuits—it has done that for years now. Sports Illustrated is a North American sports media company with over 3.5 million subscribers. The magazine is read by 23 million adults each week, including over 18 million men. (This picture was part of the 2011 Sports Illustrated swimsuit edition featuring body paint swimsuits.)

It was the first magazine with circulation over one million to win the National Magazine Award for General Excellence twice. Its swimsuit issue, which has been published since 1964, is now an annual publishing event that generates its own television shows, videos and calendars.

The swimsuit issue was invented by Sports Illustrated editor Andre Laguerre to fill the winter months, a typically slow point in the sporting calendar. He asked fashion reporter Jule Campbell to go on a shoot to fill space, including the cover, with a beautiful model. The first issue, released in 1964, entailed a cover featuring Babette March and a five-page layout.

Campbell soon became a powerful figure in modeling and molded the issue into a media phenomenon by featuring “bigger and healthier” California women and printing the names of the models with their photos, beginning a new supermodel era. Who knew men would like a swimsuit magazine? <smile> Actually I read the statistics somewhere that 33% of the people that buy the swimsuit issue are women and Sports Illustrated earns 7% of their annual revenue from this single issue.

Posted in Entertainment, Health and wellness, Man stuff, Sun bathing, YouTube | Tagged , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Lament in Bb: Soloist Block

Picture 280Ever wonder why more players can’t solo? I do. I used to think I was a decent soloist. That was until I started taking lessons. I’m in year 5 of lessons and I find that now that I understand more about theory, I am loath to solo. I think, why do I have that nanny goat vibrato that I’m working so hard to tame? Why did I think the 9th would sound so good there? Why am I playing so many kinds of instruments that I never become great on one?

Ever hear of writer’s block? Well this is the same thing but for a musician. And like writer’s block the fix is doing what comes hard to you a lot. To be a good soloist you must have the passion and drive to work for years to make it work. Taking lessons is not enough; it’s time on horn that is focused and therefore contributes to a successful learning experience.

soprillo_10I’m not there yet. I have all the excuses you normally hear; full-time job, full-time family, too much TV and other distractions that come from being alive. Today I was asked to pass a solo for a gig off to a more qualified soloist because I didn’t get it right in practice when I had a week to prepare. I spend about a half hour on the solo plus 20 minutes with an instructor. That isn’t enough time for a hobbyist such as myself.

Yesterday I was listening to two saxophone peers in the community band I belong to. Five years ago these two ladies didn’t vibrato, their instruments didn’t sing, the solos were uninspired. Technically, they both were at that time and still better readers and have a firmer grasp on internal pulse that I do. DSCF0288Now they are better than me at soloing. Their vibrato is lovely and breathtaking. How did that happen? I’m constantly thinking they set a high bar to beat. Fortunately it also gives me the impetus to work harder on my solos.

Most people who know me would be surprised that this bothers me so much. I get a lot of playing time, a lot of soloing opportunities and on a lot of instruments. But deep inside I think I know I could do better. So I will continue to take lessons, play in more bands than I probably have time to do well, and work on increasing my time on my many instruments. And every once in a while, I’ll nail a solo so well that it will spur me on to keep striving to be a better player.

Posted in Clarinet, Health and wellness, Hobbies, Saxophone, Seattle, soprillo | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Ngram Viewer: Most Popular Instrument Ever!

I have been playing around with Google’s Book Ngram Viewer. There is a nice and humorous introduction on this TED video, What we learned from 5 million books. It’s an addicting tool that lets you search for words and ideas in a database of 5 million books from across centuries.

Ngram Viewer works rather simply. After you enter a word or phrase (up to five words), the tool displays a graph charting how frequently your term has appeared in books over that half a millennium. By default, the Ngram Viewer taps into books written in English. But you can change that to a different “corpus” or category of books, such as American English, British English, English Fiction, Chinese, French, German, Russian, or Spanish.

You can vary the years tracked, all the way from 1500 to 2008 or anywhere in between. Providing a wide range of years gives you more of an overview, while narrowing the years lets the tool graph a word’s usage in a more granular fashion year by year.

You can enter multiple terms to compare their popularity. For example, typing the two terms “frankfurter” and “hot dog” shows that frankfurter’s usage has remained steady over the years, but the hot dog has continued to jump in popularity since the early 1920s.

But although the Ngram Viewer can tell you how frequently a certain word or phrase has shown up in books, it can’t tell you why. Nor can it necessarily explain the meaning of that word or phrase at the time it was used. So discovering that the word “android” first appeared in books in the mid-18th century is interesting, but did it mean the same to an Enlightenment reader that it does to someone in the era of Google?

You can, however, select a certain year or range of years to view a page that lists the books with your chosen word or phrase. By clicking on a specific book you can see the actually digitized pages, which in some cases can provide a bit of insight into how the word was used at the time.

Read more: http://news.cnet.com/8301-1023_3-20025979-93.html#ixzz1YVsRs013

So I thought I’d do a search from 500 billion words that the Ngram Viewer has added to their database. First I searched for the most popular instrument from a choice of Sax, trumpet, trombone, and clarinet. I got this:

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Trumpet wins albeit on a very superficial search criteria. But wait… how about from and more popular instrument grouping: sax,piano,violin, and guitar? When we do that search we find:

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Piano dwarfs the saxophone hits. During the mid 1800s the saxophone was invented and I would have expected a much bigger up tick in books. Hey, Google’s Ngram Viewer is kind of interesting.

Posted in Education, Music Instruments, Research, Saxophone, TED, Video | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Sold: Howarth S30C English Horn

I surprised Suzy with this instrument, a Howarth S20C Grenadilla English Horn, for Christmas a while back. It took Kessler & Sons Music a while to find it but they got it just in time. Suzy plays clarinet, sax, flute, and oboe and our band needed an occasional English Horn solo covered. But after I purchased it for us we found out how many English Horn players there are in the Seattle area. Here is an English Horn solo for your consideration.

So I am offering it for sale at a significant discount from new. I will be listing it on eBay at a starting price of $3500 plus shipping. This is a lightly used instrument that many English Horn players would aspire to own. If you would like to forgo the eBay listing ping me now. Here are some pictures to whet your appetite:

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The three reeds were made by a professor who’s name I have since forgotten. The end corks have wood caps, shown in picture. The bocal is a #2. Cheers.

Update: this is now listed on eBay at http://www.ebay.com/itm/Howarth-English-Horn-S20C-/130583372698?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item1e6760239a

Posted in Hobbies, Music Instruments, Photograph | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments

“In the Mood” theater run, take two

This year wife Suzy (tenor, clarinet), friend Bob (bass bone), friend Bill (lead trumpet), and I (alto & bari sax, sop & bass clarinet) will be a part of the “In the Mood” big band. It is a theater show based on the USO performances of the past. Music, vocalists, comedian, and lots of fun. I wonder if the cat will run through the sax section again this year?

Here are some of the posts about that experience last year:

So as Suzy and I practiced this week we came across Duke’s rendition of the Nutcracker Suite. As the bari player, I’m just luvin’ it! (Thank you for throwing it in the mix Terry!)

The bass clarinet stuff is starting to come back. I only double on clarinet so I really have to work hard to make sure the rest of the band think it is my primary instrument.  Surprised smile

This is my bass clarinet so I’m halfway there—it practically plays itself!

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Posted in Band, Big Band, Clarinet, Saxophone, Theater | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Sleep, perchance to dream…

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Calling Batman, or why we need heroes

“Should any political party attempt to abolish social security, unemployment insurance, and eliminate labor laws and farm programs, you would not hear of that party again in our political history…There is a tiny splinter group, of…a few Texas oil millionaires, and an occasional politician. Their number is negligible and they are stupid.” ~ Dwight Eisenhower

As we observe the tenth anniversary of 9/11 there is nothing else on the news. It is especially sad as the media highlights the parentless children. So many of them talk about their fallen Dad being their hero. The copy reads like a graphic novel. We need our heroes.

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Now the political season is ramping up for another presidential campaign. The venom and poison being spewed is horrific. Wannabe’s who have never done anything are queuing up to be our next president. It would be laughable if it weren’t so sad. And each of the candidates are diss’ing the current president and the job he’s done. Obama has dealt with a very nasty time in our history. The same people who say he isn’t fixing the US economic problems fast enough are voting down the fixes that might cure the situation.

batman_thekillingjoke_2But the homo sapiens (knowing man) is an optimistic species with a short memory. Most of us will be hitting the mute button for the nastiness that results from  the campaign show. And when it comes time to vote, we will vote as we always have, often as our parents did, for the candidate that comes closest to what we perceive as the truth.

Some of us will rally around a candidate as if she or he were a hero, infallible, the holder and enforcer of the truth, and the one the will bring us closer to nirvana. In 2000 and 2004 that was Mr. Bush, the good ole boy candidate. Those who voted for him hoped for a Christian country, with huge cuts in government, and breaks for the rich corporations and people (now labeled the job makers). Batman would have a hard time winning this campaign.

“America was composed of two distinct groups: the rich and the rest. And for the purposes of investment decisions, the second group didn’t matter; tracking its spending habits or worrying over its savings rate was a waste of time. All the action in the American economy was at the top: the richest 1 percent of households earned as much each year as the bottom 60 percent put together; they possessed as much wealth as the bottom 90 percent; and with each passing year, a greater share of the nation’s treasure was flowing through their hands and into their pockets. It was this segment of the population, almost exclusively, that held the key to future growth and future returns.” ~ Can the Middle Class be Saved?

In 2008 the country deserted Mr. Bush’s political party in huge numbers. But the legacy of that failed presidency will live on for decades. In came Mr. Obama, our first black president, and arguably a hero by most of our definitions. But even those who had held so much hope for his tenure were disappointed to discover he was a moderate with slight left leanings.

imageAs president, Obama signed economic stimulus legislation in the form of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act in February 2009 and the Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization, and Job Creation Act in December 2010. Other domestic policy initiatives include the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, the Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, the Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell Repeal Act and the Budget Control Act of 2011.

In foreign policy, he gradually withdrew combat troops from Iraq, increased troop levels in Afghanistan, signed the New START arms control treaty with Russia, ordered enforcement of the United Nations-sanctioned no-fly zone over Libya, and issued a direct order to a small group of American military forces to kill al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in Pakistan.

BikeWarfareBut the folks who voted for Mr. Bush are back. The corporations and rich need a new president who will take care of the “job makers”. In a time when the country cannot afford to be the world policeman because our infrastructure is crumbling and our citizens need assistance to feed themselves, the Republicans have called the poor and crippled insignificant, the teachers overpaid, and social security a drain on US resources that could be used to fund the defense of the US by way of bigger Armies, massive terror fighting agencies, huge border fences to be the number one priority.

Think this is hyperbole? Is it possible, that the Republican’s would target more taxes from the poor? World of Class Warfare – The Poor’s Free Ride Is Over

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The ugly truth is most people are not informed, don’t follow politics, and believe it or not, don’t even vote. Things have to get pretty bad for people to get off the Lazy Boy and go register to vote. With so many people unemployed, struggling to make ends to meet, imagewithout health insurance, you would think they might rise up and get a president elected who cared about them more than the rich, fat cats and corporations.

Unfortunately I don’t see that; I see another Bush-lite like Perry or uneducated like Bachmann becoming our next president. And I see them being elected by both the rich class and the ignorant bastards who would rather have a worthless friend in office than a balanced, fair president. Because, hey, even if the good ole boy can’t get the job done, he sure does provide a lot of comedians with funny stories to tell. We really need a hero to step up and not a Batty Man.

Posted in Economics, graphic novel, News and politics, Politics, United States | Tagged , , , , , , | 5 Comments

The Replacement Peavey Bass Guitar

Amazon had a Labor day sale on guitars so I sprung for this Peavey Bass Guitar to replace the guitar that one of my brothers convinced me his son needed. Well, my nephew was graduating from high school. I did say no, but didn’t stick to my guns. That bass guitar only cost me $50 from a pawn shop—it was such a sweet player with a nice feel. I thought I could find a another one, but alas, no such luck.

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The Millennium BXP 4 Tiger-eye I chose didn’t cost me as much as they are selling it for this week because of a 20% labor day discount. At less than $200 this instrument will never be an heirloom, but it will be nice looking and functional. It’s features included:

    • 34 inch scale
    • Hard rock maple neck with rosewood fret board
    • 2 way fully adjustable torsion rod
    • Basswood body with highly figured quilt maple top
    • Two straight single coil pickups, hum canceling when used together

I liked that it has a passive pickup system which means no more futzing with batteries. It arrived in pristine but unplayable condition. This is often the case with new instruments of any ilk sold by non-music shops. Fortunately my other brother, the luthier, had given me the ABCs of buying a decent instrument. Unfortunately he lives in Texas so getting him to tweak the neck and string heights will be a challenge.

imageI looked for an instrument that I had played before so that I would know how it felt in my hands. This feel is important because if you don’t do this you will often end up replacing the offending instrument which will almost always cost you more in the long run.

I also look for a guitar with a good adjusting rod in the neck. Instruments warp and bend, especially wood imageinstruments. Having an adjustable truss bar gives you the ability to adjust and tweak as the guitar ages. (Pictures: Parson’s Diablo, a guitar whisperer’s dream ride)

There are some good bass guitar adjustment guides out there. Although I have been known to play around with guitars and basses, I am not a player. I am also not mechanically inclined. The price for a basic setup in Seattle is $65 which seems a bit high to me for setting up a new instrument. But what do I know?

If my brother isn’t gonna be in town anytime soon, and I have a need to make this instrument available, I may just have to spring for the setup costs. Or maybe I can get my friend Fran to do it for me.  ;0)

Posted in Guitar, Hobbies, Man stuff, Music Instruments, My World, Toys | Tagged , , , , | 4 Comments