#JazzChurch 43 – Sunday, February 21, 2021

Livestream Replay
bbebop · #JazzChurch 43 - Sunday, February 21, 2021
Playlist

#jazzchurch 43 – Sunday, February 21, 2021 – featured music by Abdullah Ibrahim, Charles Mingus, Bennie Maupin, Miles Davis, Gil Scott-Heron & Brian Jackson, and Michael Brecker, among others shown below:

  1. Sister Cheryl (Tony Williams)
  2. Good Morning (Robert Glasper)
  3. African Market Place (Abdullah Ibrahim)
  4. Humpty Dumpty (Akio Sasajima feat. Joe Henderson)
  5. From the Lonely Afternoons (Wayne Shorter)
  6. All Blues (Herbie Hancock)
  7. Goodbye Pork Pie Hat (Charles Mingus)
  8. Rhythm Man (Do Not Disturb) (Bebop & Beyond)
  9. Little Sunflower (Phil Ranelin)
  10. Vildgolia (Deaf, Dumb & Blind) (Gil Scott-Heron & Brian Jackson)
  11. Waltzin’ In (Freddie Redd)
  12. The Jewel In the Lotus (The Bennie Maupin Quartet)
  13. Early Reflections (The Bennie Maupin Quartet)
  14. Inner Sky (The Bennie Maupin Quartet)
  15. The Glide (Oregon)
  16. Seven Steps To Heaven (Miles Davis)
  17. The Nearness of You (Michael Brecker)
  18. Aisha (Sfjazz Collective)
  19. Easy Now (Orrin Evans)
  20. Don’t Let Me Be Lonely Tonight (Michael Brecker)
  21. So Near, So Far (Miles Davis)
  22. Tuskeegee #626 (Gil Scott-Heron & Brian Jackson)
  23. Racetrack in France (Gil Scott-Heron & Brian Jackson)
  24. Joshua (Miles Davis)
Apple Music Playlist

Here’s an Apple Music Playlist containing songs from this episode of #JazzChurch:

Next week’s #jazzchurch livestream can be found at postbop.com/jazzchurch Streaming live from 1-3ish PM PDT. Past episodes are available here as well.

Where else can I find #JazzChurch?
  • Postbop.com: Livestream plus audio archives and information for all past shows
  • Twitch Livestream: 1-3pm-ish PST on Sundays plus audio/video of recent shows
  • Soundcloud: Listen to past shows and subscribe to receive notifications and listen to future shows

I Write to Learn What I Think

They say the first draft is shit, so just put a whole lot of whatevers out there because you’re going to rewrite it anyway.

Not that I believe what “they” say, right?

I make mistakes. Sometimes they’re doozies! Which contradicts the idea there are no mistakes. I mean, if you learn something, was it a mistake?

Blah. Blah. Blah.

So here’s the deal. I post a lot of links to articles I read. Sometimes I even write a post myself. [I do love to write, you know.] Most of the time, if I post something, it’s because what I read or saw resonated with me in some way.

So what I learned recently was (besides the fact I start way, waay too many sentences with the word, “so.”)

So what I learned recently was some people (on my team? colleagues?) feel I’m hypocritical. They seem to think I post ideas that I don’t do myself. I don’t live up to what I post.

Seriously, people? I mean, “REALLY?”

When this criticism first danced across my brainwaves, I was like…

So I have this rule. Never, under any frakkin’ circumstances, never, ever be defensive. About anything! It just makes things worse. Including making other people defensive too.

So I hear the criticism, and I’m like, ARE YOU SERIOUS??? Apparently, yes, serious!

Here’s the thing. If I post something, it’s because it resonated with me. It made me think. Usually, it made me think about myself and what I don’t do. Or what I need to do more of. How I need to learn how to do exactly THAT thing described in the article or thoughts in sharing! Ya dig?

Man, I can hardly fathom the idea that I can’t share a thought unless I’m a perfect representative of that idea? That’s like, don’t you ever, in your whole life, ever. post. anything!

The good news? You know there’s gotta be some good news, right?

The good news is the feedback came with the suggestion, “I think you should keep posting, keep sharing.” Yeah, right, don’t let this little bit of whatever seep into your tiny pea-brain. Keep posting. Just know that some people think you are a total, complete, 100 percent, YEAH, PHONY!!! That is all.

Which right about now, 393 words into this rough draft, has me feeling like, “maybe I should rewrite before letting an editor look at this?” Because, they’re going to think this is shit and, by all the evidence presented herein, I’m shit and can’t write. Which is not what I want them – not to mention YOU – to think.

Still, I have this goal of writing 500 words a day, and I’m already up to 465. And, just so you know, the number “465” is considered a word. And now I’m all the way up to, well not exactly, but almost up to just about, let’s see, yes, 493 words. [It was 500 words, but, you know, editing!]

The end!


Note: I originally shared this three years ago (2/21/2018). It still feels right. I’ve since decided the title is where I’m at. I write as part of the process of figuring out what I think about things or what makes sense to me. That’s always been true. It goes without saying, but I’ll say it anyway: your mileage may vary!

I invite you to disagree with me. Hell, I may not even agree with me and I just wrote it! ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Thanks!

Black History Month via the Oregon Shakespeare Festival

The Origins of Black History Month

”We’re halfway into Black History Month, but any day is a great day to begin or continue your antiracist journey to support justice and joy! Here is a great reflection by Joy Reid about the origins of Black History Month, ‘Progress Isn’t Always Linear.’ And please explore the links to events and resources below.“

#workingonit!!!

#IWantMyTubmans!!!

Harriet Tubman $20 Bill Redesign to be Accelerated by Biden Administration - The New York Times

I purchased a calendar and coffee table book based on my old posts, demonstrating there just might could be a benefit to posting on Facebook almost every day for 10+ years! :-)

@kbuddyartist: “A squirrel and a cardinal in a standoff over the last sunflower seed” -@briancarterKC

The legendary cellist Pablo Casals was asked why he continued to practice at age 90. “Because I think I’m making progress,” he replied.

We must move beyond learning the tune to playing the song and then on to making music together.

I am testing!

𝐇𝐞𝐥𝐥𝐨 𝐂𝐫𝐮𝐞𝐥 𝐖𝐨𝐫𝐥𝐝

b͟l͟a͟h͟.͟ ͟b͟l͟a͟h͟.͟ ͟b͟l͟a͟h͟.͟

blah. blah. blah.

#JazzChurch 42 – Music of Chick Corea – Sunday, February 14, 2021

Note: See RIP Chick Corea for a little of my story about experiencing Chick’s music.


Livestream Replay
bbebop · #JazzChurch 42 - Music of Chick Corea - 2/14/2021
Playlist

#jazzchurch 42 – Sunday, February 14, 2021 – featured some of my favorite music by Chick Corea:

  1. Vulcan Worlds (Chick Corea)
  2. Spain (Chick Corea)
  3. Children’s Song (Chick Corea)
  4. 500 Miles High (Chick Corea)
  5. Return To Forever (Chick Corea)
  6. Crystal Silence (Chick Corea)
  7. Sorceress (Return To Forever)
  8. The Romantic Warrior (Return To Forever feat. Chick Corea)
  9. Waltse For Dave (Chick Corea)
  10. No Mystery (Return To Forever feat. Chick Corea)
  11. Interplay (eturn To Forever feat. Chick Corea)
  12. Celebration Suite Part II (Return To Forever feat. Chick Corea)
  13. Song To John, Part 1 (Stanley Clarke feat. Chick Corea)
  14. Song To John, Part 2 (Stanley Clarke feat. Chick Corea)
  15. Quartet No.1 (Chick Corea)
  16. Quartet No.3/Quartet No.2 (Chick Corea)
  17. Part 2 (Chick Corea)
  18. Windows (Chick Corea)
  19. Humpty Dumpty (Chick Corea)
  20. Terrain (Chick Corea Quartet)
  21. If I Should Lose You (Harvey Mason, Chick Corea & Dave Carpenter)
  22. Waltse For Dave (Chick Corea, Harvey Mason)
  23. Tones for Joan’s Bones (Chick Corea)
  24. On Green Dolphin Street (Chick Corea)
  25. Inner Urge (Joe Henderson feat. Chick Corea)
  26. Alice In Wonderland (Chick Corea Trio)
  27. Do You Ever (Return To Forever feat. Chick Corea)
  28. The Endless Night (Return To Forever feat. Chick Corea)
Apple Music Playlist

Here’s an Apple Music Playlist containing songs from this episode of #JazzChurch:

Give us some feedback on #jazzchurch.

Next week’s #jazzchurch livestream can be found at postbop.com/jazzchurch Streaming live from 1-3ish PM PDT. Past episodes are available here as well.

Where else can I find #JazzChurch?
  • Postbop.com: Livestream plus audio archives and information for all past shows
  • Twitch Livestream: 1-3pm-ish PST on Sundays plus audio/video of recent shows
  • Soundcloud: Listen to past shows and subscribe to receive notifications and listen to future shows

RIP Chick Corea

I first encountered Chick Corea in 1975. I had moved to Albany, NY, for a job in the State Assembly. I’m not sure how I first heard it, but “Vulcan Worlds” from the “Where Have I Known You Before” album by Return To Forever featuring Chick Corea became my song. Written by the band’s bassist, Stanley Clarke, it makes sense I would love it!

My wife and I went to see RTF at Russell Sage College in Troy. We arrived a bit early and walked to a store to get some soda (obviously Coke in my case). The concert started just as we were walking toward the auditorium through fog and mist. I loved hearing the first notes of Vulcan Worlds as we approached and settled into our seats! It was magic, and the concert did not disappoint!

We went to see Chick Corea perform duets with Herbie Hancock at Saratoga Performing Arts Center (or SPAC). Herbie introduced a song by saying they were going to make their pianos talk to each other. It was thrilling. We couldn’t hear the precise words, but it was a conversation in every way.

The next morning, I took a flight to NYC, and guess who was on the plane? Herbie Hancock and Chick Corea!! I got to tell them how much I enjoyed the concert the night before, especially the conversation between the pianos. I’ll always carry the smile on Chick’s face with me!

There was also a duet concert at SPAC featuring Chick and Gary Burton. When they came back out after a standing ovation following the set, Chick said something like, “Encore? What should we play?” My friend Reggie and I, without prompting or coordination, both stood up in our second-row seats, cupped our hands over our mouths, and shouted, SPAIN at the top of our lungs! Maybe we weren’t the only ones (we were first!!), and perhaps that was the obvious choice, but our very loud wishes came true.

We saw different RTF incarnations when we lived in NYC and saw Chick in San Francisco and twice here in Seattle. I subscribed to his online instruction channel for awhile.

Even though I saw Chick Corea perform live on many occasions, it’s his recorded music that reverberates through my being after years of incessant listening. I loved and will continue to love his many recordings, including new music I’m just discovering.

It has been wonderful to read all the thoughtful reflections on his life as a musician, friend, and person. There are a lot of lessons there. He lived a great life, one that can inspire all of us to live our lives to the fullest and to help others along the way. I love that idea.

Thanks for the music and your life of inspiration, Armando Anthony “Chick” Corea. RIP as you return to forever.


Note: #JazzChurch 42 episode (2/14/2021) featured some of Chick Corea’s music and performances that have resonated with me over the years.

Summer is coming! 🌨🏂🏔☃️

Coronavirus Mutations In Boston Patient May Hold Clues To Variant Origins : NPR

Okay, this is frightening!!! Occasionally there are reports of a mutation where the infected person has not traveled or been in contact with a recent traveler.

In other words, perhaps the coronavirus uses long-term infections as a mutational testing ground. While inside one person, the virus can try out all these different combinations of mutations and figure out, through trial and error, which ones are best at evading the immune system or helping the virus become more infectious.

Most of these viral versions probably don’t spread beyond the chronically infected patient. But every once in a while, as the theory goes, a variant gets lucky, infects a large number of people and launches a new whole stage of the pandemic.

And this process is likely happening again right now, worldwide, in other immunocompromised patients. Eventually, these new variants could mutate again and create even more dangerous forms of the coronavirus.

COVID-19 is improvising! Death is improvising!!

some thoughts on accountability

(a work in progress)

i hate the phrase “hold people accountable”

because it almost always means

hold other people accountable

when we should focus on
being accountable ourselves.

also

when employees ask/talk about accountability
they’re mostly reflecting on the

poor managers
poor supervisors
poor individual contributors

and

poor “leaders”

who stay in place

doing a poor job

year
after
year
after
year

and

who clearly aren’t being held
accountable.

when we don’t hold
people accountable,
we’re not being
accountable
ourselves.

and if we’re not accountable

we give others permission

we invite them

we encourage them

to not be accountable.

saying accountability starts with us

is actually wrong.

accountability starts with the person
in the mirror.

accountability starts with me.

if i have to hold people accountable,

that means

i don’t have accountable people

and should.

develop accountable people

starting with the person

in

the

mirror

etc., etc., etc., yadda yadda yadda, blah. blah. blah.

While testing microphone and music levels for Sunday’s edition of #JazzChurch, I found myself sauntering down memory lane…

Here are a few things you should know…

#JazzChurch 41 – Sunday, February 7, 2021

#jazzchurch 41 – Sunday, February 7, 2021 – featured music by John Coltrane, Betty Carter, Chet Baker, Tank and The Bangas, Erykah Badu, and Sade, among others shown below:

  1. Dahomey Dance (John Coltrane)
  2. I Love Music (Betty Carter)
  3. Hello Sunshine (Maceo Woods & The Christian Tabernacle Concert Choir)
  4. Ostinato (Suite For Angela) (Herbie Hancock)
  5. Neverend (Joshua Redman)
  6. Via Mwandishi (Christian McBride)
  7. Nubian Queen (Cornelius Claudio Kreusch - Black Mud Sound)
  8. India (John Coltrane)
  9. Go (Wayne Shorter)
  10. Weak (Gretchen Parlato)
  11. Obsequious (Alex Sipiagin, Boris Koslov, Antionio Sanchez & Adam Rogers)
  12. Arboretum (Tony Williams)
  13. Funk In Deep Freeze (Chet Baker)
  14. Boxes And Squares (Tank And The Bangas)
  15. Move On Up (Delvon Lamarr Organ Trio)
  16. Think Twice (Erykah Badu featuring Roy Hargrove)
  17. Appletree (Erykah Badu)
  18. Boogie Nights/All Night (Erykah Badu)
  19. Ana Maria (Wayne Shorter)
  20. Au Rêve (Cassius)
  21. Maureen (Sade)
  22. Funk Is Here to Stay (Amp Fiddler)
  23. You’ll Know When You Get There (Herbie Hancock)

Livestream Replay

bbebop · #JazzChurch 41 - Sunday, February 7, 2021
Here's an Apple Music Playlist containing songs from this episode of #JazzChurch:

Give us some feedback on #jazzchurch.

Next week’s #jazzchurch livestream can be found at postbop.com/jazzchurch Streaming live from 1-4ish PM PDT. Past episodes are available here as well.

Where else can I find #JazzChurch?

  • Postbop.com: Livestream plus audio archives and information for all past shows
  • Twitch Livestream: 1-3pm-ish PST on Sundays plus audio/video of recent shows
  • Soundcloud: Listen to past shows and subscribe to receive notifications and listen to future shows

Jaco Pastorius Quintet – Live in Toulouse

I spent part of my Saturday morning listening to this full-length live Pastorius concert (audio-only). I still miss Jaco, and know I’m not alone.

Tracklist:

  1. Mr P.C.
  2. Poly Wanna Rhythm
  3. Dolphin Dance
  4. Passion Dance
  5. Naima
  6. So What
  7. If You Could See Me Now
  8. Amerika / Purple Haze / La Marseillaise
  9. Hard Night Blues
  10. Fannie Mae

Personnel:

Jaco Pastorius - electric bass
Azar Lawrence - tenor sax
Paul Mousavizadeh - guitar
Jon Davis - piano
Brian Melvin - drums

Enjoy! I certainly did!!

You cannot get educated by this self-propagating system in which people study to pass exams, and teach others to pass exams, but nobody knows anything.

You learn something by doing it yourself, by asking questions, by thinking, and by experimenting. 🧠.
Prof. Richard Feynman

Again With Attitude!!

George Colligan, Buster Williams, and Lenny White! Man!!!

Once upon a time, while walking across Central Park South, a small crowd of people was standing in front of one of the hotels. As I passed by, the man standing in the middle and I made eye contact. We gave each other “the nod” often shared among black men in public. I smiled as I continued across town. That man was Muhammad Ali!

I’ll guess that was around 1982-3. I got to shake his hand a few years later when Ali was leaving a South Street Seaport restaurant I was about to enter.

#NewYorkStories

This Ain't QAnon, Baby!

The most familiar Q is portrayed by John de Lancie. He is an extra-dimensional being of unknown origin who possesses immeasurable power over time, space, the laws of physics, and reality itself, being capable of altering it to his whim.

Wikipedia

Happy Birthday, Langston Hughes (born in Joplin, Missouri on February 1, 1902)

I love this bit about humor:

“Humor is laughing at what you haven’t got when you ought to have it… what you wish in your secret heart were not funny, but it is, and you must laugh. Humor is your own unconscious therapy. Like a welcome summer rain, humor may suddenly cleanse and cool the earth, the air, and you.”.
Langston Hughes

Also see 10 Poems By Langston Hughes You Should Know - Kentake Page

One thing I learned last year is people love hearing music at the beginning and end of Zoom calls. I usually play some jazz, and sometimes hear the commenter say they wish we could delay the start of the meeting until the song ends.

Today my team got together to start unpacking the latest Employee Satisfaction Survey, and a colleague suggested this song. Quite a different take on satisfaction!

Hmmm…

Me: If my variances are varying together too much, I might have a case of heteroscedasticity.
Wife: “I’m not impressed!”

In any event, I was always better with multicollinearity, so I might’ve gotten that wrong…