Thursday, December 30, 2010

Vivian Maier

Here's something that doesn't happen every day. Vivian Maier, a Chicago nanny who passed away in 2009, has been discovered to be a closet street photographer, working from the 1950s to 1990s. Based on a just a scratching of the surface of some 100,000 negatives, her work looks to be absolutely masterful. Here is a clip from a recent Chicago TV broadcast on Vivian:


Read more on the tribute blog started by John Maloof, who discovered her work at an auction. The blog includes John's story of the discovery, plus links to other media commentary on her photography.

Saturday, December 25, 2010

The Blizzard

Camera Obscura (Scottish indie poppers of Honey In The Sun fame) covers this 1964 Jim Reeves Christmas classic:

Monday, December 20, 2010

Sorrowful Songs, More ...

Last month, we marked Henryk Gorecki's passing with this remembrance. Today, I came upon a worthy addendum to that piece, this done by the blog of the ASC (American Society of Cinematographers.)

Sunday, December 19, 2010

A New Joy


I have mentioned this before. I just finished a hearing of the Estonian Chamber Orchestra Choir's A New Joy - Orthodox Christmas, a collection of Orthodox Russian church music that had been suppressed by the Communist government in the past. This CD is just about "perfect" on all counts: wonderful source material, spellbinding performance and exquisite recording. We found it about four years ago; I think it might have been cited by David Stabler of The Oregonian. Still is the go-to Christmas music I recommend to anyone who asks. You can get a lo-fi preview here.

Friday, December 17, 2010

Captain Beefheart, Gone For Now

I remember when I brought my first Don Van Vliet (aka Captain Beefheart) album, Trout Mask Replica, home to my late 60s Hollywood apartment, where a co-worker had stopped by to drop off some papers and asked how I could possibly listen to that stuff. I wondered how he couldn't. I came upon Beefheart through his association with the wonderful Frank Zappa. When I hear people like Dr. John and Tom Waits, the Captain often comes to mind. Beefheart was a sort of psychedelic blues musician and an avant-garde precursor to punk. He was a poet, sculptor and painter (one of my treasures would be his Doc At The Radar Station album that features cover art that Beefheart painted himself). Captain Beefheart died today, but let's see if we can find some Captain Beefheart for you now:



More ...



Here's a piece from the LA Weekly blog today: "Top 14 Reasons Why Captain Beefheart Was a True American Genius".

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Hallelujah

Wednesday night, Leonard Cohen performed at the Rose Garden in Portland, a performance that I missed, even though it greatly pained me to do so. (Check out The Oregonian's run-up piece and review.) Nevertheless ...

Last night, winding down on a Friday from a week of intense work, I sat back for a bit of my kind of luxurious living -- five hours of uninterrupted music. Earlier in the day, friend Jamesa brought me a surprise in the form of a new DVD documenting a 1972 tour of Leonard Cohen. Entitled, Bird On A Wire, the film is said to have languished in storage by Cohen's manager, Marty Marchat, until Marchat's death when Cohen acquired and hid it away, only recently turning it over to the original director, Tony Palmer, for re-edit and completion. Now released, Kim and I starting watching at about 7pm, followed by a hearing of just about every Leonard Cohen album that I have so far committed and converted to my FLAC library, finally slipping off to bed around 1am.

The film, while ragged in places and including some unneeded VietNam footage, does show Cohen in very human form, and is undoubtedly a must-see for any serious Cohen fan.

Arising at 6am with Leonard still resonating in my head, I started prowling the Web for more backstory on the film while listening to still more that we had not heard by bedtime. Then, at the National Film Board of Canada website, I discovered this 1964 documentary, "Ladies and Gentlemen... Mr. Leonard Cohen":




This early film is quite intriguing and even shows Cohen's youthful skills as a stand-up comic. Another must-see, but be warned: this 44-minute online experience needs pretty decent bandwidth Internet connection.

More on Leonard Cohen: http://eyeavenue.blogspot.com/2009/09/happy-birthday-leonard.html