music clip of the day

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Month: October, 2012

Sunday, 10/21/12

Here are a couple more takes on a song we heard the other day.

“I Couldn’t Hear Nobody Pray”

Fisk University Jubilee Quartet, 1909 (first known recording)

*****

Wiley College A Cappella Choir, live, 2010
The Shores at Wesley Manor, Ocean City, New Jersey

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lagniappe

musical thoughts

“Couldn’t Hear Nobody Pray; couldn’t hear nobody pray; way down yonder by myself; couldn’t hear nobody pray.” This “spiritual” was sung as part of a brilliant system of signals devised by men and women attempting an escape from the clutches of American slavery. The song’s coded meaning was, “An escape attempt has failed. We’re all trying to re-group, emotionally and spiritually.”
(http://ctl.du.edu/spirituals/freedom/coded.cfm).
The unfortunate persons singing this lament found themselves in imminent danger. Their best plans toward freedom had not worked; and there existed an immediate need for help, for direction, for protection, for divine intervention. They needed to hear somebody pray!

Vivian M. Lucas

Saturday, 10/20/12

passings

David S. Ware, saxophonist, composer, bandleader
November 7, 1949-October 18, 2012

“Mikuro’s Blues,” live, Europe, 200?*

*****

Live, Lithuania (Vilnius), 2007*

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lagniappe

reading table

“Variations On A Text By Vallejo”
By Donald Justice (1925-2004)

Me moriré en Paris con aguacero …

I will die in Miami in the sun,
On a day when the sun is very bright,
A day like the days I remember, a day like other days,
A day that nobody knows or remembers yet,
And the sun will be bright then on the dark glasses of strangers
And in the eyes of a few friends from my childhood
And of the surviving cousins by the graveside,
While the diggers, standing apart, in the still shade of the palms,
Rest on their shovels, and smoke,
Speaking in Spanish softly, out of respect.

I think it will be on a Sunday like today,
Except that the sun will be out, the rain will have stopped,
And the wind that today made all the little shrubs kneel down;
And I think it will be a Sunday because today,
When I took out this paper and began to write,
Never before had anything looked so blank,
My life, these words, the paper, the gray Sunday;
And my dog, quivering under a table because of the storm,
Looked up at me, not understanding,
And my son read on without speaking, and my wife slept.

Donald Justice is dead. One Sunday the sun came out,
It shone on the bay, it shone on the white buildings,
The cars moved down the street slowly as always, so many,
Some with their headlights on in spite of the sun,
And after awhile the diggers with their shovels
Walked back to the graveside through the sunlight,
And one of them put his blade into the earth
To lift a few clods of dirt, the black marl of Miami,
And scattered the dirt, and spat,
Turning away abruptly, out of respect.

*****

*With Matthew Shipp (piano), William Parker (bass), Guillermo Brown (drums).

Friday, 10/19/12

only rock ’n’ roll

The Ex & Brass Unbound,* live, Dublin, 2010

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lagniappe

last night

He read at the Art Institute of Chicago, where I sat rapt and happy.

Seamus Heaney, “Postscript,” Dublin, 2011

*****

*Mats Gustafsson (baritone saxophone), Ken Vandermark (tenor saxophone), Wolter Wierbos (trombone), Roy Paci (trumpet).

Thursday, 10/18/12

 fasten your seatbelt

Here’s another take on a piece we listened to the other day.

Alfred Schnittke (1934-98), Concerto Grosso No. 1 (excerpt); A Far Cry with guests Nelson Lee (violin), Meg Freivogel (violin), and Andrus Masden (harpsichord, prepared piano); live, Boston, 2009

(This entire performance can be heard here.)

Wednesday, 10/17/12

 father & son

“I Never Asked To Be Your Mountain” (T. Buckley)

Tim Buckley (1947-75), recording (Goodbye and Hello), 1969

*****

Jeff Buckley (1966-97), live, New York, 1991

Tuesday, 10/16/12

alone

Tristan Murail (1947-), “Unanswered Questions,” 1995
Erin Lesser, flute (Winter Fragments, Argento Chamber Ensemble, 2007)

Monday, 10/15/12

Over eleven hundred posts and still I haven’t even touched on so many who meant so much to me when I was young—younger than my sons are now.

Tim Buckley (1947-75), singer, songwriter, guitarist

“Venice Beach (Music Boats by the Bay),” live (TV show, Los Angeles), 1970

*****

“Sing A Song For You,” live (TV show, BBC), 1969

*****

“Gypsy Woman,” recording (Happy Sad), 1969

Sunday, 10/14/12

Bobby testifies.

The Womack Brothers (with Bobby, then 17, on lead vocal), “Couldn’t Hear Nobody Pray” (SAR Records [Sam Cooke’s label]; rec. 6/28/1961, Universal Recording Studios, Chicago)

*****

The next year, as the Valentinos, they recorded this.

The Valentinos (with Bobby on lead vocal), “Lookin’ For A Love” (SAR Records, 1962)

Saturday, 10/13/12

street music: outskirts of Tehran

Violinist, c. 2009

Friday, 10/12/12

Singers who come out of gospel bring something to everything they touch—conviction.

Bobby Womack, live (Later . . . with Jules Holland, BBC), 10/2 & 5/12

“Please Forgive My Heart” (B. Womack & R. Russell)

***

“The Bravest Man in the Universe” (B. Womack & R. Russell)

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lagniappe

reading table

my home village
even behind the outhouse
pure water gushes

—Kobayashi Issa, 1812 (translated from Japanese by David G. Lanoue)