Thankfulness

I visited David Rages on Wednesday and Thursday.  It’s my annual tradition for celebrating Thanksgiving.  I should also mention that I celebrate Christmas and Easter in a similar manner.  David deep fries turkeys.  But, he’s got it down to a science that will turn a vegetarian to the tastes he creates.  It’s both the technique of deep frying the bird, along with his secret marinade sauce.

Of course, the reality is that before Thanksgiving and on 13 November 2015 a disgusting act of cowardice, stupidity, ignorance, and un-Godliness (call Him or Her Allah of Jehovah or YaWay of whatever) occurred in the assassination of innocents occurred by and through scum.

In tribute to those fallen and that moment, Ric Louchard performed a lament.  Here it is for all who truly understand righteousness, love and peace.  Sorrows for love …

1311 Lament

 

I Made It!

Last night’s drive to San Francisco was a “trip” to say the least.  Lots of accidents on Northbound 101, cut through neighborhoods to get to 280 only to be met with a row of red tail lights.  But, the good news is I made it in 1.5 hours + a few seconds and …. lo and behold!  A parking space right in front of the restaurant.

The first set was great.  The second set ended in a train wreck.  I’m not sure how … well, that not true.  I’m not sure when …. well, actually I sensed the moment … I’m not sure where … well … actually, I know where I was.  The end was a train wreck and I think I know how, where and when and why it happened.

The incident reminds me of something a friend and fellow musician said:  “Don’t even pick up the instrument if you think you’ll not have a melt down on stage.”

Why it happens:  Lack of listening to the space.  The space will define where the beginning of the tune is.  But, you’ve got to listen to an entire chorus + to be sure you know exactly where you are, or where the rest of us are.  It’s a bit of advice I’ll pass on to the team.

Meanwhile, we did make some real pleasurable moments before the derailment. And, I got dinner + gas money + a couple of bucks for a pizza.  Cheers!

Tonight …

I’m about to embark on the trudge to San Francisco.  Seems like I dislike driving these days.  It’s kind of tiring.  But, in order to play music, sacrifice is often required.

At my small birthday party, hosted by Marilyn Scott, I was presented with a birthday card custom made by her.  She always does that.  She’s my biggest fan!  I’m pleased to share what she gave me, a card with an image of me.

Here’s a picture of me launching into music around 2002 – 3.  I was jamming with the Talons:  David Rages, Tony Rodrigues, Jeff Carr and William Jackson.  Dave’s cousin is Mark Wright and I was so pleased to be able to play with him on occasion, as facilitated by Dave.  We did a great gig in Mountain View at the Afrobean (sp?) Feastival.  Sadly, Mountain View stopped having the festival a few years later.  But, in that moment, the jam was on and it was hot!

Talons 2003

Honestly, folks … this is the way music is supposed to be.

Reflections

Now that I’ve passed the milestone of 70 years, I feel somewhat complete.  It’s not the 70 years on the planet that defines destiny.  Rather, it’s reaching 71 years of age and finding a photograph of my father, probably taken around 1947 or 1948, as best I can tell.  At four years of age, I began to have consciousness of recall.  I recall and remember learning the A,B, C’s, climbing stairs, being in the neighborhood with other kids, chased by a bad dog, learning to ride a bicycle, nice little girls who lived down stairs and experiences like that.  I recall is listening to Ravelle’s Balero,  playing the records over-and-over again on a 78 record player, sitting down and playing on a Wurlitzer upright piano and having to go to church on Sundays.

Charlie E E Channel Sr at 714 Center Street, Oakland, CA circa 1944

This is a picture of my Dad.  Fun loving, hard working foreman at Moore’s Dry Dock in Oakland, California.

I’d misplaced the picture some years ago but I managed to look where I last remembered putting it and rediscovered an image of reality that defines my own existence:  Born an African American by a father and mother who were somehow different from others in terms of their love and loyalty for each other and other human beings.  So, finding the picture completes the awareness of my reality and existence.

The lesson is simple:  Intelligence randomly distributes. Some are born leaders and lovers of life, regardless of opportunities restricted by ignorance, stupidity, prejudice and arrogance.   That’s the point.  Period.

Ye Bastards of Commerce … the Attempter-Destroyer of Happiness

I had the wonderful pleasure of attending a concert presented by Youssou N’dour on Saturday evening.  It was my birthday present!

One songs he and his band performed featured “happiness” as the vibe and I loved it.  As I’ve told others, music is wired in my brain so that it presents measurable pleasure.  And, so it was that I was inspired by Youssou’s vibe and was working out the muse on keyboards.

The interruption occurred from the telephone ringing.  Annoyed I asked, “What do you want?” and “What are you doing?” in terrible Spanish.  The resulting interaction with the solicitor was ad hominid pitiful diatribe that informed me that my Spanish was terrible, that I was a Bitch and a Motherfucker.  I’ve no problem with that.

My Spanish is terrible.  I’ve been a Bitch when I was in charge of my household with a disabled wife for several years (cooking for everyone, cleaning and holding down a full time job) and, of course, not only Mexicans but African American brothers and others have rendered the other compliment about my prowess with mothers and females.  Of course, I told him, in Spanish, that my own mother was dead (long ago deceased).

The truth is that at one point in my young life as a human, I learned the following rhyme that I lived and survived by in the neighborhood and  conditions in which I grew up:

“Sticks and stone may break my bones, but words will never hurt me.”

Times have, obviously changed.  And, I guess that’s why some complain about political correctness as that’s not their world view.  And therein lies the difference.  I am old. I am old school.

So, I’d ask the solicitor to come to my house and say it to my face if he dares.  I’m quite the public person and he knows who I am and, therefore, where I live.  I’ll tell him that to his face.  I’d just hasten to remind him that where I have survived over t he past 20+ years was, once, the murder capital of the U.S.

But the ultimate insult was that I am a terrible pianist.  I didn’t have the heart, time or opportunity to tell him that (1) I am not a pianist, (2) what he was hearing in the background was the jazz organ patch on my Yamaha (not a piano) and (3), as a musician, I’m not too worried about anything except getting back to the happiness I was recording.  He angrily hung up.

But, wait.  There’s more.  I live by the Four Agreements:

  •  Speak with integrity
  • Take nothing personally
  • Make no assumption
  • Do the best you can.

Those are the keys to the mastery of love and, thereby, life.   Conqur the predators.  Avoid the creditors.

Commerce off.

WHY AM I PAYING FOR A SERVICE THAT

ENABLES  AND EMPOWERS OTHERS TO

INTERRUPT ME?

I remembered:  “It you don’t like what’s on, turn it off!”   It’s the Silence of the Ringer.

Onward, in silence. Keep calling  and expending the irreplaceable time of your lives ye Bastards of Commerce.

Happiness on.

The Muse

The Muse is a living spirit entity.  It manifests through the human experience of life.  It sustains those who recognize its existence within themselves.  In its manifestation through one living being (serving as a conduit of its existence and life) it is received by another whose is aware  experiences reciprocal emotional exchange.

It’s forms are universal and many.  They’re called “genres.” Musically, the Muse speaks through and to everything living, one way or another. That the Muse has a sense of humor is equivalent to saying, and meaning truthfully, that life itself enables us to enjoy and experience its humor, irony and joy.

I present to you the evidence:

 

Song for Donne by Jan Leslie Mathias Channel

The times we live in are abundant in change. However, capsule at the core of change is motion. Motion does not change. Although that appears as a paradox, motion is actually, simultaneously, a constant.

Some are wise enough to document their moment,  their vibe in this life, yet actually a connected enlightened spirit far from this world. I am one of those “males” who experience such love and connectivity to a feminine being human.

Jan Channel and I were married.  I am pleased to present a posthumous tribute to her genius and spirit. She was an inspiration to me and she wrote the following song,  performed by Kimiko Arimoto, another wonderfully sensitive musician and friend. The song is titled, Song for Donne.

Enjoy!

$328.00 or “There’s Always One in the Audience!”

The title of this post may seem strange, but (read on) you’ll understand in a moment.  First, the $328.  That’s the amount of cash I’ve got in pocket from gigs at this moment.  What that means is I do not have to go to an ATM.  My practice and dedication to learning how to play the bass is paying me enough to earn petty cash.

Sure, I’d never have been able to support a family or to even pay for a crawl space to sleep in earning that kind of dough.  Homeless I’d be, for sure; but, I am meeting a goal of earning enough to feed myself.

Last night (October 6, 2015) I earned a little cash performing for another musician who held a house concert (something all music lovers who can afford it should actually do).

Teresa presented a program that featured a program was multi-media and there was one clip presented that included Henry Mancini.  When I saw him, I had a flash back.

In 1961, I was a bass drummer with Jimmy Farrell in the Santa Monica High School Viking’s Marching Band. It was an award winning band (1961 – 1962) that I’d joined after chickening out of becoming a member of the football team (no need to digress to tell you about that now).

One day, the first chair trumpet player (or somebody in the Marching band) approached and said one of the guys father, who was a producer or director or something, wanted a band to play at a party in Bel Air.  You know, where the really big stars live.  $20 bucks!

They needed a bass player, he said.

“I don’t play bass,” I replied.

“Yea, but I heard you playing ‘Peter Gunn.'”

The truth was that the bass line to Peter Gunn, by Henry Mancini, was about all I could thump out on the bass.  It was a cool line.  I think I could kind of do a couple of other licks, but mostly I’d farted around with the upright bass for fun, like kids do today playing Louie Louie air guitar.  I wasn’t really serious.  I think I also knew the line to Song for My Father or something like that.

“Uh, yea, first I don’t even play bass and second I don’t even have a bass,” I said.

“Hey, Charlie, that don’t matter, we got a gig and we need a bass player.”  He paused.  “And besides,” he said eyes gleaming, “there’s a bunch of basses in then band room.”  He paused, jammed his hand in his pocket, looked at me with a glint in his eyes and said, “I got the keys to the band room!”

“You got a car, right?”

My 1956 Ford awaited the adventure.

The evening of the gig, we met at the band room after school shut down, got in the band room and scored the bass.  Directions were given and we did a caravan to Bel Air, driving past Bob Hope’s house and up higher and higher into the hills.  We eventually came to some Star’s house.  I don’t think it was Barbara Streisand’s place, but I think she was some where in that neighborhood.

We came to a house, stopped and began loading-in on-time, but we were very close to the down beat time and it was  …

(to be continued)

10/16/2015 (continuing)  … really tight.

We set up.  As I recall, there was an entry way,  a few stairs leading down to the living room that extended out to a balcony that had a view of Los Angeles’ lights.  When we arrived, there were a couple of servants handing out wine from silver trays as you entered.  We didn’t get any, of course.

We were almost late so we had to really hustle to get set up.  To the right and above the sunken living room leading to the balcony was a 25′ square space and that’s where the band set up.  There must have been about 7 or 8 of us (maybe more).  It was a little tight, but we’d barely made it on time.  And, sure enough, the guests started to arrive.

We began playing and I noticed that no matter how we sounded (and we were not sounding that good, at all), nobody noticed and nobody cared.

Ladies would kiss each other on the cheeks, exchange pleasantries and move on into the massive living room chatting endlessly.  Guys would come in and hugs would be exchanged.  And guys in the white jackets would hand out goblets and crystals filled with red or white wine.  I guess you’d call it a Hollywood social affair.

The trumpet player called another tune.  And then another.  Meanwhile more people came, oblivious to the noise we were making, as they made their own in animated conversation.

All was going well … until one guy walked in wearing a very sharp suit, narrow lapels and a skinny ties that was the fashionable at that period of time.

He stopped in front of the band and, of all the people who come to the party, he was different.  He cocked his head to the side.  And I perceived that he was listening.  Well, not just listening.  He was listening to everyone in the band.  And, then, I felt his attention shift. He was listening … to me … no … not me … but to each musician playing.  I remember thinking, “He’s listening to see if there’s a real outstanding player among us.”

And as he stood there, each player he attended to began to lose composure, intonation, time and harmony.

Train wreck!  I lost it when he listened to me — the drummer who was trying to play the bass.

I was not alone.  You see, his attention shifted first to each musician playing, from the trumpets,  trombone, to the saxes and to the bass (that’s when I lost it). And, we all crashed like a mangled pile of steel rails falling off of a flat bed freight car.

He continued to listen for a moment, as we tried to regroup and get the groove and then — mercifully — turned, walked away and his attention went to the party and the hostess who had rushed up to greet him.

We only played four or five numbers or so, (including Peter Gunn) and we packed, got out of there and I got my $20.  I thought the kid who had arranged the gig would be pissed at my poor performance, or that the hostess would be pissed and not pay us a dime.

I swore to myself:  “I’ll never try to play in public like that again.  Never.”  It was so bad and I was embarrassed and totally ashamed.

“Sorry about that,” I said.

The gig-master wasn’t phased, at all. “Yea, it was great!” said the kid who handed me the $20.  And, he said that the hostess had told him “thank you” as we were leaving.

Who was that guy who was actually listening, the only one?’ I wondered.

Years later, I saw the picture.  Crap on myself!  It was Henry Mancini!!!!

mancini-henry-51fdbf2001d61

Lessons:

  1.  Assume there’s ALWAYS at least one great musician in the audience
  2. I’ll never play as poorly as I did that night, under any circumstance (and I haven’t)I’m playing, at every opportunity, always improving and playing better than I did that evening
  3. No matter what, get paid and there’s no reason to stop playing (or trying to)!