« May 2006 | Main | July 2006 »

June 30, 2006

Paul Strand Southwest

Feature on a photography exhibition at the Cincinnati Art Museum.

In the early stages of his career, photographer Paul Strand saw an exhibition of prints by Picasso and Matisse. "He decided that he could do with photography what they were trying to do with printing techniques," said Dennis Kiel, associate curator of prints, drawings and photographs at the Cincinnati Art Museum where "Paul Strand Southwest" hangs until Aug. 20.

After that, he began experimenting with semi-abstract images of mundane subjects, Kiel said, and by the time he spent three summers in New Mexico (1930-32), he was fully immersed in the study of shapes and forms that he could render from landscapes and portraits.

"One of the challenges for him was to find the patience to wait for the right moment," Kiel said. "The clouds and the light changed so quickly that it was hard for him to tie together the earth and the sky in the landscapes." He also photographed the ghost towns of the Southwest, seeking to find the remnants of the lives that were lived therein.

"This was at the beginning of the Great Depression," Kiel said, "and these buildings made him wonder about the pioneers and what these towns were really like at their height." Strand's most photographed subject — and because of his influence one of the most photographed and painted subjects in the Southwest — was the church at Ranchos de Taos.

In those three summers, Strand exposed 52 negatives of the church, with six of them among the 35 images in "Paul Strand Southwest." “Strand is widely acknowledged as one of the greatest American photographers of the 20th century, and this exhibition includes works never before seen on public view,” Kiel said. "Strand’s Southwest period stands out, not only as a time of intense productivity, but also as a transitional period in his life.

“His political and social ideas were shifting, and his relationships with the two most important people in his life—his wife Rebecca and his mentor, photographer Alfred Stieglitz—were disintegrating."

Kiel will present a gallery talk, "Paul Strand and the Age of Modernism," 2 p.m. July 15. There is no charge.

In a nearby gallery, a related exhibition titled "Pictorialist Photographs" explores the international photography movement that flourished from 1890 to the beginning of World War I, a precursor to Strands abstractionist impulses. Members of this movement embraced the philosophy that photography was a fine art to be judged equally with painting, drawing, printmaking, and other media, Kiel said.

Pictorialist aesthetics placed an emphasis on form, composition and atmospheric effects rather than subject matter. Drawn from the Art Museum’s permanent collection, "Pictorialist Photographs" features 25 images by important photographers such Edward Weston, Clarence White, Imogen Cunningham, Heinrich Kühn, Émile Joachim Constant Puyo, Alfred Stieglitz, Cincinnati’s Herbert Greer French and others.

June 28, 2006

I make kids cry, too


"Trillions" by Jill Greenberg


Sunday, my daughter and I went to a store to pick up some cleaning items. In the checkout line, we got behind a toddler sitting in the cart while her mother went through the self-checkout. The kid was giving me that look, the one that said, "Entertain me, clown!" So even though I was not in clown, I made faces at her.

She burst out crying, loud and long. No preliminary whimpering. No quivering lips. Just a big howl and instant tears.

Of course, I felt horrible. I clown because I love to make kids happy. I realize that my presence is sometimes intimidating to them, but most of the time I can win them over. I apologized profusely to the mother. She was cool about it, although she did say, "She's usually very friendly."

What I shoulda done was call Jill Greenberg.

Greenberg is a nationally-known photographer who apparently likes to make children cry. Her recent exhibition, "End Times," now in an extended controversal run at the Paul Kopeikin gallery in Los Angeles, uses images of children in pain as a metaphor for her feelings about contemporary America.

I know how she feels. George W. Bush makes me want to throw a temper tantrum myself.

In order to get these images, Greenberg gave the kid a lollipop, then took it away. She shoulda just hired a clown.

Here's some of the press release from the gallery:

Jill Greenberg’s new work takes a more serious turn and has already hit a national nerve . "End Times" combines beautiful, poignant imagery, impeccably executed, with both political and personal relevance. Greenberg’s subject is taboo: children in pain. She utilizes this uncomfortable image as a way to break through to the pop mainstream and begin a national dialogue. Jill Greenberg's images are sharp and saturated, stunning and quirky; her work is soaked with realism and imagination.

Bill Moyer’s article “There is No Tomorrow” more than touches on Mrs. Greenberg’s subject matter. In the article he states the amazing statistics: “For the first time in our history, ideology and theology hold a monopoly of power in Washington. Theology asserts propositions that cannot be proven true; ideologues hold stoutly to a worldview despite being contradicted by what is generally accepted as reality. The offspring of ideology and theology are not always bad but they are always blind. And that is the danger: voters and politicians alike, oblivious to the facts.

One-third of the American electorate, if a recent Gallup Poll is accurate, believes the Bible is literally true. This past November, several million good and decent citizens went to the polls believing in what is known as the "rapture index."

These true believers subscribe to a fantastical theology concocted in the 19th century by a couple of immigrant preachers who took disparate passages from the Bible and wove them into a narrative that has captivated the imagination of millions of Americans. Its outline is rather simple, if bizarre: Once Israel has occupied the rest of its "bibli-cal lands," legions of the Antichrist will attack it, triggering a final showdown in the valley of Armageddon. As the Jews who have not been converted are burned, the messiah will return for the rapture.

That is why the invasion of Iraq for them was a warm-up act, predicted in the Book of Revelations, where four angels "which are bound in the great river Euphrates will be released to slay the third part of man." For them a war with Islam in the Middle East is something to be welcomed - an essential conflagration on the road to redemption. The rapture index - "the prophetic speedometer of end-time activity" - now stands at 153."

Jill Greenberg explains, “The children I photographed were not harmed in any way. And, as a mother, I am quite aware of how easily toddlers can cry. Storms of grief sweep across their features without warning; a joyful smile can dissolve into a grimace of despair. The first little boy I shot, Liam, suddenly became hysterically upset. It reminded me of helplessness and anger I feel about our current political and social situation. The most dangerous fundamentalists aren’t just waging war in Iraq; they’re attacking evolution, blocking medical research and ignoring the environment. It’s as if they believe the apocalyptic End Time is near, therefore protecting the earth and future of our children is futile. As a parent I have to reckon with the knowledge that our children will suffer for the mistakes our government is making. Their pain is a precursor of what is to come.”

You can find the images of "End Times" here:

http://www.paulkopeikingallery.com/artists/greenberg/index0.htm

While you're there, check out her "Monkey Portraits"

http://www.paulkopeikingallery.com/artists/greenberg/index2.htm

June 27, 2006

Ensemble Theatre of Cincinnati 2006-07 Season

Five new plays and one re-invention.

To kick off the 2006-07 season, the Ensemble Theatre of Cincinnati presents a reinvention of the past Broadway hit "Mack and Mabel."
This new concert version of Jerry Herman’s score, opening Sept. 13, is set against the backdrop of the silent film era and will feature Cincinnati favorite Gary Sandy ("WKRP in Cincinnati" on TV, "Side Man" at ETC) as Mack Sennett.
Once this show closes on Oct. 1, journeys to The Falcon Theatre in Burbank, founded by television visionary Garry Marshall ("Happy Days," "Laverne and Shirley")
"Whether it is through the magic of cinema, music, or literature, this season centers upon the stories of several remarkable artists — and one ugly duck — who have helped to define and illuminate the human condition through their creativity, vision, and passion," said artistic director D. Lynn Meyers.
The season also includes:
• "String of Pearls," by Michele Lowe, Oct. 18-Nov. 5. Follow the journey of one pearl necklace as it touches, influences, and connects the lives of nearly two dozen women.
• "Ugly Duck," a world premiere musical by Joseph McDonough and David Kisor, Nov. 29-Dec. 31. From the team that created "The Frog Princess," "Sleeping Beauty" and last year’s hit, "Cinderella" for ETC comes a new spin on the classic Ugly Duckling tale.
• "Fiction," by Steven Dietz, Jan. 31-Feb. 18. Accomplished authors Michael and Linda have been happily married for twenty years. When a diagnosis gives Linda only a few weeks to live, how can Michael refuse her dying request to read his diaries?
• "Opus," by Michael Hollinger, March 14-April 1. As a world-renowned string quartet prepares for the performance of a lifetime, their practices quickly become volatile rehearsals when tensions mount, personalities clash, and their brilliant but unstable founder leaves under mysterious circumstances.
• "Souvenir," by Stephen Temperley, April 25-May 13. Direct from its smash Broadway and Tony-nominated run, "Souvenir" tells the story of Florence Foster Jenkins, an eccentric socialite, who gave a series of annual charity concerts during the 1930s. The only problem: Jenkins suffered under the illusion that she was a great coloratura soprano, when in fact she was tone deaf.
Individual tickets are $32 for adults, $29 for students and seniors, and $16 for children ages 12 and under. Season tickets for Friday and Saturday performances are $154 each for adults. Wednesday (except opening nights) and Thursday evening and Sunday matinee "Super Saver" season passes are $144 each.
For information, call (513) 421-3555 or visit www.cincyetc.com on the Internet.

June 24, 2006

Award Winning Columnist

Last night, I received an honorable mention from the Society of Professional Journalist's 2005 competition in the General Column Writing category for a piece I wrote that was published March 23, 2005.

Wednesday, March 23, 2005

Primal Shopping Instincts

JournalNews column

She doesn’t like her voice so never sings out loud, but I could hear a song in her breath, a melody flowing from her contented smile as she steered her cart through the aisle of bargains.

“What are you grinning about?” I had to ask.

“Nothing,” she said. “Just happy to be shopping.”

It’s not like we’d gone there to blow a bunch of money for the joy of spending or anything. I needed some cleaning supplies and she was, I thought, along for the ride.

But for her, it was more. It was a bonus therapy session. That’s what she calls it: “Shopping therapy.” Give her a cart with four good wheels and an aisle of bargains and her mind wanders off to the happy place.

“What is it about shopping that a gives you so much pleasure?” I asked later.

“I don’t know,” she said. “But I’ve always liked to shop. When I was a little girl, that’s what my mom and I did to make me happy. She would ground me, then feel bad about it so we’d go shopping. There were times I’d misbehave just so she’d take me shopping.

“It was one way that we could spend time together.”

“And I suppose you’ve passed this shopping gene on to your daughter, too?”

“Oh, yeah,” she said. “She better find a good job when she grows up.”

So I asked her mother about this shopping dynasty. She told me was never much of a shopper, but after her divorce many years ago, she was seeing a counselor, a social worker, who advised her to go out once a week and buy something just for herself. A way to boost self-esteem, I suppose. A chance to be selfish once in a while.

“So I was at the store and I saw a pack of Post-It notes that had little angels printed on it,” mother said. “I thought, ‘You don’t get very many of them for two dollars,’ but it was something I liked, so I bought it.”

So did it help?

“Oh, yeah,” mother said. “I love to buy things for myself now.”

But her daughter, she said, was a natural shopper.

“I took her shopping for clothes one time and I picked out a whole cart full of cute stuff,” mother said. “We went to put it in lay-away and she wouldn’t let me. She said, ‘If you can’t pay for it now so I can take it home, I don’t want it.’”

So by now, I’m thinking this is deep. Maybe this is a vestige of the hunter/gatherer mentality of our ancestors. For the same reason men like sports (generally speaking) as a link to their hunting past, so women like to shop (generally speaking) as a throwback to foraging for food.

And that’s maybe why when men shop for something, let’s say “shoes,” they conquer the shoes and come back with shoes and nothing else. But a woman will go shopping for shoes (as if she really needs another pair) and come back with a carload of shoes because they found such a bargain, or a carload of anything but shoes because they couldn’t find a suitable pair, but found all this other cool stuff to satisfy the urge to shop.

Of course, there are exceptions that prove the rule. I, for one, loathe spectator sports for the most part. When I shop, it’s because I need something. It’s rarely recreational (unless I’m going simply to keep some female company) or therapeutic. When I do, it usually results in feelings of guilt, either for spending money I shouldn’t spend or because I’ve simply added to my storehouse of unnecessary stuff.

But the women I know tell me it’s all for the good of the cause.

“Even if it’s just groceries,” my shopping friend said, “that’s fine by me. Shopping is shopping. I may have 10 boxes of Tide in the laundry room already, but I know we’ll use it eventually — and I’ve saved some money.

“I may not be the wealthiest person in town,” she added, “but at least we’ve got plenty of food in the house.”

June 19, 2006

Dog Porn

Here's a picture of Chaplin taken by my sister on Father's day, before he peed on her purse but after he peed on my leg. It was that kind of day.

I titled this "Dog Porn" because the last time I  used the word "Porn" in a blog title, I got 9 times as many hits as the day before. So this is an experiment to see how many hits I get today!

June 17, 2006

Officially a bum

Yesterday, I went down to a city health clinic on Elm Street, the kind of place where they feel it's necessary to post a "NO BATHING IN THE RESTROOMS" sign on the men's room door, to get my Panhandler's License.

 

I should receive my picture ID card within a few weeks.

 

Now I can ask you for money, if we're in the City of Cincinnati limits.

June 16, 2006

How I'm spending my vacation

With 2,780 pages of James U. Ruppert.

The harder they fall ...

When I took the dog out for his late nite pee last night, a flash of yellow caught my eye.

Turns out it was that drunken bastard Sponge Bob Square Pants out on a bender.

June 13, 2006

Burger porn

There's something just wrong about this (other than the fact that I'm going through a McDonald's Drive-Thru -- but it wasn't my idea).

 

New Angel Hands pix

New images from St. Mary's Cemetery, Mt. Healthy.

June 10, 2006

Cindy Sheehan visits the Queen City

"George W. Bush is the boil on the butt of democracy," said Cindy Sheehan last night. "A boil is just the symptom that something is wrong inside." It was interesting to hear "Gold Star Mom" Cindy Sheehan address the crowd last night at the MUSE women's choir concert.

She seemed relaxed in front of the crowd -- admittedly she was "singing to the choir," as headliner Holly Near said later.

In spite of the abundance of liberal lesbian feminist anti-war propaganda, it was a good concert, not as musically intense as, say, Richard Thompson was the night before at the Southgate House, but Near is as good a storyteller as she is a singer and it was a powerful event.

Here's what the evil competition had to say about the event.

June 09, 2006

Alejandro Escovedo

Surviving a near-death experience, particularly a severe drawn-out illness, can have a liberating effect on an artist.

Alejandro Escovedo was diagnosed with hepatitis C in 1996 during the tour to promote his “With These Hands” album. That eventually turned into advanced cirrhosis of the liver and a host of other complications, and in 2003, he collapsed after a concert in Phoenix, Ariz., and it put him out of the business for a while.

In spite of the dire prognosis, Escovedo survived and is now back on the road to support “The Boxing Mirror,” some of it documenting the personal trials he endured.

The song “Died a Little Today,” for instance, discusses some of the lessons learned from being that close to death.

“When you have a chance to reflect and get better, you hope to become a better person somehow,” he said.

Escovedo said he felt those changes in the studio, recording with producer John Cale.

“It made it easier for me to focus on the music and on my relationship with the band,” he said. “It’s been easier to shape songs and ideas. I have a better idea what I want a song to sound like and what I want to express.

“What I’ve been through has made me a lot calmer person than I used to be. There was a lot of laughter and a lot of joy in working on the record,” he said. “The process takes so long, that was a great feeling in itself.”

Now he's in paradise, poppin' cherries

The AP reported: "Zarqawi felt my son's breath on his hand as held the knife against his throat. Zarqawi had to look in his eyes when he did it," said Michael Berg father of Nicholas Berg, a U.S. contractor believed to have been beheaded by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi . "George Bush sits there glassy-eyed in his office with pieces of paper and condemns people to death. That to me is a real terrorist."

June 08, 2006

The Gospel According to Tammy Faye

 


I finally made it to a Cincinnati Fringe Festival event, taking in "The Gospel According to Tammy Faye Bakker" at the Ensemble Theatre of Cincinnati last night.

A lot of it was pretty funny, and a somewhat cynical look at the world of televangelism, especially in "The Judas Tango" performed by Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson. But it remarkably drew a rather loving portrait of Tammy Faye.

 

I particularly enjoyed the number performed by Tammy Faye and a chorus of drag queens at a Tammy Faye look-alike contest.

It would be interesting to see a fully-realized production of this show, as (being part of a Fringe Festival), it was very low-tech. No scenery except some stage boxes and folding chairs, some rudimentary lighting and thrift-shop costumes. Some of the casting could have been better, as a few of the actors were clearly struggling with their lines.

But overall, it was a fun romp through the life and mind of a cultural icon.

Here's the backstory, from the press release sent me by the producers:

The writers, JT Buck, who is working on his master‚s in directing at the University of  Houston Ho and Fernando Dovalina, who spent most of his newspaper career as an editor at the Houston Chronicle, met while studying musical collaboration under Broadway producer Stuart Ostrow at the University of Houston.
 
Buck came up with the idea while sitting at a bar and watching Bakker, now remarried and known as Tammy Faye Messner, being interviewed on the Larry King Show. They arranged for a meeting with Messner in Charlotte, N.C., and she granted them a long and in-depth interview.
 
Messner told the writers that she is at peace today because she has rediscovered the innocence that she first found in a church service when she was a 10-year-old. Messner also talked freely about her cancer, and she discussed her most-repeated religious message, that all humans are God‚s children--that, as she put it, "God doesn‚t make junk."
 
Those key pieces of information provided the heart of "The Gospel." Three actors play three Tammy Fayes, one the child, another the TV preacher who was married to PTL founder Jim Bakker, and the third playing today's at-peace Tammy Faye. At times the three are on stage at the same time exploring their relationship across the years.
 
"You can never get enough of Tammy Faye, so three of them is not too much, and if you count the contestants in the scene at a gay bar in which Tammy is judging a Tammy Faye look-alike contest among six drag queens, then you get nine Tammy Fayes in this show," said Dovalina. He had a smile on his face when he said that.
 
The musical, at times drama, at times comedy, begins with Messner in radiation therapy. Messner‚s rags-to-riches-to-rags-to-redemption life flashes before her eyes in a fantasy that alters and juggles time, events and the people around her. The original score in "The Gospel" covers the gamut from gospel to 1970s disco.
 
Buck, who wrote the music, said the musical is, in the end, a sympathetic portrayal of the televangelist, but, he added, "We don't skirt the scandals and the fall of the PTL empire." 
 
The show is directed by John Garrett, who among his other credits was the principal dancer in the movie "Grease," and choreographed by Aaron Callies, who at one time worked with the late Tejano singer Selena. Dovalina, Buck, Garrett and Callies met while studying under Ostrow.

Interview: Viva La Foxx

One doesn't often hear a punk rocker cite a Pentecostal influence. And one wouldn't expect that from a punk band named after a strip club. But one doesn't often encounter a punk rocker quite like Amy Combs, the front of Viva La Foxx. "I draw upon both performance art ideas and gospel ideas," Combs said from the back porch of her Kentucky home, watching squirrels frolic, "but not the 'sit in the pew and be quiet' idea." The daughter of the preacher of a small Pentecostal church who comes from a long line of Pentecostal preachers, Combs taught herself to play guitar from Loretta Lynn and Sex Pistols records, although she claims that playing guitar is not exactly her strong suit. "We all have a unique way of expressing simple ideas and simple music," she said. "A lot of my performances, I'll just put the guitar down and concentrate on interacting with the people, to get in their face and make them feel something. "They'll either love us or hate us, but they'll leave our show with an experience." Combs said it was a bit difficult to capture that feel for the band's first record, "I Knew It Wasn't Love But..." "The vocals are harsh and in your face, which is hard to deliver in a box, screaming at a fuzzy microphone," she said. It may have helped, however, that she was recovering from bronchitis. "I was really, really sick," she said, "taking medicine for whooping cough. Maybe that made it better. I don't know. "It's sexy and crazy and not for everybody. But it's interesting for sure." Originally published in the JournalNews, June 2, 2006

June 07, 2006

I do love you with all of my heart and sole.

My dear love Richard!!!

I didn't ever think that I would ever be this happy in my life. When I read your letter it made me a little sad, because were not together right now. I love everything that you wrote in it. You made me so happy. I feel that I'm one of the luckiest women on the world to have someone who care and love me as much as you do. I feel the same way with you. I dream of you all of the time.

I think of you all day and night. I cant sleep sometime, because of you being on my mind. I know for a fact that you are the one that God has made for me. You are the ray of light that shines through the clouds that is my life, and when I see you the sky's will clear. That is how I feel for you. You are the sweetest person I have ever known. I know that we are going to be happy together in good time and bad. I know that you will be there. We are going to make people envy us because were going to be so happy together. What I'm really saying is that I do love you with all of my heart and sole.

Natalia

ps I do not know Maria's e-mail.
_________________________________________________
My dearest Natalia:

Summer has arrived here in Ohio. The weekend weather was very beautiful and as I went about my jobs, I kept thinking how wonderful it would be to share these glorious days with my one true love -- which is you, my dearest.

I have been working very hard to raise the money to buy your airline ticket so that you may come here and I almost have enough saved up. One more good contract and I will be able to send you the money. It is just a matter of time. Be patient, my dear, and please keep writing me.

Send more pictures so that I can be reminded of your love.

with all my heart,
Richard

June 02, 2006

Richard Thompson and the history of pop music

Since the eponymous debut of Fairport Convention in 1968, Richard Thompson has released nearly 80 albums, depending on how you try to count them, including seminal work with his (now ex-) wife Linda, but not counting all of the guest appearances he's made on the records with his friends.

So it's no wonder that Thompson said he had "hands-off" involvement with the development of his second box set, the five-disc "RT: The Life and Music of Richard Thompson," released in February.

"It was a big project, with hundreds of hours of live tape to go through," he said. "I don't have the time or passion for that kind of thing, but I had the power of veto to weed out the things that were just too out of tune or too horrible to sit through.

"But there's some good, edgy stuff that made it in," he said.


As if taking on four decades of Richard Thompson music wasn't enough, the British songwriter and guitarist will soon release a DVD version of his "1,000 Years of Popular Music," a culmination (or is it?) of a project that began at the turn of the millennium.

"Like so many great things, it began with Playboy magazine," he said. "In 1999, they contacted me to contribute to an article where they asked different musicians to list the 10 greatest songs of the
millenium.

"What they really meant was the 10 greatest songs of the last 20 years, but I took them literally, started at 1000 AD and worked my way up.

"They didn't use my list, but the thought was there, and when the Getty Museum booked me for a show, I did some research and worked out a concert with that theme."

With vocalist Judith Owen and percussionist Debra Dobkin, Thompson has taken "1,000 Years" on the road several times since then, constantly researching and revising the program, including everything from ancient British folk tunes to the Beatles and Britney
Spears.

"There's a lot out there and you can unearth some gems that people have forgotten about," he said.

He chose the low-tech trio format partly because of the convenience of traveling that way, but also for the irony.

"I think it's important for this show to be minimalist," he said, "otherwise, you'd have to do it with an orchestra.

"Plus, there's something ridiculous and charming about three people performing a show this ambitious. There's a tongue-in-cheek quality about it that I like."

For his current sweep of America, Thompson is taking it down even further: Just the man and his guitar.

"It doesn't get much smaller than that," he said. "I have thought about just sending out my guitar.

"There's a kind of honesty about standing in front of an audience with an acoustic instrument. There's no need to question your motives."

Interview: Rosie Flores, The Rockabilly Filly

 

Rosie Flores was there when the first rockabilly revival revved up in the early 1980s.

“A lot of the resurgence was coming from England,” she said. “They took it seriously. They called themselves 'Teddy Boys,’ with their long sideburns and pompadours.”

It was nothing new to Flores, however. It was the music of her youth growing up in San Antonio, Texas, going to a lot of weddings where the bands played a peculiar mix of swing, rock and country, and where her father subscribed to Hit Parade magazine so the family would have the lyrics to sing along with the radio.

“I could always sing,” she said. “I was born with a voice and near perfect pitch, and I still have a tape recording my father made of me singing at 5 years old.”

When she was 12, the family moved to San Diego where her father discovered movie musicals and Rodgers and Hammerstein on stage. About the same time, she picked up the guitar.

“I really had a good upbringing for this,” she said. So when the revival hit California, with cool younger musicians re-visiting “all this hillbilly stuff, country music with a punk edge to it,” Flores was ready.

Since then, she’s covered a lot of territory.

“I’m accused of being all over the map,” she said. “I’ve dabbled in jazz and Western swing, and now I’d like to do an album of standards. I’m not just stuck in rockabilly.”

 

Same song, new notes

INTERVIEW WITH PIANIST JOHN BERCAW

 

    The band's name is different, but the music never changes. Except the notes are fresh.

"Last year, we called ourselves 'The Coke Otto Band,'" said pianist John Bercaw. "But that was too obscure and no one knew what it meant."

So this year, John Bercaw and the Aristocrats will perform for the annual Little Chicago Jazz Society
Membership Concert.

While the new reference may be a little less obscure because of a recent film, Bercaw just chuckles at the possibility of a connection.

"It used to be a musician's joke," he said.

The Aristocrats include Bercaw, vocalist Barb Guenther, bassist Steve Bruce, drummer Jimmy Seward, trumpeter Dave Petrik and Bill Gemmer on trombone.

"We've been rehearsing," Bercaw said, but paused a moment and laughed when asked what new stuff they've been working on. "It's the same old stuff at different tempos.

"When you play this kind of music, there is no new stuff," he explained. "You just go to the guys and ask, 'What stuff do you want to do now?,' because it's all stuff that everyone knows anyway."

Bercaw said that he's been playing with vocalist Guenther since the early 1980s when the rock band he was playing in with her husband, bassist Bruce, broke up.

"He wanted us to stay together to play some jazz," Bercaw said, "and in the process said, 'My wife's
singer, by the way.'

"So any chance I have to work with them, whenever anybody wants a singer, I give them a call.

"That's the way we put bands together. Everybody knows the same stuff."

Coke Otto, by the way, was an early name for the village of New Miami. As for the Aristocrats, you'll have to see the film.

(Photo by Cameron Knight/JournalNews)

June 01, 2006

I know that all that we do not vainly.

My love Richard!

I did not thought that I can love so much man. To tell the truth I did not feel such feelings, but now I am sure in my feelings to you. I thank to God that he let us to know each other. And I believe that if he meet us he will not separate us and we have to do anything for this, as hard as it be. I am sure, that you are my love feel the same feelings, I trust you and also believe that you will not betray me.

The day of our meeting will be the greatest day of my life. I imagine myself often how I go down on a gangway and you run towards me with bouquet of flowers and when we reach each other you throw bouquet of flowers up, and I falling in your hugs and we are immersed to a long long kiss… This picture is always at my eyes, in my thoughts. And I becoming crazy from waiting this day.

My love Richard, I ask you about ine thing: when we shall meet, I would like you to hug me, to put me at your breast, and never let me out! I am asking you to do anything for our meeting, for us and for our love. As for me, I am ready for anything for you Now you have read results of my feelings which I wrote on paper within all day, and when I will come to you I will present you this letter that you have red wroted on paper. I know that all that we do not vainly.

With all my love, Natalia

ps On a photo my girlfriend Maria. She lives and works in Moscow. Our photo has been made on Black sea in the last summer.
------------------------------

Sweetest Natalia:

You really have a way with words. When I read your letters it fills my heart with such joy and happiness to make me look forward to our meeting.

The check did not come in today's mail. I am so disappointed. But never fear, my love, as soon as it arrives, we will take care of funding your arrival to my waiting arms.

So do you have any other photos of Maria? What is her e-mail address? I would like to ask her a couple of questions.


Your own true love,
--Richard


Hosting by Yahoo!