Monday 31 March 2014
Sunday 30 March 2014
Bob Dylan - Revisionist Art in Newcastle upon Tyne
We're delighted to announce the forthcoming launch of hand signed limited edition silkscreens on canvas and paper from Bob Dylan
Revisionist Art
In 1965 Bob Dylan picked up an electric guitar and changed the face of rock and roll music forever. In 2014 he challenges our perception of him as an artist.
Dylan has never been afraid to defy his audience – many times he has left them struggling to keep up. He left behind the protest songs and swapped his acoustic guitar for an electric one, bewildering many of his fans.
But none of this ever seems to concern Dylan, his eyes are firmly fixed on the road ahead, never looking back.
In 2008 Dylan captivated the world with the Drawn Blank Series. Revisionist Art could not be any more different. This collection reveals a hard-edged, conceptual form of art that boldly displays the Dylan-esque artistic intelligence fully at work. Bob Dylan is once again showing us the world as he sees it, and he challenges us to come along for the ride.
In 2008 Dylan captivated the world with the Drawn Blank Series. Revisionist Art could not be any more different. This collection reveals a hard-edged, conceptual form of art that boldly displays the Dylan-esque artistic intelligence fully at work. Bob Dylan is once again showing us the world as he sees it, and he challenges us to come along for the ride.
From 12 April 2014
61-67 Grey Street, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 6EF
http://www.castlegalleries.com/campaigns/view/13617
More detail:
Dylan has long been a willful contextualizer of his own source material. All personas are interchangeable. His diverse musical output spans a wealth of genres. His Revisionist art provides a glimpse of an artistic process that is equally maverick and elusive.
The most celebrated singer-songwriter of our time, Bob Dylan’s visual art is marked by the same constant drive for renewal that characterizes his legendary music. Although he has been making art since the 1960s, his work was not publicly exhibited until 2007 when an exhibition of “The Drawn Blank Series” was held in Chemnitz, Germany, followed by “The Brazil Series” at the Statens Museum, Copenhagen, in 2010–11. “The Asia Series” was presented at Gagosian New York in 2011.
And don't forget the book...
Revisionist Art: Thirty Works by Bob Dylan
Authors: Introduction by Luc Sante; essay by B. Clavery
Imprint: Abrams Books
ISBN: 1-4197-0979-8
EAN: 9781419709791
Page Count: 156
Cover: Hardcover
Illustrations: 38
In Revisionist Art, Bob Dylan offers silkscreened covers of popular magazines from the last half century that somehow escaped history’s notice. As Luc Sante says in his introduction to this collection, they seem to emanate, “from a world just slightly removed from ours--a world a bit more honest about its corruption, its chronic horniness, its sweat, its body odor.” Art critic B. Clavery provides a history of Revisionist Art, from cave drawings, to Gutenberg, to Duchamp, Picasso, and Warhol. The book also features vivid commentaries on the work, (re)acquainting the reader with such colorful historical figures as the Depression-era politician Cameron Chambers, whose mustache became an icon in the gay underworld, and Gemma Burton, a San Francisco trial attorney who used all of her assets in the courtroom. According to these works, history is not quite what we think it is.
Praise for Revisionist Art:
“Revisionist Art may be the strangest move Dylan has made in a long while, but it’s also his most brilliantly uproarious foray into full-blown comedy.” —Rolling Stone, four-star review
Saturday 29 March 2014
Salinger Biopic in the works?
This doesn't sound like a good idea...
Weinstein Co. Developing Feature Film Based on ‘Salinger’ Doc
Salerno on board to pen screenplay
Dave McNary
Film Reporter
18 September 2013
Harvey Weinstein is delving into J.D. Salinger, partnering with Shane Salerno on developing a feature film adaptation of Salerno’s documentary about the author.
The film will be focused on Salinger’s life between his military service in World War II and the 1951 publication of “Catcher in the Rye” and examine the effects war can have on an artist. Salerno, who produced and directed the doc, is already signed to write the feature film screenplay.
“The company has long been extremely interested in Salerno’s extensive research on the renowned author and feels the material will make for an incredible live action narrative,” The Weinstein Company said.
The documentary grossed an impressive $86,956 at four screens in its opening weekend earlier this month and has increased that number to $162,067.
“This documentary has been an incredible journey and truly epitomizes what it means to be a passion project,” said Salerno.
Salerno began working on the documentary nine years ago. Salinger died in 2010.
TWC also announced that the documentary, which has only opened in New York and Los Angeles, will be expanded to include never-before-seen material about Salinger’s life, his relationships with young women and footage of the author as part of its 62-city theatrical expansion this weekend.
TWC noted that a companion book, also titled “Salinger” and authored by Salerno and David Shield, has debuted at number six on The New York Times bestseller list.
TWC Co-Chairman Harvey Weinstein said in a statement: “Shane has created an amazing documentary about one of the most beloved but enigmatic literary figures of our time. We are glad he was able to take the opportunity to add fantastic new footage. We greatly look forward to sharing the new edition with audiences and developing a Salinger feature with him.”
Harvey Weinstein is delving into J.D. Salinger, partnering with Shane Salerno on developing a feature film adaptation of Salerno’s documentary about the author.
The film will be focused on Salinger’s life between his military service in World War II and the 1951 publication of “Catcher in the Rye” and examine the effects war can have on an artist. Salerno, who produced and directed the doc, is already signed to write the feature film screenplay.
“The company has long been extremely interested in Salerno’s extensive research on the renowned author and feels the material will make for an incredible live action narrative,” The Weinstein Company said.
The documentary grossed an impressive $86,956 at four screens in its opening weekend earlier this month and has increased that number to $162,067.
“This documentary has been an incredible journey and truly epitomizes what it means to be a passion project,” said Salerno.
Salerno began working on the documentary nine years ago. Salinger died in 2010.
TWC also announced that the documentary, which has only opened in New York and Los Angeles, will be expanded to include never-before-seen material about Salinger’s life, his relationships with young women and footage of the author as part of its 62-city theatrical expansion this weekend.
TWC noted that a companion book, also titled “Salinger” and authored by Salerno and David Shield, has debuted at number six on The New York Times bestseller list.
TWC Co-Chairman Harvey Weinstein said in a statement: “Shane has created an amazing documentary about one of the most beloved but enigmatic literary figures of our time. We are glad he was able to take the opportunity to add fantastic new footage. We greatly look forward to sharing the new edition with audiences and developing a Salinger feature with him.”
Friday 28 March 2014
Wednesday 26 March 2014
Christopher Cross - his career, the Beach Boys, Led Zeppelin, Michael McDonald, Deep Purple...
There’s more to singer-songwriter Christopher Cross than meets the eye
Ken Sharp
In 1981, you couldn’t turn the radio dial without landing on one of Christopher Cross’ hits. These intricately crafted pop jewels — “Sailing,” “Arthur’s Theme,” “Ride Like The Wind,” “All Right” — featured virtuoso musicianship and Cross’ instantly recognizable voice. Decades since he first broke through, the five-time Grammy (and one-time Oscar) winner continues to write, record and tour. His latest effort, the two-CD/DVD set “A Night In Paris,” is packed with his beloved hits and a passel of strong new material, including “November” and “Leave it to Me.”
GOLDMINE: Performing today as opposed when you first hit it big: How are things different? Is it more fun for you today?CHRISTOPHER CROSS: Well, I think it’s a lot more fun. There are two reasons why. Early on in my career, I was playing four sets a night and banging out the hits. There’s a certain chemistry there, but it’s exhausting, and you’re not playing your own music, so it’s not as rewarding. Then, when my career took off in the early ’80s and things became so meteoric, it felt like I was on a different planet. It was hard to grasp what was happening. Now after all these years, I’m really in the best place ever, because I’m playing my own music. I’m confident and feel really good about what I’m doing and the musicians I’m playing with. And now I have a big catalog, whereas when I toured behind my first record I only had nine songs to play, and I was playing 20,000-seaters (laughs). So, it’s really come together. The only downside now is the traveling, because I’m older, and that’s hard for all of us. It’s a wonderful time to play, and I really relish it more than ever now, because I know it won’t last forever.
GM: How does the manner in which you’re interpreting the songs in more of a jazz-rock setting impact on your performance?
CC: With all respect to the musicians I’ve played with in the past, I’ve been fortunate enough to grow into a situation where I’m able to work with some pretty high-level, jazz-trained musicians, much like Sting does, and how he brings that sensibility to the pop thing. So the songs are harmonically interesting enough, and in the manner that Steely Dan uses all these great session players, I’m using cats at that level. They bring a real jazz sensibility to the music, and it’s really enjoyable for me, because their interpretations mean we can really stretch things out. This is really the pinnacle for me as far as this time in my music and what I’m doing and who I’m doing it with. It’s pretty amazing. I’m also doing orchestral dates, which are incredibly rewarding. So it’s a great time for me. For a while in the early years, I used backing tracks, trying to emulate every note on the records, and I’ve abandoned that now. We just play completely live, and I have musicians capable of doing it.
GM: Today, with years and years of experience under your belt, have your goals changed from, say, 30 years ago?
CC: Well, I don’t know if my goals have changed a great deal. I just write songs ’cause I love to write them, and I’ve never expected much. Everything happened so quickly for me. I think my career arc has always been styled after Joni Mitchell’s, even though what happened in her career was, in a lot of way, unintentional. Joan did her early records, which were so lauded, and as she went on the material to me got better and better, and people had less and less interest in it, which was tragic. For me, it’s a similar arc (laughs). I didn’t design it that way as far as a career arc, but as far as trying to grow and get more sophisticated with what I do, especially lyrically, was all based on Joan. So to me, it’s sort of a natural progression that you have this start, and there’s a lot of excitement, and then you settle back into a place in the business, but that doesn’t affect the drive and the reason you do it. You do it because you love it.
GM: With major changes in the business — record labels folding, artists regaining control over their careers — how has the new paradigm impacted on the manner in which you approach your career as recording and touring artist?
CC: Well, it hasn’t really affected me too much, because I had a lot of success. The paradigm shift has helped democratize music, which is cool because there are all these young people who can make music in their houses, and they don’t have to have labels. But the field is very crowded — trying to get noticed on YouTube and that sort of thing. So I think the real challenge is how do you monetize the music? How do you still make a living at it? In my case, I have an audience, and I can go out and play. The challenge for young artists is, “How do I get my music heard enough to create a buzz where 500 people will show up in Cleveland to hear me?” The only way to really make any money in the business now is live shows, because everything else is sort of diluted, and it’s all over the Internet for free. So for artists today with record sales on a big level, like Taylor Swift, when you look at her numbers compared to “Jagged Little Pill” by Alanis Morissette, they’re quite different. Or look at U2’s album sales compared to “Rumours” by Fleetwood Mac, and there’s a big difference in sales. I’m producing my own records now, which is nice. I learned a great deal from Michael Omartian, my producer, but it got to the point with Michael where I couldn’t really afford him; it wasn’t practical for him to do the records. But I loved working with him and learned a lot from him, so I now produce myself because there’s no one else to do it (laughs). It’s an interesting time. I’m really glad I had my 15 minutes of fame when I did. It was an amazing time to be in the music business with people like Carl (Wilson) and Mike McDonald. It was really an amazing musical time, but also a real cool cycle of life where you made vinyl, it went to the retail outlets, it went to radio and you promoted it and toured, and then came back and did it again. I kind of enjoyed that cycle, to tell you the truth. Even though the record companies made the lion’s share of the money, it was a good time. I feel like a fish out of water with this new model with Twitter and all this stuff. I’m trying, but it’s pretty hard (laughs).
GM: A few years back, one of the engineers told me that during the recording of “Double Fantasy,” John Lennon was talking about how much he loved your song, “Sailing.” From what I’ve read, John always felt very alive on the water, and that’s something you connected with, too.
CC: In the old days, explorers went out into the ocean to see what they could find, not knowing that the earth didn’t drop off. These were guys who really had balls, because they went out there without knowing what would happen. But the ocean has always been the road to discovery. The transition I talk about in the song, (recites lyrics) ”The canvas can do miracles,” is certainly a liquid metaphor, but it’s also about transition through art. So for me, the canvas is a painter’s canvas, so the transition through art would be dance, music, poetry — the transition you experience when you interact with it. So there’s kind of a double meaning with that song and certainly the sailing part. But it’s also about the transition you experience when you hear a song or read a book. It’s both of those things. I did a lot of sailing when I was younger, and a lot of people have taken me on their boats. In fact, I think the last time I went sailing was on (David) Crosby’s boat. Sailing is a wonderful pastime. I like the escapism of it and the fact that you’re being driven by the wind, and there’s this sense of discovery to be on the edge of the earth. It’s a wonderful experience. I did a lot of sailing when I was younger with this guy named Al, who was an older mentor of mine, so there’s also some connection in that song to Al taking me out sailing. Al was an older guy and a guitarist, so there was some kind of big brother stuff attached to that, as well, which was meaningful for me. I’ll probably have these words on my epitaph, (recites lyrics) ”Just a dream and the wind to carry me and soon I will be free,” because that’s kind of what the creative process is about. It’s so strange that there’s this connection with that song to John Lennon. I was playing at the CafĂ© Carlyle in New York for a month, and the soundman was doing lot of archiving of the “Double Fantasy” sessions. He told me one day, “I was archiving all this ‘Double Fantasy’ stuff and there was this one moment where John was talking about you in the studio.” I told him, “I’ll give you everything I have if you can find that!” He said, “I had to listen to hours of tape, and I have no idea of where it was, but he started talking about you in the session and how he liked your song ‘Sailing.’” When I think about the fact if John had survived, I probably would have known him, that would have been so cool. I just saw (Paul) McCartney. I live in Austin, and he came here recently to play a concert. I went backstage and visited for quite a while with him, and I remember saying to him, “It was so bizarre to think about them hearing my record.” And Paul was like, “Well, why? Your record was, like, THE record. I mean, everybody had it.” I said, “Yeah, I know. But it’s one thing for everybody to have it, and it’s another thing for a Beatle to have it.” (Laughs.)
GM: Carl Wilson of The Beach Boys was a good friend of yours. How did you and Carl wind up laying down background vocals on David Lee Roth’s cover of “California Girls?”
CC: I’d sung with him before that. I met Carl after my first record. Carl sang on a couple of tracks on my second record, “Another Page.” I have some pictures of us in the studio, and it was an unreal experience. Then, after that we became very good friends, and we would do things together. I think people wanted Brian and Carl to sing on their records, but Brian wasn’t really doing much then … Ted Templeman, who produced David Lee Roth, wanted to do a cover of “California Girls,” and he called me and said, “Hey, we’d like to get you to do the backgrounds on this song.” And I said, “Yeah, of course.” I knew Ted from working with The Doobies. Then he suddenly said, “Hey, what do you think about getting Carl Wilson to sing with you?” Of course, I’m like, “Obviously you’re calling me because you wanted to get Carl.” (Laughs) They wanted validation; I think they wanted the stamp of approval from a Beach Boy. Carl was cool about it. David (Lee Roth) wasn’t at the sessions, but we just went in and did all the vocals, which was fabulous because Carl knew all the parts, so it was a lot of fun. But in all the situations where I sang with Carl — we got called to sing on a Clint Black record — whenever someone would call me to sing, it was strange how they’d always go, “Oh, is Carl around?” (Laughs) So I was really nothing more than a sub for Brian (Wilson), to tell you the truth, which is not a bad gig. But they always wanted to get Carl.
GM: Speaking of Brian Wilson, you sang background vocals on “Nighttime,” a track on his debut solo album.
CC: Yeah, that’s obviously a strange song. Brian was just getting back into music. Carl said, “Can you come down and sing on a song for Brian?” And it was just such a weird little high, stabbing, vocal part; it’s kind of a strange vocal, thinking about it now. But it was thrilling to get to do it. Brian was in the studio, and he sat at the piano and showed me what he wanted to do. It was pretty surreal. When I moved to L.A. from Texas, I lived on a street and my neighbors were Randy Newman and Brian and his therapist, Gene Landy — that’s when Brian lived with Gene. I’ve been very involved with The Beach Boys family saga all this time, and now I see Brian a lot because I’m very good friends with Jeff Foskett, a member of his band. I get along with all the guys in The Beach Boys; I toured with Mike (Love) for about a month in Australia and New Zealand, and I’d always come out and sing “I Can Hear Music,” which Carl produced for The Beach Boys back in the day. One of the things that happened, which was so touching for me — I was just in tears about it — I was opening for them at a show in France. They brought me out to sing “I Can Hear Music,” and after the show, I was saying goodbye to Mike, and he said to me, “Man, I could’ve sworn Carl was standing right next to me.” That was incredibly powerful for me. I teared up and told him, “Man, I cannot tell you what that means to me.”
GM: Do you think Carl was aware of how good he was?
CC: Yeah, I think Carl knew how good he was. The Wilson brothers — Carl, Dennis and Brian — were all very humble boys. They were all so sweet. They had to have gotten that from their mother, Audree, because certainly their father, Murry, was pretty nuts. I think it’s just sort of genetic thing with them. They’re all just so kind. Brian is still so lovely. He doesn’t like when people tell him over and over that he’s a genius. I was fawning all over him one time, and he said, “Look man, I just produced some records, OK. It’s no big deal.” I think Carl probably knew he had something special. I mean, who else can go out and sing “Darlin’” onstage and not know they’re great? He was such a humble cat. The two people in the music business who I’ve met who are the most genuine people and totally not full of sh*t are Carl and Mike McDonald.
GM: For “Ride like the Wind,” how did you come to get Michael McDonald involved?
CC: Well, Michael Omartian produced my first four records. He was sort of in Steely Dan — as much as anybody’s in Steely Dan — and so was McDonald. So when I came to L.A. to make the record, Omartian invited McDonald to come down and hear this kid from Texas that he was working with, which is so funny because Mike is actually a year younger than me. So Mike came down and listened to what we were doing, liked it and said, “If you need to throw some backgrounds on it, let me know.” So we immediately had him sing on “I Really Don’t Know Anymore,” which is another track on the record. Subsequently, when we were working “Ride like the Wind,” we thought, “Wow, ‘Ride like the Wind’ has a great part for Mike to sing on,” and he graciously did it. It really helped me at radio tremendously to have him on the record; it was a huge coup. He did that, and we became friends, and our kids became friends too. Mike turned 60, and I went to Hawaii for a week for his birthday, so we remain real close. He’s such an incredible artist and a loving, genuine person. He reminds me so much of Carl. Mike is an R&B kind of cat, but I remember he picked me up one night to go to dinner, and I got into the car, and he had “Surf’s Up” on. He keeps telling me I should do a record like his Motown thing, but do all Beach Boys songs. I do want to do a Carl (Wilson) tribute record at some point, but I said, “Brian’s still touring; he’s still around. I don’t think it’s the right time to do that.”
GM: Songs have healing properties. What songs do you lean on that have helped raise your spirits?
CC: I do have my heroes, people like Joni (Mitchell) and Randy Newman. It’s funny. I don’t look for songs to lift me up in that way, but will listen to songs like Randy’s “Real Emotional Girl” or “I Think It’s Gonna Rain” and Joni’s “Song for Sharon” or “Don’t Interrupt the Sorrow.” They’re actually pretty heavy songs, but I tend to listen to stuff like that. Also, a song like Jackson Browne’s “Fountain of Sorrow.” I’ll listen to things like that, maybe because they’re so depressing that they make me feel better (laughs). It’s like watching “The Jerry Springer Show.” I mean, God, I thought my life was bad. (Laughs) I’ll also listen to something like “Surf’s Up” or “God Only Knows” by The Beach Boys because of Carl’s voice. He was my biggest vocal influence. Carl’s voice always puts me in a great place; a song like “Heaven” does it for me. Brian’s influence on me is huge as far as writing.
GM: In the early ’80s you experienced a huge wave of success. How were you able to handle it?
CC: You know, it was really hard. I was overwhelmed by everything but certainly didn’t handle it as well as I could have. I didn’t get into the drug thing; it was just too much. I wish I could go back and sort of do it again. It was fantastic. I’m glad it happened, but it’s all a big blur. As far as performing, I certainly wasn’t ready to be up on those stages and play for those large audiences. Coming straight from clubs and suddenly I’m performing in 20,000 seaters with only nine songs to play from my first album. I wish I’d had been a little better prepared for that. But it was an amazing start to my career … So much happened — the Grammys, and all that stuff, and all the touring, and then I got involved with Burt (Bacharach) and Carole (Bayer Sager) and did the “Arthur” thing (“Arthur’s Theme”) and the Academy Awards. Those few years were like an out-of-body thing. I remember a lot of it, and I’m certainly very honored and humbled that it all happened, but it was pretty surreal.
GM: You’re in a happier place now.
CC: I can sort of imagine what it must have been like for The Beatles or The Beach Boys having this huge success and being really young. That must have been hard. Like I said, I experienced a little bit of that in a very tiny way. I’m in a place where I’ve got a lot better handle on it and I really have a lot of confidence in what I’m doing, whether it’s records or performing. It’s nice when you meet people in the business who you’ve revered and you get to be around them as people and watch how they handle some of this stuff, and you learn from that, too. You learn to be a nice person and you learn to be humble. You learn a lot of that from people like Don Henley and Carl (Wilson).
GM: True or false: You subbed for an ailing Ritchie Blackmore for a gig at the JAM Factory in San Antonio with Deep Purple in 1970.
CC: That’s true. Growing up in Austin with the guitarists here like Billy Gibbons and Stevie Ray (Vaughan) and Eric Johnson, that was part of my thing, but the songwriter thing kind of took over. I was working for this guy named Joe Miller, who had this company called JAM Productions. He was a promoter in San Antonio and was bringing a lot of big tours through. He had a thousand-seat venue called the JAM Factory, and he brought Deep Purple in for their first show ever in the U.S. The band had been advised to get flu shots and Ritchie had a bad reaction to the flu shot and got quite ill and couldn’t play the show. The show was sold out, and Joe didn’t want to cancel it, so he talked to Jon Lord and said, “I’ve got this kid who works for me doing production stuff. He’s a guitarist with a band and he’s a big fan of Ritchie’s. He could sub for Ritchie so you guys could play and not have to cancel the show.” The band discussed it. The singer Ian Gillan was not in favor of it; everyone else in the band was all for it, thinking it’s better to play than cancel their very first show. So basically they announced to the audience that Ritchie was sick but they were still gonna play and me, Chris Geppert — which is my real name — was gonna substitute for Ritchie. I was a local guy, people knew me, and I had some respect. I mean, the crowd was clearly disappointed, especially those that were Blackmore fans. But I got up and played with them. I had a Flying V, long hair and a big Marshall stack. I knew a lot of the tunes from the record, so we got up and played the tunes that I knew, and then we jammed some blues. It was incredible for me. It was an iconic moment. When they left, I went to the airport and I met Ritchie. He was very gracious and gave me a guitar pick. He said, “I hear you did a real good job covering for me.” I said, “Well, it was an honor.” It was brief, but it was nice. What’s really interesting is Eagle Rock Records in Europe, who released my last studio album, “Doctor Faith,” also have Deep Purple on their label. So I asked the head of the label to ask Jon Lord about this. So he asked Jon about it — he recently passed away — and Jon said, “That never happened.” So the label head said, “Well, Christopher said it did.” And he said, “Never happened.” So I started getting freaked out like, “Wow. Did I just imagine this whole thing?” Eric Johnson lives in Austin, too, and he’s a good friend of mine. His band, Mariani, opened the show for Deep Purple. I called up Eric and said, “Hey man, did that actually happen?” And he said, “Yeah it happened. I was there; I saw it. I don’t know what he’s talking about.” I told the head of the label, “This is something they want to forget and that I want to remember.”
GM: You also opened for Led Zeppelin early in their career.
CC: I had a band called Flash. We were like Brian Wilson meets Frank Zappa. It was an attempt at complicated pop. I’m a big fan of Frank’s as well as Brian Wilson. Frank covered “Ride like the Wind” at one of his shows and asked me to sing, but I couldn’t make it. I do have a tape of it. In those days, they would have two acts and a local band playing 30 minutes before those bands went on. So the main acts on the bill were Led Zeppelin and Jethro Tull. Joe Miller was sort of managing us at the time and gave us the opportunity to open about seven shows for Tull and Zeppelin. It was really cool. We weren’t very good. The second day we were on the tour, Jimmy (Page) and Robert (Plant) came up to me and Jimmy said, “How do you kids follow us around? Do your parents have money or something?” They didn’t realize we were on the show. I said, “We have a band, and we’re opening for you.” And so the next night we’re playing and I look over, and there’s Page and Plant, standing in the wings watching us. They were only there for a short time; I almost sh*t my pants when I saw them watching us. As the next week or 10 days went on, I spent a little time with the guys in Zeppelin; they were all very nice. I got to watch them play over that period, and they were just unbelievable. I’d sit and watch them at sound check, too. (John) Bonham would show up and play for 45 minutes by himself, and it was crazy. Jimmy would come up and be warming up and wailin,’ and it was pretty fantastic. Back when my band opened for Zeppelin, they were using these rare Hiwatt amplifiers; no one had them beside Page and (Pete) Townshend. I said to Jimmy, “These amplifiers are really cool, and I’ve seen them in magazines but nobody really carries them over here.” He said, “Yeah, they’re made by this guy, and right now he only makes them for Pete and I.” I told him, “It’s my dream to have one of those amps! He said, “Well, give some money to my roadie, Clive, and we’ll send you one.” So I gave Clive $700, which was a lot of money back then. Everybody said that I’d never see my money again. A month or two later, I came home from school, and there were these boxes in my living room. It was a 4-by-12 cabinet and a Hiwatt head, and they shipped it to me. So not only was I the coolest guy in town with a Hiwatt amp, but I’d gotten it from Jimmy Page. Years later, I came up and played with The Beach Boys at a huge July Fourth show in Philadelphia in 1985, and Jimmy Page was a special guest on that show; he also played with The Beach Boys that day. I grabbed him at the show and introduced myself, and then he knew me as Christopher Cross. He was very nice. I said, “Let me tell you this story,” and he had no recollection of the story, but he said, “You know what I love about this story, man? It sounds like I was really nice to you, and I haven’t always been the nicest guy.”
GM: You also encountered Blind Faith.
CC: I didn’t open for Blind Faith, but I worked the show. I would go get drinks and pick them up at the airport. I watched Eric Clapton at sound check playing his Gibson 335 for 30 or 40 minutes, which was great. I was a gopher. Joe (Miller) had me doing anything and everything, because I wanted to learn about the business. In fact, I picked up Fleetwood Mac in a station wagon at the airport and drove them to the Holiday Inn. In the band at that time were Peter Green, Christine Perfect, Mick Fleetwood, John McVie and Jeremy Spencer. I told Mick this story years later when I was on the road opening for Fleetwood Mac, and he was like, “I don’t think so.” I reminded John McVie that the roof leaked in the San Antonio Auditorium on his amp, and it blew it up, and we had to get him another amp. John said, “You know man, I don’t remember anything about you, but I remember that happening when my amp blew up. I remember this gig!” (Laughs)
GM: If you had to pawn every guitar of yours and only keep one, which would you save?
CC: Sadly, at one point I had a ’59 Les Paul that I bought in a hock shop and I got to where I was so paranoid to do anything with it that I sold it, and I wish I hadn’t. I sold it for $30,000, and I saw it the other day on eBay for $110,000! (Laughs) The one guitar I would never pawn is my Carl Wilson Rickenbacker 12-string. They made them in a limited run of 2,500, but when I found out they were all sold, I called one of Carl’s sons, Jonah, and said, “Man, is there any way you can pull any strings and get me that guitar?” They made a call and I was able to buy a black one, and it’s amazing. If it wasn’t for Carl’s sons, I wouldn’t have it.GM
http://www.goldminemag.com/article/theres-singer-songwriter-christopher-cross-meets-eye
Ken Sharp
March 14, 2014
In 1981, you couldn’t turn the radio dial without landing on one of Christopher Cross’ hits. These intricately crafted pop jewels — “Sailing,” “Arthur’s Theme,” “Ride Like The Wind,” “All Right” — featured virtuoso musicianship and Cross’ instantly recognizable voice. Decades since he first broke through, the five-time Grammy (and one-time Oscar) winner continues to write, record and tour. His latest effort, the two-CD/DVD set “A Night In Paris,” is packed with his beloved hits and a passel of strong new material, including “November” and “Leave it to Me.”
GOLDMINE: Performing today as opposed when you first hit it big: How are things different? Is it more fun for you today?CHRISTOPHER CROSS: Well, I think it’s a lot more fun. There are two reasons why. Early on in my career, I was playing four sets a night and banging out the hits. There’s a certain chemistry there, but it’s exhausting, and you’re not playing your own music, so it’s not as rewarding. Then, when my career took off in the early ’80s and things became so meteoric, it felt like I was on a different planet. It was hard to grasp what was happening. Now after all these years, I’m really in the best place ever, because I’m playing my own music. I’m confident and feel really good about what I’m doing and the musicians I’m playing with. And now I have a big catalog, whereas when I toured behind my first record I only had nine songs to play, and I was playing 20,000-seaters (laughs). So, it’s really come together. The only downside now is the traveling, because I’m older, and that’s hard for all of us. It’s a wonderful time to play, and I really relish it more than ever now, because I know it won’t last forever.
GM: How does the manner in which you’re interpreting the songs in more of a jazz-rock setting impact on your performance?
CC: With all respect to the musicians I’ve played with in the past, I’ve been fortunate enough to grow into a situation where I’m able to work with some pretty high-level, jazz-trained musicians, much like Sting does, and how he brings that sensibility to the pop thing. So the songs are harmonically interesting enough, and in the manner that Steely Dan uses all these great session players, I’m using cats at that level. They bring a real jazz sensibility to the music, and it’s really enjoyable for me, because their interpretations mean we can really stretch things out. This is really the pinnacle for me as far as this time in my music and what I’m doing and who I’m doing it with. It’s pretty amazing. I’m also doing orchestral dates, which are incredibly rewarding. So it’s a great time for me. For a while in the early years, I used backing tracks, trying to emulate every note on the records, and I’ve abandoned that now. We just play completely live, and I have musicians capable of doing it.
GM: Today, with years and years of experience under your belt, have your goals changed from, say, 30 years ago?
CC: Well, I don’t know if my goals have changed a great deal. I just write songs ’cause I love to write them, and I’ve never expected much. Everything happened so quickly for me. I think my career arc has always been styled after Joni Mitchell’s, even though what happened in her career was, in a lot of way, unintentional. Joan did her early records, which were so lauded, and as she went on the material to me got better and better, and people had less and less interest in it, which was tragic. For me, it’s a similar arc (laughs). I didn’t design it that way as far as a career arc, but as far as trying to grow and get more sophisticated with what I do, especially lyrically, was all based on Joan. So to me, it’s sort of a natural progression that you have this start, and there’s a lot of excitement, and then you settle back into a place in the business, but that doesn’t affect the drive and the reason you do it. You do it because you love it.
GM: With major changes in the business — record labels folding, artists regaining control over their careers — how has the new paradigm impacted on the manner in which you approach your career as recording and touring artist?
CC: Well, it hasn’t really affected me too much, because I had a lot of success. The paradigm shift has helped democratize music, which is cool because there are all these young people who can make music in their houses, and they don’t have to have labels. But the field is very crowded — trying to get noticed on YouTube and that sort of thing. So I think the real challenge is how do you monetize the music? How do you still make a living at it? In my case, I have an audience, and I can go out and play. The challenge for young artists is, “How do I get my music heard enough to create a buzz where 500 people will show up in Cleveland to hear me?” The only way to really make any money in the business now is live shows, because everything else is sort of diluted, and it’s all over the Internet for free. So for artists today with record sales on a big level, like Taylor Swift, when you look at her numbers compared to “Jagged Little Pill” by Alanis Morissette, they’re quite different. Or look at U2’s album sales compared to “Rumours” by Fleetwood Mac, and there’s a big difference in sales. I’m producing my own records now, which is nice. I learned a great deal from Michael Omartian, my producer, but it got to the point with Michael where I couldn’t really afford him; it wasn’t practical for him to do the records. But I loved working with him and learned a lot from him, so I now produce myself because there’s no one else to do it (laughs). It’s an interesting time. I’m really glad I had my 15 minutes of fame when I did. It was an amazing time to be in the music business with people like Carl (Wilson) and Mike McDonald. It was really an amazing musical time, but also a real cool cycle of life where you made vinyl, it went to the retail outlets, it went to radio and you promoted it and toured, and then came back and did it again. I kind of enjoyed that cycle, to tell you the truth. Even though the record companies made the lion’s share of the money, it was a good time. I feel like a fish out of water with this new model with Twitter and all this stuff. I’m trying, but it’s pretty hard (laughs).
GM: A few years back, one of the engineers told me that during the recording of “Double Fantasy,” John Lennon was talking about how much he loved your song, “Sailing.” From what I’ve read, John always felt very alive on the water, and that’s something you connected with, too.
CC: In the old days, explorers went out into the ocean to see what they could find, not knowing that the earth didn’t drop off. These were guys who really had balls, because they went out there without knowing what would happen. But the ocean has always been the road to discovery. The transition I talk about in the song, (recites lyrics) ”The canvas can do miracles,” is certainly a liquid metaphor, but it’s also about transition through art. So for me, the canvas is a painter’s canvas, so the transition through art would be dance, music, poetry — the transition you experience when you interact with it. So there’s kind of a double meaning with that song and certainly the sailing part. But it’s also about the transition you experience when you hear a song or read a book. It’s both of those things. I did a lot of sailing when I was younger, and a lot of people have taken me on their boats. In fact, I think the last time I went sailing was on (David) Crosby’s boat. Sailing is a wonderful pastime. I like the escapism of it and the fact that you’re being driven by the wind, and there’s this sense of discovery to be on the edge of the earth. It’s a wonderful experience. I did a lot of sailing when I was younger with this guy named Al, who was an older mentor of mine, so there’s also some connection in that song to Al taking me out sailing. Al was an older guy and a guitarist, so there was some kind of big brother stuff attached to that, as well, which was meaningful for me. I’ll probably have these words on my epitaph, (recites lyrics) ”Just a dream and the wind to carry me and soon I will be free,” because that’s kind of what the creative process is about. It’s so strange that there’s this connection with that song to John Lennon. I was playing at the CafĂ© Carlyle in New York for a month, and the soundman was doing lot of archiving of the “Double Fantasy” sessions. He told me one day, “I was archiving all this ‘Double Fantasy’ stuff and there was this one moment where John was talking about you in the studio.” I told him, “I’ll give you everything I have if you can find that!” He said, “I had to listen to hours of tape, and I have no idea of where it was, but he started talking about you in the session and how he liked your song ‘Sailing.’” When I think about the fact if John had survived, I probably would have known him, that would have been so cool. I just saw (Paul) McCartney. I live in Austin, and he came here recently to play a concert. I went backstage and visited for quite a while with him, and I remember saying to him, “It was so bizarre to think about them hearing my record.” And Paul was like, “Well, why? Your record was, like, THE record. I mean, everybody had it.” I said, “Yeah, I know. But it’s one thing for everybody to have it, and it’s another thing for a Beatle to have it.” (Laughs.)
GM: Carl Wilson of The Beach Boys was a good friend of yours. How did you and Carl wind up laying down background vocals on David Lee Roth’s cover of “California Girls?”
CC: I’d sung with him before that. I met Carl after my first record. Carl sang on a couple of tracks on my second record, “Another Page.” I have some pictures of us in the studio, and it was an unreal experience. Then, after that we became very good friends, and we would do things together. I think people wanted Brian and Carl to sing on their records, but Brian wasn’t really doing much then … Ted Templeman, who produced David Lee Roth, wanted to do a cover of “California Girls,” and he called me and said, “Hey, we’d like to get you to do the backgrounds on this song.” And I said, “Yeah, of course.” I knew Ted from working with The Doobies. Then he suddenly said, “Hey, what do you think about getting Carl Wilson to sing with you?” Of course, I’m like, “Obviously you’re calling me because you wanted to get Carl.” (Laughs) They wanted validation; I think they wanted the stamp of approval from a Beach Boy. Carl was cool about it. David (Lee Roth) wasn’t at the sessions, but we just went in and did all the vocals, which was fabulous because Carl knew all the parts, so it was a lot of fun. But in all the situations where I sang with Carl — we got called to sing on a Clint Black record — whenever someone would call me to sing, it was strange how they’d always go, “Oh, is Carl around?” (Laughs) So I was really nothing more than a sub for Brian (Wilson), to tell you the truth, which is not a bad gig. But they always wanted to get Carl.
GM: Speaking of Brian Wilson, you sang background vocals on “Nighttime,” a track on his debut solo album.
CC: Yeah, that’s obviously a strange song. Brian was just getting back into music. Carl said, “Can you come down and sing on a song for Brian?” And it was just such a weird little high, stabbing, vocal part; it’s kind of a strange vocal, thinking about it now. But it was thrilling to get to do it. Brian was in the studio, and he sat at the piano and showed me what he wanted to do. It was pretty surreal. When I moved to L.A. from Texas, I lived on a street and my neighbors were Randy Newman and Brian and his therapist, Gene Landy — that’s when Brian lived with Gene. I’ve been very involved with The Beach Boys family saga all this time, and now I see Brian a lot because I’m very good friends with Jeff Foskett, a member of his band. I get along with all the guys in The Beach Boys; I toured with Mike (Love) for about a month in Australia and New Zealand, and I’d always come out and sing “I Can Hear Music,” which Carl produced for The Beach Boys back in the day. One of the things that happened, which was so touching for me — I was just in tears about it — I was opening for them at a show in France. They brought me out to sing “I Can Hear Music,” and after the show, I was saying goodbye to Mike, and he said to me, “Man, I could’ve sworn Carl was standing right next to me.” That was incredibly powerful for me. I teared up and told him, “Man, I cannot tell you what that means to me.”
GM: Do you think Carl was aware of how good he was?
CC: Yeah, I think Carl knew how good he was. The Wilson brothers — Carl, Dennis and Brian — were all very humble boys. They were all so sweet. They had to have gotten that from their mother, Audree, because certainly their father, Murry, was pretty nuts. I think it’s just sort of genetic thing with them. They’re all just so kind. Brian is still so lovely. He doesn’t like when people tell him over and over that he’s a genius. I was fawning all over him one time, and he said, “Look man, I just produced some records, OK. It’s no big deal.” I think Carl probably knew he had something special. I mean, who else can go out and sing “Darlin’” onstage and not know they’re great? He was such a humble cat. The two people in the music business who I’ve met who are the most genuine people and totally not full of sh*t are Carl and Mike McDonald.
GM: For “Ride like the Wind,” how did you come to get Michael McDonald involved?
CC: Well, Michael Omartian produced my first four records. He was sort of in Steely Dan — as much as anybody’s in Steely Dan — and so was McDonald. So when I came to L.A. to make the record, Omartian invited McDonald to come down and hear this kid from Texas that he was working with, which is so funny because Mike is actually a year younger than me. So Mike came down and listened to what we were doing, liked it and said, “If you need to throw some backgrounds on it, let me know.” So we immediately had him sing on “I Really Don’t Know Anymore,” which is another track on the record. Subsequently, when we were working “Ride like the Wind,” we thought, “Wow, ‘Ride like the Wind’ has a great part for Mike to sing on,” and he graciously did it. It really helped me at radio tremendously to have him on the record; it was a huge coup. He did that, and we became friends, and our kids became friends too. Mike turned 60, and I went to Hawaii for a week for his birthday, so we remain real close. He’s such an incredible artist and a loving, genuine person. He reminds me so much of Carl. Mike is an R&B kind of cat, but I remember he picked me up one night to go to dinner, and I got into the car, and he had “Surf’s Up” on. He keeps telling me I should do a record like his Motown thing, but do all Beach Boys songs. I do want to do a Carl (Wilson) tribute record at some point, but I said, “Brian’s still touring; he’s still around. I don’t think it’s the right time to do that.”
GM: Songs have healing properties. What songs do you lean on that have helped raise your spirits?
CC: I do have my heroes, people like Joni (Mitchell) and Randy Newman. It’s funny. I don’t look for songs to lift me up in that way, but will listen to songs like Randy’s “Real Emotional Girl” or “I Think It’s Gonna Rain” and Joni’s “Song for Sharon” or “Don’t Interrupt the Sorrow.” They’re actually pretty heavy songs, but I tend to listen to stuff like that. Also, a song like Jackson Browne’s “Fountain of Sorrow.” I’ll listen to things like that, maybe because they’re so depressing that they make me feel better (laughs). It’s like watching “The Jerry Springer Show.” I mean, God, I thought my life was bad. (Laughs) I’ll also listen to something like “Surf’s Up” or “God Only Knows” by The Beach Boys because of Carl’s voice. He was my biggest vocal influence. Carl’s voice always puts me in a great place; a song like “Heaven” does it for me. Brian’s influence on me is huge as far as writing.
GM: In the early ’80s you experienced a huge wave of success. How were you able to handle it?
CC: You know, it was really hard. I was overwhelmed by everything but certainly didn’t handle it as well as I could have. I didn’t get into the drug thing; it was just too much. I wish I could go back and sort of do it again. It was fantastic. I’m glad it happened, but it’s all a big blur. As far as performing, I certainly wasn’t ready to be up on those stages and play for those large audiences. Coming straight from clubs and suddenly I’m performing in 20,000 seaters with only nine songs to play from my first album. I wish I’d had been a little better prepared for that. But it was an amazing start to my career … So much happened — the Grammys, and all that stuff, and all the touring, and then I got involved with Burt (Bacharach) and Carole (Bayer Sager) and did the “Arthur” thing (“Arthur’s Theme”) and the Academy Awards. Those few years were like an out-of-body thing. I remember a lot of it, and I’m certainly very honored and humbled that it all happened, but it was pretty surreal.
GM: You’re in a happier place now.
CC: I can sort of imagine what it must have been like for The Beatles or The Beach Boys having this huge success and being really young. That must have been hard. Like I said, I experienced a little bit of that in a very tiny way. I’m in a place where I’ve got a lot better handle on it and I really have a lot of confidence in what I’m doing, whether it’s records or performing. It’s nice when you meet people in the business who you’ve revered and you get to be around them as people and watch how they handle some of this stuff, and you learn from that, too. You learn to be a nice person and you learn to be humble. You learn a lot of that from people like Don Henley and Carl (Wilson).
GM: True or false: You subbed for an ailing Ritchie Blackmore for a gig at the JAM Factory in San Antonio with Deep Purple in 1970.
CC: That’s true. Growing up in Austin with the guitarists here like Billy Gibbons and Stevie Ray (Vaughan) and Eric Johnson, that was part of my thing, but the songwriter thing kind of took over. I was working for this guy named Joe Miller, who had this company called JAM Productions. He was a promoter in San Antonio and was bringing a lot of big tours through. He had a thousand-seat venue called the JAM Factory, and he brought Deep Purple in for their first show ever in the U.S. The band had been advised to get flu shots and Ritchie had a bad reaction to the flu shot and got quite ill and couldn’t play the show. The show was sold out, and Joe didn’t want to cancel it, so he talked to Jon Lord and said, “I’ve got this kid who works for me doing production stuff. He’s a guitarist with a band and he’s a big fan of Ritchie’s. He could sub for Ritchie so you guys could play and not have to cancel the show.” The band discussed it. The singer Ian Gillan was not in favor of it; everyone else in the band was all for it, thinking it’s better to play than cancel their very first show. So basically they announced to the audience that Ritchie was sick but they were still gonna play and me, Chris Geppert — which is my real name — was gonna substitute for Ritchie. I was a local guy, people knew me, and I had some respect. I mean, the crowd was clearly disappointed, especially those that were Blackmore fans. But I got up and played with them. I had a Flying V, long hair and a big Marshall stack. I knew a lot of the tunes from the record, so we got up and played the tunes that I knew, and then we jammed some blues. It was incredible for me. It was an iconic moment. When they left, I went to the airport and I met Ritchie. He was very gracious and gave me a guitar pick. He said, “I hear you did a real good job covering for me.” I said, “Well, it was an honor.” It was brief, but it was nice. What’s really interesting is Eagle Rock Records in Europe, who released my last studio album, “Doctor Faith,” also have Deep Purple on their label. So I asked the head of the label to ask Jon Lord about this. So he asked Jon about it — he recently passed away — and Jon said, “That never happened.” So the label head said, “Well, Christopher said it did.” And he said, “Never happened.” So I started getting freaked out like, “Wow. Did I just imagine this whole thing?” Eric Johnson lives in Austin, too, and he’s a good friend of mine. His band, Mariani, opened the show for Deep Purple. I called up Eric and said, “Hey man, did that actually happen?” And he said, “Yeah it happened. I was there; I saw it. I don’t know what he’s talking about.” I told the head of the label, “This is something they want to forget and that I want to remember.”
GM: You also opened for Led Zeppelin early in their career.
CC: I had a band called Flash. We were like Brian Wilson meets Frank Zappa. It was an attempt at complicated pop. I’m a big fan of Frank’s as well as Brian Wilson. Frank covered “Ride like the Wind” at one of his shows and asked me to sing, but I couldn’t make it. I do have a tape of it. In those days, they would have two acts and a local band playing 30 minutes before those bands went on. So the main acts on the bill were Led Zeppelin and Jethro Tull. Joe Miller was sort of managing us at the time and gave us the opportunity to open about seven shows for Tull and Zeppelin. It was really cool. We weren’t very good. The second day we were on the tour, Jimmy (Page) and Robert (Plant) came up to me and Jimmy said, “How do you kids follow us around? Do your parents have money or something?” They didn’t realize we were on the show. I said, “We have a band, and we’re opening for you.” And so the next night we’re playing and I look over, and there’s Page and Plant, standing in the wings watching us. They were only there for a short time; I almost sh*t my pants when I saw them watching us. As the next week or 10 days went on, I spent a little time with the guys in Zeppelin; they were all very nice. I got to watch them play over that period, and they were just unbelievable. I’d sit and watch them at sound check, too. (John) Bonham would show up and play for 45 minutes by himself, and it was crazy. Jimmy would come up and be warming up and wailin,’ and it was pretty fantastic. Back when my band opened for Zeppelin, they were using these rare Hiwatt amplifiers; no one had them beside Page and (Pete) Townshend. I said to Jimmy, “These amplifiers are really cool, and I’ve seen them in magazines but nobody really carries them over here.” He said, “Yeah, they’re made by this guy, and right now he only makes them for Pete and I.” I told him, “It’s my dream to have one of those amps! He said, “Well, give some money to my roadie, Clive, and we’ll send you one.” So I gave Clive $700, which was a lot of money back then. Everybody said that I’d never see my money again. A month or two later, I came home from school, and there were these boxes in my living room. It was a 4-by-12 cabinet and a Hiwatt head, and they shipped it to me. So not only was I the coolest guy in town with a Hiwatt amp, but I’d gotten it from Jimmy Page. Years later, I came up and played with The Beach Boys at a huge July Fourth show in Philadelphia in 1985, and Jimmy Page was a special guest on that show; he also played with The Beach Boys that day. I grabbed him at the show and introduced myself, and then he knew me as Christopher Cross. He was very nice. I said, “Let me tell you this story,” and he had no recollection of the story, but he said, “You know what I love about this story, man? It sounds like I was really nice to you, and I haven’t always been the nicest guy.”
GM: You also encountered Blind Faith.
CC: I didn’t open for Blind Faith, but I worked the show. I would go get drinks and pick them up at the airport. I watched Eric Clapton at sound check playing his Gibson 335 for 30 or 40 minutes, which was great. I was a gopher. Joe (Miller) had me doing anything and everything, because I wanted to learn about the business. In fact, I picked up Fleetwood Mac in a station wagon at the airport and drove them to the Holiday Inn. In the band at that time were Peter Green, Christine Perfect, Mick Fleetwood, John McVie and Jeremy Spencer. I told Mick this story years later when I was on the road opening for Fleetwood Mac, and he was like, “I don’t think so.” I reminded John McVie that the roof leaked in the San Antonio Auditorium on his amp, and it blew it up, and we had to get him another amp. John said, “You know man, I don’t remember anything about you, but I remember that happening when my amp blew up. I remember this gig!” (Laughs)
GM: If you had to pawn every guitar of yours and only keep one, which would you save?
CC: Sadly, at one point I had a ’59 Les Paul that I bought in a hock shop and I got to where I was so paranoid to do anything with it that I sold it, and I wish I hadn’t. I sold it for $30,000, and I saw it the other day on eBay for $110,000! (Laughs) The one guitar I would never pawn is my Carl Wilson Rickenbacker 12-string. They made them in a limited run of 2,500, but when I found out they were all sold, I called one of Carl’s sons, Jonah, and said, “Man, is there any way you can pull any strings and get me that guitar?” They made a call and I was able to buy a black one, and it’s amazing. If it wasn’t for Carl’s sons, I wouldn’t have it.GM
Tuesday 25 March 2014
Great Libraries from Around the World...
Just as your local library is closing down...
The Rijksmuseum library in Amsterdam has the largest art history collection in the Netherlands. It has been open to the public since renovation work was completed in April 2013
http://www.theguardian.com/world/picture/2014/mar/24/eyewitness-rijksmuseum-amsterdam
Stunning libraries from around the world – in pictures
'Without libraries we have no past and no future,' said Ray Bradbury. A new book celebrates the most innovative library buildings. Take a whirlwind tour with our gallery
Nikki Hatchett
theguardian.com
Monday 24 March 2014
Seattle Central library, Washington, USA. The top-floor reading room offers views of Puget Sound and the surrounding mountains. Designed by OMA/LMN, completed in 2004.
Interior, Seattle Central library.
Sir Duncan Rice library, University of Aberdeen, Scotland. A building inspired by 'the ice and light of the north', with eight storeys housing 13km of bookshelves. Schmidt Hammer Lassen Architects, 2012.
John Ă Lasco library, Emden, Germany. This 16th-century church was bombed in the second world war and remained a ruin until the 1990s, when it was incorporated into a new library building. Jochen Bunse, 1995.
John Ă Lasco library
Sainte-Geneviève library, Paris, France. The use of iron for the Ionic columns, highly innovative in its day, made it possible to do without cumbersome masonry. Henri Labrouste, 1851.
Vennesla library and culture house, Norway. The 'whale skeleton' structure and generous use of glass make this a bright, striking library that has become part of the urban fabric. Helen & Hard, 2011.
Vennesla library interior.
Luckenwalde library, Germany: a converted railway building on the Berlin-Dresden line. FF Architekten and Martina Wronna, 2008.
Children and young people's section, Luckenwalde library.
Newcastle Literary and Philosophical Society, where you can usually find several core and fringe members of the FNB waiting for the previous night's alcohol-induced haze to clear on Saturday morning,
http://fabulousbooksfantasticplaces.wordpress.com/category/lit-and-phil/
Glasgow School of Art Library
http://www.scotcities.com/mackintosh/gsa.htm
Glasgow School of Art Library
http://www.scotcities.com/mackintosh/gsa.htm
Long Room, Trinity College Library, Dublin
Library Hall, Admont Abbey, Admont, Austria
Tama Art University Library, Tokyo, Japan
A few more:
Millicent Library; Fairhaven, Massachusetts, 1994. In 1894, Mark Twain wrote a letter calling this library “ideal”: “Books are the liberated spirits of men, and should be bestowed in a heaven of light and grace and harmonious color and sumptuous comfort, like this, instead of in the customary kind of public library, with its depressing austerities and severities of form and furniture and decoration. A public library is the most enduring of memorials…. All other things which I have seen today must pass away and be forgotten; but there will still be a Millicent Library when by the mutations of language the books that are in it now will speak in a lost tongue to your posterity.”
Monday 24 March 2014
Saturday 22 March 2014
Woody Allen - Crimes and Misdemeanors and The Front - reviews
Compromising Moral Positions
‘Crimes and Misdemeanors’ and ‘The Front’ Come to Blu-ray
By J. Hobeman
‘Crimes and Misdemeanors’ and ‘The Front’ Come to Blu-ray
By J. Hobeman
14 March 2014
The writer and director of more than 40 feature films, Woody Allen is one of the most driven artists in Hollywood history. I’m not sufficiently driven to have seen every one of his movies, but of the three dozen or so I have taken in, one stands alone: “Crimes and Misdemeanors,” newly out in a limited edition Blu-ray from Twilight Time.
Originally released in late 1989, “Crimes and Misdemeanors” walks the line between comedy and drama and rarely stumbles. The movie, set in an upper-middle-class Manhattan milieu, concerns two families, each unhappy in its own way. The distinguished ophthalmologist Judah Rosenthal (Martin Landau) struggles to disentangle himself from an affair with the pill-popping and increasingly needy Dolores (Anjelica Huston), a former flight attendant who threatens to expose their two-year relationship, as well as certain financial improprieties, to his adoring wife (Claire Bloom). Panicking, the doctor seeks help solving the Dolores problem from his mob-connected younger brother (Jerry Orbach).
This tawdry bourgeois tragedy plays out in counterpoint to a sweet, foredoomed romance. Cliff Stern (Mr. Allen) is a nebbish, miserably married (to Joanna Gleason). He makes “little films about toxic waste” and dreams of completing a feature-length portrait of a venerable Mittel European dispenser of psychoanalytic wisdom (the New York University professor Martin S. Bergmann).
Instead, his disapproving wife secures him a commission to direct a portrait of a Los Angeles producer of TV sitcoms, his fabulously successful and equally fatuous brother-in-law Lester (Alan Alda). During the course of the shoot, Cliff becomes infatuated with the project’s associate producer (Mia Farrow). The on-screen chemistry between Mr. Allen and Ms. Farrow is palpable — and more striking now than it was in 1989.
Featuring one of the finest casts Mr. Allen has ever assembled, “Crimes and Misdemeanors” has novelistic richness in delineating character — so much so that, at 104 minutes, the narrative feels squeezed. (I would have welcomed another half-hour.) The cinematic texture is unusually complex as well. Mr. Allen effects some startling juxtapositions, as when a hit man stalks his prey to a Schubert quartet.
He excerpts movies as varied as the 1943 musical “Happy Go Lucky” and the 1942 noir “This Gun for Hire” and, like a New Wave filmmaker, places “Crimes and Misdemeanors” in movie history. It variously suggests a bitter travesty of “Manhattan” (1979) and a gloss on the near-contemporaneous hit “Fatal Attraction” (1987), while to see the respectable Dr. Rosenthal struggle with his conscience is to recall the sinister thug the young Mr. Landau played 30 years before in “North by Northwest.” Cinema also affords the filmmaker protagonist a Pyrrhic victory; the first cut of his documentary hilariously juxtaposes self-aggrandizing Lester with newsreel footage of Mussolini.
“Crimes and Misdemeanors” is also hyperverbal, with an abundance of zingers delivered mainly by Cliff. (Mr. Allen is as funny as he has ever been, and Mr. Alda makes an excellent straight man.) At the same time, this may be the only Woody Allen movie in which Jewishness functions less as a shtick than as a moral code. The two families are linked by Cliff’s second brother-in-law (Sam Waterston), a saintly rabbi undergoing treatment with Judah for imminent blindness. One can forgive the continuous riffing on the need to “look at reality” and the nature of guilt in the “eyes of God.” The good cannot see; the bad choose not to.
Mr. Allen’s title consciously echoes that of “Crime and Punishment,” and the comparison is not altogether specious. Like Dostoyevsky’s, his characters are notably prone to agonized self-analysis, and seldom in an Allen picture have the stakes been so high. The various crimes and misdemeanors committed include murder, suicide and adultery (among other forms of deceit and betrayal), as well as the most unspeakable sexual act in Mr. Allen’s entire oeuvre; the movie ends with a wedding that brings everyone together to consecrate the notion of an unjust world.
An agnostic with regard to Mr. Allen when I first reviewed “Crimes and Misdemeanors” for The Village Voice, I thought I saw “startling intimations of greatness.” Revisiting the movie nearly a quarter-century later, I was struck by the skill with which he pulls off this unlikely amalgam. “Crimes and Misdemeanors,” remade after a fashion in Mr. Allen’s “Match Point” (2005) is an ambitious movie, although, according to his current biographer David Evanier (reached by email), Mr. Allen does not rank it among his favorites. It is also discomfiting, not least in Cliff’s cozy relationship with his prepubescent niece, Jenny (Jenny Nichols, the daughter of Mike Nichols).
Mr. Allen is a complicated man, and, as the world knows, his relationship with Ms. Farrow and their children has proved to be equally so. “Crimes and Misdemeanors” is his darkest film and, it would now seem, his most personal as well.
The writer and director of more than 40 feature films, Woody Allen is one of the most driven artists in Hollywood history. I’m not sufficiently driven to have seen every one of his movies, but of the three dozen or so I have taken in, one stands alone: “Crimes and Misdemeanors,” newly out in a limited edition Blu-ray from Twilight Time.
Originally released in late 1989, “Crimes and Misdemeanors” walks the line between comedy and drama and rarely stumbles. The movie, set in an upper-middle-class Manhattan milieu, concerns two families, each unhappy in its own way. The distinguished ophthalmologist Judah Rosenthal (Martin Landau) struggles to disentangle himself from an affair with the pill-popping and increasingly needy Dolores (Anjelica Huston), a former flight attendant who threatens to expose their two-year relationship, as well as certain financial improprieties, to his adoring wife (Claire Bloom). Panicking, the doctor seeks help solving the Dolores problem from his mob-connected younger brother (Jerry Orbach).
This tawdry bourgeois tragedy plays out in counterpoint to a sweet, foredoomed romance. Cliff Stern (Mr. Allen) is a nebbish, miserably married (to Joanna Gleason). He makes “little films about toxic waste” and dreams of completing a feature-length portrait of a venerable Mittel European dispenser of psychoanalytic wisdom (the New York University professor Martin S. Bergmann).
Instead, his disapproving wife secures him a commission to direct a portrait of a Los Angeles producer of TV sitcoms, his fabulously successful and equally fatuous brother-in-law Lester (Alan Alda). During the course of the shoot, Cliff becomes infatuated with the project’s associate producer (Mia Farrow). The on-screen chemistry between Mr. Allen and Ms. Farrow is palpable — and more striking now than it was in 1989.
Featuring one of the finest casts Mr. Allen has ever assembled, “Crimes and Misdemeanors” has novelistic richness in delineating character — so much so that, at 104 minutes, the narrative feels squeezed. (I would have welcomed another half-hour.) The cinematic texture is unusually complex as well. Mr. Allen effects some startling juxtapositions, as when a hit man stalks his prey to a Schubert quartet.
He excerpts movies as varied as the 1943 musical “Happy Go Lucky” and the 1942 noir “This Gun for Hire” and, like a New Wave filmmaker, places “Crimes and Misdemeanors” in movie history. It variously suggests a bitter travesty of “Manhattan” (1979) and a gloss on the near-contemporaneous hit “Fatal Attraction” (1987), while to see the respectable Dr. Rosenthal struggle with his conscience is to recall the sinister thug the young Mr. Landau played 30 years before in “North by Northwest.” Cinema also affords the filmmaker protagonist a Pyrrhic victory; the first cut of his documentary hilariously juxtaposes self-aggrandizing Lester with newsreel footage of Mussolini.
“Crimes and Misdemeanors” is also hyperverbal, with an abundance of zingers delivered mainly by Cliff. (Mr. Allen is as funny as he has ever been, and Mr. Alda makes an excellent straight man.) At the same time, this may be the only Woody Allen movie in which Jewishness functions less as a shtick than as a moral code. The two families are linked by Cliff’s second brother-in-law (Sam Waterston), a saintly rabbi undergoing treatment with Judah for imminent blindness. One can forgive the continuous riffing on the need to “look at reality” and the nature of guilt in the “eyes of God.” The good cannot see; the bad choose not to.
Mr. Allen’s title consciously echoes that of “Crime and Punishment,” and the comparison is not altogether specious. Like Dostoyevsky’s, his characters are notably prone to agonized self-analysis, and seldom in an Allen picture have the stakes been so high. The various crimes and misdemeanors committed include murder, suicide and adultery (among other forms of deceit and betrayal), as well as the most unspeakable sexual act in Mr. Allen’s entire oeuvre; the movie ends with a wedding that brings everyone together to consecrate the notion of an unjust world.
An agnostic with regard to Mr. Allen when I first reviewed “Crimes and Misdemeanors” for The Village Voice, I thought I saw “startling intimations of greatness.” Revisiting the movie nearly a quarter-century later, I was struck by the skill with which he pulls off this unlikely amalgam. “Crimes and Misdemeanors,” remade after a fashion in Mr. Allen’s “Match Point” (2005) is an ambitious movie, although, according to his current biographer David Evanier (reached by email), Mr. Allen does not rank it among his favorites. It is also discomfiting, not least in Cliff’s cozy relationship with his prepubescent niece, Jenny (Jenny Nichols, the daughter of Mike Nichols).
Mr. Allen is a complicated man, and, as the world knows, his relationship with Ms. Farrow and their children has proved to be equally so. “Crimes and Misdemeanors” is his darkest film and, it would now seem, his most personal as well.
‘The Front’
Also recently reissued by Twilight Time on Blu-ray, “The Front” (1976) is a less ambiguous morality play than “Crimes and Misdemeanors,” as well as a rare instance of Mr. Allen lending the Woody Allen character to someone else’s movie. Directed by Martin Ritt from Walter Bernstein’s screenplay, this comedy-drama was perhaps the first Hollywood film directly to address the blacklisting of Communists, Communist sympathizers and suspected Communist sympathizers during the 1950s.
Also recently reissued by Twilight Time on Blu-ray, “The Front” (1976) is a less ambiguous morality play than “Crimes and Misdemeanors,” as well as a rare instance of Mr. Allen lending the Woody Allen character to someone else’s movie. Directed by Martin Ritt from Walter Bernstein’s screenplay, this comedy-drama was perhaps the first Hollywood film directly to address the blacklisting of Communists, Communist sympathizers and suspected Communist sympathizers during the 1950s.
That it was made by and features a number of once blacklisted individuals, among them Zero Mostel, gives it a sense of collective psychodrama. Mr. Allen plays a petty hustler cum schnook enlisted by an old high school buddy (Michael Murphy, who’d play a similar role in “Manhattan”) to front for a group of proscribed writers, selling their scripts under his name. In a way, Mr. Allen fronted for the movie — as a star who made the story commercially viable as well as a character who, in the climactic scene, articulates things no one else can say.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/16/movies/homevideo/crimes-and-misdemeanors-and-the-front-come-to-blu-ray.html?emc=eta1&_r=0
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/16/movies/homevideo/crimes-and-misdemeanors-and-the-front-come-to-blu-ray.html?emc=eta1&_r=0
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