April 4, 2008

The Hoarders Are Defeated! Long Live Property!

Imagine my shock when I unsheathed the Times-Pic from the plastic wrap this morning and saw the hoarders on the front page. Then try and imagine them at the exact same time as the demolition crew descended on their family's home, leaving them with no place to live and a flat plain where their world stood just the day before. Then focus on the honk-honk up the block, the one with the marble porch and the short shorts and the Escalade, as he cradles two weiner dogs and smiles at the progress that's come to his end of Magazine Street, to the home he'll never sell in this market.

I wrote about this here, here, and here. This was coming, and many will say that nine years is more than enough time to deal with your problems, to accept the solutions offered by the city, to swallow the benevolent medicine of Stacey Head. Yet these are mentally ill people who for the better part of 5 years lived on a street with no traffic and a barrier that blocked them off from the rest of the city. They weren't a danger until they threatened property value and someone else's out of town dreams of gentrification. And they weren't in danger until the city got its demolition act together a week ago. And even then, when you thought blighted property, you probably thought of thousands of storm damaged houses that were left to fester by FedNaginBlakely.

But, no, first on the list is the family home of the hoarders. For they cannot fight, their neighborhood has no interest in them, and they live in the middle of high-rent land. Soon, developers will steal the land from them and we'll get a loft or condos and imaginary young professionals with jobs in an imaginary economy with imaginary cars and imaginary gas prices and imaginary needs for new clothes and hairstyles will move in and fit in and yes, yes, yes.... As Kim said this morning, those Africans who run the body shop on Melpomene will be next.

What bothers me almost as much as this forced evacuation of those without use-value is the course to come. If, in the history of the world, the lion has always eaten the lamb, Americans living in the wake of 25 years of neo-conservative, anti-gov't policy can expect no safety net and the inevitable triumph of the rapacious. We can mourn it, but that's the consequence of voting and stolen elections.

However, when the lions (be it the fenced-in little homeowner at Terpsichore and Magazine, the salon owner, the childish Councilwoman, the pasty real estate tycoon) are so deformed, sickly, and delusional, the equation serves no purpose. Really, if the supposed "strong" in this New Orleans are to win out, all we'll get is a better track for tourists and fesitval mongers. We won't get a better economy, better schools, or a better shot at longevity. These people aren't trained or equipped for success ala Seattle or DUMBO, they just have the money to buy CliffNotes on the book "How to Get Over in the New Cities Game." No one wins.

People who are weird and don't get with the "program," like the hoarders, are made homeless, people who lost their homes in the storm have to wait for Magazine Street demolitions, and people who want another gelato shop wait in line with some fcker in a fanny pack who read about good shopping in a guide book. It's not progress, it's playtime, except that real folks get hurt while wannabe titans swing their limp processes around.

And by the time I finish this post, three more feeble people will have no home. Just in time for Jazzfest.

April 2, 2008

4/1 Set List

Order this album right away
Premiered three new discs--this one (thanks to Matt Shipp for the mail), Irvin Mayfield & Ellis Marsalis new release (the first from Basin St. Records since the storm), and The Roy Campbell Ensemble's live recording from the 2007 Vision Fest (dope). Jean-Luc Ponty-of view: at a recent panel/performance, I heard two local clarinetists bemoan a "lost generation" of musicians that came up in the 60's and 70's who never paid their dues in trad bands. I maintained that this missed the point, or rather condescened real political issues + the development of R&B and Funk + the basic fact of a musician's life in this city: you play every style, whatever they'll pay you for. Just because these two didn't see their contemporaries at Preservation Hall, that doesn't mean the music was lost. And what of today's lost generation? Can trad save them? As Jean-Luc might say, Don't Let the World Pass You By.

Anyways, this includes some left over marathon requests in the 1st 30 minutes, which worked pretty well, actually...

Artist - Track - Album - Label
James Booker - United Our Thing Will Stand - Tipitina's 1977 - none
Billy Martin - Coconuts Feeding Birds - Solo Live Tonic 2002 - Amulet
Joni Mitchell - The Last Time I Saw Richard - Miles of Aisles - Elektra (marathon request)

Wilco - Sky Blue Sky - Sky Blue Sky - Nonesuch
Joni Mitchell - You Turn Me On, I'm a Radio -Miles of Aisles - Elektra
Billie Holiday - Georgia on My Mind - Lady Day: The Master Takes - Sony
Howard Wiley - No More My Lawd - The Angola Project - HNIC
Right Hemisphere - Right Hemisphere - Right Hemisphere - Rogueart
Right Hemisphere - You Rang

Chick Corea & Gary Burton - Bud Powell - The New Crystal Silence - Concord
Irvin Mayfield & Ellis Marsalis - Blame it on the sun - Love Songs, Ballads, and Standards - Basin Street
Mayfield & Marsalis - A House is Not a Home - Love Songs, Ballads, and Standards - Basin Street
William Parker & Hamid Drake - Bodies Die/Spirits Live - First Communion - AUM Fidelity
Right Hemisphere - Lava
The Roy Campbell Ensemble - Aten and Amarna - Live at Vision Festival XII - AUM Fidelity
Campbell Ensemble - Sunset on the Nile
Right Hemisphere - Dice
Jean-Luc Ponty - Don't Let the World Pass You By - Cosmic Messenger - Atlantic
Albert Ayler - Softly As In a Morning Sunrise - The First Recording Vol. 2 -DIW
Hamilton de Holanda - as rosas nao falam (the roses don't speak) - Intimo - Adventure
Bill Dixon - Mandala Per Mandela - Son of Sisyphus - Soul Note

April 1, 2008

Stella and St. Claude

Sunday was a rambler. I worked the Tennesse Williams Festival's music events at the Palm Court, which mostly involved sitting at the bar and sipping some beer, occasionally tilting my head at a comment or verse. At one point, I strolled back to headquarters at the Bourbon Orleans to pick up checks and credentials for a few of the performers, and got caught behind these men (and woman) of the cloth.


When things finished up, I biked into Jackson Square, where I ran into a friend who got me up onto the judge's balcony for the Stella contest.

I don't know who won, but I was rooting for the gold-painted mime who simply mouthed the word "Stella" three times. These lil' children took a shot after the judges retreated to their quarters. Initial shyness wore off and these two fellows shouted for about 15 minutes.


Kim was at the big PGA tournament on the West Bank, cause that's how she rolls. After I got home, I took a drive to pick up some food for us.


I'm repeating myself, but certain stretches of time bring you back into the fold, even while completely alone in a minivan: a believer, a member, adrift in the haze and sun-struck grace of the city and its many odd hours.

March 26, 2008

March 25th Set List

Henry Butler


Good first show online. Included the Jean Luc Ponty-of-view questions: Ray Nagin really has a company called Stone Age? And, if it not sheerly for bribery's sake, who in their right mind would hire Ray Nagin to do their countertops?

Artist - Track - Album - Label
Bigga Raiji - Size - VA - Japan Record
James Booker - Classified - Live at Tipitina's 1977
Jason Kato Hwang - From East Sixth STreet - Edge - Innova
Gil Scot Heron - Home is Where the Hatred Is - The Revolution Will Not Be Televised - RCA
Barre Phillips - Ms. P. - Three Day Moon - ECM
William Parker - Old Tears - Raining on the Moon - AUM Fidelity
Bud Powell - Parisian Thoroughfare - In Paris - Reprise
Nublu Orchestra - Let's Do It - Self - Titled - Nublu
Circle (Braxton, Corea, Holland, Altschul) - Kelvin 73 - Paris - Concert - Polydor
Gregory Hines - The Chicago Strut - Jellly's Last Jam Soundtrack - Polygram
Myra Melford Extended Ensemble - Part II Frank Lloyd WRight Goes West to Rest - Even the Sounds Shine - WDR
Johnny Greenwood - Eat Him By His Own Light - There Will Be Blood Soundtrack - Nonesuch
Henry Butler - Beautiful, She Is - The Village - Impulse
Loyola University Jazz Band - Where Are You? - LUJB - H&G
Slow Poke - Listen Here - At Home - Palmetto
Sarah Vaughn - Trouble - A Time In my Life - Mainstream
Billy Bang - Pieta - Commandment (for the sculpture of Alain Kirili) - No More Records
Jean Luc Ponty - Ethreal Mood - Cosmic Messenger - Atlantic
Paul Rutherford - Secundus - Solo in Berlin 1975 - Emanem
Barry Altschul Quartet - Le Tango - Irina - Soul Note

March 25, 2008

R.I.P. Al Copeland

I'm a little late on this, but pour a little fountain Coke on the ground for Al Copeland, Popeye's founder and true G of New Orleans low culture.

Really, I have a special spot in my heart for the man and his creation. A Popeye's meal was the first one I ever shared with Kim, probably one of the most memorable 30 minutes of my life. A friend of mine babysat for Copeland's grandchildren one summer and had more than a few tales of excess and odd parenting. When I moved from N.O. to Philly, I ate so much Popeye's, I converted half my office to the special spices and had people collecting coupons for me (those were tough times). One of my favorite advertising schemes was the slot machine set-up at the cash registers at the Popeye's on 46th St. in Manhattan, where you'd hit a button and round up your change, getting a free side dish or drink, depending on how the slots treated you. After my dad had heart surgery in '03, I gave up eating Popeye's for the most part, but since moving back, I've hit it up for special occasions, like Saints games or Mardi Gras or anniversaries. Before the Hornets started selling out games and Al's health went downhill, he was the only celebrity you'd see at games, walking around like a black rooster with some candy girl/new wife. I wouldn't say he added a touch of class to the proceedings, but he was a certain kind of N.O. royalty and people would gawk at him. Everybody knew--Al Copeland lived large.

Much respect to the man. In a city where the phrase is over-used, Al Copeland was a New Orleans original.

March 24, 2008

And Now Some Good News

WTUL is broadcasting online again right HERE. Check us out on Tuesdays, 6-8pm, for some jazz and things. Personally, I'm amped.

March 23, 2008

Projects or Tanks: 5th Anniversary of the War

On Saturday morning, the Crescent City Classic blocked our route uptown, so we ended up cutting over to St. Bernard to get onto 610. New rubble stood in the place of the St. Bernard projects, which we'd passed only a week ago, and which were on the front page of the TP just a few days back. In the photo, the pitiful, racist, supposed mouthpiece of public housing residents (as selected by some liberal arts students) shouted at two national guardsmen while two hippies watched from a neutral ground. Now all that was left was brick and twisted wire.

Once on 610, we saw a train pass to our left. Its load: one tank after another, maybe 20 in all, squat and desert-tan and seemingly benign as toys, sliding through the morning with the city skyline as silent witness.

And as victim. For if personality games and falsehood can make up the dialogue on the war in the rest of the country--and only on anniversaries does your local news speak its name--here in New Orleans, we eat it daily. The precedence given to endless war over infrastructure and the basic functions of government is never more clear than on mornings like this Saturday. I am not bemoaning the loss of public housing in favor of war--I am pointing out that these are the disasterous choices we face, almost 7 years after 9/11, 5 years after the war began, over 2 years after Katrina.

I wanted to pull over and sit there a minute, but you know, we're paying $3.25 a gallon, and you can't really enjoy your pity at that rate, right? We were already running late, anyhow.

It is not healthy for us to see such things. Perhaps it is an honest existence in this country today, to face up to a demolished project and a line of tanks all in one ride to work. Perhaps I can feel the breath of the conflict and am somewhat buoyed on occasion, knowing that none of this is sublimated or theory--it is right here. But on others, like this one, I have to take many breaths, slow breaths, closing my eyes when possible. This is your youth, your nation, this is that time, these things are the same and powerful. And no one wants to talk about that.

My friend is in town from Japan. His English is not so good, and so I'm not sure what comes across in my explanations of the city, of my life, of where we live and what we do. This afternoon, we took him east, out Hayne Blvd., then to Chef Menteur, and then we made our way around the old Six Flags. I pulled over in front of a Toyota dealership and I don't think my friend knew why.

I wanted to see the crests of the coasters beyond the roofs of the giant SUV's, all them to be bought on credit and to drink spiraling gas costs, and to circle, perhaps in service, or perhaps aimlessly, this vivid, grotesque spot of America.

Five years after this war began, the edges have collapsed all around us and no one can say a nice thing about the future. Whatever reasons for starting this thing, they are feeding anyone today, and they will not tear down that Six Flags and build a school. We pay for this thing daily and we ask why the economy is in the shitter. We buy bigger cars and make songs about them. We leap over ourselves to avoid the guilt that comes with talking or watching it on cable. We let idiots pray for the return of slums.

Five years later, hasn't this war taken over everything? On 9/11, I stood on the corner of 5th Avenue and 48th Street in Manhattan as a black cloud spread across the lower tip of the island, and I knew something bad had come for us. If these days I drive past tanks and rubble and rusted out amusement parks, that's no surprise. It is a surprise that we only get around to these connections when the calendar hits a certain number, rather than in the endless hours within the constant, consumptive fever of the last five years.

March 20, 2008

Indian Sunday 2008


Most of this is from outside of Marcus Garvey Park at S. Derbigny and Washington Avenue. I wasn't quite as delirious as last year, but we showed some friends from outta town how the heart of the city beats.