Not a Cover Band - Get Back Unplugged - The Beatles Reimagined
Saturday, March 15, 2025
 | 15 March 2025 |
Of late I write a lot about my advanced age of 82 and how
since the death of my Rosemary on 9 December 2020 I have little inclination to
go alone to concerts, theatre and dance. I particularly avoid the large, and to me cold venues
like the Queen Elizabeth Theatre and the Chan Centre.
The Orpheum for me is now an exercise in nostalgia for the
warm personality of Bramwell Tovey. Few people that I ask now know who heads
the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra.
I think this city is culturally sterile. We have no real newspapers that inform
us of cultural events in theatre, music and dance. And our CBC is now vacant in cultural programming with the exception of Ideas, Reclaimed and that intelligent The Debaters.
There is a happy exception. This is to be in the email lists
of your fave groups. Many of those are headed by virtuoso violinist Cameron Wilson
who is as busy as Leslie Dala. I reckon that their families no longer recognize
them as they are rarely home! Another email list of mine included The Turning Point Ensemble ,Yarilo and the Microcosmos Quartet.
Tonight I went with my designer friend Graham Walker to a
concert called Get Back Unplugged - The Beatles Reimagined. It was held at the
West Vancouver Yacht Club. After a longish trek on a curvy road we arrived to
find ourselves in an out-of-context situation of seeing elderly people having
dinner at many long tables. It occurred to me that I was probably older than
most of them. A reality check it became for me. I first heard the Beatles single Love Me Do in 1962 when I was 20 in the house of a Yorkshire friend in Mexico City. Yes, last night I was one very old man. Cameron Wilson - violin, vocals
Andrew Hillhouse - guitar, vocals,
LJ Mounteney - vocals, ukulele, percussion
Allan Dionne - accordion, vocals
David Gibbons - guitar, vocals
Brent Gubbels - bass
The band, a most definitely not a cover band, played many
Beatles songs that this musical ignoramus had no memory of ever hearing before.
Thanks to my Beatles expert, Graham Walker I was clued in.
Such is the virtuosity of this band that I marvelled at how
some of their Beatles versions sounded like Nova Scotia folk music or Tina
Turner versions. The female singer L.J. Mounteney performed her Turner impression and her singing throughout the night was stellar, and in particular,
with all her little noise making devices.
The evening’s revelation to this amateur music critic, was
the combination (they played on opposite sides) of British electric guitar/singer David Gibbons and accordionist/singer Allan Dionne (consider that I do
not like the accordion!).
Mentioning those three performers does not take away from
the other three who are a group called The Wahs. Cameron Wilson played his
violin with dazzling virtuosity. Guitarist and singer Andrew Hillhouse injected
his strong singing personality and bassist Brent Gubbles made his bass be the steady
pillar of the group. I can only add that Gubbles follows the Vancouver
tradition, perhaps begun by Mark Haney (he of the Isolation Commissions during
the Covid pandemic), of bassists being extremely handsome.
I find it perplexing that there is so much musical talent
in this city and that only a few lucky few like me are aware. CBC wake up!
A Mechanical Persistence
Wednesday, March 12, 2025
 | Photograph - Curtis Daily - 10 March 2025 |
 | Gary Cullen - 28 November 2024 |
The more I survive into this 21st century the more I am
amazed of situations that have persisted (continued?) since I was very young.
The camera in this scan is an East German Pentacon-F (the
nomenclature on the bottom plate of the camera reads – Russian occupied Germany)
I purchased in 1958 from Olden Cameras in New York for $100. I was at the time
a boarder in a Roman Catholic high school in Austin called St. Edwards. At the
time popular cameras were rangefinders and these SLRs were the new kids on the
block.
I had saved for the purchase from a job cleaning and
catching mice at Brother Edwin Reggio CSC’s band room. I played the alto
saxophone for the school band and jazz band.
With this camera, and a used Asahi Pentax S-3, I made good
money in the early 1970s in Mexico City until we left for Vancouver in 1975. I
photographed wealthy Mexican families using Kodak Tri-X and processing the film
and printing in my little darkroom in Arboledas, Estado de México. Many years
later when I have returned to Mexico City my former clients have shown me my
work and I can proudly reveal that they are pristine and not yellow with age.
As soon as we left Mexico, and on our way here, I purchased
a couple of better cameras in Los Angeles. The Pentacon-F became a decorative
fixture in my oficina.
Every once in a while I would test the shutter. To my shock
about 3 months ago the shutter was not operational.
My philosophy is that since I bought these cameras when they
worked, they should still work when I leave for my soon to come oblivion.
My friend Gary Cullen (owner of a magical 1947 Tatra) used
to have a business called Brighouse Camera Repair. He is now retired. He
offered to fix it. What did he do?
Incredibly, he has black shutter cloth, so he cut some and
made a new shutter for the camera.
When my Portland friend, Curtis Daily visited me last
week (he left yesterday), we decided to shoot some pinhole photographs with my
Mamiya RB 67. We also shot portraits with the Pentacon of each other posing
with Pancho el Esqueleto using Kodak Ektachrome which is not only being sold in
Vancouver but it is processed at The Lab. And of course that new shutter works perfectly.
In my current technique of using my Epson V700 scanner as a
tabletop camera, this image satisfies me and I remember fondly how the
Pentacon-F, purchased with funds I earned from working for Brother Edwin Reggio,
C.S.C. somehow predetermined that someday I would become a photographer.
On Inspiration & Gunfighters
Friday, March 07, 2025
 | Boris Riabov - 6 March 2025 |  | The Keynote - 1915 - William Arthur Chase |
My grandmother often told me that the devil knew more not
because he was the devil but because he was an old man. Because I am 82, I can
assert that I know stuff and that some of that stuff is useful.
I started taking photographs in 1958 and I have continued
until now. And from now, I am continuing until I meet my oblivion.
It is for that that I can assert that the Holy Grail of photography
in the 20th century was a style that could be readily identified. We
could discern the styles of Philippe Halsmann, Annie Leibovitz, Irving Penn,
Helmut Newton, Diane Arbus, Ansel Adams, and many more.
In this 21st century with magazines and
newspapers all but gone the profession of editorial (magazine, newspaper)
photograph has all but disappeared.
Ansel Adams’s photos are famous to this day as we know where
he took his pictures and we understand the clarity of his zone system that
brings out the shadows without blowing out the whites.
Because of the proliferation of phone photographs, we now see
lots of nature/garden, sunset photographs. It is very difficult (my opinion)
for anybody to identify these photographs to a particular photographer. It was
the portrait of that past century, where a sense of style was obvious and
lighting was used.
I look at my large collection of photo books and I wonder
who will want them when I am gone. At the same time I know why I purchased them
and why I read them all.
To have an identifiable style in that 20thcentury one had to rip off styles of other photographers, and sooner or later
the rip-offs had enough variation that they became the property of the
photographer. I have looked at photographs, sculptures and paintings and I have
used them for inspiration. My photographs might not make the rip-off obvious
but it is there. Even poetry such as that of Emily Dickinson and my countryman Jorge Luís Borges that inspires me to take photographs to illustrate one of their poems.
I equate a photographer with a 19th century American
gunfighter. A gunfighter’s last shot had to be good or he would be dead. While
death is not the result for a photographer who takes a bad photograph, I would
think that a photographer is as good as their last photograph.
Such was the case (a subjective opinion it is) of my
photograph last night of the mercurial Boris Riabov who is gainfully employed
by Beau Photo.  | Boris Riabov - June 6, 2024 |
Because of the excellent (my opinion) algorithms of
Facebook and Twitter and since I rarely comment or discuss politics and
religion, my feed is a wonderful and constant show of Vincent van Goghs, and
other artist of the pasts to this day. There was one that caught my eye. His
name is William Arthur Chase:
Born: 1878 -
Bristol, England
Died: 1944 -
Blewbury, England
Known for: Portrait and floral still life painting.
A few weeks before last night, I had been visited by
Riabov and his Beau Photo friend Nicole Langdon-Davies. He sat down at my baby
grand Chickering piano and played for almost 45 minutes. When a bit later I saw
the Chase’s piano painting I was inspired.
For the photograph I used a Fuji X-E3 equipped with a
Lensbaby attachement and wide-angle extension. I took 8 photographs and one (in
my eyes is perfect).
Today Friday, March 7 I find myself still alive. An added piece of information important to me is that the music on the Chickering was one of three albums of my great aunt Buenaventura Gálvez Puig who was a concert pianist. The book is open at a Chopin Impromtu.
A Melancholic Found Polaroid With Rosemary's Face
Wednesday, March 05, 2025
 | Senecio Brachyglottis greyii |
When one lives alone in a house that was occupied also by
someone else, and in this case my Rosemary, I find things every day that remind
me of her.
I have had this Polaroid on my desk for some months. It is
dark and embedded with dust. Today I decided to scan it and to painfully remove
all that dust. The colours are a purplish
blue. The Senecio Brachyglottis greyii (the grey plant) was one of her
favourite grey plants. She had a fondness for all grey plants. The rose is one
of my favourite David Austen English Roses called Rosa ‘Fair Bianca’. It has a unique myrrh scent that only snobbish
rosarians like. Both Rosemary and I were rose snobs!
To me there is a lovely sadness in this Polaroid that is
almost like looking at Rosemary, who often, on her own, would reflect and
show a sadness in her face. Our eldest daughter Alexandra inherited that
melancholic face.
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