Canaries With La Modestine
Sunday, March 08, 2026
 | | Marc Destrubé |
Folia a baroque Louie Louie 7 listening to Marc Destrube play while on my back under a harpsichord.
According to
my Real Academia dictionary folía is a word of French origin that means mad. It
is further defined as a dance typical of the Canary Islands but also an extremely
noisy Portuguese dance that involved many people. This is partially confirmed
by the Folia website and I quote:
 | | Natalie Mackie |
The name
"Folia" is of Iberian origin and refers to a fertility dance in
three-four time originating in the late 15th century. The first time the name
emerges is in a text by the Portuguese dramatist Gil Vicente entitled
"Auto de Sibilla Cassandra". In music Folia meant, at least till the
1670's, a very quick paced and tumultuous dance, in which the dancers carried
men dressed as women upon their shoulders. They were literally driven mad by
the noise and the stirring rhythm.
 | | Lucas Harris |
Yesterday
March 7 I went to an intimate concert by La Modestine ( a trio) at Hodson
Manor. It was a most pleasant surprise as the music was early baroque
compositions by Spanish composers or by a Portuguese composer Falconieri who
was in Spanish ruled Naples and an English Henry Butler who and English composer who spent 29 years in
Madrid in the court of Philip IV.
Because my
Manila-born grandmother María de los Dolores Reyes de Irureta Goyena was
educated in Valencia in the 19th century she inculcated me with lots of
stuff about her Spain. Interestingly she often told me that the best songs
about Spain had been written by Mexican composer, Agustin Lara (one version of
La Malagueña) or by Cuban Ernesto Lecuona (the other better known Malagueña).
She further cited Edouard Lalo’s Opus 21 in D minor Symphonie Espagnole written
for Spanish virtuoso violinist Pablo de Sarasate. She would end her argument
telling me that Rimsky Korsakov’s Capriccio Espagnol sounded more Spanish than
most Spanish music. She did not have to tell me about Bizet’s opera Carmen to
put the nails on the Spanish coffin. I eventually agreed with her in 1961 when
in my new craziness for American jazz I bought Miles Davis’ Sketches of Spain.
Because I am
Argentine, and, because of my grandmother’s love for the Spanish language, I was
most impressed by lutenist-theorbist(?) & Spanish guitarist, Lucas Harris’s
fine pronunciation of Spanish. My Argentine counterparts say they speak
castellano while Mexicans and Spaniards speak español. In Spanish we never
capitalize languages or nationalities.
I was delighted
to see Ray Nurse and Michelle Speller who never uses tail hair from female
horse to make her violin bows.
Many years
ago Ray Nurse gave fabulous pre-concert talks. One day I asked him about my
favourite folias, chaconnes and passacaglias. He told me that they were
basically the same thing. And then amazingly he surprised me by telling me that
the Dave Brubeck Quartet’s Take Five was a chaconne!
Marc
Destrubé’s groups always feature lots of explanation of the music played and
its origin.
One of the
real pleasures of listening to La Modestine (in this case minus a harpsichord)
was the lovely sound blending between the always smiling Natalie Mackie and
Lucas Harris’s Spanish guitar and his huge theorbo (built by Ray Nurse).
All in all
the concierto was macanudo ( an Argentine word for wonderful). And there is
this: Macanudo (1963) is a jazz album by pianist Ahmad Jamal, released on the
Argo label. Recorded in 1962, it features Jamal with an orchestra arranged and
conducted by Richard Evans, blending Latin-influenced sounds with strings
Inspired by Susan Sontag
Saturday, March 07, 2026
 | | Niño & Niña |
Each time a
woman lies about her age she becomes an accomplice in her underdevelopment as a
human being.
Women have
another option. They can aspire to be wise not merely nice; to be competent,
not merely helpful; to be strong not merely graceful; to be ambitious for
themselves, not merely for themselves in relation to men and children. They can
let themselves age naturally and without embarrassment, actively protesting and
disobeying the conventions that stem from this society’s double standard about
aging. Instead of being girls, girls as long as possible, who then age
humiliatingly into middle-aged women and then into obscenely into old women,
they can become women much earlier – and remain active adults, enjoying the
long, erotic career of which women are capable, far longer. Women should allow
their faces to show the lives they have lived. Women should tell the truth.
1972 – Susan
Sontag- On Women – Copyright 2023 by the Estate of Susan Sontag.
Some
beginning to read this might wonder why I am using a phone photograph of my two
cats Niño and Niña on our bed with Sontag’s book.
In the late
70s, 80s and in beginning of the 90s I photographed many Vancouver
ecdysiasts. I was trusted, so I was even given access into their verboten
dressing rooms. A couple of days ago I was interviewed at home by two women who
are starting the project of making a documentary on the exotic dancing seen in
Vancouver until now. They tape recorded me and plan to return next week with a
video camera.
One of the
women is the daughter of famous dancer in the late 70s at the Number 5 Orange
Bar. She is lovely and intelligent and showed me nude photographs of her mother
with a not-in-the-least understated smile.
On a whim I
wrote to her and asked her if she would pose for me in the spirit of things. I
received a very quick and enthusiastic, “Yes!”
While I am
excited about the project, in my career as a magazine, I was
constantly pushed by pushy art directors to “do it differently”. While my
dancer photographs were mostly portraits and never cheesy, I cannot approach these photographs with a last-century mentality.
This is
especially so as I finished Sontag’s book a couple of days ago. Reading it I
could not help but compare her liberated woman of 1975 to that of my liberated
Rosemary. It was she who made all the decisions in our life together and thanks
to her I never have to worry about where the next buck is going to come from.
Will I have
to persuade this woman not to take all her clothes off? Because she is inspired
by her mother’s former profession, she is keen on imitating the photograph she
showed me of her fully nude.
So how am I
to combine in a photograph that 80s ecdysiast portrait I so often took, while
giving it a modern approach? I know how I am going to start. In the late 70s
one of the first dancers I photographed was T. I took my photograph of her
reflected in a Mexican 8-sided mirror. I still have that mirror by my entrance.
KImberly Klass - Lovely Innocence
Friday, March 06, 2026
In the 80s and the 90s some of my friends who were
writers, illustrators, editors, designers, strippers, poets, etc. would meet
for lunch every Thursday at Vancouver’s then fabulous Railway Club for lunch at
noon. One very lively and pleasant young woman was Kimberly Klass. She seemed
to be innocent and proved it with enthusiasm when she visited me one afternoon
and I played her some of my favourite jazz. She had never heard it.
Somehow I got to photograph her many times. She was
more than a muse as she made me (without saying anything) push the boundary of
what I usually did. The photograph of her with her black skirt, stockings and
hand is one of my most favourite ever.
One day she called me to tell me that she had a new
friend who was a painter/artist. I immediately told her to bring him to my
studio and for him to bring a little paintbrush.
At the end of the 20th century and in the beginning
of this one there was a photographic gallery called The Exposure Gallery on
Beatty Street. They kept having group shows with themes. A frequent one was The
Erotic.
Somehow I managed to photograph two women, Kimberly
was one of them in which I had a procedure which involved me pointing my camera
at their faces while below they indulged in a self-induced orgasm. Then from
the contact sheet I would pick five and run them in a long matted frame which I
called a narrative. It was up to me to figure out (and as I was a man that was
next to impossible) to find that third frame that marked the orgasm.
I will never understand women. At the opening about
five of my women friends came up to me and asked, “Alex, why did you not ask
me?”
This positive blog now goes in the opposite direction
as some years ago Kimberly committed suicide. While we were friends she never
ever told me about what might have led her to do that.
I am placing her beautiful photographs here in her
memory.
Sursum corda.
The Cosmic Lottery
My friend
Ian McGuffie constantly tells me that we won the cosmic lottery because we were
born in that last century.
Not too long
ago I was fired from a photography school in Vancouver as I told my students
that if they wanted to be photographers they should have a Plan B (plumbing)
and a Plan C (electricity). Because I am an old man I am trying to throw stuff.
Today I found an envelopes with these promo post card sized cards. The date is
2006. By then the writing was on the wall as magazines and newspapers began to
fade and the concept of accepting photographs provided to them started the end
of assigned jobs.
I had these
card printed very well by Metropolitan Design Printers and my photographs were
drum-scanned by Grant Simmons/DISC. These were my last ever hard copy promotion
that began many years before with all sorts of portfolios including some that
were called tear-sheet. All of these portfolios are, one on top of another in
my oficina. I cannot make myself throw them away.
Back in that
cosmic lottery I made yearly trip to Toronto to show those portfolios to
magazine are directors.
Of these
four promo cards I can state that they all now involve some bad news. Arthur
Erickson is dead, the lovely model Lisa married a plastic surgeon in LA and he
ruined her body. As for my two granddaughters (28 and 22) this century has
eliminated the importance of grandparents. I am an old man.
A Late Christmas Surprise
Thursday, March 05, 2026
 | | Euphorbia pulcherrima - 5 March 2026 |
In what is a
yearly tradition, my friend Tim Turner who is a real estate agent who sold our
Kerrisdale house and found our home in Kitsilano, brings me a large poinsettia
every year. It is now in its last legs. As I was about to take it to the green
bin I noticed the leaves. Noticing small stuff is something I learned from my
Rosemary. In our garden my large hostas competed with some of her tiny
perennials.
Because I
cannot escape connecting everything in my house to my memory of Rosemary I
decided to scan these lovely leaves. She would have smiled at my effort.
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