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BillF

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Everything posted by BillF

  1. Little Chef Big Chief Head Honcho
  2. Monica Vitti McVitie & Price Limp Bizkit
  3. Pierre Cardin The Card Denry Machin
  4. Wilfred De'ath David Boddy Chuck Berry
  5. Travis Perkins Perkin Warbeck William Warboys
  6. Brian Rix Will Hay Jack Straw
  7. The older generation of British jazz musicians - Ronnie Scott, Tubby Hayes, Stan Tracey, Phil Seamen - didn't suffer fools gladly. Peter King says in his autobiography that he was scared stiff of them as an aspiring musician. I heard Ronnie say to Ed Dipple, who as a student had organised a visiting Scott quintet gig showcasing Freddie Hubbard, "Whoever organised this gig should have a pineapple shoved up his arse!" But for me the exception from that generation was Joe Harriott, who was always the nice guy when I met him.
  8. Good story. Wrong thread? Yes, will transfer it to the "nice guys" thread.
  9. Harry Krishna Harry Kiri Prince Harry
  10. Enough of Proust. Next up - a box set of Mr Men books. You gotta know your level! http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/jun/02/box-set-mr-men-stories
  11. Stu Williamson Robert Zimmerman Lord Boyle
  12. J Lo Jeyes Harpic
  13. Emily Post Billy Mayerl Terence Stamp
  14. Listening on the audio archive to the Mike DiRubbo Quartet with David Hazeltine, John Webber and Joe Strasser on Thursday March 20th 2008. Very swinging session! http://www.smallsjazzclub.com/indexnew.cfm?eventId=425
  15. Was present when Lenny Tristano took a BBC interviewer to pieces. (It was Peter Ind who got me in.) Who was that Bill - Humph, Steve Race? A bloke from BBC Yorkshire radio with an exaggerated RP accent (Lennie's laid-back hip snarl was a real contrast) and very square, as we used to say in those days. It was at the Harrogate Festival in the later 60s - one of Lennie's very rare visits to the UK. Peter Ind, who was teaching on the pioneer jazz course at Leeds College of Music, was behind the whole thing. One of my great jazz moments, I suppose. Thinking about it brings this to mind: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8uo1miqVbfE
  16. I'm lucky that the only time I saw Gil Evans, this was the band.
  17. Was present when Lenny Tristano took a BBC interviewer to pieces. (It was Peter Ind who got me in.)
  18. Glad you mentioned David Berkman. Had a chat with him when he was in Southport with the New York Standards Quartet. A very nice guy and, what is more, he knew all about Tubby Hayes!
  19. Agree about the Strazzeri; discovered it on Spotify a few weeks ago. Now listening to the Lanphere from the same source.
  20. The only one I met from that list was Johnny Griffin and, yes, he was very easy to talk with. Nowadays it's Greg Abate who has become a good friend on his frequent visits to England. Others have also commented on what a nice guy he is. Of British musicians, Simon Spillett must take the nice guy prize for giving me a couple of albums (not by him) when I said I hadn't heard them!
  21. Pebbles Flintstone Piers Morgan Thema Forshaw
  22. Wanted to followup on the Proust. Have you made your way through all 7 volumes? Or "only" Volume 1, "Swann's Way"? I still have a self-commitment to read Proust (have only gotten to "Swann's Way") but haven't buckled down to it. It may be one of those works that defeats my attempts. Sounds like it wasn't much fun for you. Maybe you could give us a better idea of the difficulties in reading Proust, or at least what to avoid. Bravo for getting through. PS: I think you'll like the Murdoch. Yes, this will be all 7 volumes. Had I stopped with Swann's Way, I don't think I would have bothered posting on it. Not to belabor this too much, but I have been blogging about Proust, and here are a few representative posts: http://erics-hangout.blogspot.ca/2014/04/proustian-disappointments.html and http://erics-hangout.blogspot.ca/2014/04/proustian-contradictions.html You can actually do a keyword search to find out everything that I have said about the man and the work. (Perhaps of more interest is a challenge where I am giving away a copy of Robert Kroetsch's The Studhorse Man. -- http://erics-hangout.blogspot.ca/2014/05/the-studhorse-man-challenge-closes-june.html ) I think if this had been boiled down to its essence -- 400 to 500 pages on memory, the shifting sands of people's status in social circles and some thoughts on "art" it would have been brilliant. I find it totally overstays its welcome at 3000+ pages. But mostly I find the length completely wasted on a group of parasites who are quite loathsome -- it seems almost 1/3 of the book is the Narrator frittering away his time at parties where one person is snubbing another. I found them all interchangeable and thus couldn't tell you much of anything about these party scenes. (While I tend to feel the same way about the nobles in Tolstoy -- a useless parasitical class -- they still tended to be better drawn portraits.) And the Narrator goes from spoiled brat to a fairly monstrous young adult who keeps his mistress virtually locked up for an entire volume (The Captive). And why does he do this -- because he has decided to save her from herself and not let her indulge in her bisexual tendencies. That's right -- close to a third of Proust is completely driven by discussions about homosexuality (which he almost always called inversion) and how terrible it is, particularly in men (and how widespread in high society). There is just so much self-loathing going on here (Proust was gay). I have come to think about this as the epic literary monument to "the closet." So if a lot of high-minded self-loathing bothers you, you probably are not going to like Proust and you should skip the last 3 volumes. Had I known going in what this would have been like, I would never have started it, but it was a book that I thought (as a former English lit. major) I really ought to read... It is one I will never return to. Thank you for making clear the problems you find in Proust. I did go to the links you provided and read your blog posts too. Forewarned is forearmed as they say, but if I decide to go forward, I'll know there are a bunch of red flags to consider. And if I don't go forward, I won't feel so bad about it . I confess to never having read Proust - I've got a thing about translations and my French isn't up to it - but I did watch a film last week based on La prisonnière which you mention:
  23. Lord of the Flies Zippy Buttons
  24. Wilis Conover Olga Legova Peter Bonke
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