Friday, December 13, 2019
Backstage Virtuoso Improv - St. James Infirmary
Not long ago friend Michael Ward-Bergeman, renowned accordionist and composer, sent me a clip in which he and celebrated jazz trumpeter Dominick Farinacci, sitting backstage, were caught riffing off St. James Infirmary ... you know the song?
I wrote to Ward-Bergeman, and asked how this came about:
"Dominick Farinacci is a virtuoso jazz trumpeter that I have been working with off and on for about a decade. Our most recent collaboration has been a sonata for poets and jazz ensemble titled 'Life and Loves,' produced by the Catskill Jazz Factory. We premiered an early version of this in London last spring.
"When Dominick first got in touch about the project he sent a draft program. It was a bit of a shock to see St. James Infirmary on there."
Ward-Bergeman has had a long association with St. James Infirmary. He has performed the song with Gypsy/Roma bands (featuring members of Taraf de Haiduks), with Yo Yo Ma and the Silk Road Ensemble (including Rhiannon Giddens on vocals, Reylon Yount on yangqin), and has performed it, or variations of it, with a number of renowned chamber groups, roots bands, and so on.
"I said to myself " Ward-Bergeman continued, "'I can't escape this song!!'
"In London, Dominick and I worked with another collaborator, multi-instrumentalist Christian Tamburr, in putting the set together and arranging the songs. We were arranging for a jazz singer and an opera singer. Someone had the bright idea to mashup St. James Infirmary sung by the jazz singer with the violent Mack the Knife (with German lyrics) sung by the opera singer. We pulled this off in one arrangement that was a highlight of the London performances. There are some big things planned for this project over the next couple years.
"Dominick recently invited me to perform with him alongside some of his other collaborators in Easton, MD. It was a show produced by "Jazz on the Chesapeake." The program was a kind of 'best of" of the many projects Dominick has been working on over the past few years.
"About a half hour before show time he asked if we could do St. James Infirmary as a duo. Cool! After the show we were still messing around with the tune backstage and someone caught a bit on camera.
"Here it is."
(Double-click to get the full image via YouTube)
Sunday, November 10, 2019
The Mysterious E and SJI
Many familiar with this site are also familiar with NO Notes - the other (presently paused) blog dedicated to St. James Infirmary and created by author Rob Walker. In NONotes, which I followed assiduously, Rob often referred to a person called "E."
E?
E was a mystery.
A little later Pam and I read Walker's book "Letters from New Orleans" (profits going to victims of hurricane Katrina). Before Pam and I were finally able to travel to New Orleans, we read a lot of books about the place. As it turned out, Walker's was the best of the lot. A good read, in Letters from New Orleans the mysterious E kept popping up. Who the heck is E???? I became convinced that she went deep, beneath the waves.
I stumbled upon something unexpected, as these web searches go. E once lived in Savannah, Georgia, near military bases. She saw soldiers in shops, on the street, some recently returned from Iraq or Afghanistan. The artist in her must have asked, "How do you represent these people as individuals?"
Have you seen 19th century photographs, in which the subjects stare seriously back at the camera? In those days a portrait required a long exposure. One minute. Two minutes. It is almost impossible to hold a smile for that long. And so our ancestors appear to have been somber people. Photographically, a smile was a rare thing. In photos of civil war soldiers, they had this same demeanour ... although one could ask if they had much to smile about, anyway. Today, of course, we can take a dozen photos a second, and then choose the most attractive - perhaps a transitional expression. I would argue that the held pose, in which one does not move for a minute or so, is more resonant. More representative of the person. More revealing of the subject, more responsive than is possible with our digital fastness. You can't pretend for that long.
E used 19th century photo techniques to portray 21st century soldiers.
Eventually Pam and I met E. She and Rob were living in New Orleans. We knocked ... she answered. E. The mysterious E stood in the doorway and ushered us in.
Of course we chatted about St. James Infirmary. E cued up The White Stripes.
Sometime during the evening I asked her for her favourite recording of St. James Infirmary. She said something, I said something, and afterwards neither of us remembered. But, when I wrote to her later, she did recall the Hot Eight performing the song in New Orleans ... "I have a vivid memory of that performance and song. It was skillful, raw, and moving, in part because the performers were so young, so local, and so convincing in the way they sold the song. It was a magical, divey, sweaty evening. I don't think hearing a recording would have the same effect, but if a live performance can be said top be a favourite, I guess I could go with that."
So, here's the official video of Hot 8 - of course not what E experienced in a live performance. But you'll get an impression.
E & SJI.
Depth and mystery.
Some of E's collodion images have been selected for display, at huge size, in The National Museum of the United States Army, in Virginia. Slated to open in June, 2020. here's a rendering of the "Army and Society" section of the museum, where E's portraits will be featured..
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| Some of E's collodion portraits in the projected "Army & Society" space at the museum |
Brilliant
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| All collodion images courtesy of Ellen Susan |
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