| I don't know where I am at the moment but will be back with all new vague memories, anecdotes, and twisted concepts sometime between the first week in July and never. You could try sending me money . . . that might help. |
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All photos by Brian Nation unless otherwise noted.

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- I don't know where I am at the moment but will be ...
- CODA Magazine turns 50 but is still younger than m...
- sarah silverman part 2
- Henry Miller
- a score for cecil taylor
- just another broadcast from Sydney
- press
- mugs
- tales of the airport (no. 6)
- evolution
All posts
- Henry Miller
- a score for cecil taylor
- just another broadcast from Sydney
- press
- mugs
- tales of the airport (no. 6)
- evolution
- saxe
- Robert Sinclair / Malvin St Claire
- The Return Of The Son Of Monster Magnet
- Calgary
- baseball
- Ahhh . . . we were young.
- narc
- who needs enemies?
- Electric Nightmare Jelly
- do the right thing
- Men of Destiny
- Howie Schulman
- blood of a poet
- John Sinclair
- Philip K. Dick, Volume II
- 55 Rue Guilbault Ouest
- Souvenirs of the revolution
- Bowering
- 30 odd days in pictures
- Benway's Deathbed Re-Released
- Happy Birthday Rachel Louise Carson
- My latest movie
- I am not dead
- 4 drawings for stephen roxborough
- The Pictures that were Left Out of the McGarrigle ...
- Artie Gold, Ryan Larkin
- Son of Hot Dog Palace
- cookin
- Walter Skees
- Mitzi memorial
- great moments in television, part one
- Miles
- four women
- Mitzi Gibbs
- film culture part one
- running shoes
- Albert Ayler
- not exactly as illustrated
- four women
- Melissa Gibbs
- film culture part one
- running shoes
- Albert Ayler
- not exactly as illustrated
- Suzanne
- Daryl Duke
- chasm
- railway club
- Meet my latest grandchild, Charlie. Four days old ...
- nothing
- best line ever
- Ralph Gibson
- short waves
- austere, lean, and unyielding
- spies
- driftin'
- Bar Light
- jazz festival . . . lost weekend
- night tripper
- spies
- driftin'
- Bar Light
- jazz festival . . . lost weekend
- night tripper
- jazz lunch with the Smiths
- jazz festival . . . thursday
- jazz for thinkers
- jazz festival . . . two (b)
- jazz festival . . . two
- jazz festival . . . one
- street theatre
- Skip
- Lenny Breau lunch
- one never knows, do one
- Ashok
- Caroline
- mostly not mozart
- planet news
- poets hitchhiking in the dairy section
- the radiant danse uv being book launch, reading ...
- Happy Birthday Wavy Gravy
- white lightning
- bissett book bash
- Charles Burke and the Black Bottom
- Ray and Fathead
- A Day in the Jazz Life
- radiant danse uv being
- Bill Heine in the twenty-first century
- A Day in the Jazz Life
- radiant danse uv being
- Bill Heine in the twenty-first century
- Clark Street Alley
- 6 films for peace & freedom
- dylan
- Foncie's Fotos
- Me and Wally
- Food of the Gods
- trip of the day
- here's lookin at you
- Just saw the new King Kong
- How to Succeed in Business Without Really Succeeding
- Horse on Fire
- Libation with Nation
- Harry Redl, Violet Redl, Michael McClure, Amy McClure
- Harry Redl
- the tao of breakfast
- Serena
- being and messiness
- Sarah Silverman
- Irving Layton
- drawing
- Romance Without Finance is a Nuisance
- Two Thieves
- What I Wore When
- Howie Green Was My Valet
- Beyond the Bus
- Son of a gun
- Lime Shake Lolita
- Jazz Club in 9 Days
- Men Are Swine
- Eat the Devil
- Bill Heine
- Bill Hoffer
- A Day Without Teeth
- The world is waiting for the sunrise
- Cheap Cigarettes
- Mister Death
- Live Jazz Nightly
- bissett
- Mazurka
- On the Roadside
- Paul Anka
- The Rodin Exhibit
- I haven't posted in almost a month
- Bird Saved My Life
- Mingus Wants To Be Alone, Man
- Grateful Dead
- Close Calls : Che Guevara
- Close Calls : Paul Krassner
- Pat Boone
- The Duck
- Famous Ellington Step-Son
- Skokiaan
- Sunday Driver of Love
- An unusual suspect
- Benway's Deathbed
- Norman McLaren
- David S. Ware
- Immortal Poems
- Dreaming of Babylon
- Polish Jazz Penpal
- Mort Fega
- Memoirs of an Amnesiac
- Angels of the Road
- Close Calls : William Burroughs
- John King
- Ryan Larkin
- Julius Orlovsky
- The story of the story of my life
- Memories, Dreams, Sandwiches
- You Can Rent the Truth
- Wild Kingdom
- Burger
- Philip K. Dick
- Seven Steps - The Potpourri
June 29, 2008
May 07, 2008
CODA Magazine turns 50 but is still younger than me
Coda celebrates its 50th anniversary today. This Canadian magazine was once one of the best jazz magazines in the world. Maybe it still is but I don't read jazz magazines these days so wouldn't know. I first came across it around 1960, at the Record Centre on Crescent Street in downtown Montreal. Run by the professorial but cool Edgar Jones, the Record Centre was a lending library with a fair-sized and eclectic collection of albums. Every week or so I'd go down and get a few albums, fifty cents each for one week's rental, everything from Wozzek to Wilbur Ware. Jones asked me what kind of music i liked when I signed up and I said everything. "You're tastes are catholic, then?" and I went home and looked up what he meant by "catholic" to make sure i wasn't gonna have to confess my sins at some point. There was usually a small stack of these Coda magazines on a table by the door – a mimeographed and stapled letter-sized journal which I picked up regularly, thereby enhancing my musical scholarship. There were so many places in those days outside of so-called school where i was coming by my real education.Some years later Jane and I hitchhiked to Toronto for a couple of days . . . my first and second-to-last time in that city. She took me to Sam's Records to introduce me to John Norris who presided over the second-floor all jazz and blues department. Norris was the founder, editor, and publisher of Coda. Due to confusion and disarray where Jane and I were staying, later that day I went back to the store and asked Norris if he'd put me up for one night. He didn't hesitate, suggesting I come by his apartment around six and have dinner with he and his wife. As impressive as the Norris' hospitality, was John's record collection taking up an entire wall in the sizable living room. I'd never seen anything like it and I'm telling you it was mind-altering experience, just looking at it. I'm guessing 10,000 albums. "Put something on," John says. Are you kidding??? I was nonplussed. John eventually found something to play. It took many years to get that great wall of vinyl out of my mind and have since seen bigger collections, but still . . . As it turned out, the newest issue of Coda was being put together that night, which involved a bit of a party, including a half-dozen or so friends and Coda contributors, plus plenty of wine and snacks. Stacks of mimeographed pages had to be collated, stapled, some stuffed in envelopes to be mailed to subscribers. I was an expert at this type of thing so was happy to be able to organize the work, cutting the usual amount of time it took so that there was more time for partying and listening to some of John's records. Among the partyers/collators was a handsome young man (six years older than me) from Bristol, England – William Ernest Smith, better know, oddly enough, as Bill Smith. Bill was eventually an editor of the magazine, in addition to his other contributions to modern music as saxophonist, clarinetist, composer, editor, photographer, and film and record producer. He eventually moved to Hornby Island and I'm happy to report that all these many decades later we are still friends. Norris I haven't seen since the mid-seventies, sad to say. When Jane and I hit the road back to Montreal, Norris asked if I'd deliver some copies of the new Coda to his friend and Coda contributor, Len Dobbin. So that's when I first met Dobbin, for about fifty years the dean of the Montreal jazz scene. John visited Vancouver around 1974 and was a house guest of Fraser Nicholson, owner of the famous Record Gallery on Robson Street, my main source of jazz records for many of my Vancouver years. By then I was working at the Georgia Straight, heading up the distribution department. Besides the Straight itself we handled a number of the hipper papers and magazines, including Rolling Stone when it was actually a small alternative news, music, and culture rag. I suggested John send me fifty copies of every Coda and I'd put them into book and record stores and a few of the bigger newsstands. He agreed, observing, "Gosh, we've never had a distributor before." So, adding to my achievements, I became the first distributor of Coda Magazine. By the late seventies author and musician David Lee was co-editing Coda with Bill Smith. I met him during one of his visits to Vancouver. He told me that the notices I was sending to Coda via John Norris, about the series of concerts I was producing here, were being greeted with amazement. I treated David to dinner at the Nanking in Chinatown for the sole purpose of talking his ear off for a couple of hours about all that I was up to, my hopes and dreams, and pretty much my whole life story as it pertained to jazz and its variants in the last third of the twentieth century. After that I took him to a party at Patricia LaNauze's place and for all I know it was the best night of his life. But there was no payoff for me because . . . I don't know . . . I thought there'd be something at some time in the magazine which, as far as I know, there never was. That would have been pretty helpful to the cause, I think. As of 2000 the magazine has changed hands twice and is still being published. I can't compare the current magazine to what it was in the early years but it seems to still be a very good jazz magazine, despite the fact that my name has never appeared in it. Although my first effort as a record producer made two top-ten lists in their Best of 2007 issue a few months ago. More about that tomorrow. Photo above of Bill Smith (left) and John Norris in the seventies by unidentified photographer. COMMENTS |
March 31, 2008
sarah silverman part 2
sarah and i get a little closer![]() photo by Guy MacPherson Sarah Silverman is hot, isn't she? The hottest. Even Barbara thinks so, except she wouldn't say hot. And she's funny as hell. The funniest. Sharp. I'm crazy about her. Her TV show is one of only about three that I ever watch. I'm very particular. Or do I mean peculiar? I get those words mixed up. Two years ago I explained how I was seduced by a photo of Sarah Silverman in an old New Yorker magazine that lay open on a pile of other magazines in my apartment for several weeks or months. It was sort of like the portrait of Laura Hunt (Gene Tierney) that Detective Mark McPherson (Dana Andrews) eventually falls for, except that I knew Sarah hadn't been murdered. And I didn't actually fall in the usual sense of "falling". Since then I've become her biggest fan, although not as crazed as the boys who've been going around town stealing pi les of Georgia Straights out of vending boxes for her cover photo. And these Straight boxes are two or three on every block around here so I've been seeing a lot of Sarah lately.The reason for the cover story is that Sarah blew through town on the weekend for a show at the River Rock Casino in Richmond, to which our mutual friend Guy MacPherson (who wrote the story) invited me. I had to pass on seeing Bill Coon's guitar genius band at Cap College to catch her. In fact I risked my life as despite being the end of March a freezing sonofabitch hailstorm blew in from Russia (I thought the fucking Cold War was over!) and I don't like being on the roads here at the best of times. I thought I'd probably die an icy death on the way to Richmond but I took that chance. Sarah's show was great. I'm not a comedy critic (that's Guy's job) so won't elaborate. I loved it. How could I not? Some familiar stuff and some new stuff and Sarah's just fun to be around when she's on stage, and off as well, as it turns out. We went backstage and hung out for an hour I'm guessing. I haven't met many comics but the few I have were not that funny in real life. I'm funnier in real life but if I got on stage I'd be shot. But Sarah's funny and warm and well . . . as much as you can tell in an hour . . . real . . . and a sweetheart! I'm still crazy about her. ![]() Guy MacPherson and Sarah Silverman Tomorrow: Running into Woody Allen at City Lights Books in 1963 Links: Sarah Silverman at Wikipedia Sarah Silverman Show at Wikipedia Sarah Silverman Show at Comedy Central Sarah Silverman article by Guy MacPherson, in the Georgia Straight COMMENTS |

Coda celebrates its 50th anniversary today. This Canadian magazine was once one of the best jazz magazines in the world. Maybe it still is but I don't read jazz magazines these days so wouldn't know. I first came across it around 1960, at the Record Centre on Crescent Street in downtown Montreal. Run by the professorial but cool Edgar Jones, the Record Centre was a lending library with a fair-sized and eclectic collection of albums. Every week or so I'd go down and get a few albums, fifty cents each for one week's rental, everything from Wozzek to Wilbur Ware. Jones asked me what kind of music i liked when I signed up and I said everything. "You're tastes are catholic, then?" and I went home and looked up what he meant by "catholic" to make sure i wasn't gonna have to confess my sins at some point. There was usually a small stack of these 





