Monday, December 31, 2007

MURDERED CHICAGO CHOIR DIRECTOR LAID TO REST: Donald Young's 'home going' service draws thous

  MURDERED CHICAGO CHOIR DIRECTOR LAID TO REST: Donald Young's 'home going' service draws thousands.
   Two days before Christmas, Donald Young, the popular choir director at Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago, was discovered murdered in his apartment.  He had been shot multiple times, including a shot in the head.

      Young, 47, conducted choir for more than two decades at the well-known church. He also taught fourth grade at a Chicago public school.

      On Saturday, December 29, more than 2,500 people attended his standing-room-only funeral service, according to the Chicago Sun-Times. Some mourners waited outside for over 20 minutes to say goodbye.

      Senator Barack Obama, who attends the church, sent a letter of condolence. The letter, along were many others, was read during the service, according to the paper.

       Authorities told The Chicago Sun-Times that Christmas presents and jewelry were missing from Young's home.

      No arrest has been made in the case. A police investigation is underway and a $1,000 reward is being offered for info leading to an arrest.

      Young had grown the choir's membership to more than 100 members. They all attended his funeral-singing one last time for their leader.

 

No answers yet in deacon's slaying SOUTH SHORE | Deacon's spirit was "infectious"

No answers yet in deacon's slaying SOUTH SHORE | Deacon's spirit was "infectious"

December 27, 2007

Last week, Donald Young, was "on fire." He was animated, praise-dancing, and the choir he had directed for two decades responded with a joyful noise. The Dec. 17 performance was typical of Young's "infectious spirit."

"When he directed, it was like the Lord took over," the Rev. Joe Ann Watson, music department administrator at Trinity United Church of Christ on the South Side, said Wednesday.

Young was found shot to death in his apartment early Sunday morning, just hours before he was planning to leave Chicago to spend the holiday with a close friend, a woman who had become like a mother to him, friends said.

Chicago Police were trying to determine what happened inside Young's South Shore apartment.

Young, also a deacon at the church, was found by his roommate in their home in the 2300 block of East 69th Street. The door to the apartment was closed but not locked, police said.

Several items were reported missing from the apartment, but police have not yet determined what led to Young's shooting.

Young was a fourth-grade teacher at Guggenheim Elementary School and was pursuing a master's degree, said Donna Hammond-Miller, a close friend and church deacon.

Young, who had family in Chicago, also found a second one at the church, friends said. He joined the church, at 400 W. 95th St., at age 12.

Michelle Obama reacted to Young's death Wednesday, calling the situation "sad.''

"He was very well-known in the church family,'' Obama, wife of White House hopeful Barack Obama, said from the campaign trail in Iowa.

On Wednesday evening, longtime members of Young's choir shared recollections of his leadership, sense of humor and sense of style. They told how he playfully modeled his African garb.

"He was very particular about his shoes," joked Sandra Bibb. "He said, 'You can praise the Lord all you want, just don't touch these shoes.' "

A wake for Young will be at 10 a.m. Saturday at the church. A funeral service follows at 11 a.m.


Saturday, December 29, 2007

James Brown and The Big Payback

James Brown and The Big Payback
Posted Dec 28th 2007 7:47PM by <A href="http:///" deborah-owens? bloggers ? . $GLOBALS[HTTP_HOST]>Deborah Owens
It has been over a year since James Brown died on Christmas Day 2006. How he got that legendary scream to come out of his diminutive body remains a mystery and I'm sure he wants to let out loud noise from the grave watching his family fight over his fortune.

Five of his children want his will to be overturned because all he left them were household items. His wife and former backup singer was kicked out of his house and fighting for half of his assets as well. Who said you couldn't speak from the grave?

Unlike many famous people the Godfather of Soul handled his business and avoided probate by having a will and charitable trusts established which determined how his fortune should be distributed upon his death.That didn't stop the family from acting up because they believed he couldn't possibly want to leave all that money to the less fortunate and needy children of Georgia and South Carolina. It's a dirty crying shame because if they aren't careful the legal fees will have the attorneys laughing all the way to the bank.

James Brown's estate is estimated to be worth 85 million dollars when you account for the royalties the estate will be paid from his hit songs like---Super Bad, Say It Loud, It's a Man's World and the list goes on. The man had a will and the only way it can be contested is if he was either unduly influenced by his advisors or incompetent. According to reports before his death Mr. Brown was still holding it down in front of audiences which will make it difficult to convince a judge otherwise.

This is a prime example of why everyone needs a will. Mr. Brown had attorneys draw up his will however if your estate isn't worth several million you can use a boiler plate template to draw one up and have a witness sign it. Visit Find Forms to see several variations. You can also establish a living trust which will allow you to have your assets administered for your benefit while you are living and the assets distributed upon you death.

I can hear James Brown singing "Papa Don't Take No Mess" right about now.

FRED DE SAM LAZARO, guest anchor: Now, the priest with pop-star fame. It's wasn't his duties as a pa

 

 

FRED DE SAM LAZARO, guest anchor: Now, the priest with pop-star fame. It's wasn't his duties as a parish priest that made Liam Lawton a household name in Ireland. It was his music.

During his recent tour in the U.S., Judy Valente caught up with him in Chicago.

JUDY VALENTE: Liam Lawton grew up in a family immersed in music, and where Gaelic -- the Irish language -- was spoken. He opened this concert in Chicago with a song in Gaelic dating back to the 14th century, when it was sung during Holy Week.

Father LIAM LAWTON: The basis of the Irish language is very much a basis on spirituality. There are many words which really refer to God and to the heavens or to a blessing.

VALENTE: He wrote his first collection of music in Gaelic nearly 20 years ago.

Fr. LAWTON: It brought back into the liturgy a sense of mystery, a sense of mystique that perhaps the Latin had done earlier on. But I believe that Irish music could do also.

VALENTE: Lawton, here saying Mass during his tour of the U.S., had all but stopped writing music after his ordination.

Fr. LAWTON: The body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ…

VALENTE: As a parish priest in Ireland, serving as chaplain at a school, a nursing home, and a psychiatric hospital, he didn't feel he should be creating music. And yet…

Father Liam Lawton


Fr. LAWTON: I was beginning to feel myself imploding because there wasn't a creative force in my life, and I wanted in some way to be more creative, and I remember playing a piece of music. And it was John Michael Talbot's "Magnificat." I'd always loved his voice and his -- I find his music very prayerful. And I was sitting there. I started crying and I couldn't stop. I'm crying and crying and crying. I think I was crying for a loss of creativity in my own life, but also for a feeling of helplessness.

VALENTE: Helpless to heal the suffering people he encountered in his ministry.

Fr. LAWTON: And then it suddenly struck me that if somebody like John Michael Talbot could write music that would touch my life and other people's lives, surely I could try to do the same.

VALENTE: Lawton began composing and performing. He recalls his first public concert.

Fr. LAWTON: There was an old man sitting in the audience. He started crying, and he was crying the whole way through the performance. So when it was over I made it my business to go to him. He said whatever your music did, but it touched, you know, my psyche. And he said, "I haven't been able to cry for years."

And so I realized then that, you know, there is in some way a ministry of healing. A ministry of -- because music is a divine gift, and nobody can persuade me otherwise.

Mary Evers


MARY EVERS: I find his voice so very comforting.

VALENTE: Mary Evers is the former director of liturgy at Old St. Patrick's Church in Chicago.

Ms. EVERS: Let's face it. Through the rough, struggles of our daily living there are times we need to hear that voice. We need to hear it coming toward us to collect us, and we need to hear it within ourselves.

VALENTE: Within a few years, Lawton found himself in the uncomfortable position of being both priest and pop star in Ireland.

Fr. LAWTON: In the beginning I found myself being very isolated, not being fish or fowl, where do it -- you know, being in the middle. And sometimes the world, the clerical world not understanding me, and then the people in the secular world not understanding me as well.

For me, it's all bound up. This is me as one person, and that Liam the singer is drawing his inspiration from Liam the priest.

"Lawton lives in a parish house, on the pay of a parish priest..."


Ms. EVERS: It's more we who look at that situation and say, "Well, is he a priest or not?" And to that I'd have to say there are many ways to be priestly, and serving God's people with the music is a very priestly gift.

VALENTE: Lawton lives in a parish house, on the pay of a parish priest, the equivalent of about $20,000 a year.

Proceeds from concerts go to his musicians -- to music projects and to charities. He expresses little interest in money, and he even appears somewhat shy on stage.

Fr. LAWTON: If I could perform and just disappear then, I would do that. I live beside a contemplative monastery, and sometimes I really envy the sisters who are there, you know, because while I love performing, I love writing, and I love the whole creative side of it, after that I just want to get away.

VALENTE: Lawton is perhaps best known for music he wrote after the sudden, tragic death of an uncle who for years had been his musical mentor.

Father Lawton performing

Fr. LAWTON (to audience): One day after he died I was really disinterested in music. I didn't want to sing or play again. This woman sent me a card. It was just a blank card with two lines across the front. It said, "When the dark clouds veil the sky, I am by your side."

VALENTE: His song "The Cloud's Veil" was among those chosen for a memorial service following the attacks of Sept 11.

Fr. LAWTON: I think melody is a gift. I'm told I have a gift of melody. Everybody has been blessed with some gift, and I think that in those gifts, I think we in some way can make the Kingdom present. My gifts, I hope, are my music and for my writing in some way, in using those that I can bring consolation, a hope, or just calm and peace to people.

VALENTE: He wants his music not only to console but to inspire prayer. Mary Evers:

Ms. EVERS: It acknowledges the pain, but it also lifts up and puts a place of hope out before us to strive for. We need music in our church that's going to move us and challenge us and give us hope, and that's the priestliness of Liam.

For RELIGION & ETHICS NEWSWEEKLY, this is Judy Valente in Chicago.
 

Dear Friends

As we near the end of your tour I want to say a huge thank you to all who have helped, supported and cared for us in any way. We have been received with great kindness and hospitality throughout the country. Thank you also to all the people who attended our concerts and I am delighted that we have made many new friends and fans on the way.  

I am delighted at your response to my new music and hope athat in time I will have the opportunity to record these songs. We have also been able to support many worthwhile charities throughout the tour which is very important to me.  Thank you also to the thousands of people who log on to the web site and who sent good wishes during the tour and after our Late Late Show TV appearance . Your support means much.  

I look forward to spending some time with my family over Christmas and then to take a break for some time. Our web site will keep you posted on future events.  

I would like to take this opportunity to wish you all the blessings and peace of this Christmas time. I hope and pray that the peace of Bethlehem will be your gift this Christmas . 

Finally I would personally like to thank my Manager Mattie Fox, and my own great crew, Mark, Nigel, Martin, Brendan, James, Aoife, Darren, Ciaran, Ian, John and Steven for all their help and support in the past year.

May 2008 bring the peace and joy that we all seek,  

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Kenya: A Gospel Group Brought Together By Similarities

Kenya: A Gospel Group Brought Together By Similarities


Cosmas Butunyi
Nairobi

They have been brought together by passion for music. Besides, the five young artistes have more similarities than one.

Apart from being born in the same month, the Kisumu-based gospel group, The Izralites, have identical family backgrounds.

The male members, all of whom were born in March, were brought up by single mothers; while the females' parents are teachers and their birthdays fall in May.

Founded in late 2002, the group was born out of a chance encounter of Lenny Odhiambo and Jim Ogol, both aspiring musicians, at a friend's house. Then friendship sprouted from their common interests.

Incidentally, a concert was coming up at a church they both went to, although they did no know each other. After the encounter they decided to put together a song for the occasion. They performed and the response was so great they took music seriously.

Then they started singing in church, and at first, used only the keyboard as the accompaniment. Later, they graduated into recorded instrumentals. "We were interested in recording our songs, but we could not afford the studio charges as we were all students in high school," recalls Jim Ogol, the group leader.

They finally recorded their first demonstration song in mid-2003, which was well received at the venues. It is around this time that Tony Okoth, another youth from the church, joined the group.

Members' first names

All the while, the group was being referred to by the members' first names but with the incorporation of Tony, it became a mouthful. A name had to be found, and after a spirited search, they settled on The Izralites. "We settled on the name because we consider ourselves equal to the biblical Israelites, who were chosen by God for a particular purpose," explains Jim. The band's aims and objectives were, however, not clear then.

With the rebranding, the group intensified its efforts - so much so that towards the end of the year, they went back to the studio and redid the first demo and another titled Haijalishi (it does not matter to me). "The song was warmly received and we also liked it a lot, but we felt that feminine harmonies in the choruses would have made it perfect," he says.

They began hunting for talent among the women church-mates and, after a series of elimination, they had only two - Gladys Gero and Morrey Adala, who seemed to share the enthusiasm.

The two joined two days before a scheduled studio session, and had to be taken through a crash training programme. The songs which stayed in the studio for longer than anticipated, received encouraging sizeable air play.

Towards the end of 2004, The Isralites had discovered their vision: reaching out to young people, so they began plans to record an album. A budge was drafted possible fund-raising projects suggested. "We began working on the songs and recording them, but we did not like the end product," Jim explains. They shelved some of the songs and composed others. With the album's production, invitations to perform began streaming in from all over the country.

The group participated at the Najivunia Kuwa Mkenya (I am proud to be Kenyan) music contest that was organised by the office of public communications secretary and they finished among the top 20 finalists in the regional heat. "The contest boosted our morale and gave us publicity, which translated into more invites," he adds.

At the beginning of the year, the group came up with an idea for an album launch, which they scheduled for year-end. They, however, had to push back the launch as Gladys and Morrey were joining university later in the year.

In August, The Izralites launched Suluhisho (solution), a 12-track album recorded at Kisumu's Chuqua Records. The album features Vicky Dali of Christoboyz, Louisa and the Kisumu Pentecostal Church's children's choir. It is a mix of genres, including zouk, reggae and hip-hop.

The album, according to Jim, is doing well in the market, but the group isreinvesting the proceeds from the sales in their music activities.

Keen on expanding their frontiers beyond recording and album sales, the group has embraced event organisation. Recently, they hosted a gospel gig in Kisumu town that featured Jimmy Gait and other local gospel musicians.

"Young people do not buy music and we can only reach them at concerts," Jim says of the new venture. Moreover, they want to use the events that they organise to expose upcoming artistes.

"Many people come up but are stranded along the way due to lack of support from the established artistes."

Kenya: A Gospel Group Brought Together By Similarities

 (Page 2 of 2)

The group has been performing all over the country, sharing the stage with virtually all the big names on the local gospel music scene. The Izralites also want to venture into video production, an expertise, they say, is not up to scratch in Kisumu. "We want to discourage the notion that Nairobi is the centre of entertainment, so as to expose other regions that have long been overlooked," says Tony.

He says the group is keen on getting rid of the excuse media houses give for not playing their music - poor quality. But it is not all smooth for the group: other commitments compete for the members' attention and getting time to practise and attend all shows they are invited to is sometimes an uphill task.

All but Lenny are college students. Lenny is a graphic designer and also operates a clothing line under the name, Tilymec, that produces T-shirts and other garments for local artistes. Occasionally they have had to perform without some members, especially the women, who recently joined university.

Besides, getting family approval and support has been hard to come by to most members, but with what they call intense prayers, their parents and guardians have mellowed. Tony, an orphan, lives with a cousin. When he began dabbling in music, the relative thought he was wasting his time, but gradually, he is accepting and supporting him.

Lenny has had it smooth right from the time he got involved in music, and has enjoyed his mother's support, although she never took him seriously.

"She now has had a change of heart and I no longer have to explain whenever I am going to shows as it is a normal occurrence," he explains.

It was not any different for Jim. "Beginning was not easy as I had the dubious reputation as a big joker," he says. But when the invitations to concerts began flowing in, they believed what I was doing."

The Izralites are yet to begin reaping from music since album sales are ploughed back into improving their trade. Moreover, they barely make money from the many shows that they take part in.

"We only ask for transport, accommodation and a little allowance," says Jim. He however takes issue with organisers whom he accuses of not paying artistes from the show fee.

Nigeria: Eedris Apologises to 50 Cent At KORA Night

Nigeria: Eedris Apologises to 50 Cent At KORA Night


Abdulkareem Baba Aminu
Abuja

The long-standing feud between Nigerian singing superstar Eedris Abdulkareem and international rap star 50 Cent was brought to an abrupt, shocking end Thursday night at the media launch of the KORA Awards in Abuja.

Right after the American artiste's performance, the compere announced to 50 Cent and the audience that "An African brother is going to come onstage and show you some African love." Abdulkareem surfaced from a corner into the spotlight, causing the audience to erupt in applause as soon as it was clear who he was.

50 Cent, already seated, was met by Abdulkareem and they shook hands. "I'm sorry," said Eedris, to the visible surprise of the entire audience, who are familiar with the feud between the duo, which began two years ago when 50 Cent visited Nigeria for the Star Mega Jam that both stars were billed to perform at. After the apology, Eedris performed a song which preached about African brotherhood. Soon after, he bounced offstage, vanishing into the shadows, leaving a smile on 50 Cent's face.

The quarrel between the two was caused by seating arrangements on a plane taking the stars to Port Harcourt from Abuja.

Eedris could not be reached for comment, as his mobile phone was off as of press time. "This is the highlight of the evening," said Audu Maikori, CEO of Chocolate City Records and the current International Music Entrepreneur. "KORA's debut appearance in Nigeria is indeed a noteworthy one. I mean, if they can fix things between 50 [Cent] and Eedris, then they are obviously bridge-builders," he added.

A fan, who was also a guest at the event, was thrilled at the development and exclaimed: "Eedris and Fiddy...made up? Wow!"

But another guest frowned at the development, saying 50 Cent should have apologised too, "to balance the situation."

The KORA awards were previously held in South Africa, with next year's outing being the first edition to be held in Nigeria.

Tuesday, December 25, 2007

Jazz Great Oscar Peterson Dies

Jazz Great Oscar Peterson Dies
ROB GILLIES,
AP
Filed Under: Top News
TORONTO (AP) -- Oscar Peterson, whose early talent and speedy fingers made him one of the world's best known jazz pianists, died at age 82.
 

His death was confirmed by Neweduk Funeral Home in Mississauga, the Toronto suburb where Peterson lived. The town's mayor, Hazel McCallion, told The Associated Press that he died of kidney failure but that she did not know when. The hospital and police refused to comment. The Canadian Broadcasting Corp. reported that he died on Sunday.

"He's been going downhill in the last few months, slowing up," McCallion said, calling Peterson a "very close friend."

During an illustrious career spanning seven decades, Peterson played with some of the biggest names in jazz, including Ella Fitzgerald, Count Basie and Dizzy Gillespie. He is also remembered for touring in a trio with Ray Brown on bass and Herb Ellis on guitar in the 1950s.

Peterson's impressive collection of awards include all of Canada's highest honors, such as the Order of Canada, as well as a Lifetime Grammy (1997) and a spot in the International Jazz Hall of Fame.

His growing stature was reflected in the admiration of his peers. Duke Ellington referred to him as "Maharajah of the keyboard," while Count Basie once said "Oscar Peterson plays the best ivory box I've ever heard."

In a statement, French President Nicolas Sarkozy said "one of the bright lights of jazz has gone out."

"He was a regular on the French stage, where the public adored his luminous style," Sarkozy said. "It is a great loss for us."

Jazz pianist Marian McPartland called Peterson "the finest technician that I have seen."

McPartland said she first met Peterson when she and her husband, jazz cornetist Jimmy McPartland, opened for him at the Colonial Tavern in Toronto in the 1940s.

"From that point on we became such goods friends, and he was always wonderful to me and I have always felt very close to him," she said. "I played at his tribute concert at Carnegie Hall earlier this year and performed `Tenderly,' which was always my favorite piece of his."

Born on Aug. 15, 1925, in a poor neighborhood southwest of Montreal, Peterson obtained a passion for music from his father. Daniel Peterson, a railway porter and self-taught musician, bestowed his love of music to his five children, offering them a means to escape from poverty.

Oscar Peterson learned to play trumpet and piano at a young age, but after a bout with tuberculosis had to concentrate on the latter.

He became a teen sensation in his native Canada, playing in dance bands and recording in the late 1930s and early 1940s. But he got his real break as a surprise guest at Carnegie Hall in 1949, after which he began touring the United States and Europe.

He quickly made a name for himself as a jazz virtuoso, often compared to piano great Art Tatum, his childhood idol, for his speed and technical skill.

He was also influenced by Nat King Cole, whose Nat King Cole Trio album he considered "a complete musical thesaurus for any aspiring Jazz pianist."

Peterson never stopped calling Canada home despite his growing international reputation. But at times he felt slighted here, where he was occasionally mistaken for a football player, standing at 6 foot 3 and more than 250 pounds.

In 2005 he became the first living person other than a reigning monarch to obtain a commemorative stamp in Canada, where he is jazz royalty, with streets, squares, concert halls and schools named after him.

Peterson suffered a stroke in 1993 that weakened his left hand, but not his passion or drive for music. Within a year he was back on tour, recording "Side By Side" with Itzhak Perlman.

As he grew older, Peterson kept playing and touring, despite worsening arthritis and difficulties walking.

"A jazz player is an instant composer," Peterson once said in a CBC interview, while conceding jazzdid not have the mass appeal of other musical genres. "You have to think about it, it's an intellectual form," he said.

Oscar Peterson, 82, Jazz’s Piano Virtuoso, Dies

 
Oscar Peterson, 82, Jazz’s Piano Virtuoso, Dies
Michelle V. Agins/The New York Times

Oscar Peterson performing at Birdland in 2006. By RICHARD SEVERO

Published: December 25, 2007

Oscar Peterson, whose dazzling piano playing made him one of the most popular jazz artists in history, died on Sunday night at his home in Mississauga, Ontario, outside Toronto. He was 82.

Audio Audio Clips (oscarpeterson.com)

 An Excerpt from 'Blues for Big Scotia'

Michelle V. Agins/The New York Times

Oscar Peterson performing at Birdland in Aug. 2006.

The cause was kidney failure, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation reported. Mr. Peterson had performed publicly for a time even after a stroke he suffered in 1993 compromised movement in his left hand.

Mr. Peterson was one of the greatest virtuosos in jazz, with a piano technique that was always meticulous and ornate and sometimes overwhelming. But rather than expand the boundaries of jazz, he used his gifts in the service of moderation and reliability, gratifying his devoted audiences whether he was playing in a trio or solo or accompanying some of the most famous names of jazz. His technical accomplishments were always evident, almost transparently so. Even at his peak, there was very little tension in his playing.

One of the most prolific major stars in jazz history, he amassed an enormous discography. From the 1950s until his death, he released sometimes four or five albums a year, toured Europe and Japan frequently and became a big draw at jazz festivals.

Norman Granz, his influential manager and producer, helped Mr. Peterson realize that success, setting loose a flow of records on his own Verve and Pablo labels and establishing Mr. Peterson as a favorite in his touring Jazz at the Philharmonic concerts in the 1940s and ’50s.

Mr. Peterson won eight Grammy awards, as well as almost every possible honor in the jazz world. He played alongside giants like Louis Armstrong, Count Basie, Charlie Parker, Roy Eldridge, Nat King Cole, Stan Getz, Dizzy Gillespie and Ella Fitzgerald.

Duke Ellington referred to him as “maharajah of the keyboard.” Basie said, “Oscar Peterson plays the best ivory box I’ve ever heard.” The pianist and conductor André Previn called Mr. Peterson “the best” among jazz pianists.

In a review of a performance in 1987, Stephen Holden, writing in The New York Times, said, “Mr. Peterson’s rock-solid sense of swing, grounded in Count Basie, is balanced by a delicacy of tone and fleetness of touch that make his extended runs seem to almost disappear into the sky.” He added, “His amazing speed was matched by an equally amazing sense of thematic invention.”

But many critics found Mr. Peterson more derivative than original, especially early in his career. Some even suggested that his fantastic technique lacked coherence and was almost too much for some listeners to compute.

Billy Taylor, a fellow pianist and a jazz historian, said he thought that while Mr. Peterson was a “remarkable musician,” his “phenomenal facility sometimes gets in the way of people’s listening.”

Whitney Balliett, the jazz critic of The New Yorker, wrote in 1966 that Mr. Peterson’s playing “continues to be a pudding made of the leavings of Art Tatum, Nat Cole and Teddy Wilson.”

The critical ambivalence was typified in 1973 in a review of a Peterson performance by John S. Wilson of The Times. Mr. Wilson wrote: “For the last 20 years, Oscar Peterson has been one of the most dazzling exponents of the flying fingers school of piano playing. His performances have tended to be beautifully executed displays of technique but woefully weak on emotional projection.”

The complaints evoked those heard in the 1940s about the great concert violinist Jascha Heifetz, who was occasionally accused of being so technically brilliant that one could not find his or the composer’s heart and soul in the music he played.

The jazz critic Gene Lees defended Mr. Peterson as “a summational artist.”

“So was Mozart. So was Bach,” Mr. Lees wrote in his biography of Mr. Peterson, “The Will to Swing” (1990). “Bach and Mozart were both dealing with known vocabularies and an accepted body of aesthetic principles.” He noted that just as Bach used material that he first heard in Vivaldi, “Oscar uses a curious spinning figure that he got from Dizzy Gillespie.”

Oscar Emmanuel Peterson was born in the poor St. Antoine district of Montreal on Aug. 15, 1925, one of five children of Daniel Peterson, a West Indian immigrant, and the former Olivia John, whom Daniel had met in Montreal. Daniel Peterson, who worked as a sleeping-car porter on the Canadian Pacific Railway, had taught himself how to play the organ before he landed in Halifax, N.S., in 1917. Mr. Peterson’s mother, who also had roots in the Caribbean, encouraged Oscar to study music.

 
Oscar Peterson, 82, Jazz’s Piano Virtuoso, Dies
Published: December 25, 2007

(Page 2 of 2)

As a boy, Oscar began to learn the trumpet as well as the piano. At 7, he contracted tuberculosis and was hospitalized for 13 months. Fearing the strain the trumpet might put on his son’s lungs, Daniel Peterson persuaded him to concentrate on piano. He studied first with Lou Hooper, then with Paul (Alexander) de Marky, a Hungarian who had also given lessons to Oscar’s older sister, Daisy.

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Canadian Broadcasting Corporation

Mr. Peterson performing with Ray Charles in 1976.

Multimedia

Audio Audio Clips (oscarpeterson.com)

 An Excerpt from 'Blues for Big Scotia'

Bettmann/Corbis

In an undated photograph Mr. Peterson is joined by, from left, Ella Fitzgerald, Roy Eldridge and Max Roach.

By his own account, Oscar believed he had become quite accomplished by age 14. Then he heard a recording by Art Tatum.

“I gave up the piano for two solid months,” Mr. Peterson later recalled, and had “crying fits at night” because he thought nobody else could ever be as good as Tatum.

The same year, however, he won an amateur competition sponsored by the CBC, prompting him to drop out of Montreal High School so he could spend all his time playing the piano.

By 1942, Oscar Peterson was known in Canada as the “Brown Bomber of Boogie-Woogie,” an allusion to the nickname of the boxer Joe Louis and also to Mr. Peterson’s physical stature — 6-foot-3 and 250 pounds.

Mr. Peterson became the only black member of the Johnny Holmes Orchestra, which toured Canada and the United States. In parts of the United States, he discovered that he, like other blacks, would not be served in the same hotels and restaurants as the white musicians. Many times they would bring food out to him as he sat in the band’s bus, he recalled.

For a time, Mr. Peterson was so identified with popular dance boogie-woogie that he was denied wider recognition as a serious jazz musician. In 1947, Mr. Granz, the jazz impresario, was on his way to Montreal’s airport in a taxi when he heard a live broadcast of Mr. Peterson playing at a local lounge. He ordered the driver to turn the taxi around and take him to the lounge. There he persuaded Mr. Peterson to move away from boogie-woogie.

Mr. Peterson eventually became a mainstay of the Jazz at the Philharmonic series, which Mr. Granz created in the 1940s. In 1949 Mr. Peterson made his debut at Carnegie Hall, becoming a sensation. A year later he won the Down Beat magazine readers’ poll for best jazz pianist for the first time. He would go on to win it more than a dozen times, the last in 1972.

Over the years his albums sold well, and he recorded with Billie Holiday, Fred Astaire, Benny Carter, Louis Armstrong, Ella Fitzgerald, Roy Eldridge, Lester Young, Stan Getz, Buddy DeFranco and many others. He also occasionally sang.

Among his more notable long-playing recordings were the so-called Song Books of Irving Berlin, George Gershwin, Duke Ellington, Jerome Kern, Richard Rodgers, Harry Warren, Harold Arlen and Jimmy McHugh.

His format of choice was the trio. Perhaps his most famous threesome, which lasted from 1953 to 1958, was with the guitarist Herb Ellis and the bassist Ray Brown.

Though best known as an interpreter of other people’s work, Mr. Peterson cultivated a second identity as a composer. In 1964 he recorded “The Canadiana Suite,” an extended work written for his home country; he later wrote “African Suite” and “A Royal Wedding Suite,” for the wedding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer.

Mr. Granz’s Verve and Pablo labels released most of Mr. Peterson’s work, but he also recorded for the MPS and Telarc labels, among others.

Mr. Peterson was frequently invited to perform for heads of state, including Queen Elizabeth II and President Richard M. Nixon. In 2005 he became the first living person other than a reigning monarch to obtain a commemorative stamp in Canada, where streets, squares, concert halls and schools are named after him.

Mr. Peterson’s autobiography, “A Jazz Odyssey: The Life of Oscar Peterson,” was published in 2002 by Continuum.

According to the CBC, Mr. Peterson was married four times. He had a daughter, Celine, with his fourth wife, Kelly. He also had six children from his first and third marriages: Lyn, Sharon, Gay, Oscar Jr., Norman and Joel.

Mr. Peterson continued playing after his stroke in 1993 because, as he told The Chicago Tribune, “I think I have a closeness with the instrument that I’ve treasured over the years.” Before long he was back on tour and recording, among other albums, “Side by Side” with Itzhak Perlman, having learned to do more playing with his right hand. As he told Down Beat in 1997: “When I sit down to the piano, I don’t want any scuffling. I want it to be a love affair.”

Monday, December 24, 2007

Oscar Peterson dies at 82

Oscar Peterson dies at 82

HAROLD BARKLEY/TORONTO STAR
Oscar Peterson in 1980.
December 24, 2007
THE CANADIAN PRESS

Jazz legend Oscar Peterson, widely counted among the most accomplished pianists in the world for his seemingly magical hands, has died at age 82, the CBC reports.

CBC said Peterson died at home in Mississauga, Ont., of kidney failure on Sunday night.

Peterson's storied 50-year career took him from the jazz clubs of 1950s Montreal to the bright lights of New York's Carnegie Hall and beyond.

He collected eight Grammys, including a lifetime achievement award in 1997, hundreds of prizes from the jazz community, the Governor General's Performing Arts Award for lifetime achievement and was a Companion of the Order of Canada.

In 2005 Canada Post marked his contribution to music with a 50-cent stamp.

The keyboard titan, who recorded almost 200 albums, played alongside the greats of the jazz world: Louis Armstrong, Count Basie, Charlie Parker, Roy Eldridge, Duke Ellington, Nat King Cole, Stan Getz, Dizzy Gillespie and Ella Fitzgerald.

 
Canadian jazz great Oscar Peterson dies Last Updated: Monday, December 24, 2007 | 1:49 PM ET CBC News

The jazz odyssey is over for Oscar Peterson: the Canadian known globally as one of the most spectacularly talented musicians ever to play jazz piano has died at age 82.

In August 2005, Canada Post paid tribute to Oscar Peterson on his 80th birthday by issuing a postage stamp in his honour.In August 2005, Canada Post paid tribute to Oscar Peterson on his 80th birthday by issuing a postage stamp in his honour.
(Nathan Denette/Canadian Press)

Peterson died Sunday night at his home in Mississauga, Ont., from kidney failure, CBC News has confirmed.

"The world has lost the world's greatest jazz player," Hazel McCallion, mayor of Mississauga and Peterson's friend, told CBC News Monday afternoon.

Renowned for his speed and virtuosity as a pianist, Peterson — who was born in Montreal and later made Toronto his home — made hundreds of recordings in his career, even after a stroke in 1993 disabled his left hand.

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Over the years, his recording and performing partners included such stars as Charlie Parker, Ella Fitzgerald, Dizzy Gillespie, Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Nat King Cole and Stan Getz.

Some of Peterson's most legendary works came after he teamed up to form the Oscar Peterson Trio in 1953. The trio created such classic recordings as 1955's At Zardis, 1956's At the Stratford Shakespearean Festival, and 1957's At Concertgebouw.

He formed another classic piano-guitar-bass trio in the 1970s with guitarist Joe Pass and Danish-born bassist Niels Pedersen.

Lived for music's 'moments of great beauty'

Peterson reveled in the kind of improvisation he could perform with talented musicians, recalling in a 2005 interview how well he worked with his late friend Pedersen.

"The minute we get to the sections where he's featured, I take no prisoners! I like to take liberties, and he's got to be right there to hear where I'm going. We still open doors in the improvisation for one another to develop."

He also loved the competitive nature of this kind of jazz and the unexpected pleasures that could emerge in live performances.

"There is always the chance for moments of great beauty to emerge," he said.
 
Among the dozens of awards and acknowledgements over the decades, Peterson racked up seven Grammy awards, including the Grammy for Lifetime Achievement in 1997; received an International Jazz Hall of Fame Award in the same year; and was named a Companion of the Order of Canada, its highest level.

His autobiography, A Jazz Odyssey: The Life of Oscar Peterson, was written in collaboration with jazz journalist Richard Palmer.

Early success

Born in Montreal in Aug. 15, 1925, Peterson was the son of a Canadian National railroad porter.

Though he started playing piano at age five, taught by his sister Daisy, Peterson credited his introduction to jazz to his older brother Fred, who died of tuberculosis at age 16.

Oscar continued his studies under Paul de Marky, a Hungarian-born teacher who had studied with the famous Hungarian pianist and composer Franz Liszt.

Peterson said he learned how to use a piano to full potential from de Marky and from listening to jazz greats.

Tributes to Oscar Peterson 

"Apart from perhaps [jazz pianist] Art Tatum, there has been no one in the history of jazz that has come close to his performance level and his dedication to the music." 
-Composer and pianist Joe Sealy

"The world has lost the world's greatest jazz player."
- Mississauga, Ont. Mayor Hazel McCallion

"[After his stroke] he came back and for the most part was playing with one hand… what he was able to achieve, playing with half of what most other pianists had, he was still light years ahead of every one else."
- Jazz broadcaster Ross Porter

"I never tried to sound like a trumpet or a clarinet," he once said an interview with the Wall Street Journal.

"I was taught to respect it for what it was: a piano. And it spoke with a certain voice. And that was what I was determined to bring forward."

At age 15, Peterson won first prize in a CBC radio talent show and was invited to play weekly on the Montreal station CKAC.

He soon had other offers to play on radio. By 1942, Peterson was performing with one of Canada's leading big bands, the Johnny Holmes Orchestra.

He came up against the colour bar early in his career, with some hotels threatening to prevent him from playing and radio hosts introducing him as "a coloured boy with amazing fingers."

About this time his father, Daniel Peterson, brought home a recording by Art Tatum, then considered the best jazz pianist of his day. Peterson later recalled how Tatum gave him a new pinnacle to aim for.

"Of course I was just about flattened…I swear, I didn't play piano for two months afterward, I was so intimidated," Peterson said.

Later, Tatum came to regard Peterson as heir to his crown as the king of jazz pianists.

Carnegie Hall

In 1949, Peterson got another big break. The story goes that jazz promoter Norman Granz was in a taxi on the way to the airport in Montreal when he heard a live Peterson broadcast on the radio, and insisted the driver turn around and drive him to the club where the broadcast originated.

Granz signed Peterson up for a gig at Carnegie Hall in New York with some of the biggest names in jazz.

According to a report in Down Beat magazine, at Carnegie Hall Peterson "stopped the concert dead cold in its tracks."

Granz became one of Peterson's closest friends and his manager. Peterson began to build international renown, touring in the 1950s with Jazz at the Philharmonic to Japan, Hong Kong, Australia and the Philippines.

Birth of a legendary trio

In 1953, Peterson formed the Oscar Peterson Trio, joining up with bassist Ray Brown, and then guitarist Herb Ellis. They became one of the hardest-working trios in jazz, touring the U.S. under Ganz's management.

"When the group gets hot you take a lot of chances and pull a lot of things off when you play it live that you might not do before a microphone, " Brown recalled in a 1975 interview with CBC Radio.

"When you have a group that operates five days a week in nightclubs…you had to be on your toes. [Oscar said] we want to be able to play any song and make it work."

Peterson moved to Toronto in 1958 and kept a base in Canada throughout the rest of his career.

Oscar Peterson addresses the crowd during a tribute to Prime Minister Jean Chrétien at a Liberal convention on Nov. 13, 2003.Oscar Peterson addresses the crowd during a tribute to Prime Minister Jean Chrétien at a Liberal convention on Nov. 13, 2003.
(Tom Hanson/Canadian Press)

A year later, he and several other musicians founded the Advanced School of Contemporary Music, a school toteach jazz, but it lasted only a few years.

Peterson continued to perform throughout the world, even behind the Iron Curtain in Ljubljana, then part of Yugoslavia.

As a composer, his best-known work is likely 1964's Canadiana Suite, each track of which was inspired by a different region. Peterson called it "my musical portrait of the Canada I love."

He made the first of many solo recordings in the late 1960s and often played solo in the 1970s and 1980s.  He also began voice recording in 1965 on With Respect to Nat.

He composed film and television scores, winning a Genie film award for best film score in 1978, for The Silent Partner.

Peterson built a recording studio in his Mississauga, Ont., home so that he could experiment with electronic keyboard and sound equipment.

The struggle to overcome a stroke

In 1993, while performing at the Blue Note club in New York, Peterson noticed a numbness in his left hand, and doctors diagnosed a stroke.

Peterson was depressed by the loss of ability and stopped playing for two years. "The first day I sat at the piano with my therapist, I had tears in my eyes," he told the Minneapolis Star Tribune.

But he said fellow musicians encouraged him to continue playing, initially with the right hand only and eventually with a slightly disabled left hand. Playing with a group was "the best therapy of all," he said.

He continued to travel and perform, still packing in the audiences. His 80th birthday in 2006 was celebrated with a concert featuring Diana Krall and a new postage stamp honouring him.

Peterson has received numerous citations for best jazz pianist from Contemporary Keyboard and Down Beat; was named an officer of the Order of Arts and Letters in France; and was named honorary chancellor at York University in Toronto.

His life was showcased in two films, Oscar Peterson: Music in the Key of Oscar in 1995 and Oscar Peterson: The Life of a Legend in 1996.

Over the years, Peterson has been a supporter of young Canadian artists, saying he admires the work of fellow Canadian Oliver Jones and appearing in 2006 at a school in Mississauga named after him to hear a school concert.

"It's very moving to work with them and to play with them," he told CBC Television at that appearance. "I want to say again I'm a softy for youngsters. I'm so glad to be here with them. "

Peterson was married four times and had six children from his first and third marriages — Lyn, Sharon, Gay, Oscar Jr., Norman and Joel — and one daughter, Celine, with his fourth wife, Kelly.

According to friends of the family, there will be a private funeral for Peterson, with a public memorial service to be held in the new year. 

BISHOP WEEKS AND EVANGELIST BYNUM LOOSING SIGHT:

BISHOP WEEKS AND EVANGELIST BYNUM LOOSING SIGHT:
Weeks and Bynum's public affairs proves that they've lost sight of God's purpose.
 
 On August 21, 2007 Bishop Weeks and Evangelist Bynum of Global Destiny Ministries were in a public domestic dispute and confrontation. Juanita Bynum and witnesses accused her husband Weeks of physically abusing her. Married on July 22, 2002 in a public wedding, told to be valued at five million, the couple then combined their ministries.

     In the recent Essence issue Bynum gets candid about the marriage that effectively ended on August 21st at a meeting that was supposed to be a discussion on mending the marriage. The Pentecostal Prophetess accused Weeks of physical, verbal and emotional abuse, of which he has denied, but yet later confesses to his congregation that, "the devil made me do it."  Bynum said she accepted the Essence interview request to squash the accusations of her husband. He in turn publishes a tell-all book, according to www.ajc.com  titled "What Love Taught Me" (Global Destiny Publishing), which he pulled 48 hours later, promising those who had already purchased it that he would reissue it later.

     According to AJC.com he claims that it was Evangelist Bynum who pleaded for the meeting that August 21st because she "wanted to use Global Destiny Church to help raise funds for her mentorship classes and wanted to solidify the location to make her commercial." She on the other hand in, her Essence interview said it was he who pleaded for the meeting to talk about mending the marriage.

     Since the split Weeks was evicted from his two million dollar country club estate and was threatened eviction from his church, but made payment arrangements and saved that action. He is also facing a law suit from a former employee for $90,000. She claims that she brought, at his request, $90,000 in items for the church but was never paid back.

     According to www.assatashakur.org, Afroamerica said an eyewitness attending a prayer group meeting lead by Tele-evangelist Bynum, said the attendees were told to purchase a t-shirt (with the church's name on it) and if not, they couldn't attend the next meeting. That same eyewitness said that two weeks previously Bishop Weeks told his congregation that those who didn't pay their tithing would be getting a letter stating that they couldn't attend his church until they do.

THOMAS WEEKS, III IS FED UP: Embattled Bishop plans to speak out.

     It seems they both have lost sight of God's purpose for them, to spread God's gospel. Sometimes when God's people loose sight of what He asks or directs them to do, they loose his grace and guidance.

     That's what the Weeks/Bynum drama is an example of. Their sight became full of "the business," "the tidings" and the public prestige. Unfortunately, they are not alone; many sometimes loose sight of what God wants/directs them to do, getting prideful and thinking that "they" created their successes.

In the wake of numerous inflammatory press campaigns speaking out from Juanita Bynum-Weeks and her publicist Amy Malone, Bishop Thomas Weeks, III is pushing for a private and amicable resolution in the interest of both his marriage and ministry.

      Earlier this week, Bishop Weeks retracted the publishing of his memoir, What Love Taught Me. Weeks is, by no means, out to wound or defame his wife. He is simply emphasizing that he is torn between protecting his wife as well as protecting his Atlanta church and ministry at large.

      Through these trying times, the Bishop has remained quiet and kept the views and accounts of his marriage private, in hopes of a future reconciliation. The desired reconciliation is not for marital purposes, but to bring forth peace between the couple and their families and to bring harmony, healing and calm to the Christian body. Over 1,600 members have left Weeks' ministry due to the one-sided, unopposed attacks, which have been displayed on television, in print and on radio and online media. In addition to negative publicity that the church has received, Weeks' credible entrepreneurial endeavors have suffered.

      In response to the most recent outcry, a press release on behalf of Mrs. Bynum-Weeks was followed by a radio interview on the syndicated Tom Joyner Morning Show. Bynum-Weeks' brother made malicious statements against Weeks and his church. The Bishop says his silence cannot be contained for much longer. These continued deliberate and assassinating attacks against Bishop Weeks' character have compromised his longstanding pastoral ministry of over 10 years. Weeks wishes to bring closure to this situation so that publicly, corporately and worldwide, members of the Global Destiny Ministries, as well as the body of Christ, can welcome in the New Year on a positive note.

      In the interest of the church, if there is any further agitation by Mrs. Bynum-Weeks or her publicity team, Bishop Weeks' public relations firm, Double XXposure will be releasing his highly anticipated memoir, What Love Taught Me. With this, the highest level of clarity and truth will be exposed with regard to this matter. At the very least, Bishop Weeks hopes to bring closure to all of the drama that has been stirred up through various media outlets.

 

Chinese Unveil Mammoth Arts Center

Chinese Unveil Mammoth Arts Center
Peter Parks/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The new National Center for the Performing Arts in Beijing is meant to establish a cultural core next to Tiananmen Square, a political center.

 

Published: December 24, 2007

BEIJING — Compared variously to a floating pearl and a duck egg, the titanium-and-glass half-dome of the National Center for the Performing Arts formally opened its underwater entryway to Chinese officials and dignitaries here over the weekend.

The $400 million complex, a concert hall, opera house and theater under one space age span, is designed to be the center of Chinese culture, just as Tiananmen Square next door was designated this country’s political center.

The complex’s lush, dazzling interior, sophisticated acoustics and mechanical wizardry rival any hall in Europe or the United States, its promoters say. Chen Ping, the center’s director, proclaimed it “a concrete example of China’s rising soft power and comprehensive national strength” during the opening ceremony on Saturday night.

Yet the center, designed by the French architect Paul Andreu, has attracted at least as much attention for its cost overruns, safety concerns and provocative aesthetics.

And the hall’s artistic directors, appointed after prolonged bureaucratic squabbling, had to scramble to line up a credible schedule of performances for the premier season, which runs from late December until April, organizers said.

The opening event was an eclectic sampler of Chinese and Western musical classics, with two conductors, two orchestras, four choral groups and a half-dozen soloists, a mélange that showed off the building’s acoustics but underscored its continuing search for an artistic mission.

Li Changchun, a senior Communist Party leader, was the guest of honor at the event, broadcast on national television. At each interlude in the program camera operators hustled to the row in front of Mr. Li to record him clapping.

The center joins a list of monoliths designed by foreign architects — the bird’s-nest Olympic stadium and the cantilevered towers of China Central Television’s new headquarters among them — that have remade the Beijing skyline and projected the soaring ambitions and bulging coffers of the Communist Party leadership.

Mr. Andreu’s creation joins the Shanghai Grand Theater, designed by another Frenchman, Jean-Marie Charpentier, as one of the top performance halls in China.

That field will grow crowded, however, as other cities pour hundreds of millions of dollars into their own cultural showcases. Zaha Hadid, the London architect, is building an opera house for Guangzhou, a provincial capital. The architect Carlos Ott, a Canadian born in Uruguay, has four contracts for performance halls in smaller cities.

Whether this adds up to a cultural renaissance or an edifice contest remains unclear. China has produced first-rate classical musicians, including the pianists Yundi Li, who performed a solo on Saturday night, and Lang Lang. Yet its musical groups, ballets and symphony orchestras have received far less attention than the concert halls. They face financial constraints, political censorship and public indifference.

“China needs a top national performance hall of this kind,” Wu Zuqiang, who heads the center’s arts committee, said in an interview before it opened. “But promoting national culture will take extended efforts, and will require some adjustments in our approach.”

Officials call the complex the largest performing arts center in the world, twice as big as the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington. It was designed to be conspicuous.

Mr. Andreu said that he envisioned the hall as a tribute to the traditional Chinese image of heaven and earth, round above square. His bubblelike soaring glass dome encloses several performance spaces and is suspended above a shallow pool. Viewed at night, illuminated from within, the dome resembles a spaceship hovering over a calm lake. But on dim days when the haze and dust of Beijing cover the silvery titanium shell, the hall can look no more distinguished than an airport service hangar.

A few years ago a group of Chinese architects organized a vocal petition campaign to protest the design. They said it blended poorly with the Stalinist Great Hall of the People next door and high vermilion walls of the imperial Forbidden City across the street.

Their effort received a boost in 2004 when the roof of a new terminal building at the Charles de Gaulle International Airport near Paris, which Mr. Andreu also designed, collapsed. Some critics of the design said that the complex’s entryway, a subterranean glass-enclosed corridor extending 250 feet under the artificial lake, posed safety risks in the event of structural problems or a terrorist attack.

The project faced stoppages and reviews, and was several years late and many tens of millions of dollars over budget.

Saturday, December 22, 2007

Pastor's Challenge Shocks Congregation

Pastor's Challenge Shocks Congregation
By HELEN O'NEILL,
AP
Posted: 2007-12-22 07:00:06
CHAGRIN FALLS, Ohio (Dec. 20) - The Rev. Hamilton Coe Throckmorton shivered with anticipation as he gazed at the loot - wads of $50 bills piled high beside boxes of crayons in a Sunday school classroom.

Cautiously, he locked the door. Then he started counting.

Photo Gallery: What Happened to the Money?
Amy Sancetta, AP

Reverend Hamilton Throckmorton, right, surprised his congregation in Chagrin Falls, Ohio, when he followed up a sermon by handing out $40,000 in cash.

    1 of 9
It was a balmy Friday evening in September. From several floors below faint melodies drifted up - the choir practicing for Sunday service.

Throckmorton was oblivious. For hours, perched awkwardly on child-sized wooden stools surrounded by biblical murals and children's drawings, the pastor and a handful of coconspirators concentrated on the count.

Forty-thousand dollars. Throckmorton smiled in satisfaction as he stashed the money in a safe.

That Sunday, the 52-year-old minister donned his creamy white robes, swept to the pulpit and delivered one of the most extraordinary sermons of his life.

First he read from the Gospel of Matthew.

"And unto one he gave five talents, to another two, and to another one; to every man according to his ability."

Then he explained the parable of the talents, which tells of the rich master who entrusts three servants with a sum of money - "talents" - and instructs them to go forth and do good. The master lavishes praise on the two servants who double their money. But he casts into the wilderness the one so afraid to take a risk that he buries his share.

Throckmorton spends up to 20 hours working on his weekly homily, and his clear diction, contemplative message and ringing voice command the church. Gazing down from the pulpit that Sunday, Throckmorton dropped his bombshell.

Like the master, he would entrust each adult with a sum of money - in this case, $50. Church members had seven weeks to find ways to double their money, the proceeds to go toward church missions.

"Live the parable of the talents!" Throckmorton exhorted, as assistants handed out hundreds of red envelops stuffed with crisp $50 bills and stunned church members did quick mental calculations, wondering where all the money had come from. There are about 1,700 in the congregation, though not everyone attends each week.

The cash, Throckmorton explained, was loaned by several anonymous donors.

In her regular pew at the back of the church, where she has listened to sermons for 40 years, 73-year-old Barbara Gates gasped. What kind of kooky nonsense is this, she thought.

"Sheer madness," sniffed retired accountant Wayne Albers, 85, to his wife, Marnie, who hushed him as he whispered loudly. "Why can't the church just collect money the old-fashioned way?"

In a center pew, Ann Nagy's eyes moistened as she considered her ailing, beloved father, his suffering, and the song she had written to comfort him near death. She nudged her husband Scott. "Give me your $50," she whispered. Nagy knew exactly what she would do.

Throckmorton wrapped up his two morning services by saying that children would get $10. And he assured the congregation that anyone who didn't feel comfortable could simply return the money. No consignment to outer darkness for those who didn't participate.

Throckmorton is warm and engaging and approachable, as comfortable talking about the Cleveland Indians baseball team as he is discussing scripture. At the Federated Church, he is known simply as Hamilton.

But as church members spilled into the late summer sunshine that morning to ponder their skills and their souls, there were many who thought: Hamilton is really pushing us this time.

"There was definitely this tension, this pressure to live up to something," said Hal Maskiell, a 62-year-old retired Navy pilot who spent days trying to figure out how to meet the challenge.

Maskiell's passion is flying a four-seater Cessna 172 Skyhawk over the Cuyahoga County hills. He decided to use his $50 to rent air time from Portage County airport and charge $30 for half-hour rides. Church members eagerly signed up. Maskiell was thrilled to get hours of flying time, and he raised $700.

His girlfriend, Kathy Marous, 55, was far less confident. What talents do I have, she thought dejectedly. She was tempted to give the money back.

And then Marous found an old family recipe for tomato soup, one she hadn't made in 19 years. She remembered how much she had enjoyed the chopping and the cooking and the canning and the smells. With Hal's encouragement Marous dug out her pots. She bought three pecks of tomatoes. Suddenly she was chopping and cooking and canning again. At $5 a jar, she made $180.

"I just never imagined people would pay money for the things I made," Marous exclaimed.

Others felt the same way. Barbara Gates raised $450 crafting pendants from beads and sea glass - pieces she had casually made for her grandchildren over the years. Kathie Biggin created fanciful little red-nosed Rudolph pins and sold them for $2.50. Twelve-year-old Amanda Horner pooled her money with friends, stocked up at JoAnn's fabric store, and made dozens of colorful fleece baby blankets, which were purchased by church members and then donated to a local hospital.

And 87-year-old Bob Burrows rediscovered old carpentry skills and began selling wooden bird-feeders.

But it wasn't the money; everyone said so. It was something else, something far less tangible but yet so very real. For seven weeks an almost magical sense of excitement and energy and camaraderie infused the elegant red-brick church on Bell Street, spilling over into homes and hearts as the parable of the talents came alive.

In her sun-filled studio on Strawberry Lane, Shirley Culbertson felt it - a joyful sense ofpurpose that she had rarely experienced since her husband passed two years ago. Culbertson, 81, is a gifted painter and watercolors fill her house. But she discovered another talent during this time - knitting whimsical eight-inch stuffed dolls with button noses and floppy hats. She raised $90.

Zooming down country roads clinging to the back of a leather-clad biker, Florence Cross felt it too. For the challenge, Barry Biggin had parked his 2006 Harley Davidson Road King outside the church, offering 12-mile rides for $30. Cross was the first to sign up. Never mind that she is in her mid-80s, had never been on a bike, or that her husband of 60 years had to hoist her up.

"Oh, it was such a thrill!" said Cross, her face glowing at the memory. Her friends now call her "Harley Girl."

Martine Scheuermann lived the parable in her Elm Street kitchen, transforming it into an "applesauce factory" for several weeks. The 49-year-old human resources director would rise at 6 a.m. on Sundays in order to have warm batches ready for sampling at church services.

In his origami-filled bedroom on Bradley Street, Paul Cantlay lived the parable too. Surrounded by sheets of colored construction paper, the 9-year-old crafted paper dragons and stars and sailboats. He set up an origami stand at the end of his street, charged 50 cents to $5 depending on the piece, and raised $68.

Talents began multiplying at such a rate that the church held a bazaar after services on two consecutive Sundays for people to display - and sell - their wares.

The pretty little village on the Chagrin River falls had never seen anything quite like it. Everyone seemed to be talking about the talent challenge: over the clatter of coffee cups at Dink's restaurant, at the Fireside bookshop on the green, sipping drinks at the Gamekeeper's Taverne. Even members of other churches weighed in: Have you heard what's happening at Federated?

"Anyone can open their wallet and give cash," Kris Tesar said. "This was just an extraordinary process of exploration and discovery and of challenging ourselves. It became bigger than any one of us or than any individual talent."

Tesar, a 58-year-old retired nurse, discovered her talent in buckets of flip-flops for sale at Old Navy. She stocked up on yarn and beads and made dozens of funky, fluffy decorative footwear that were a huge hit with teens. Tesar raised $550 for the church, is still taking orders and is thinking of starting a business. Now even her children call her the "flip-flop lady."

People also got to know the "hen lady" - Gabrielle Quintin, who took to raising chickens on a whim 23 years ago when she moved into a 180-year-old house with a barn. Her "ladies," as Quintin calls her backyard flock, provide a welcome distraction from her nursing job in a cancer center. Quintin decided to put her brood to work for the church. For $10 church members could "hire-a-hen" and get three dozen fresh eggs complete with a photograph of the "lady" who laid them.

"It wasn't exactly spiritual, but I had a lot of fun," said Quintin, whose husband, Mike, made glass birdfeeders. "And it was just this great way of bringing everyone together and connecting with the church."

Kathy Wellman quilted. Mary Hobbs knit shawls and penciled portraits. Cathy Hatfield auctioned a ride in her hot-air balloon. Norma and Trent Bobbitt pooled their money with another church member to hire a harpist from the Cleveland orchestra and host an elegant evening dinner party. Folks paid $50 each to attend and the Bobbitts made over $1,200.

And physician Peter Yang took over shifts from other doctors in his partnership (he used his $50 for gas to get to the hospital) and raised $3,000.

The deadline to return the money was Sunday, Oct. 28. Nervously, some church council members suggested posting plain clothes security guards at services that day. But Throckmorton would have none of it. He insisted that the spirit of the challenge, which had already inspired so much goodwill, would carry them safely through. And it did.

Organ music filled the church as people silently filed down the aisle, dropped their proceeds into baskets, and offered testimonials about what living the parable had meant to them. Throckmorton thanked everyone for their generosity. Then he started counting.

A week later he delivered the joyful news: They had more than doubled the amount distributed.

The initial take was $38,195 over the loan, but the amount is still growing. Some people didn't make the deadline, or extended it in order to finish their projects.

The final sum will be divided equally between three charities: One-third will go to a school library in South Africa where the church is involved in an AIDS mission; one-third will go to micro-loan organizations that provide seed money for small businesses in developing countries; one-thirdwill help the Interfaith Hospitality Network in Cleveland, specifically programs for homeless women.

Throckmorton is asked all the time if the talent challenge will become an annual event, but he is doubtful. It was a special time and a special idea, he says, and he is not sure it could be re-created or relived.

Yet in a very real sense, it lives on. Church members who never knew each other have become friends. And orders for applesauce, flip-flops and Rudolph pins are still rolling in for Christmas.

There are other, more poignant reminders. Like Ann Nagy's haunting tribute to her father, who died of brain cancer on Oct. 11.

Nagy, 44, has always been a singer with a clear lovely voice. It wasn't until her father grew ill and moved into a hospice that she started writing songs. She found solace in the music and a way of communicating that was sometimes easier than spoken words.

At hospice, patients are taught five simple truths to tell their loved ones before they die: I'll miss you. I love you. I forgive you. I'm sorry. Goodbye.

Borrowing from that theme, Nagy wrote a farewell song for her Dad. She pooled her $50 talent money with her husband's share and cut a CD to sell to church members. Ironically it was finished just an hour before her father passed, on Oct. 11. Nagy stood by his bed and sang it for him anyway.

On Nov. 11 - her father's 72nd birthday - Throckmorton preached a sermon about dying. He invited Nagy to the altar. There, accompanied by a cellist and a pianist she sang "Before You Go."

Her voice soared. The congregation wept. The parable of the talents had never seemed so alive.

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Organ-Driven, With Unexpected Stops

Organ-Driven, With Unexpected Stops
By NATE CHINEN
Published: December 20, 2007

The promise of Crescent Boogaloo, a small coterie of all-stars at the Jazz Standard, announces itself up front. There’s a lot of room for overlap between the more groove-oriented music of New Orleans (a k a the Crescent City) and the New York-based, 1960s-vintage Latin-soul hybrid known as boogaloo (or bugalú). Put those two styles in contact, with the right ambassadors, and you might have something special.

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Rahav Segev for The New York Times

Dr. Lonnie Smith playing the organ at Jazz Standard.

But the group’s first set on Tuesday night harbored no traces of boogaloo, and the lone funk jam, halfway through, felt Northeastern in origin. For that matter, the two musicians onstage with roots in New Orleans, the alto saxophonist Donald Harrison and the trumpeter Nicholas Payton, often came across like guests at a party.

The host of that party — Dr. Lonnie Smith, a Hammond B-3 organist who appeared some 40 years ago on “Alligator Boogaloo,” a soul-jazz album by the alto saxophonist Lou Donaldson — didn’t seem terribly concerned by these matters. Regardless of what was listed on the club calendar, he was going to do his thing.

Time for some good news then: Dr. Smith is a bold and charismatic stylist, and here he was working with the guitarist Peter Bernstein, an experienced partner, and the drummer Bill Stewart, a quick study with open ears (and a lot of history with Mr. Bernstein). Together as a rhythm section they pushed ahead with purpose and grace.

The set opener was “Good Bait,” a Tadd Dameron tune, and Dr. Smith set the gauge at a medium-easy tempo, the standard gait of mid-Atlantic organ-trio protocol. It was a casual, companionable sound, which partly explained the level of chatter in the room.

Mr. Payton and Mr. Harrison had no problems on this turf or on Sonny Rollins’s “Oleo,” another bebop standard that crisply closed the set. Their more interesting statements, though, involved a modal waltz by Dr. Smith called “Simone.” Mr. Payton explored the theme with measured phrases, exhausting one idea before adopting the next; his solo gave the impression of searching a house, room by room. Mr. Harrison took a more headlong approach, with hard gusts and fast flurries, occasionally zipping through an exotic scale.

Both soloists contributed solid work to the set’s funk centerpiece, a vamp with a bridge, loosely based on “Come Together,” the Lennon-McCartney song. But Dr. Smith didn’t give them much to work with in terms of melody, opting to indulge in some playful vocalization. Eventually both Mr. Payton and Mr. Harrison filed awkwardly off the stage.

Later on, introducing the band, Dr. Smith botched Mr. Harrison’s name. It was an honest mistake, quickly rectified, but it felt offhandedly appropriate. One hopes that Crescent Boogaloo, whatever the misleading handle, finds more collaborative footing this week.

Performances continue through Sunday at the Jazz Standard, 116 East 27th Street, Manhattan; (212) 576-2232, jazzstandard.net.

Saturday, December 15, 2007

EUR FILM REVIEW: 'Tis Autumn: The Search for Jackie Paris

EUR FILM REVIEW: 'Tis Autumn: The Search for Jackie Paris Bittersweet Bio-Pic Revisits Rise and Fall of Fabled Flash in the Pan
By Kam Williams
By the time that he was voted the Best New Male Vocalist in Downbeat’s 1953 Critics’ Poll, Jackie Paris (1924-2004) was already the toast of New York City’s café society.

      For this slight Italian-American with a velvety baritone voice had by then worked as sideman with Charlie Parker, toured with Lionel Hampton, and sung with many other leading luminaries on the bebop jazz scene.

      However, despite subsequently recording and releasing a quintet of critically-acclaimed albums during the Fifties, Jackie’s promising career never quite took flight, and by the middle of the next decade he had all but slipped into obscurity. Why hadn’t his become a household name alongside Sinatra and Ella, and the other gifted singers of his era?

      That is the task doggedly undertaken by ‘Tis Autumn: The Search for Jackie Paris, a bittersweet bio-pic directed by Oscar-nominee Raymond De Felitta (for Bronx Cheers). In his quest for an answer as to why Jackie disappeared after being briefly revered, De Felitta exhibits little hesitation about showing his subject in a negative light.

      The recently-deceased Paris was still alive during some of the filming, and participated in the warts-and-all documentary which shows him still plugging away as a performer at 79, desperate for a revival. But the movie is at its best when contrasting the vintage footage of Jackie in his prime with an assortment of accolades and speculative musings by friends, an ex-wife (vocalist Anne-Marie Moss) and jazz greats (James Moody, Billy Taylor,
etcetera) about why fame had passed him by.

      A good clue comes when we learn that he had a hard time controlling a temper which served to sabotage both his personal and professional lives. Women seemed to be his weakness, and he was apparently willing to go to his grave still deep in denial about the existence of his only child, a son born out of wedlock.

      A posthumous probing of the psyche of a genius who could swing and sing, but was also prone to self-destructive behavior, daddy-o!

Very Good (3 stars)
Unrated
Running time: 100 minutes
Studio: Outsider Pictures

Friday, December 14, 2007

Ike Turner, Musician and Songwriter in Duo With Tina Turner, Dies at 76

Ike Turner, Musician and Songwriter in Duo With Tina Turner, Dies at 76
Fabrice Coffrini/Keystone, via Associated Press

Ike Turner during a concert at the the Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland in 2002. Share

Published: December 13, 2007

Ike Turner, the R&B musician, songwriter, bandleader, producer, talent scout and ex-husband of Tina Turner, died on Wednesday at his home in San Marcos, Calif., a San Diego suburb. He was 76.

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 An Excerpt from 'Rocket 88' (mp3)

Times Topics: Ike Turner

His death was announced by Jeanette Bazzell Turner, who married Mr. Turner in 1995. She gave no cause of death, but said he had had emphysema.

Mr. Turner was best known for discovering Anna Mae Bullock, a teenage singer from Nutbush, Tenn., whom he renamed Tina Turner. The Ike and Tina Turner Revue made a string of hits in the 1960s before the Turners broke up in 1975.

Tina Turner described the relationship as abusive in her autobiography, “I, Tina,” which was adapted for the 1993 film “What’s Love Got to Do WithIt?” and made Mr. Turner’s name synonymous with domestic abuse.

“I got a temper,” he admitted in 1999 in his autobiography, “Takin’ Back My Name: The Confessions of Ike Turner.” But he maintained that the film had “overstated” it.

Mr. Turner’s career extended back to the 1950s, when he played with pioneering Mississippi Delta bluesmen and helped shape early rock ’n’ roll as well as soul and rhythm-and-blues. “Rocket 88,” a song his band released in 1951 under the name Jackie Brenston and his Delta Cats, is regularly cited as a contender for the first rock-’n’-roll record for its beat, its distorted guitar and its honking saxophone.

Ike and Tina Turner were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1991.

Ike Turner, whose full name is variously given as Izear Luster Turner Jr. and Ike Wister Turner, was born in Clarksdale, Miss., and was brought up there by his mother after his father, a minister, was beaten to death by a white mob.

As a child Ike spent time at the local radio station, WROX, a hub for Delta blues performances. According to Mr. Turner’s autobiography, the D.J.s taught him how to cue up and segue records, sometimes leaving him alone on the air when he was 8 years old.

He grew up around Delta musicians like the bluesman Robert Nighthawk Jr. and the pianist Pinetop Perkins, who gave him boogie-woogie lessons, and he learned to play guitar.

In high school he formed a group called the Kings of Rhythm. B. B. King helped that band get a steady weekend gig and recommended it to Sam Phillips at Sun Studios in Memphis. The band had been performing jukebox hits, but on the drive from Mississippi to Memphis, its members decided to write something of their own.

Their saxophonist, Jackie Brenston, suggested a song about the new Rocket 88 Oldsmobile. The piano-pounding intro and the first verse were by Mr. Turner, and the band collaborated on the rest; Mr. Brenston sang.

Sun was not yet its own record label, so Mr. Phillips sent the song to Chess Records. It went on to sell a half-million copies. “I was playing rhythm and blues,” Mr. Turner wrote. “That’s all I was playing.” His book says he was paid $20 for the record.

Mr. Turner became a session guitarist, known for his flamboyant, note-bending use of his guitar’s whammy bar. He was also a producer, songwriter and talent scout for Sun and for RPM/Modern Records. He worked with Mr. King, Bobby (Blue) Bland, Howlin’ Wolf, Johnny Ace, Otis Rush, Elmore James and many other blues and R&B musicians.

In 1954 he moved up the Mississippi River to East St. Louis, Ill., where his disciplined and dynamic band became a major draw at local clubs. There, in 1958, he heard Anna Mae Bullock, who joined the group and quickly became its focal point as Tina Turner. The band was soon renamed the Ike and Tina Turner Revue. Her lead vocal on “A Fool in Love” started a streak of Top 10 R&B hits for the revue and also reached the pop Top 40. It was followed by “It’s Gonna Work Out Fine” in 1961. The duo became stars on the grueling so-called chitlin’ circuit of African-American clubs.

Ike and Tina Turner had a wedding ceremony in Tijuana, Mexico, in 1962; Mr. Turner’s book said they were never actually married. They had a son, Ronald, who survives him, along with Jeanette Bazzell Turner and four other children: Mia, Twanna, Michael and Ike Jr.

Ike Turner, Musician and Songwriter in Duo With Tina Turner, Dies at 76

Published: December 13, 2007

(Page 2 of 2)

The Rolling Stones chose the Ike and Tina Turner Revue as its opening act on a 1969 tour, introducing it to many rock fans. In 1971 the revue reached the pop Top 10 with its version of Creedence Clearwater Revival’s “Proud Mary,” with Ike’s deep vocal counterpoint and Tina’s memorable spoken-word interlude. “We never do anything nice and easy,” Ms. Turner says in the song. “We always do it nice and rough.” That song won a Grammy Award for best R&B performance by a group.

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Related

 An Excerpt from 'Rocket 88' (mp3)

Times Topics: Ike Turner

Ms. Turner’s account of the couple’s years together describes domestic violence, infidelity and drug use; his version does not deny that, although he wrote in his book, “Tina and me, we had our fights, but we ain’t had no more fights than anybody else.”

Tina walked out on him in 1975. Mr. Turner, already abusing cocaine and alcohol, spiraled further downward during the 1980s while Ms. Turner became a multimillion-selling star on her own. A recording studio he had built in Los Angeles burned down in 1982, and he was arrested repeatedly on drug charges. In 1989 he went to prison for various cocaine-possession offenses and was in jail when he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

But he had a windfall when the hip-hop duo Salt ’N’ Pepa used a sample of his song “I’m Blue” for their 1993 hit “Shoop,” which reached No. 4 on the Billboard pop chart.

Mr. Turner set out to reclaim his place in rock history. He wrote his autobiography with a British writer, Nigel Cawthorne. At the 2001 Chicago Blues Festival he performed with Pinetop Perkins in a set filmed for the Martin Scorsese PBS series “The Blues.” He renamed his band the Kings of Rhythm and re-recorded “Rocket 88” for the 2001 album “Here and Now.” He toured internationally, recording a live album and DVD, “The Resurrection,” at the Montreux Jazz Festival in 2002. He visited high schools during Black History Month with an antidrug message. He recorded a song with the British band Gorillaz in 2005.

In the end, the music business embraced him: Mr. Turner’s 2006 album, “Risin’ With the Blues,” won the Grammy this year as best traditional blues album.