Sunday, January 27, 2008

A day like only New York can offer



Sometimes I wonder if I should leave New York and then I have days like yesterday and I think I should NEVER leave New York. The day started simply enough woke up, didn't move, and decided to forgo my usual trip to the farmers market at Grand Army Plaza. Stayed in bed for a bit. Woke up, drunk some juice, went and got my dry cleaning. Came back rocked out to some Northern Soul - especially this Wigan Casino segment in a BBC TV documentary called Dance Britannia. Then went out to Chelsea to meet a friend at the Gladstone Gallery for Shirin Neshat's new show.







What an absolutely fantastic experience it was - a small group of photographs were excellent - especially the one seen at the top of this post which when seen full scale is almost mystical but the meat of the event was the two rooms each showing a separate high definition film.

MUNIS follows the story of young woman and her magical encounter with a dead activist. FAEZEH sees a woman escaping the city to a magical orchard. Yes magical describes both movies and I don't want to give away the plot here.

I was blown away by the cinematography and spiritual feel of these short films. I know I will be going back for sure. Each film also includes a fantastic electronic soundtrack from the ever brilliant Ryuchi Sakamoto. If you are anywhere near West 24th St and 10th Ave go see this.

Here's an Interview with Shirin Neshat from July 2000 in The Guardian, Interview from Adriondacklife and a review of the new show from this weeks Time Out.

We also caught the show of Poul Kjærholm furntiture at Sean Kelly Gallery (way too dry, elitist and brittle in it's presentation) and a not so inspirational show by minimalist Japanese artists Atsuko Tanaka and Akira Kanyama. Maybe Shirin was just so good no one could compete.

To kill some time before dinner I went to the fantastic new, three floor Kinokuniya bookstore at 1073 Avenue of the Americas to pick up the new issue of Casa Brutus which I mentioned a few posts ago (more on it in another post). Of course I should have known I couldn't resist the store and I also broke down and bought a book I've been looking at there for the last 3 months - Electronic Music In The (Lost) World - a fantastic visual document of Synthesizer music in Japan. A few days from the end of January and I broke my no new books in January self imposed rule !! So much for my will power.



Staying with the developing theme, afterwards I went to Japanese restaurant Sakagura, 211 East 43rd St between 2nd & 3rd Avenues - a place wonderfully hidden in the basement of an office building (odd on the way in / fantastic once you're inside) - I ate:

* Fluke Carpaccio - Thinly sliced fluke sashimi drizzled w olive oil topped with plum paste, salmon roe and shisho leaf
* Satoimo Iridashi - Taro, potato, eggplant, and shitake mushroom fried and served with a broth
* Tori Karaage - Deep fried chunks of chicken marinated in sake Ginger infused soy sauce
* Pear Millefeuille - a desert of Earl Grey ice cream and Pear Millefeuille
* and a glass of Daishichi MINOWAMON Sake.

YUMMY !! I am not reviewing it. It was DELICIOUS and I am most certainly going back to Sakagura.



After that I went to meet my friend Kabir at musician George Lewis' house party. His upcoming book "A Power Stronger Than Itself: The AACM and American Experimental Music" is a title I mentioned in my very first post here (things I am looking forward to in 2008). I wasn't expecting to know anyone there and neither was I expecting George to remember me from the brief time I met him at Mills in Oakland but he did, and also old San Francisco jazz friends Bassist Lisle Ellis and Keyboardist Vijay Iyer where also there as was drummer Guillermo E. Brown who I hadn't seen for years. Lisle reminded me of a cover story I wrote on him for California Jazz Now way back in the early '90s and told me how the follow up article had only just came out recently - the cover of Cadence magazine - it only took over a decade !! We smiled about it and I told him that even though now I have been doing PR for many years that press doesn't matter. The people in the music who know the music are always the most important and then those who enjoy it - press or no press. Guillermo E. Brown told me about an upcoming solo gig at the Apollo in Harlem in April that sounded like it will be great.

House parties in New York can be a trip - first off it's just fascinating to see where and how people live - in this city it's so diverse and George's apartment was at Central Park West and 105th St not a neighborhood I'm often in. First conversation I had was with two Japanese women - turns out one of them improvised a special vocal piece by none other than Takehisa Kosugi a musician whose music has really been inspiring the hell out of me lately. The other lady works at Music From Japan - a cultural organization who are presenting a show of Toru Takemitsu music I just bought tickets for this week!. My Japanese theme had continued in and by itself !!

A few interesting hours later, after meeting a fascinating young Columbia University student working on a new controller device, I headed home with a bunch of people from the party. On the train I reached into my bag to show my friend Kabir (a electronic musician) the book I just bought - he showed it to an older couple next to him (also from the party) and the man said "oh - there I am !!" It was Morton Subotnick !! I was speechless. The book had an entire page showing 9 of his albums. He didn't know about the book and was curious where I bought it - saying appropriately "do they still have bookstores ?." He and his partner Joan La Barbara had been at the party but somehow I hadn't got to meet them. Hand shakes ensued and some smiles as we all realized just how wonderfully odd but captivating this city called New York can be. Bring on more days like this.

Funny thing I could have kept going too and gone either to No Ordinary Monkey or Matthew Dear at Minimoo. Suffice to say I decided the day had been perfect enough.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Sounds like an awesome day...but you should have gone to minimoo! Matt Dear killed it, dropping a seriously twisted set beginning at about 3:30-4:00 AM, comprised of some loopy tripped-out sound manipulations that I've never heard him play before, including a sped up version of Men Without Hats "Safety Dance" that went over very well. :) People were dancing like total idiots until well after sunrise.