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#252127 - 12/31/08 08:00 AM
Re: Jazz great Freddie Hubbard dead at 70
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Member
Registered: 03/04/06
Posts: 533
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Originally posted by cgiles: Lucky: "I’m interested to see if anyone else sees it as I do?" Chas: “I don't. Everything seems to be about how YOU see it, how YOU prefer things to be, what YOU want SZ to be about; in other words, YOU, YOU, YOU. The world in general and SZ in particular, has no obligation to conform to what YOU want.” chas Chas..... I just now read this. Now, what I'm interested about is how you arrived at that conclusion? Perhaps you skipped over the previous line which reads: "For those of you who are going to argue my point...this is MY opinion. I’m not saying this is the way it should be, but that this is the way I would prefer it to be." You write: "Everything seems to be about how YOU see it" Me: “much of what I write IS about how I see it...no different than anyone else in this room.” You write: "how YOU prefer things to be" Me: "absolutely correct...I was never a follower. I think a lot and I express my views a lot. Again....no different from anyone else in this room." You write "what YOU want SZ to be about" Me: "May I ask what is wrong with that?" You write: "in other words, YOU, YOU, YOU. The world in general and SZ in particular, has no obligation to conform to what YOU want." Me: "If you look at my postings, I don't believe I ever demanded that the SZ "conform to what I want." If YOU feel it does, then I'll have to be more careful about how I "word" my postings from now on." In real life, I'm actually a very open-minded individual who enjoys viewing and debating an issue and hearing the viewpoints of others (the qualifier being when they're not laced with hostility!). Lucky
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#252128 - 12/31/08 09:15 AM
Re: Jazz great Freddie Hubbard dead at 70
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Senior Member
Registered: 09/29/05
Posts: 6703
Loc: Roswell,GA/USA
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Originally posted by Stephenm52: Chas, interesting and wow Shirley Scott your former teacher. Very cool to say the least. I had no idea that she was married to Turrentine.
Okay, maybe that's a slight exaggeration. Shirley, who had a Master's degree in music, taught music at Cheney University which was walking distance from my house. As a side gig, I was a consultant to their IT dept. (such as it was) and knew the then president socially. My cousin was also chairman of the Sociology dept. there at the time. I knew and socialized with a lot of the staff there but knew Shirley already from both (Philly's famous) Settlement music school and as an active musician on the Philly music scene. The 'lessons' were mostly "tips and tricks" and jams at my house on my trusty ol' C3. I learned a lot and therefore loosely refer to her as 'my teacher'. The Black music community (with a few White musicians such as guitarist Pat Martino and a few others) in Philadelphia at that time was very close-knit and almost everybody knew everybody else. The number of really great musicians coming out of the Philadelphia area at that time was phenomenal. Most moved on to obscurity in New York and LA but some, such as Jimmy Smith, Jimmy McGriff, Groove Holmes (Camden, NJ), Shirley Scott, Grover Washington, Jr., etc. went on to bigger and better things. With the demise of the major Jazz clubs, the music scene changed (as it did in most cities). I could go on (and on, and on) but I'm sure you're pretty bored by now. Just waxing nostalgic. chas (of the over-the-hill gang)
_________________________
"Faith means not wanting to know what is true." [Nietzsche]
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#252129 - 01/01/09 01:36 PM
Re: Jazz great Freddie Hubbard dead at 70
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Senior Member
Registered: 04/13/05
Posts: 5126
Loc: USA
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Originally posted by cgiles: Okay, maybe that's a slight exaggeration. Shirley, who had a Master's degree in music, taught music at Cheney University which was walking distance from my house. As a side gig, I was a consultant to their IT dept. (such as it was) and knew the then president socially. My cousin was also chairman of the Sociology dept. there at the time. I knew and socialized with a lot of the staff there but knew Shirley already from both (Philly's famous) Settlement music school and as an active musician on the Philly music scene. The 'lessons' were mostly "tips and tricks" and jams at my house on my trusty ol' C3. I learned a lot and therefore loosely refer to her as 'my teacher'. The Black music community (with a few White musicians such as guitarist Pat Martino and a few others) in Philadelphia at that time was very close-knit and almost everybody knew everybody else. The number of really great musicians coming out of the Philadelphia area at that time was phenomenal. Most moved on to obscurity in New York and LA but some, such as Jimmy Smith, Jimmy McGriff, Groove Holmes (Camden, NJ), Shirley Scott, Grover Washington, Jr., etc. went on to bigger and better things. With the demise of the major Jazz clubs, the music scene changed (as it did in most cities). I could go on (and on, and on) but I'm sure you're pretty bored by now. Just waxing nostalgic.
chas (of the over-the-hill gang)
Chas, no boredom at all on this end. Love to hear those stories. I've been a fan of McGriff, Smith and Groove Holmes. We got to see Groove Holmes at Sculler's Jazz Club in Boston shortly before he passed away. It was a great show, probably about 75 in attendance in a mid size lounge. We had great seats and he could see his every move.
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