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  • PIll Popping

    No More Wake and Bake

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 09th, 2016

    Taking more drugs than ever but they don't give me a buzz. Not like wake and bake back in the day when Spaceman Bill Lee put pot on his corn flakes.

  • Duh Ramones

    Hey Ho Lets Go

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 09th, 2016

    By 1974 four guys from Forest Hills, Queens, unrelated, hit the downtown club scene as The Ramones. There last gig was in 1996. Over that time tons of albums. Adored by critics and fans they were too punk for mainstream success. Decades of endless one-nighters. Today they are regarded as one of the greatest and most influential all time rock bands.

  • Cyndi Lauper

    Beyond Just Having Fun

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 09th, 2016

    Cyndi Lauper's "Girls Just Want to Have Fun" was a youthful and fun anthem to a generation. Her ballad "Time After Time," covered by Miles Davis, hinted at what was to come. She won a Tony for the Broadway Musical "Kinky Boots." With more to come.

  • Britain's T. Rex

    Marc Bolan's American Pratfall

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 08th, 2016

    Big deal that we got to talk with Marc Bolan of British supergroup T. Rex launching their first American tour. Be nice we were warned by the PR folks. That night Bolan skipped on stage and fell flat on his ass. It was a bad omen and the tour bombed. Not long after both the group and Bolan were dead as dinos.

  • Buddy Rich

    Marching to a Different Drummer

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 08th, 2016

    It is argued that Buddy Rich was the greatest drummer of his era. His challenger, great album, Max Roach. In the dressing room at Lennie's on the Turnpike between sets Buddy was always good for a quote. Usually about Vegas or stints with Johnny Carson on the Tonight Show. Lennie discovered a local kid doing standup. Jay Leno became a regular on the Tonight Show and eventually took over from Johnny.

  • Stan Kenton's Progressive Band

    Artistry in Rhythm

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 08th, 2016

    There was an edge to progressive big band leader Stan Kenton when we met in 1970. He had cut loose from 25 years with Capitol Records and bought the catalogue to reissue on his own label Creative World. On the road with Stan it was less a tour than crusade. Those who performed and heard his music were true believers in his Artistry in Rhythm

  • Woody Herman

    Big Band Bop

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 07th, 2016

    Woody Herman fronted one of the most admired and successful groups of the big band era. He commissioned works ranging from Stravinsky's Ebony Concert to the eventual Dizzy Gillespi standard Woody'n You. The gig in Beverly at Sandy's Jazz Revival was more like a family reunion.

  • Count Basie

    Goin' To Kansas City

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 07th, 2016

    In the mobbed up city of politician Tom "Boss" Pendergast the saloons and brothels of Kansas City were wide open during prohibition and the depression years. The best of the thriving Midwest jazz and blues scene was the Count Basie Band.

  • Pianist McCoy Tyner

    Trane and Beyond

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 06th, 2016

    Growing up in Philly the legendary pianist Bod Powell was a neighbor and mentor to pianist McCoy Tyner. He also knew John Coltrane before he joined Miles Davis emerging as a superstar. Tyner was invited to join the classic quartet of Trane, drummer Joe Jones, and bass player Jimmy Garrison. There was an edge when I asked Tyner why he and Jones quit Trane a couple of years before he died.

  • Spirit Boat

    Hatshepsut Pharaoh/ Queen

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 06th, 2016

    Hatshepsut was the daughter of Thutmose I and his primary wife Ahmes. Her husband Thutmose II was the son of Thutmose I and a secondary wife named Mutnofret. Married to her half brother they had a daughter Neferure. By another wife Thutmose II fathered Thutmose III. From the age of two Hatshepsut co-ruled as Regent but overshadowed him as Pharaoh. When he came to power Thutmose III did his best to removed her name from prolific monuments.

  • Pianist Chick Corea

    Pushing the Limits

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 05th, 2016

    Miles Davis launched fusion jazz with the seminal double album Bitches Brew in March, 1970. It marked an era of experiment and change. That summer I covered Miles twice in one week at Harvard Stadium then Lennie's on the Turnpike. For both sessions he featured the dual electric pianos of Chick Corea, who had replaced Herbie Hancock, and Keith Jarrett.

  • Janis Joplin's Last Gig

    Harvard Stadium, August 12, 1970

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 05th, 2016

    During the turbulent summer of 1970 Schaefer Beer sponsored a series of concerts at Harvard Stadium. It was just $2 for festival seating. Capacity was topped at 10,000 although there were incident ot vandalism and gate crashing. Janis Joplin performed her last gig there on AUGUST 12. She was dead at just 27 shortly later on October 4.

  • Lin Manuel Miranda

    Hip Hopping Hamilton

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 05th, 2016

    While on vacation Lin Manuel Miranda, an avid reader, took along Ron Chernow's biography of the colorful, brilliant, complex and tragic founding father, Alexander Hamilton.. Blended with rap and hip hop Miranda concocted it into a game changing Broadway musical.

  • Jazz Pianist Bill Evans

    More Classical Than Roots

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 04th, 2016

    Working with composer and theorist George Russell the pianist Bill Evans evolved from bop to modal playing. That was an influence of Miles Davis resulting in the masterpiece Kind of Blue. Snubbed by influential mainstream musicians and critics, Wynton Marsalis and Stanley Crouch, who excluded him from the PBS/ Ken Burns series Jazz, Evans is widely regarded as among the seminal artists of his generation.

  • Pianist Teddy Wilson

    Benny Goodman to Billie Holiday

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 04th, 2016

    Initially Teddy Wilson studied music at Tuskegee University. With Lionel Hampton and Charlie Christian they integrated Benny Goodman's big band. Billiw Holiday was invited to join the band but she declined to tour with Ben particularly in the South. Pianist Wilson made classic recordings with Lady Day. We recall his long stints as piano player in the bar of Boston's Copley Square Hotel.

  • African Artist El Anatsui

    Metallic Cloth of Many Colors

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 04th, 2016

    Gallerist Jack Shainman, who grew up in Williamstown, represents major African as well as African American artists. He was instrumental in bringing super star El Anatsui to the Clark Art Institute.

  • Playwright Mark St. Germain

    Mentor and Friend

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 04th, 2016

    Playwright Mark St. Germain started as a writer for The Cosby Show. He could have stayed on in TV and its easy money. But Mark took the road less traveled for a challenging career in theatre. We first met for breakfast after the premiere of Freud's Last Session at Barrington Stage. There has been a dialogue ever since as he developed new plays. The insights have been invaluable.

  • Chuck Berry

    Outlaw Rock 'n' Roll

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 03rd, 2016

    In the 1950s, for Chicago's Chess Records, Chuck Berry recorded the national anthems of rock 'n' roll from Maybelline and Roll Over Beethoven to Johnny B. Goode. Busted for armed robbery as a teenager he did three years. Then more time for jail bait and later for tax evasion. It left him with understandable trust issues as a loaner on the road. Amazingly he is now pushing 90.

  • Eubie Blake

    Brought Ragtime to Broadway

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 03rd, 2016

    The team of Eubie Blake and Noble Sissle brought Shuffle Along the first all black musical to Broadway in 1921. Blake's music was the basis for Eubie! another Broadway hit in 1978. Well into his 90's he put on a hell of a show.

  • Gato Barbieri 1932 to 2016

    Argentine Musician's Last Tango

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 03rd, 2016

    Tenor sax player, Gato Beabieri, fused jazz with his Argentine roots. He composed the score for Bernado Bertolucci's steamy, moody erotic masterpiece Last Tango in Paris.

  • WGBH DJ Ron Della Chiesa

    Boogie Nights

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 03rd, 2016

    Hanging with WGBH DJ and host of Music America, the impeccable Ron Della Chiesa when jazz was king in Beantown. Recalling the lush life.

  • Storyville Pianists

    Crescent City Professors

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 01st, 2016

    Jazz was born in the cat houses and juke joints of the red light district, Storyville, in New Orleans. The pianists were known as professors starting with Jelly Roll Morton. There have been many since in the Crescent City from Fats Domino and Professor Longhair to Allen Touissant.

  • Giverny Goes Pop

    Monet's Lily Pond

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 01st, 2016

    When Claude Monet died at 86 in 1926, with the sculptor Rodin, he was the most famous and successful artist of his generation. By then Picasso and Cubism had changed the art world. Legally blind, with numerous operations, he painted ever more abstract versions of the beloved lily pond of his rural home at Giverny. Here we reconfigure his art with post modernism.

  • Caryatids

    Liberated from Captivity in the British Museum

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 31st, 2016

    That scoundrel Lord Elgin looted the sculptures from the Acropolis and sold them to the British Museum. There they have languished ever since. Here, however, we see the Caryatid from the Erectheum returned to the light of day.

  • Marilyn in Paris

    Not Fade Away

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 30th, 2016

    Born Norm Jean Baker she emerged as Hollywood's brightest star. Profiled as a dumb blonde Marilyn Monroe, tormented to an early grave, had a brilliant comedic touch. Just by chance we encountered her on a hot summer day, skirts billowing, in the Marais.

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