March 2008 Archives

I like books, too.

| 2 Comments | No TrackBacks

Today, I went to Elliott Bay Books (my fave. If a company could be my BFF, it would be) and got:

awake: a reader for the sleepless ed. steven lee beeber

I've been sleeping like shit for the past week and I walk into Elliott Bay and sitting on this "celebrating small press!" table is a completely eclectic collection of insomnia themed everything that manages to throw Margaret Atwood in with Davy Rothbart (Found Magazine editor/This American Life contributor). YES PLEASE.

book of other people, ed. zadie smith

A series of character-study short stories/comix featuring the likes of:

  • Daniel Clowes, author of the series 8-ball and, subsequently from that, Ghost World and Like a Velvet Glove Cast in Iron. Along with Adrian Tomine, he's one of my favorite graphic novelists/cartoonists ever.
  • Dave Eggers. You know.
  • Jonathan Safran Foer, author of Everything is Illuminated and Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close, which is one of my two favorite books of last year. When you can manage to make a book about a kid whose dad died on 9/11 and make it (a) not trite and (b) adorably quirky and touching, you are amazing.
  • Nick Hornby. High Fidelity. The Believer. Yes yes yes.
  • Miranda July, who is amazing. If you don't know her from all the billion things she's done from writing to performance art to installation pieces at Bumbershoot, you know her as the auteur of Me and You and Everyone We Know.
  • & more!

Also, I got my brother In Me Own Words: The Autobiography of Bigfoot for his birthday, featuring this spread, "Feelings":

bigfoot’s feelings

(click to enlarge.)

The bike poem is my favorite thing that I've read in a while.

Norm

| No Comments | 1 TrackBack

Yesterday I found out that Norm Bobrow has six weeks to live.

It took a little while to hit me. Not only was I nursing a serious hangover when I found out, but Norm dying is like Santa Claus dying in that he was around every Christmas and I was never sure he was real in the first place. But I never helped Santa Claus with his aging computer, and Santa Claus never believed in me back.

I first met Norm when I was around fourteen. I wore gigantic pants and glitter makeup every day and I was going to be a rock star. Norm knew I was going to be a rock star. When I decided to get into journalism, Norm told my mother that he saw me as a TV news anchor. He came to see my high school plays. Once, in a letter, he told me I should be a cocktail waitress in a “classy joint,” because I am a classy lady. In retrospect, it’s kind of weird that he saw all this in me, as I think everyone else in my family sphere saw me as a little raggedy, loud and overweight.

Norm changes the subject now whenever I bring up the memoirs he was writing, called Sang with Louis Armstrong, Slept with Charlie Parker. Which is true. He sang onstage with Louis Armstrong, and he crashed with Charlie Parker, or the other way around.  This is because Norm is a Big Deal.

Norm started out in New York, which you can tell really easily from his slight Brooklyn accent and how his feet tap like he’s listening to a good record all the time as he goes on long tirades introducing new life characters like he was introducing them at a cocktail party. He managed Broadway talent, most notably Pat Suzuki, who played one of the lead roles in Flower Drum Song. The biggest song to come out of that musical was “I Enjoy Being a Girl,” which she sang, and my mother used to sing to me when I was a kid, especially after dentists’ appointments (“and my teeth aren’t teeth but pearls”):

[youtube BqXBkC-u--k]

Norm later relocated to Seattle, where he worked as a journalist (he sent me an article he wrote in the 50’s about how what America needs is a woman for a president), a jazz promoter, a DJ, and a club owner. Articles on the history of jazz call him an “impresario.”

Norm was a friend of my grandmother’s husband Tom. He attached himself to my family pretty quickly, becoming a staple at holidays and even informal gatherings, and everyone accepted and embraced it except Norm himself. I think it never really occurred to him that we consider him family. He’d always discourage us from helping him with anything or picking him up from his apartment on the way to Thanksgiving or Christmas because he didn’t want to be a bother. But that’s what my family does. “We will stop and see him on our way home on Sunday,” said my grandmother in the email she sent out, telling us the news, “although he's not sure he wants to see us.”

In Seattle, he owned a club, I think called the Colony. He was briefly in a vocal group called the Signatures, which I didn’t find out until I searched the Internet for his name. He put on jazz shows every Sunday. He still went to jazz shows all the time once old age set in – once he ran into my high school principal at one.

The last time I saw Norm, it was at a Christmas Eve get-together at my aunt and uncle’s house in Seattle. My cousin Michael asked him if he “ever smoked grass, back in the day.” Without missing a beat or even an awkward flinch he said that only jazz musicians did that back in the day, and we talked about radio. He liked that my favorite band at the time was the Supremes. For his long autobiographical rants he went on, he really didn’t like to talk about himself.

I want to write more about Norm. But this is long already. I want to visit him and bring a tape recorder. But I don’t know if he’d be embarrassed.

This is one of the pictures I could find in a pinch - it's from a local singer's (I think) website, and the caption is "Maia and Northwest jazz legend Norm Bobrow."

I haven't played this on the air yet because it felt boring to me but now I feel like I need to learn this backup dance. Immediately.

[youtube my7WTG2OJUo]

When I was at Seattle Central I took History of American Popular Music with James Cauter. He'd always throw in when someone was dead, when they died and how, always really awkwardly and bluntly.  I didn't learn this from Cauter, but Bobby Fuller died right after "I Fought the Law" became a top 10 hit. He was found in his car covered in gasoline and "wounds" (oh Wikipedia and your specificity). His death was ruled a suicide, from drinking gasoline.

I am really excited about this.

My name's Sarah. Right now, I'm doing the playlist for my show, which is pop music from 1955-1965. I can't, unfortunately, play this 1958 PBR song, though, because it's a beer ad, however amazing or four minutes long it is. I'm guessing it was somehow integrated with TV programming, since it's way too long for 1958 radio play.

I can't play any of this Devo fan club special either, because it doesn't fit my theme, but I wish I could play it on the radio over and over again. When I first listened to this my roommate thought a phone was ringing but really it was just an early MIDI keyboard takeover. This is my main musical influence from now on.

About this Archive

This page is an archive of entries from March 2008 listed from newest to oldest.

April 2008 is the next archive.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.