Monday, February 15, 2010

MARLENA SHAW

While everyone agrees that Marlena Shaw is a n amazing soulful singer, its difficult to categorize her. Both Downbeat and Record World have named her Best Female Singer, and many have compared her range, class and swing that of to eternal jazz lights like Sarah Vaughn, Dinah Washington, and Nancy Wilson. But shes also been called a soul legend, both before and after her successful detour into disco. Marlena is a lyricist and composer as well.

Given her 40-year boundary-busting career, such labeling confusion is inevitable. Its easier and more descriptive to think of Marlena as a natural element: like water, which we recognize in a gleaming dewdrop or clear mountain stream, Marlenas music is unmistakable. Whether shes singing jazz, R&B, pop, rock, soul, disco, blues or gospel, her originality makes such distinctions irrelevant, and each song becomes intimate and new. Marlena is a soulful survivor whos been there, and more than once. But her music is never heavy -- where others might communicate pain or despair, she offers wisdom and hope, laced with humor.

Born in Valhalla, New York and raised on gospel and jazz, Marlenas first public performance was at the age of 10, at the legendary Apollo Theater. Her activities since then have been as diverse as her legions of fans. Marlena has fronted big bands and orchestras, among them Basies (both original and new). Frank Fosters Loud Minority Band, the Cologne Big Band, the Smithsonian and Seattle Repertory Orchestras, and the US Army Blues Band. Shes performed and recorded with Ray Brown, Benny Carter, and Joe Williams, toured with Sammy Davis Jr. for four years, and graced every major jazz festival in the world, as well as top venues like Carnegie Hall and the Kennedy Center. Its not unusual for Marlena to be on the road over 200 days a year.

The first woman vocalist ever signed to Blue Note Records, where she made five albums and several singles, Marlenas recording career actually began in 1966 with Cadet Records (a subsidiary of the ground-breaking Chess Records). Along with hit singles like Wade in the Water, California Soul, and Mercy, Mercy, Mercy (which she co-wrote, and which first brought her to Count Basies' attention), she made two well-received albums. At Columbia Records there were four more, including the disco smash, Take a Bite!, and Verve and Concord followed.

In 2000, her tremendous overseas popularity led to Anthology, a splendid collection from London's Soul Brother Records, and two hits for Sony Japan: Live in Tokyo (2002) and Lookin for Love (2003, both released in the US by 441 Records). The critics use words like astonishing, peerless, radiant and powerful, and marvel at her soaring sensuality. Marlena's appeal is so timeless that her songs have even been sampled by the download generation.

Marlena is universally admired for her warm, supple voice and relaxed charm; a natural storyteller, her spoken words before, during, and between songs is often hilarious. In fact, the set-up to her signature tune, Go Away, Little Boy has become a famous monologue in itself, entitled Yu-Ma. Marlena's smiling, spontaneous interplay with both her band and her audience invites the listener in like a valued friend.

But despite her long experience, there's no slickness or pretense in Marlena's style. Communicating directly from her heart and soul to yours, her undiminished creative vitality has no artificial ingredients. Like water -- or a welcome

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

NATIONAL WILDIFE 2009 PHOTO CONTEST

This year’s contest winners are drawn from nearly 70,000 entries—the largest pool in contest history—in seven categories: Mammals, Birds, Other Wildlife, Landscapes and Plant Life, Backyard Habitats, Connecting People and Nature and, for the first time, Global Warming. This new category features species whose habitats or behaviors have been affected by climate change. Along with selecting the two $5,000 grand prize winners—one each for the professional and amateur divisions—judges awarded cash and other prizes for the first- and second-place winners in every category in each of the two divisions. One winner was also chosen in the youth division.
 
 

Monday, February 1, 2010

JUNYA WATANABE - SPRING 2010



In a world of hipster poseurs that you too often want to punch in the face, Junya Watanabe is the real deal, a guy who knows it's not about swagger, it's about the glide. In this case, it's a bit Mingus meets the Mods. Un-vented, vintage-y looking suits in three buttons or double-breasted are cut tight and paired with wingtip shoes (and wingtip sneakers). There's a confident mix of fabrics and textures, all built for layering: denim with moleskin patching, waxed coats, corduroy topcoats in camel, andQuadrophenia-ish parkas in olive drab. In short, classics for the guy who appreciates classics, but digs seeing them reinterpreted.









BEST OF FLICKR: "LOST AMERICA'S" PHOTOSTREAM

Love this Flickr set from night photographer Troy Pavia. Shot at the Byron Hot Springs Hotel in California. Unsurprisingly legend has it that it’s haunted. The forboding use of reds, greens andbles dn’t exactly allay this feel. Good stuff, more highlights after the jump.