Pour Me a Fourth

Just got back from an excellent trip upstate for the fourth of July.  Just wonderful to see family and friends, and feel like life is getting closer to back to normal.  We drove up on Saturday the second, and it was a beautiful day for a drive.  Listened to Kamasi Washington, plus a few of my own records on the trip.  The first evening we hung out with Larry and Jackie at their house.  Lizzy and Larry’s daughter Caroline joined us.  Somehow between us we polished off a whole bottle of whiskey.  Larry was the drummer in my first band in high school, one of the best drummers I know.  Back in the day we were very into prog rock, bands like Rush and Genesis.  The song YYZ happened to come up on a playlist, and Larry knew it was in 5/4 time and the title of the song refers to the airport code for Pearson airport in Toronto.  I blew his mind when I showed him the rhythm of the song comes from Y-Y-Z in morse code:  – . – –   – . – –   – – . .

We stayed with parents and Sunday morning we just sort of hung around and talked.  Jeannie and I went for a walk down to the park and the lake.  After lunch I went rollerblading around their neighborhood.  The streets are much flatter and smoother than around here, and with less traffic.  Mid afternoon my brother Martin arrived.  His kids are all getting bigger, so Jeannie and were off to a hotel the next couple days.  That evening we went out to dinner with Lizzy at Canalside, which is down at the waterfront where the naval museum used to be (and still is).  They’ve expanded it with some restaurants, shops, museums about the Erie Canal, and a waterfront walk.  Very nice.  Lizzy recently got a big promotion at work, so we were celebrating that.  We went to a seafood restaurant right on the waterfront, very nice.  Afterwards we went back to her apartment and played Trivial Pursuit.  Jeannie won, probably because there were so many baseball questions, despite Lizzy and I teaming up against her at the end.

Our hotel had a pool and a hot tub, so we started the morning of the fourth enjoying that.  We had the place to ourselves, so I swam a bunch of laps, something I haven’t done in years.  Then it was on to Wegman’s for beer and ice and party supplies.  We spent most of the day on my parent’s back porch chillin’ and grillin’.  Dogs, burgers and steak!  Lizzy made a pasta salad.  Classic rock on the radio, which I don’t always listen to, but still love.  At one point Martin got out his rollerblades and his kids all had scooters, so we rolled around the neighborhood together.  Later we played Azul, a Eurogame based around collecting tiles.  We have this game at home, but Martin and Kathleen play it a higher level than Jeannie and I, and kicked our butts.

In the evening we went out to the park and laid our blankets on the lawn to watch the fireworks show.  I hadn’t done this in a few years and it was pretty spectacular.  I think the must have saved up the fireworks from the last few years’ cancelled shows.  Afterwards Martin and I stayed up late into the night talking.

The right home was nice too.  More classic rock until we got tired of it.  We found a roadside barbecue place about halfway home, which was perfect for lunch.

Now it’s back to work and projects for a spell, but there’ll be more road trips and vacations later in the summer.

Origami USA 2022

This was the first in-person origami convention in three years, at the Sheraton in midtown Manhattan.  It was great to be back, to see all my origami friends and catch up on what everyone was up to.

There was an exhibit, which was a big motivator for me to get off my butt and start folding some new things.  I had four new models, plus a good handful of my best prior work.  One of the new models is the Space Cat, named after my new jazz and funk band.  It’s variation on Sophie the Cat, sculpted in a streamlined midcentury modern style out an appropriate shade of blue paper.

The others were more ambitious: single-sheet polyhedra with tessellation or other surface textures.  One was my Hydrangea Cuboctahedron, which I actually folded last year but never had a chance to exhibit before, folded out of a sheet of blue 19″ shiny paper, which has a sparkle similar to Stardream but is thinner and crisper.

The other two were variations on a dodecahedron, with various regions sunk to bring out five-pointed stars latent in the geometry of the design.  One had the embedded star oriented to that its corners align with the corners of the base dodecahedron’s pentagonal faces.  The other and the corners of the stars at the midpoints of the edges of the pentagons. 

These took quite alot of effort to make.  First the design had to be worked out with drawings, then single-hemisphere studies.  Then the pre-creasing took several evenings per model, very technical and precise, using fivefold symmetry.  Each is folded out of a pentagon, and creating a regular pentagon from a square is a non-trivial task in itself.  I used 15″ Tant paper for these, and the model is about at the limit of what the paper could handle without getting too soft.

Up until the very end, I wasn’t even sure if they were going to work, if I’d be able to finish and close the model.  The layout was such that one pentagon of dodecahedron was in the center of the paper, and on the opposite face the five corners come together to form a lock.  I’ve used this technique successfully on other models including my Stellated Dodecahedron and my Great Dodecahedron.  It’s the nature of single-sheet polyhedra, being folded from a flat sheet, that you have a lot of layers of paper at the end, and they need to be tucked away so that the tendency to spring open is countered, or at least minimized, while maintaining the pattern on the exterior surface.  However for these two new ones, this approach created a pinwheel out of the corners on the last face, so I ended up tucking the paper inside instead.  This left a pentagonal hole at the bottom (which no one could see) but allowed me to reach inside to do the final shaping, which was pretty fragile and tricky.

I’ve been doing single-sheet polyhedra for years, but sometimes I feel like people don’t really get them, because most people make models like this as modulars, fitting together many small sheets, which is much easier to do.  But my new models brought out the surface in a way that could not be done with modulars, and finally people took notice.  It’s particularly gratifying when folders I admire are impressed with my work.  Boice Wong, who specializes in supercomplex human figures such as Samurai and videogame heroes, affectionately called them “fake modulars” and told me they were causing quite a buzz.  Indeed, I got quite a few compliments on my exhibit and got into several conversations with other folders about the designs.

So, having gotten these models to work at all, I now want to fold really nice ones out of my last remaining sheet of ivory Marble Winstone paper, which I can cut to yield two 19″ pentagons.  I figure if I’m going to do this, I might as well see if I can come up with a layout that lets me close the bottom nicely.  So I spent a good part of my free folding time at the convention exploring various layouts for the dodecahedron.  Of course John Montroll was around, and it was lots of fun to jam on pentagons and polyhedra with him.

This led me on a quest to find a source for large, accurately pre-cut pentagons in high-quality paper, but alas no such thing exists.  I befriended Kathy, the lady who usually makes such things – octagons, hexagons, etc. – and sells them to the origami source.  She says she has a jig for it and can custom cut some for me.  I also bid on and won a silent auction item which was a nice wooden storage box filled with various papers, included a drawer full of 10″ pentagonal sheets.

As I mentioned, this was the first in-person convention in several years due to the pandemic, and it was at the Sheraton Hotel in New York city, a new venue for us.  Overall it worked out quite well, with nice conference rooms for the classes and hospitality.  Origami USA negotiated a really good rate for the hotel rooms.  Since getting in and out the city can be a pain, Jeannie and decided to stay the night Friday and Saturday, and this also worked out quite well.

This year the convention went to a system where people sign up to take classes ahead of time on the web site, so I ended up taking alot more classes than usual.  Mostly I took classes from friends of mine who are complex folders to see if I can glean some insight to their design process as well as different teaching styles.  I took Brain Chan’s Cicada, inspired by the classic model but with added legs; Beth Johnson’s Circus Elephant, and an airplane by Michael LaFosse. 

I taught two classes.  Saturday it was Sophie the Cat.  This is a high-intermediate level model and the class was full.  I didn’t have a document camera in my room, so there was a fair amount of going around and showing some of the steps up close.  But everyone got thru successfully.  On Sunday I taught my Five-Banded Armadillo.  This is a complex model and it took up two periods.  Again, the class was full.  This was a bit surpassing for a complex model; sometimes I only get a few students on classes like these.  A document camera would have helped here as well, but still everyone folded it successfully and had a good time.

I saw alot of first-timers, some of whom were teaching and exhibiting.  This is a very good sign for future conventions.  Over the course of the weekend quite a few people came up to me asking me to sign their copy of my Animal Sculptures book, or to take a picture with me, or just to tell me they really admire my work.  This happens a bit at every convention, but never before to this degree.  Very flattering.  Or maybe I’ve just forgotten since it’s been a long time.

Saturday night was a screening of a documentary film about the the artist Kevin Box, who create large metal sculptures of origami figures, and collaborates with Beth, Michael and Robert Lang on the designs.  Really fascinating.

Michelle came into the city with us Friday and stayed with us overnight.  She had to work Sunday – she chose to come to convention on the day with more dragons and flowers – so she drove home Saturday evening, and came back again Sunday evening.  This was her first time driving in Manhattan, but she learned to drive in The Bronx, so was pretty unfazed.

Sunday night was the giant folding contest, which was alot of fun.  Marc Kirschenbaum was the emcee, and I was asked to be a judge along with Beth, Michael, Richard Alexander, and Quentin Trollop.  Of course every team gets a prize, so the challenge is to think of a fun category appropriate to each model.  For example, the Blue Whale won the “deepest fold” and the Giraffe, believe or not, lost out to the Emperor Penguin in the “tallest” category, but won “best legs”.

Sunday night we all went home to sleep, and came back Monday in time for the start of the afternoon session.  I haven’t spent much time in the city in the last three years, just the occasion meeting or concert, cuz I’ve been working from home since the start of the pandemic. The first day I was there New York felt really strange and alien to me – crowded, noisy, chaotic, rectangular, and I was noticing lots of things in a sort of heightened way.  The second day I could feel myself tuning into the wavelength to appreciate everything on its own terms, and by the third day it was as if I’d never been away.

Monday I took Boice’s class on action figures.  I’ve been experimenting with human figures and was looking to improve at it.  He first presented a nice box-pleated human figure model.  It uses a 16 x 16 grid, but it otherwise very similar to my Astronaut, which uses an 8 x 8 grid, and my subsequently developed Robot Base, which uses a 12 x 12 grid (the Robot remains unfinished, hence the base).  It’s a good go-to human figure base.  Then we spent most of the class working on stances and poses to make the figure more lifelike natural.  Harkened back to figure drawing classes in art school.  I made a figure standing on one foot as if to delver a karate kick, and another mediating in a lotus position.  Picked up alot of good insight.

A fun topper to the whole weekend:  As we were getting our car out of the garage at the end of the night, there was a guy in line ahead of us in a Frank Zappa T-shirt, and I recognized him as Ed Palermo, leader of a big band that does arrangements of Zappa and other prog rock artists.  He does a monthly gig at the Iridium right around the corner, and had just come off the bandstand.  So we struck up a conversation and I gave him links to some of my music to listen too.  Asked him to keep me in mind if he every needs a sub on sax.

Next up: photos

The Analog Kid

More summer, more busy these days.  The weather has been beautiful.  One night last weekend we built a fire in our fire pit and hung out on the patio and considered what song we might use to break Vecna’s curse.  Last summer I made a playlist of 80 favorite 80’s songs, and now I’m thinking of making a new playlist of 77 favorite 70’s songs for this summer.

I edited up some highlight form the the Spacecats gig.  I’m going to update my web site soon to feature of few of the best ones, but for now, you can see the whole set here:

zingman.com/music/spacecats/video/spacecats_altmed2206/

I got out for a bike ride five days last week.  I mostly go around our neighborhood, which is kinda hilly and some streets have alot of cars. Sometimes to a local place called Nature Study Woods, which is mountain biking trails, and not particularly well maintained.  The steep parts tend to be washed out and stony, and the low spots muddy.  Also I tend to go on fairly short rides – a half hour to an hour, and usually go as fast as possible.  

All in all Jeannie doesn’t enjoy this style of riding, but we wanted to start doing some biking together.

So on Sunday Jeannie took our bikes out to Jones Beach and biked along the scenic Ocean Parkway Coastal Greenway.  It’s a great bike path, smooth and flat, that runs the length of the island, out from the main beach, through as series of smaller beaches, saltwater wildlife refuges, and the occasional marina, restaurant or bar.  We went out a little over seven miles then turned around, for a total of fifteen miles or so.  On the way back there was a pretty consistent headwind, but it was a very doable and fun ride.   We had a lunch of ice cream and clam strips, then went out to the beach, but it was too cold for swimming.  The water was unusually calm and there were lots of seashells.  Also tons of giant container ships out at see, queued up to get into New York harbor, like I’ve never seen before.  There’s usually maybe two or three, but this time there was over a dozen.

I also got the mustang on the road over the weekend, and continued with the yardwork.  This time is was doing the edging on the driveway and front walk.  Still to go is the walk around the back of the house, and the patio.  It seems everything has grown in quite alot this spring, and needs an extra level of cutting back.  Also I’ve never seen so many bunny rabbits and chipmunks in our neighborhood, nor heard so many songbirds.

Lastly, I’m continuing with doing origami and preparing for the convention, which starts this Friday.  My two dodecahedron star balls are nearly complete, but it’s taking some work to finish them.  They’re single-sheet polyhedra, a very advance form of origami, and closing off and locking the bottom where the edges come together is a nontrivial design challenge.  I’ve also been experimenting with a new design called the Space Cat, a variation on my Sophie the Cat, with a midcentury modern look and proportions.  Hopefully will get there and have a few new pieces for my exhibit.

Meanwhile, I’m teaching a couple classes, and agreed to pre-record them for people who are attending the convention remotely.  This process grew out of last year’s online-only convention, in which all classes were taught live as Zoom calls.  This year we’re recording Zoom sessions, with a camera pointing down at the work as it’s being folded.  I kind of view this a run-thru, a rehearsal for the real class, and good opportunity to make sure I know the model and can teach it.  My first class, Sophie the Cat, went off without a hitch, totally great.  For my second class my Five-Banded Armadillo, I somehow skipped a stepped and messed of the proportions of the bands, which are created by pleating.  I realized my mistake after I did the collapse and it was too late to undo, so I had to just roll with it and adjust the proportions as I finished the model. All in all it still turned out in the end, and I’m sure to get it right in the actual class.

I Hear a Rhapsody

Well, Spacecats had our first gig Saturday night, at the Alternative Medicine Brewing Company in Mount Vernon.  It went really well.  The band sounded great.  The crowd dug us, and the owner wants to have us back, and is talking about putting together a regular jazz night.

The room itself is pretty big, although half of it, behind the band, is where they brew the beer, and the other half, out in front is the bar.  So the acoustics were good, with a large, boomy reverb.  The bar provided a PA, which was very nice and saved us alot of trouble hauling and setting up our own.

We did a combination of jazz and funk, standards, originals, and interpretations of rock and pop songs.  I was definitely happy with my playing, and the sound of the group, and everything musically. We really came together as a band, focused and leveled up the last few weeks.

We played two sets of just about an hour each.  Here’s the set list.

  1. Buzzy Blue (Szinger)           
  2. All the Things You Are
  3. Mister Magic
  4. Heavy Skies (Szinger)    
  5. I Hear a Rhapsody
  6. Walking on the Moon
  7. Pour Me a Fifth (Duetchman)
  8. Some Skunk Funk
  9. Peg
  1. Dr. Pluto (Szinger)                        
  2. Sunny
  3. Minority
  4. Atonement Blues (Szinger)           
  5. Havona
  6. Dolphin Dance
  7. Lift Off (Szinger)
  8. Cape Verdean Blues
  9. You Can’t Get What You Want (‘Till You Know What You Want)

Some of these originals I played in previous bands, altough the arrangement and sound have been updated.  Dr. Pluto is all-new, a funk jam written for this group based around a bluesy bass line, which Ken plays with a wah-wah effect.  Pour Me a Fifth is also new, a jazz waltz by our piano player Josh.

Watch this space for audio and video clips from the show, coming soon.

In other news, I finally finished trimming the hedges over the weekend.  All in all it took five sessions over three weekends.  This last one was all up on the ladder, including getting low-hanging boughs from the neighbor’s willow tree.  Now we’re done for a while, but next it’s on to weeding and edging.

And, it’s origami crunch time.  I’m trying to finish a few original models before the convention.  This week it’s dodecahedron star balls.  Watch this space for pics, coming soon.

These are Road Games

Summer continues.  The weather has been beautiful and I’ve been spending alot of time outside.  We’ve been busy.  Lots of the usual, including work, practicing music, biking, and taking the mustang out for rides.  Lots of yardwork the last few weekends, including trimming the trees and hedges.  So far I’ve filled up all my yard waste cans two weeks in a row.  Probably one more session to go, but it will be up on the ladder.  

Over Memorial Day weekend we went out to a barbecue at our friend Nick’s house.  The presence of a pull-up bar in his backyard inspired me to add some new exercises to my workout to focus on my lats.  

We got some new furniture, including an armchair for the living room and a sectional sofa for the downstairs room.  A new pair fo end tables arrived today and need to be assembled, and a coffee table is on order.  It all looks nice and is comfortable, is a big upgrade from our old stuff, and represents the culmination of a long and tedious research project.  Well almost.  Now we want to get a new entertainment center, bookshelf and end tables downstairs too.

Of course now we have to deal with getting rid of the old furniture.  A friend of mine who just moved into a new apartment may take our futon and gold chairs.  Meanwhile we have to store it somewhere, so we cleaned out a whole bunch of old junk and boxes from the garage.  Big step forward in project defrag the house.

The other big item is over the weekend I did the class schedule for the Origami USA convention, which is coming up at the end of June.  This is our first in-person convention in three years, and around 140 people signed up to teach classes.  You’ll recall I wrote the software for the scheduling for last year’s (virtual, online) convention.  I made several improvements to it this year.  Still not everything can be automated, so the weekend was full of back-and-forth with the teaching committed as we juggled classes around until it met with everyone’s satisfaction.  I’ll be teaching two classes, my Five-Banded Armadillo, and Sophie the Cat.  I’m also working on some new models for the exhibition.

Lastly, the Global Jukebox 4.2.1 is now live.  The cutover to our new, node-based server is complete, and we can now retire the old backend servers.

Stepping Out

It feels like just a few short weeks ago that spring arrived, and now it feels like full-on summertime. It was hot over the weekend, up in the 90’s, and we put in our air conditioners.

We just got back from a road trip to pick Michelle up from college, and Jeannie and I took a mini-vacation along the way. On the way up to Buffalo, we stopped in Ithaca. The motivation was to see Joe Jackson, playing with his band at a theater there in town. The show was great. Joe’s songs are always great and the band was really hot. Joe did a solo spot of four or five songs with him just singing and playing piano. The theater was this really cool old art-deco venue, very ornate, good sound.

The next day we spent pretty much the whole day hiking around lake Cayuga and some waterfalls. Very relaxing, beautiful scenery and a beautiful day for it. Went out to dinner that night at a Mexican place across the street from the place we went the night before. Ithaca is a cute little college town with a downtown district maybe four five blocks long. Our hotel was on the outskirts of town, with a trial to a waterfall right out the door.

Next day we spent to morning at the Corning Museum of Glass. We must have driven past it a hundred times over the years, but the kids were never interested. When I told them we were going to check it out, at first they thought I was joking. In any event, it’s vary cool, with a whole big gallery space, in which the pieces range from pretty cool to totally amazing. Another section is all about glass technology, including things like modern forming and shaping techniques, and applications such as telescope mirrors, space shuttle windows, car windshields and computer touchscreens. A third section is about the history of glass, with artifacts from all over the world, going back to the time of ancient Egypt. There was also an interactive area where you could watch live demos of blowing glass, other sculptural techniques, and breaking glass too. There was even a thing where you could blow your own glass bowl or ornament, but we found out about that too late. Now we’ll have to come back another time.

We arrived in Buffalo in the afternoon and went to visit Lizzy. Unfortunately, on the way there she texted us that she’d just tested positive for covid. I had brought up her bicycle because she wanted to ride it this summer. So we handed it off in her driveway, keeping a safe distance. Her hanging out with us was right out, so that was that. Next day she said she’s feeling better, so that’s good news.

Then we went up to the UB campus to pack a carload of Michelle’s stuff to store at my parent’s house. Next morning we came back to get the rest of her things, then back to my parents for a barbecue. We hit the road home later that afternoon. Now we’re back to three in the house again.

In other news, my blog here has been having repeated outages, and the tech support has been just useless and miserable, so I’m in the process of dropping my web host and moving to a new service provider. You can preview it at:

https://www.zingmanstudios.com/blog/

Right now it’s just a few test posts, and I’m working on customizing the visual theme. Hopefully that won’t take too long, and then I can go ahead and do the migration. So watch this space.

Spacecats II

Life continues to be busy on a bunch of fronts. First, check the new poster and web page for my band Spacecats.

spacecats

https://zingman.com/music/spacecats.php

So let’s see. I guess project dirt was completed a while ago and the new grass is well on its way to being grown in at this point. I’ve been mowing the lawn for several weeks now. We even did the first round of weeding, planting in the garden, and putting down mulch under the hedges. Next job will be trimming.

A couple weeks back I got up on a ladder to unclog the downspout of my gutter in one corner of my job. I used to have to get up there and clean out my gutters every year or so, when there were hundred-foot-tall trees all around my house. But one by one the trees got cut down and I didn’t have to do it for several years. This time instead of leaves and sticks, it was beads of whatever our roof shingles are made of. We got a new roof put on a couple years back, same time we installed our solar panels, and some of the material has worn off with the weather. Of all the jobs I do, this is the one I dislike the most, because of the potential danger of falling off the ladder twenty feet up. So far I’ve been careful and never met with any harm but you never know. Next time I’ll probably hire someone.

Now that the yardwork situation is under control, I’ve been trying to move forward with project furniture. I want to get a good armchair for the living room to replace the awful recliner we have, and a new coffee table and end tables, plus a new sectional sofa for the family room, and maybe and entertainment center too. By the end of the year, if possible. We started thinking about this at the beginning of the pandemic, but it turns out to be a kinda complicated research project, and there’s always something else to do, and every time we find something we think we like, it turns our to backordered for months. Nevertheless, it’s getting to the point where our kids have nicer furniture than us. So it’s time to get moving.

As the weather has been getting nicer, Jeannie and I have been spending more time outdoors. We’ve gone for a couple hikes, mostly at local places like Saxon Woods. I’ve also been getting on my bike alot more, averaging about three times a week this spring, and my strength, speed and endurance are increasing. My typical ride is pretty short, less than an hour, but the neighborhood is kinda hilly. My main ride these days is a loop into downtown Bronxville, then thru Chester Heights and back home. Also went to the Nature Study Woods once, but mostly it’s been too muddy cuz of the rain.

I’ve gotten the Mustang out on the road a few times. Even had to put a tankful of gas in it yesterday. So far it’s been running great. I want to get new tires put on it this spring. The tires I have are the ones from when I bought the car in 1997!

In the software realm, I’ve been working on several things. One of which is the Origami USA convention scheduling tool. If you recall, I’m on the OUSA convention and web committees, as the person who creates the schedule of classes and events, and the one who writes the software to make that task easier. The last few years we haven’t had any in-person conventions. Last year we had a zoom convention, and I did the schedule for that. Along the way, I discarded the existing scheduling tool, basically a bunch of macros for MS Access, and wrote a web application in Drupal/PHP that integrates with the main web site and other tools. This year I enhanced the functionality in a few ways. First, I created a workflow to reschedule a class without having to first unschedule it then schedule it again. Second I added the capacity to sort the classes by name, to make it easier to find them. On the roadmap is the ability to sort and filter by a number of parameters including the class name, the teacher name, the class type, level of complexity, number of periods, etc. But Drupal and PHP are a serious pain to work with, so I’ll save these enhancements for a future convention.

Meanwhile I have a little over a month to get some new models completed, get and exhibit together and decide what to teach. I have a big pile of half-finished models and an even bigger backlog of ideas. But for the zoom conventions don’t really inspire me and I haven’t been doing that much folding lately. Luckily, this year’s convention is live and in person, at the Sheraton Hotel in NYC, the third weekend in June (I think). Should be alot of fun to reconnect with my origami friends, and hopefully I’ll have a bunch of cool new models.

Been working hard at my new consulting gig at Consumer Reports R&D Lab. Hard to believe I’ve been there three months already. They’ve just extended my contract to the end of the year, which is good news. My group is involved in this thing called the Digital Rights Protocol, which is designed to make it easier for consumers to exercise their rights to opt out of online data collection, tracking, etc., and easier for companies to comply with requests around these rights. We lead a consortium of startups involved in the internet privacy business, and last week we had the first end-to-end test of the Protocol with partners in various roles. Meanwhile Consumer reports is involved in several business-oriented capacities as well, so I am building a reference implementation of the DRP to live in our application ecosystem and provide a touchstone to our partners. Anyway, the end-to-end test was a big success, and now we’re planning out the next phase of development.

Meanwhile at my other big client, The Global Jukebox, we’re getting ready to roll out a new release to Live. This one has a new backend and a cutover to a new server, to get rid of a bunch of old headaches. Everything is all tested and ready to roll. All that remains now is to switch over the DNS server.

Lastly, my music projects proceed apace. Mary came over and laid down the vocal track for My Ol’ Breakdown Truck a week or so ago, and it came out great. Afterwards we went out for Mexican food. Now I have three songs mostly done, with the vocals, bass and guitar tracked and mixed. All that remains is the fine-tune the drum parts, and add a little keyboards and sax to fill things out. Also, Elixr – 2022 Remaster is vary much almost done; all that remains is one final listening back.

Now that my Thursday band has a name and a gig, the music has been rising to the occasion and getting more intense. Today we had a rehearsal where we really drilled down on some of the finer points of some of our songs, to really master the arrangements and make them our own.

Meanwhile, I’ve noticed my Selmer Reference ’54 tenor sax, which I was so in love with, seems to have developed a leak somewhere, so the notes below low D don’t sound clearly and require alot of force to sound at all. Plus one of the mounting posts on the low C keyguard has come loose. So I need to find a new sax repair guy. The guy I’d been using for year – Virgil Scott – was up on Yonkers, only 10 minutes from my house. Sadly, he died of covid during the pandemic. My new guy is great, he’s out in Connecticut up new Massachusetts, almost two hour from here. So I need to find someone local.

For the time being I’ve switched back to playing my Selmer Mark VII, which I had worked on last summer. The low notes are clear and effortless, but best of all, I had the action set up, which it turns out makes a huge difference on tunes like Some Skunk Funk. I’d been struggling with playing that fast and cleanly on my other horn, and now the notes just roll right off. On the downside, I have to get used to this horn’s intonation again. And even worse, I’d been busting my ass to get good on the altissimo range on the tenor, and could get all the way up to the second high D, and play riffs up there. I was developing some real chops. On this horn, the embouchure required is completely different, so I’m back to square one.

Spacecats

My jazz and funk group has a name now.  It’s Spacecats.

We’ll be playing Saturday June 11, and Alternative Medicine Brewing Company in Mount Vernon, at 7pm.  More info as the date draws nearer, plus a poster and stuff.  Meanwhile, here’s our blurb:

Spacecats

Spacecats is a jazz and funk quartet featuring sax, piano/synth, bass and drums.  The group imparts their own imprint to a spectrum of styles from cool hard bop to high-energy fusion, r&b, rock and pop.

John Szinger – saxophones
John Deutchman – piano and keyboards
Ken Matthews – bass
Steve Russo – drums

In Walked Bud

I’m now in the middle of three studio recording projects.  First on the stack is the next Buzzy Tonic album and the follow-up to Bluezebub.  It’s working title is BZVR, and is more of a rock album, with all the songs so far including and electric guitar part.  I had three songs mostly complete before I decided to make Bluezebub as an instrumental jazz record, so now I’ve dusted them off.  

One is The Story Lies, written by my brother Martin, a cool uptempo funky number.  Second is Who Speaks on Your Behalf, a prog-pop anthem by The Cheshire Cat from Buffalo back in the day, reinterpreted with a horn section.  I had this one in the can, but when I listened back I decided it needed a heavier sound.  So I added a guitar part, mostly big sustained power chords to give it some fill, or syncopated rhythm accents behind the riffs, which are handled by saxes and synths.  Third was Why Not Zed? which already had a pretty heavy guitar, and a sort of metal-industrial vibe, but the sax sounded a bit thin.  So I doubled the tenor part on bari and octave down and replaced the tenor solo with a bari solo.  Just the thing!

That was back in late winter.  Then I began work on the three new songs, all short, singer-songwriter style songs written on guitar.  The first of these was Slope.  It began life as a jazz song with my pre-pandemic group Haven Street, written by our bass player Jay, and appeared on our record.  I wrote a lyric for it, but I’ve never been much of a fan of vocalese, unless it’s Ella Fitzgerald.  So I changed it from a jazz style into a blues.  The arrangement is fairly sparse, with just a single vocal, guitar, bass and drum.  I’ll probably add a bit of fender rhodes and organ, and a bit of sax.  Possibly also some real drums doing brushes on the snare, since I don’t have a good sample for that.

Second is My Ol’ Brokedown Truck.  This is pretty much a traditional country song, although with different lyrics and chord voicings it might be something like a jazz standard from the great American songbook.  I wrote it around Christmastime, when I was visiting my parents and my Mum asked me to explain Nashville notation.  I did by way of demonstration and came up with the beginnings of this song.  I like the chords and lyrics enough to finish it, and it came out quite good.  I now have the basic track recorded, with guitar, bass drums and vocal.  The vocal has a low and high harmony part, and decided it’d sound better with a female voice doing the high harmony.  I asked my sister-in-law Mary, who has been in a number of singing groups over the years, if she’d like to the part.  Now we’re trying to set up a time.

Third is All of the Above, which is a rock song with a uptempo fell, and lots of little changes in time signature, basically going from 4/4 to 6/4, but more easily expressed as 2/4 throughout.  I have the guitar and bass tracked, and a basic drum part, and have been trying to find the time to lay down the vocals.  But things have gotten busy …

I was listening back to my earlier Buzzy Tonic record Elixr for comparison.  This was the last one before Bluezebub, and again more of a rock record with lyrics.  It took me about eight years to write and record it.  My friend Jay helped me mix and master it, and at the time it was a big step forward for me in terms of musical production.  But my mixing chops have improved substantially over the last few years and there are a few things I don’t like about the sound of that record.  So decided to remix and remaster it.  And I must say I’m quite happy with the result.  I don’t think I’ll get new CD’s printed up but I’ll probably replace the existing record on Spotify.  I’m almost done; just tweaking the time between songs and a final listening back on different stereos.

But then along came an opportunity for a gig with my Thursday Jazz and Funk Group.  The group has been getting more and more solid, and none of us has played out since before the pandemic, so we’re all pretty excited.  A few weeks ago I bought a portable digital recorder and started recording our rehearsals.  To give bar owners an idea of our sound, I put together a few some clips of songs from our last rehearsal.  You can hear it at:

https://zingman.com/music/mp3/jazzfunkgroup/jazzfunkjam220421.mp3

Enjoy!