7JW – Caught on Tape Again

Tonight we’re settling in to wait out a “potentially historic” blizzard. A good time to catch up some random tasks.

Last weekend my jazz septet Seven Jazz West played a return engagement at the Bass Line in Mount Vernon. It was a really good night with a great crowd and the band was really smokin’. Consensus was we sounded tighter, with better energy and better soloing. So here’s a few videos from the show to share with y’all.

Soul Station
My Favorite Things
Tom Thumb
Invitiation
Willow Weep for Me
Joy of Spring
Better Git It in Yer Soul
Mercy Mercy Mercy
No Room for Squares
Hush
The Chicken

7 Jazz West – Caught on Tape

Here’s some video of the last 7JW gig back in November. I must say it’s a darn good perfomance. The sound and picture are really good considering it’s a smartphone camera, and it still looks kinda underground and edgy. Musically there are some moments where everyone in the group really shines. Mercy Mercy Mercy, Better Git in Yer Soul, Willow Weep For Me, ah, heck they’re all good.

Seven Jazz West are: Gary Trosclair on trumpet, Rich “The Hurricane” Ferricane on alto sax, John (Yours Truly) Szinger on tenor, Rich Paginello on piano, Steve Spitz on guitar, Ken Mathews on bass and Mike Oliva on drums.

Mercy Mercy Mercy
Willow Weep for Me
Better Git It in Yer Soul
All Blues
Chameleon
Joy of Spring
Blues for Wood

Day Trippers this Saturday!

My Beatles tribute band, The Day Trippers, will be playing this Saturday night, December 13, at the Lexington Grille, just over the Tappen Zee bridge in Bardonia, NY. This is our third gig and our ever-expanding repetoire is up to about 30 songs, two solid hours of material covering everything from the early Bealtemania pop to psychedelic blues and everything in between.

Show starts at 9:00. Looks like they also have good food there.

2014 Origami Holiday Tree

There seems to be a theme right now of reprising origami from my book for various exhibitions. For the annual Holiday Tree at the American Museum of Natural History Ros from OUSA asked me to contribute one of Lizards and a couple of my Octopi. She provided me with really cool papers. The Lizard paper is called Stardream. It’s thickish and kinda sparkly. The one had was large (maybe 20”) and green. Perfect. The paper for the Octopi was foil backed with a crinkly texture, one red and one brown, maybe 15” square. Also came out very nice. I ended up folding the octopi up in Boston cuz I was behind schedule. The larger size made it hard to sculpt the finishing stages, and I had to use a spoon instead of a finger on the inside. I dropped them off at the museum one day last week on my lunch break. It was a crisp autumn day, great for a walk thru Central Park.

While we’re at it here are some pics from our Hallowe’en Jack o’Lantern this year, designed by Michelle.

Origami Interview

They’re promoting my book Origami Animal Sculpture over at Cut Out and Keep. Here’s the url:

http://www.cutoutandkeep.net/books/origami-animal-sculpture

The article includes an interview with yours truly, reprinted below.

• Hey John, can you introduce yourself to our readers?

Yeah, hi! I’m John Szinger, origami artist and author of Origami Animal Sculpture.

• Tell us a bit about Origami Animal Sculpture and what kind of projects we can expect?

Sure. It’s an origami book that features mainly animals, as the name would suggest, with an emphasis on the sculptural qualities of the models. The book features step-by-step instructions for twenty-two projects, and a discussion that touches on origami design, choosing paper, and finishing the models. It also features some great photography by my friend Bob Plotkin, of models folded by yours truly. There’s a DVD demonstrating the folds for people who feel more comfortable doing it that way. The book is meant for folders of an intermediate level and up. But there’s a bit of a progression to it. If you’ve mastered a few basic folds you could probably tackle at least a few of the projects in the book, then move on to the more advanced projects to increase your skill and artistry.

• What was the inspiration / where did the idea for the book come from?

I think animals are a great subject. They’re interesting and often challenging to fold, and there’s so many ways to approach the design. And of course being part of nature, animal designs bring out that natural connection. About half the models are based on the kind of creatures you can find camping and going on hikes around New York and New England: bears and moose, frogs and lizards, inchworms and butterflies. These kinds of creatures are near to my heart, and some were even designed on camping trips. Others such as the Narwhal and the Cuttlefish, are creatures I think are just plain cool.

• Which is your favourite project in the book?

I like ’em all, but a few are special for different reasons. The Lizard was one of my earliest successful designs. In fact I came up with it in a class on origami design. After that I was off and running. The Fox and Inchworm are charming. The Adirondack Moose is pretty cool, and so is the American Turkey. That’s the most complex model in the book and took me a while to really perfect.

• What is your craft space / writing space like?

I have an office/studio in my house. I’m also a musician and software designer so it’s full of saxophones, synthesizers and computers too. There’s origami all over the place, ideas I’m working in a big pile on a desk and a table, and in boxes. When I was doing the photos and videos for the book I built a little setup with lights and backdrops and a camera. You can fold just about anywhere, so I’ll do it sitting around the coffee table or whereever. Sometimes on the train. When I’m doing a big, intense piece or series, or wetfolding, I’ll set up on the kitchen table and go late into the night. The rest of my house is full of origami too, but most of that is finished pieces. My current favorites or newest stuff always go on top of my piano. That way I can look at them until I decide I’m satisfied with a piece.

• Have you always been creative?

Yeah, you could say that. When I was a kid I was really into drawing, and thought I would be an artist or comic book illustrator, or maybe do album covers when I grew up. I loved drawing monsters and spaceships, action-oriented kinds of things. Later I studied drawing animals and human figures, and that helped me down the line with origami, developing the eye for the subject. I also studied drafting, which helped alot when it came time to diagramming my origami.

• When did you first start crafting and can you remember the first thing you made?

Hmmm, my mom is into sewing and knitting and crossstich, so doing crafty stuff was always around when I was growing up. I remember doing paper airplanes and other kinds of paper crafts as a little kid. I came to prefer origami cuz of the simplicity: no cutting or gluing or stapling. In third grade or so I started doing origami out of books in the local library, but after a while I had folded everything I could find and I put it aside. I didn’t really come back to origami until many years later. I attended a origami convention mostly out of curiosity. I was amazed at level to which it had advanced as an art form, and found a really friendly community. I started making my own designs and participating in exhibits. I got hooked.

• Who are some of your favourite authors and crafty heroes?

I read lot of different kinds of books. Lately I’ve been into history and particularly biographies. Famous people always have interesting lives and you can learn alot about the times they lived in, and often something about what it takes to become successful. The last two books I read were the autobiographies of actor Arnold Schwarzenegger and singer David Lee Roth. Funny enough, both cite Teddy Roosevelt among their heroes. I read his autobiography earlier this year.

As for crafty heroes, I’ve always admired people who could fuse the technical and creative sides of their fields. For example, early in his career Walt Disney made some major contributions to the field of animation with synchronized sound, color, multi-plane animation and rotoscoping. He was never a really great cartoonist but was able to build a world empire starting with his cartoons. Similarly, when Pixar started out they were known for a product called Renderman that let you render your animation on a network of computers instead of a single computer, which made things go much faster. They were making short films to show off their technology, and it took off from there. On an individual level many great artists have developed new techniques to advance the expressiveness of their art form: John Coltrane, Picasso, the list goes on.

• Where do you look for inspiration?

Well for animals and natural subjects, the starting point is always nature itself. That’s a big part of my work and something I keep returning to. Within the origami world there’s lots people doing amazing work, different styles, different subjects, and often I’ll see something and think I’d like to try something like that. But you can’t try everything, there’s too much, so you have to choose, find your voice. Once you get into something and begin to understand, you look for a way to develop it and make it your own. Origami is very geometric art form and there’s a there’s a whole side that’s not at all representational, but strictly geometric. Tessellations, polyhedra, that sort of thing. I do alot work in that area too. That comes from nature too in a way, but more crystals than biology. Another stream of ideas comes from the world of graphic design, and various stylized art forms like stained glass or folk art.

• What’s next for you?

I just finished my first book, so I’m starting to think about book number two. I’m always experimenting, thinking about new subjects I’d like to tackle, and how I’d approach them. For a complex subject the actual hard work — folding better and better failures over and over — can get fairly intense so it tends to come and go in waves that might last a few weeks. I have maybe 50 or 60 models right now beyond what’s been published. I had to take a break from diagramming after finishing the book, but I’m back to diagramming again. I teach origami classes a few times a year at different events and its always nice to show up with something new to see how people respond. After I’ve diagrammed a model I’ll pass around the diagrams to see how people do. If they tend to have trouble with a particular step or sequence I’ll go back and rework that.

But the question is really to develop a theme. I have a few series of models that run together that could be the nucleus of a book. Whatever I pick, I have only about about a half a book’s worth, so I’d have to come up with a good number of new models. For one I have more animals, including a very nice cat and dog that seem to be popular. Developing this would lead me in a less complex direction that might have broader appeal. Another is mythological and fantastic animals. I have a Dragon and a War Elephant with a castle on its back that are among my favorite models, but they didn’t fit in with the first book. A third thread is my spaceships and airships, which have an unusual folding technique as well as a novel subject matter. Another thing I could do is a book on the tessellations and polyhedra. Some of the polyhedra are incredibly hard to fold, and to diagram. So I’m thinking of ways to make that work, to get it across to people. One idea is to use photos instead of diagrams in the final stages. I’m also working on developing a story-oriented book in collaboration with Bob my photographer. Whatever I pick, that’s going to be my main focus for the next year or two. So right now I’m just sort of looking and thinking before I dive back in.

Seven Jazz West

Switching gears completely, my jazz group has booked it’s first gig. We’re playing Friday November 14 at the Bassline Jazz Club in Mount Vernon, starting at 9:00. The address is:

The Bassline
130 E 1st St, Mt Vernon, NY 10550
(914) 433-1052

For those of you who don’t know, we play a good variety of modern jazz, straight-ahead, hard bop, latin, and funk, from cats like Miles, Monk, Mingus, Joco, Horace Silver, Wayne Shorter, Hank Mobley, Clifford Brown, Joe Zawinul, the list goes on.

Rehearsal have gotten a bit less relaxed now, as we want to get everything tight for the show: beginnings and endings, transitions, who’s soloing when and all that. Should be no problem, but we have a half-dozen or so new tunes in addition the ones we already know well. We actually have enough material for two shows, so if the first show goes well we’ll do another.

Now we need to come up with a name for the band. The top contender right now is the Seven West Jazz Band, or some variation on that, because there are seven of us and we rehearse in Westchester, and it’s short and easy to say. There are other ideas floating around. We’ll see where it ends up.

Every Which Way But Loose

Everything looks bright and shiny on the band front these days. First, the Day Trippers have gig coming up (see my previous post) and we’ve been learning a bunch of new material, including Rain, Lady Madonna, Hello Goodbye, Dear Prudence, I Want You (She’s So Heavy), Here Comes the Sun and a few others. Hope we have time for all of them. I played an Abbey Road medley – from She Came in Through the Bathroom Window on – for the guys in the band. While they all agreed it sounded great and was a great idea, they also thought it was too much material to learn for this show, so it’s on the slate for the next one.

Second, my jazz project may actually be getting some gigs. Our drummer and leader Mike is booking us into a place called The Baseline in Mount Vernon. After a year of rehearsing we’ve gotten to the point where we sound pretty damn good, and I feel like people are missing out not hearing us. Personally I feel like my sax playing has gotten back to the point where it’s as good as or better than it’s ever been, and that’s saying something looking back at the days of Event Horizon. My tone is really great, and my sense of time has improved, and I can even slalom those bebop changes. But now I’m much more relaxed, focused on melody and phrasing and dynamics and expressiveness. On songs we’ve done a few times I know I can forget about the chords and just blow, and really tell the story. Now the challenge moves on to having something fresh to say each time. On top of that it’s a really good group and all the players are really strong. I particularly dig Rich, Mike and Ken on piano, bass and drums. So I hope this gig comes through. I’ll let you know when we have a date set.

Third, the rock band has reformed and it looks extremely promising. Two weeks ago I brought in young Wolfgang Skywalker on bass to meet Gus and Jefferson. Gus is our drummer, and he’s pretty tough on bass players he can’t groove with. But he fell right in love with Youngblood within sixteen bars of the first song. Even without a guitar it was an excellent rehearsal. The whole things sounded more solid and energetic. One of the songs we were considering dropping was Long Train Running, but with the new bassist the song had a whole lot more energy and was suddenly a keeper. And the group is moving in much more of a funk and soul direction, which I really like. At the end of the session we decided to add another James Brown song and another Sly Stone number. Also Youngblood amazed us all even more revealing he’d only been playing bass for two years (switched from cello) and is taking lessons with John Pattitucchi.

The next week were joined by Gary Guitar. He fit in really well. Like Gus and myself he’s a seasoned pro and knows tons of songs. He favors a clear jazzy tone that fits right in with the direction of the group. So now all we need to do is learn a bunch of songs and think of a name for the group and then we can start booking gigs. I’m expecting we’ll be ready around the new year.

Only thing I’ve been neglecting is my home recording situation. Well not exactly neglecting. I’m working on a new song, To Be a Rock, and it’s been slow going. I haven’t had a really big block of free time in a while, so it’s bit by bit. I had put down a scratch piano and drum track to lay out the time, chords and structure. Then I got to work on the bass line. The song begins with a bass solo, which is fairly hard to play, at least for me, so I had to practice it a while, and it took me several attempts at recording it to really nail it. So that’s in the can now, and it’s time work on the other parts. Listening back, neither the drums nor the piano sound very good to me, so I’m looking at having to tear them down and basically start over. Ah well. Should be worth it in the end.

Down to the Crossroads

My Beatles tribute band, the Day Trippers, will playing Saturday night, October 25 a place called Crossroads in New Jersey. It looks like a pretty cool place. Recently had Stanley Jordan on the bill. The address is:

Crossroads
78 North Ave Garwood, NJ 07027
(908) 232-5666

Oddly, they’re in the middle of a block. Also, our guitarist John put up a facebook page for the band, featuring some photos and videos of our earlier gig:

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Day-Trippers-Beatles-Tribute-Band/721842167880962?ref=hl

So come on out and have a good time. Hope to see y’all there.

Churn Churn Churn

So Gus and I have decided to reboot the rock band. After jamming together since June, the summer came and went and we didn’t have any more than a few songs really tight and weren’t ready to start playing out. Our bass player wasn’t really cutting it, and our guitarist was not willing to learn new material and was just kind of a dickhead in so many ways it made you wonder how he was able to function in the world of adults. The kicker for me came when we couldn’t even make Roadhouse Blues sound good last rehearsal. I was thinking “I’ve known high school kids better than these guys!” So we had to let them go. Later I found out the bass player was coming back from a long period of not playing due to a hand condition, and I felt bad about that, but I was glad to be rid of the guitarist.

That left me, and Gus the drummer and Jefferson the singer. So we’ve been looking for new musicians. I got lucky cuz there’s been a guitar player Gary who’s been sitting in with the jazz group the last few weeks. He’s an excellent player, you could tell from the first note, great sound and phrasing. And I was telling him about my learning Van Halen on the piano and he had a few things to say about Eddie (“He’s the real deal”), so I had a hunch he was also a rocker. At the end of the jazz jam I made my pitch for him to join the rock group. “Yeah I do all that stuff. I’m your man”, he said.

Then I got a referral from a friend for a bassist looking to join a group. He was pretty enthusiastic about both the cover band and the possibility of a group based on my originals so I invited him over to jam and see what happened. It turned out he’s a high school kid! Just a couple years older than my kids. My mind was truly blown.

But man, he sure could play. Particularly into Joco, James Brown, and all kinds of funk and jazz. His knowledge of classic rock is kind of limited but he’s a quick study. He was also able to grok my originals, which are too hard for a lot of people. Still, I’m not sure I want to take him on. Yeah there’s a chance he might flake, or his parents wouldn’t let him continue with the group down the line, or it might be hard to work at a bar with him in the group. No matter what he’s not that experienced. But you gotta figure a kid who’s that good has the capacity to focus and would pretty much have is act together. Also, I was playing in bands working in bars when I was just seventeen, and never had any problems if I didn’t try and order a drink. No, the reason is this:

When I lived in California I was in horn-section funk band called The Hip Pocket. It was one of the better bands I’ve even been. Played a lot of great gigs. There were 4 guys in the horn section and 10 in the whole group. It was also a 50-50 split of black guys and white guys. The bass player was this dude Dmitry, who was the second best player I’ve ever played with. (The best was Jim Wynne, master of two-handed tap who had a whole technique he developed after borrowing a Chapman Stick for a few months but had to give it back. We were in several bands together including Automatic Man and The Purple Connection. After he left my group Event Horizon he went on the play in Gamalon.) Anyway Dmitri was from Odessa, in the Ukraine, where he’d been classically trained on symphonic bass. But he loved funk. And in a year of playing with him I never heard a single clam. Such a solid groove. Then one day he told us he was leaving the group cuz he’d been accepted into Berklee School of Music. We all wished him the best, then we tried to find a replacement and when we couldn’t find anyone as solid the band had to break up.

I told this story to the kid I was auditioning and he said “that’s my plan!”. Oy!

The good news, however is Ken, the bassist from my jazz group and The Day Trippers, has changed his status from “maybe” to “very interested”. The reason being one of his other bands seems to have folded. He didn’t want to commit cuz he was already in two other groups. If we get both Gary and Ken I feel we’ll have a really solid group that could do some serious damage!

In other news, The Day Trippers next gig has been confirmed for the last weekend in October for some bar in New Jersey. I’ve requested we do an Abbey Road medley. I’ll let you know as details emerge.

In other news Lizzy is learning De-Lovely for her performance group, so I dusted off my Cole Porter songbook to try and learn it on piano.