Paul's Blog

Saturday, June 23, 2007

Pinetop Perkins Documentary DVD Released



It's been over a year since I edited "Born in the Honey: The Pinetop Perkins Story" and the DVD has finally been released commercially to great reviews. Pinetop Perkins is the legendary 93 year old, Grammy Award winning blues pianist (he turns 94 in July) who played with Muddy Waters, Robert Nighthawk, Earl Hooker and many other blues giants. I was proud to work on this documentary as the primary Editor and Script Writer, and also to have the privilege of meeting such a fine man as Pinetop. I also shot the cover photo for the DVD, taken on Pinetop's back porch in Austin, Texas in 2005.

Here's a brief review from BluesCritic.com:

How could you go wrong with a 60 minute DVD documentary on the 93-year old Blues legend with a bonus CD included? You can't when it's "Born In The Honey: The Pinetop Perkins Story". Friends and peers like Ike Turner, Taj Mahal, Bobby Rush, etc. help narrate this journey from the Honey Island Plantation in Belzoni, Mississippi through his 1983 "breakthrough" up to his present day doings. A few tidbits include Turner admitting Perkins taught him how to play, Perkins once playing a prank on a bandmate by letting him flirt with a "woman" before finding out "she" was a transvestite (as told by Rush), plus, most importantly, his trials as a black man in the pre-Civil Rights South and more. Sure, Ken Burns or Martin Scorcese could've done a better job (with their big budgets) but it's a fascinating life that of Perkins.

And another from AmericanRoots.com:


At age 93 blues pianist Pinetop Perkins is still rocking with the best of them. “Born in the Honey” provides a comprehensive look at Perkins life from growing up in the Mississippi Delta to migrating North and becoming a sideman for such legends as Sonny Boy Williamson, Earl Hooker and Muddy Waters. Starting his solo career at age 83 Perkins began to revel in the spotlight and continues to this day. Not only is this the story of Pinetop Perkins, it also serves as an overview of the migration north many African-Americans embarked on in the 1930s and 1940s. It is a fascinating story and one more than worthy of the DVD treatment. Also packaged with the DVD is a CD containing 9 live tracks and one rare studio track.

Here's a few more reviews of the DVD, you can order it directly from Amazon by clicking the box below:

Blog Critics Magazine
STL Blues Reviews
Jazz News
Dallas Observer
Austin Chronicle
Music City Blues Society

Labels: , ,

Thursday, June 14, 2007

London Update and a Weekend in the Adriatic

London
London Tube

Summer has finally arrived in London! After an incredibly warm and dry April (the driest on record in the UK) and an unbelievably wet May (the wettest in 20+ years, and freezing to boot!), we're finally starting to get some sun and warm weather here. It's still not a real summer, but at least I've stopped wearing a jacket most of the time. Those astute readers who've been reading my blog for a while may have noticed the trend over the last year or so in freak weather. This continues to be the case!

In April I also started an electric bass class at the London Music School and I'm really enjoying it! The bass is a relatively easy instrument to play, and although the class is quite difficult for a beginner like me, I'm the only student so I get a lot of personal attention. Bass really suits someone like me who's always been more rhythm oriented, but still wants to learn to play melodies. I bought a Yamaha RBX170, Yamaha's lowest-end bass guitar, but it plays great and has proven to be a great beginner's tool. It's a cool electric blue color too and was really cheap. I'm also taking a keyboard class for the second time around and continue wrestling with the 88s. I am finding that both instruments compliment each other pretty well though and look forward to being able to play both bass and keyboard before too long. This whole musical journey has been incredibly rewarding and it's the culmination of a life long dream for me - I love it!

London
My Yamaha bass

Aside from music, I've started salsa dancing and it seems that salsa is quite the rage in London. Besides being fun it's a great way to meet the opposite sex and there are plenty of places to dance. Right now my favorite is Salsa, near Leicester Square, which is open every night of the week. There's a good crew of people from my Spanish intercambio meetings that go there at least once a week to shake our booties. It's great!

While I am keeping busy socially, I have found Londoners to be a bit uptight and I lament the fact that very little happens in London nocturnally. It's just not a late night town. Most places close at 11pm and the clubs mostly close at 2am, at which point a vast stream of drunken revellers packs into the night buses like an army of disoriented sardines caught in a fishing net. It's also a town full of people who seem completely wedded to their day jobs and don't have much time to do anything other than work or drink. When most folks are not working they are too tired to do anything and on the weekends go to a pub or crowded nightclub to drink themselves into oblivion. Sad that so many people will spend their lives like this... They might make lot's of money (London is awash in cash these days) but they are enslaved to their employers and don't lead any kind of life other than one of excessive material consumption. Funny how modern people always assume that our agricultural ancestors had no leisure time and only worked from sun up to sun down; I'd say the opposite is true! But that's just my social observation about big cities and financial centers like London or NY. Thank god I'm self-employed and don't have to slave away to the man or punch a clock. So many of my friends I rarely get to see because they are so caught up in this rat race of materialism and credit card bills which forces them to work all of their waking hours. I think the old farm workers lived much happier and richer lives than we assume. It's modern man that is the slave!


Boats in Venice harbor

Speaking of happier, richer lives, the Italians know how to live! Last week I took my first trip to Italy, to visit a friend I met through couchsurfing.com. My friend Cole lives in Padova and I stayed there and for a few days at his parents house near Venice. I got to see the wonderful city of Venice as well as Padova and even went on a side trip to Slovenia and Croatia with Cole's parents. Italy was just an amazing experience: wonderful food, wonderful people, and wonderful art. They have all their priorities straight too: food, art, sex, music! Work, punctuality, etc. are near the bottom of the list where they belong ;p

One of the highlights of my trip to Venice was a visit to the Venice Biennale, a biannual art exhibition that draws thousands of art revellers from all over the world. Each country has its own pavilion and displays various "modern" art works. Cole and I managed to find someone to give us free tickets and we spent a few hours checking out the art and very happening "scene". One of the better pavilions was the Austrian one, not because of the art, but because they had free food and drinks, and it was a huge affair that even drew the Chancellor and President of Austria. I met loads of interesting people there and afterwards went to the Austria party, a night time beach bash with more free food and drink. It was a great day and night in Venice! Ahhh, I love Europe!


Party goers at Venice Biennnale



Austria's party drew lots of interesting folks

The trip to Slovenia and Croatia was great too. The Slovenian border is less than 2 hours away from where I was staying, via Trieste, and made for an easy day trip. Cole's parents, who work at the Aviano air base, drove me there and we hit a few of the coastal towns, making it as far south as Umag in Croatia, in the northeastern Adriatic sea. The former Yugoslav provinces are quite fascinating and each has it's own distinctive culture and history, even though they all share a very similar Slavic language. Now with Slovenia and Croatia on my list of places visited, the only former Yugoslav province I haven't been to is Bosnia (and of course the disputed province of Kosovo).


Village dancers in Izola, Slovenia


Croatian fishing boat


For more photos of Venice and Slovenia/Croatia, check out my galleries at Zenfolio.

Labels: , , , , , ,