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Guide to Life

Monday February 24, 2003

The ABCs of Kulchur Part 1

By William Grim and Bruce Gatenby

The Editors of ZCPortal are starting a new weekly feature which we like to call The ABCs of Kulchur. Every week we will make suggestions about books and CDs that we think are outstanding and in need of greater exposure. So consider this the book and CD club for the cognoscenti, the intellectual elite and the very sophisticated. And what’s even better—You don’t have to watch Oprah.


Books
 
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Rafi Zabor, The Bears Comes Home

Can a talking bear who happens to be the world’s greatest jazz saxophonist find true love with a neurotic human woman, play in nightclubs without scaring his audiences and find a reasonably priced apartment in the Village? Well, you’ll just have to read the novel to find out. This is one of the best (and funniest) novels ever written about jazz and many of the characters are real life jazz musicians.


Paul Auster, The Book of Illusions

Another great novel from the master of chance and unintended consequences. Following the tragic accidental death of his wife and children, a professor becomes obsessed with a silent film era comedian long thought dead, but who turns out to be still alive.




John Fowles, Daniel Martin

“The fated sky,” the Bard once wrote, “gives us free scope.” But how free are we really? Fowles addresses this question in the story of an English playwright who sells out to Hollywood, marries the wrong woman and then has the chance to go back and make the right choices. Fowles argues that artistic creation is a chasing after not success or popularity but simply the freedom to be able to create. A brilliant, challenging novel often overlooked by readers of his more popular works like The French Lieutenant’s Woman or the Magus.

CDs


Mike Melvoin, Oh Baby

One of the best jazz pianists on the scene, and his trio is amazing. You may not know the name, but Mike Melvoin has been a top studio pianist since the 1960s and has played with everyone, from Sinatra to the Beach Boys, and he’s also been the musical director for the Grammy Awards. This album deserves the Grammy. It’s that good. For straight ahead jazz in the bop style, it doesn’t get any better than this.

Joyce, Gafieira Moderna

A brilliant album by one of Brazil’s best singers and songwriters. Joyce combines the rhythms of Brazil with the drive of American jazz. This is the real deal.

 



Dave Alvin and the Guilty Men, Public Domain: Songs From the Wild Land

Former Blasters’ songwriter and guitarist Dave Alvin is one of the great rock ‘n roll songwriters and is largely unknown outside Los Angeles. On “Public Domain” he puts together a collection of old folk tunes from the 19th and early 20th century. Worth the price of admission alone for his rendition of “Shenendoah,” but also check out “East Virginia Blues,” “Delia,” (compare with Dylan’s version on “World Gone Wrong”) and “Dark Eyes.” Great stuff.

 


 

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