jazz boogaloo – lou donaldson – alligator boogaloo, live 1970.
ıvan “boogaloo joe” jones – ıntroducing the psychedelic soul jazz guitar of joe jones (full album). latın jazz funk boogaloo – compilation n°2. lou donaldson quintet – alligator bogaloo.
boogaloo joe jones psychedelic jazz guitar 1967 full album lp. “latin music power” boogaloo & latin 60’s on vinyl! ıvan “boogaloo” joe jones – my fire! latinement soul ‘ afro cuban latin jazz and boogaloo ‘.
I’m more than happy
As a fan of MMW, I wondered what Mr Scofield could add. Well a lot, actually. Rather as Dave Olist, thickened the sound of the Nice and spurred the others on to greater things, so Dave S spurs MMW on to greater heights.
A wonderful blend of jazz funk and rock with a swirl of prog even. Better than ” A gogo”
Not as good to my ears as “A Go GO”, and by that I dont mean it is not good because it is not coming out of my CD player for days. Live CD is not catching my mind yet but maybe reason for that is not enough time spent on listening it.
The MMW and Scofield combination is just awesome.
Chances are, youve been enjoying “Out Louder” for years. On the other hand, if “Out Louder” is news to you, see my write-up for the amazing studio release under the comments section for this review.
Most likely, you have the original release and you want to know whats up with this limited edition release. In short, this import contains two discs.
While the first CD plays the regular album, the second disc contains live music from a November 25, 2006 performance at New York Citys Bowery Room. The musical quality and production is amazing.
Things start off with A Go Go. Its the MSMW anthem . . and what could be a better version? Next up is, Cachaça. In Brazil, Cachaça isnt just a liquor made from fermented sugarcane juice, its the most popular distilled beverage in the country.
Click Link In Description For More Reviews.
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Ignasi Monreal (left) makes a cameo appearance in the video for his collaboration with Etnia.
Out with the old, in with the new, or so they say. But Ignasi Monreal, the Spanish, Rome-based artist, has never been one to discard the existing beauty of the world. His creations, which combine oil paintings with digital art, are pop culture pieces that remix old and new and add a cherry on top. From Dua Lipa to Gucci, Rosalia to Bvlgari, Monreal has created art for the hottest stars and brands in the world. Now, with a collaboration with Etnia Barcelona, the eccentric Spanish eyewear brand, Monreal has created a pair of sunglasses that could be comfortable on display at an art museum. The limited-edition shades come in three colorways and feature eyes on the temples as a way to “expand your vision”—something we could all use as 2020 comes to a close. Much like his works of art, the sunglasses take inspiration from Monreal’s years living and exploring Rome, his hometown Barcelona, and the colorful individuals that comprise his artistic bubble. Recently, the artist connected with Interview from his cold studio in Rome for a conversation about peripheral vision, John Berger’s Ways of Seeing, and seeing beauty wherever you go.
———.
ERNESTO MACIAS: Your collaboration with Etnia is so groovy, funky, and really assaults the senses. What attracted you to work with them?
IGNASI MONREAL: They gave me creative freedom, which is always very attractive. They’re from Barcelona and so am I, so I was very excited to be able to work with such a cool brand from my hometown. The project ended up being very personal.
MACIAS: What really caught my eye the most were the eyes on the side of the sunglasses, on the temples. I know there’s a couple of inspirations behind them—break it down for us.
MONREAL: It was a bit of peripheral vision. I was finding inspiration in the most obvious thing, which is Ways of Seeing by John Berger. It was a great inspiration because it made a big impact on me a few years ago. I keep going back to it, the idea of looking at the perceived reality from a new perspective, finding meanings in what we know or think we know. So these glasses are a filter that helps you see the world in a new way, at least for me. The peripheral vision was to expand your sight.
When I moved to Rome, I saw that the city’s a museum in itself. The reason why I came here really, as corny as it sounds, is because I was looking for beauty and inspiration. I was living in London before and London is not very beautiful, especially in East London where I lived. I wanted the opposite.I came here and these sunglasses are a bit of the culmination of these three years. It also comes at a perfect time because I’m moving to Lisbon next year. It’s a bit of a goodbye love letter to my experience.
MACIAS: When you moved to Rome, what were some of the things that really caught your eye—what places particularly?
MONREAL: There are so many, but there’s one right next to my house, two minutes walking from here, which is called Villa Farnesina, this small villa that not many tourists know about, and it’s all painted by Raphael. He opened it in trompe-l’oeil, it’s a French word that means trick the eye. It’s all fake marvels of painted fake perspective, fake everything. That has been abig inspiration in my work ever since I arrived here, tricking the eye into believing something else. It gives functionality to the painting, an extra layer of meaning.
MACIAS: The video that you creative directed was shot in Rome as well. What did you want to convey with that video?
MONREAL: Well, it was more like a fun take on tourists. You can see a few cameos of me in the background sort of dressed like a tourist, in a tracksuit. That’s how tourists come to Rome, with the tracking sticks. I thought it was very funny, but it’s more about the eyes—as tourist eyes or foreigner’s eyes.I came here as a Spanish person coming from the outside, just traveling around the city and discovering it as I have in these few years. The city is not only about monuments and sculptures, and paintings, it’s also about the people. For the campaign, we put together a team of my closest people in the city and we did portraits of them because they’ll tell you as much about this city as any church or any painting.
MACIAS: So the people in the campaign are actually friends of yours in Rome?
MONREAL: We used real people. They’re actually here right now, just arriving, some of them. I live in an art gallery and the owner is in the campaign. There’s also my boyfriend’s friend, he’s this sort of Italian sexy Casanova guy who is with all the ladies, and I thought “You’resuch a character, come in.” The producer of the shoot made it into the campaign as well in the end, because we went out one night during the shoot and we got drunk and told her, “You should be in the pictures!” The next day she showed up with a bathing suit and we shot her and she looks amazing. Walking down the street, we found two kids coming back from school, and we shot them too. So it has this sort of spontaneous energy with real people, and I thought that was the cool part of shooting this diary.
The city is full of characters. That’s the beauty of it. It’s very cinematic, but it’s not only about the beautiful things. The scenes that you find day-to-day, they seem to be coming out of a movie. You find these unbelievable situations in the most common things.
MACIAS: Sunglasses are an important accessory, at least for me. They mean a lot more than what they’re intended for. What do you hope people get out of wearing these really insane-looking sunglasses?
MONREAL: One, they look good on almost anybody—they really suit everybody. And two, just this reminder of not taking things for granted and trying to find a new perspective in looking at things. Try to find creativity in the darkest places. Hopefully, they will.
Do you ever wake up in the middle of the night with so many thoughts in your head you need to write them all down?” Guy Fieri says in his irrepressible staccato way, which, even over FaceTime, sounds only a little less irrepressible than the high-motor voice that emanates more or less 24 hours a day on Food Network.
On this sun-splashed California afternoon, the Mayor of Flavortown is dressed in a faded camo hunting vest and a T-shirt from one of his 70 or so temporarily shuttered dining concepts; it’s emblazoned with the image of an American eagle fashioned from different kinds of kitchenware. We’re in the middle of an impromptu 3,000-mile-distanced walkabout of his 450-acre ranch up in the hills near Napa, and as the Mayor wanders to and fro, pointing out his pet peacocks (“They help keep the rattlesnake population down”) and his impressively large goat shed (“Goats are Über-smart, Über-useful!”), he has already discoursed on a wide array of topics, pausing every now and then with the faintest smirk on his face as this slow-typing restaurant critic frantically taps out notes on his rickety keyboard.
Like most successful restaurant people, the Mayor is an obsessive planner. The Fieris roasted, sliced, and prewrapped their turkey-breast “leftovers” many days before Thanksgiving just to have them ready for sandwiches on Black Friday. His famous dislike of eggs remains intact (when told Alfred Hitchcock was a similarly avowed egg hater, the Mayor cries, “I can understand the man’s passion!”), and he claims he has recently developed a taste for vegan cooking (“I met some vegetable butchers in Minneapolis — they make some amazing food!”). He’d rather not talk about politics (“We’re the greatest nation on earth. Can we please just go in one direction?”), although his views on critics like Anthony Bourdain and Pete Wells, who thrashed Fieri’s Times Square restaurant in a legendary takedown many moons ago — among other things, Wells wrote that the watermelon margaritas tasted like a “combination of radiator fluid and formaldehyde” — have mellowed a little over time.
“I don’t know where all the negativity comes from, but that’s not my jam,” says the Mayor, adopting a modest, almost philosophical tone as he points his phone toward the top of a giant pine tree. “If you look at where I was back then and where I am now, I’ll take it.” It’s hard to disagree. Fieri’s Diners, Drive-ins and Dives is now in its 33rd season on Food Network, having filmed with a whopping 1,500 mom-and-pops in all 50 states. Before the great COVID calamity, he had profitable restaurants operating in far-flung destinations like Vegas, Colombia, and Dubai; a well-reviewed Sonoma winery named after his two sons; and ever-proliferating consulting and licensing deals with Disney theme parks, cruise-ship lines, and a whole rogues’ list of gambling dens. Long ridiculed as a loud, bro-ey megaphone with moon-size watches and a blinding array of pinkie rings, Fieri has seen his reputation undergo a modest renaissance lately, even among some members of the lofty food intelligentsia.
The Mayor wants me to know that he greatly enjoyed comedian Shane Torres’s “Can someone please explain to me what the hell Guy Fieri ever did to anyone?” bit (answer: All he ever did was follow his dreams), which went viral a couple of years back, and says he has always made a point of using his prime Food Network spot to give back to his community. He’s a longtime booster of Cal Fire, along with other local nonprofits, and has taken time from his busy schedule to preside over a multi-couple same-sex wedding while dressed in an electric-purple suit. His popular show Guy’s Grocery Games— a cooking-competition spinoff of Diners, Drive-ins and Dives — hosts frequent charity tournaments for causes like the Make-A-Wish Foundation, and where contestants play for their favorite charities like Planned Parenthood. This year, Fieri has moved beyond his familiar honky-tonk corner of Flavortown to serve as a vocal, money-raising, morale-boosting Mayor for the restaurant industry at large.
Fieri in the portable kitchen he takes to relief efforts. Photo: Courtesy Fieri
The COVID crisis is what keeps the Mayor awake these days, and he is often buzzing with so many thoughts and ideas about how to help solve it that he taps them out on a phone by his bedside in the wee hours of the morning. “I’ve been through some shit in my day,” Fieri says, “but in a million years, you never could have told me a story as horrific, as decimating, as this has been.” In late March, Fieri partnered with the National Restaurant Association Educational Foundation to launch the Restaurant Employee Relief Fund, which has raised $21.5 million to distribute in $500 grants to laid-off restaurant workers, a move that landed the Mayor on this year’s “Bloomberg 50” list. He also had the idea of giving GoPro cameras to four restaurateurs, including Marcus Samuelsson in New York, as a way to record and personalize the industry’s life-or-death struggles, a project that resulted in Restaurant Hustle 2020: All on the Line, a sad, stirring documentary that debuted online in November and will air a couple of days after Christmas on Food Network.
“It’s an understatement to say things aren’t looking good, and we haven’t faced the worst of it yet,” says Fieri, as we start meandering from the goat shed (guarded, for the record, by a fierce pack of nameless snow-white Great Pyrenees dogs) back toward ranch headquarters. It’s equipped with a studio-size kitchen, which has allowed the Mayor to churn out hours of fresh TV content during the COVID months while other housebound cooking icons were sending out home-cooked bean-soup recipes on their Instagram feeds. There are already 20 episodes of a new Triple D To-Go concept in the can, a project that involved hanging more GoPros from the kitchen rafters and having a group of veteran Triple Dchefs send a blizzard of secret waffle mixes, hoagie recipes, and do-it-yourself taco kits directly to Flavortown headquarters to be prepared and then judged on-camera by Fieri and his son Hunter, who, at age 24, is now working in the family business.
“In New York, you can get everything, but in the rest of the country, carryout has blown up in a great way, and I think it’s here to stay,” says Fieri, who rarely experienced the joys of takeout in the small Northern California town of Ferndale, where he grew up. He describes his parents as non-dope-smoking hippies who managed a Western-clothing store in town and preached the virtues of self-reliance and discipline to a family that traveled around in a green Econoline van. Young Guy’s aha food moment came as a junior in high school, when he saved enough money to spend a year as an exchange student in France. “I had my mind blown. This baguette-and-Brie-cheese shit — this is the big fucking deal!” is how Fieri describes this epiphany, althoughotherwise he presents his career as mostly a matter of good luck and happenstance.
When he and his wife, Lori, married in 1995, the Mayor changed his name from Guy Ferry to the original Fieri in honor of his Italian grandfather, who had anglicized it when he immigrated to America. The younger Fieri was already running a string of successful restaurants with a business partner out of Santa Rosa, peddling the kind of signature flavor combinations that would later make him notorious (“Dragon’s Breath Chili Nachos” was the name of a dish at his sushi-and-barbecue concept called Tex Wasabi’s), when he entered, and won, a show called The Next Food Network Star in 2006. A few years earlier, one of his employees, an aspiring hairdresser, had asked to practice on the boss, which was how the famous bleached-spikes look was born. After the show wrapped, a TV executive sidled up to the Mayor and said, “You’d better get used to that hair color, buddy.”
Other Flavortown memes and catchphrases evolved in similarly haphazard ways: Triple D was easier for the tongue-tied host to pronounce on-camera than his show’s alliterative name, so he started using it all the time, while “Donkey Sauce” was something Fieri blurted out while demonstrating a particularly viscous-looking aïoli in front of a crowd of Carnival Cruise Line chefs who loved the name so much they put it on the menu the following day.
The Mayor has been chattering for exactly two hours by the time we wend our way back to ranch headquarters. Before we sign off, Fieri wants to talk about the tequilas he has been developing with his buddy Sammy Hagar. (“I’ve got to send you a bottle — you need to take a little spin!”) When pressed, he says his favorite dining town is probably Chicago, for its variety and neighborliness, and if he had to choose one culinary hero, it would be his dad, who taught him self-sufficiency in the kitchen and in life. “Someone like Eric Ripert or Daniel Boulud would be the cliché answer,” he tells me. “I’m giving you the real one.”
And, finally, the Mayor wants his citizens to know that the COVID crisis will surely pass one day but the power of a good meal will never disappear. “Not everybody likes the same sports or the same politics, but everybody likes food,” he says, as the faint sounds of birds and rustling leaves filter through our fading FaceTime connection and the bright California light begins to dim in the trees. “Food is the great amalgamator, whether it’s Thai, Ethiopian, Hawaiian, Chinese, German, Swedish, Danish, Italian, Greek, Sicilian, Spanish, Moroccan, Cuban, Dominican, Afghan, Israeli, or Guatemalan.” The little mom-and-pop joints where you find this rainbow of vitality and variety are part of the American story, he says, and that will still be true when we emerge from our great national hibernation and once again start clamoring for hot dogs piled with relish and onions, crunchy bean and chili tacos, and even burgers slathered with plenty of Donkey Sauce.
*This article appears in the December 21, 2020, issue of New York Magazine. Subscribe Now!
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The answer, of course is just to do it, which Trainor is totally up for. She and Sabara already have “one solid name we’re all loving,” and she’s begun the nesting process. And with Christmas likely to bring a solid haul of baby gear, there’s little else to do but wait and, as she told E! News, focus on her new plan, which is simply to “be the best mom ever.”
With her holiday album out and the countdown to labor officially on, “We can just, like, focus on, like, getting ready to give birth and have a baby and have a human,” she told ET. “And then I can disappear and be mom.” Her maternity leave planned, “I told them the first three months, leave me alone,” she continued, “me, baby, that’s it. And husband.”
One More Round by Alice Clayton (romantic comedy, follow up to Wallbanger) goes live at midnight!! — Simon and Caroline have it all. A gorgeous restored Victorian house in Sausalito, flourishing careers, an eternal spark for each other, and a cat with more attitude than is legal in the state of California. So what’s plaguing the couple of the century? They’ve got everything anyone could wish for, except…a family. After a few close calls, Simon and Caroline are coming to terms with the idea that being parents might not be in the cards for them. They’ve been married several years, and they’re realizing it may just be the two of them, forever. Which is ok, right? Caroline is considering a major career change, Simon is working more than ever, things are falling into place, without a baby rattle. But just when you think your life is set, the universe gives you a…twist.”
Take Me Away by Kelly Elliot goes live at midnight!! — “Life-risking adventures are not just a hobby for me, not just a way to pass the time. I need the adrenaline rush like I need my next breath. I’m addicted to it. It’s the only thing that allows me to bury my painful past—even if only for as long as it takes for me to come down from the high. All that matters is that I’m able to forget. And every heart-stopping moment of it was working…at least, until she appeared back in my life. Both my worst nightmare and my wildest dream all wrapped up in one beautiful woman…a woman I was still very much in love with. And that’s not the worst part… She has no idea who I am. She has no idea how intertwined our terrible pasts are—and for that, she is lucky. She doesn’t remember the night when everything important in her life, everything that she lived for, was taken from her by the man who promised he would always protect her. That man was me. To love her is to forget she ever existed in my world.”
Let It Be by Marie Force goes live this week!! — “Fresh out of college with a psychology degree, Molly Stillman was searching for the meaning of life by taking a summer volunteer gig building houses. The meaning in Molly’s life became apparent when her path crossed Lincoln Abbott’s. With his brand-new Yale MBA in hand, Linc was Mississippi bound, ready to spend the summer rebuilding houses after a devastating hurricane. He had a plan, lots of them, actually. But after meeting Molly, he realized plans have a way of showing you who’s boss.”
RECENT RELEASE: Dream Chaser by Kristen Ashley (Dream Team #2) I’ve been loving this KA series and this newest release is now live!! — “Ryn Jansen has no interest in taking a risk on Boone Sadler. Thanks to a long list of men who’ve done nothing but let her down, Ryn vows to stay far away from the caring, protective commando. And when Boone confronts Ryn with evidence that her loved ones are conning her, Ryn is less than thrilled — with her family and Boone. But even as Boone proves he’s the kind of guy to meet her every need, she doesn’t trust him to stay when life gets hard… Boone Sadler’s never been one to back down from a challenge. He’s determined to show the funny, sexy Ryn that the irresistible connection between them is worth exploring. But caring for Ryn’s heart and body becomes a matter of life and death when Ryn’s beloved niece and nephew are put in danger and dirty cops begin gunning for Ryn. Soon Boone realizes their romance is in danger of more than heartbreak — and to have any future together, they’ll have to put their trust in each other.” — Be sure to grab a copy of Dream Chaser (new release) or start the series with Dream Maker!
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The cast and crew of B Positive have received an early Christmas present. CBS has given the freshman sitcom an order for five additional episodes, bringing B Positive’s first season tally to 18 episodes. Just five installments have aired thus far and the series returns from hiatus on January 7th.
A comedy series, the B Positive TV show airs on Thursday nights and stars Thomas Middleditch, Annaleigh Ashford, Kether Donohue, Sara Rue, Izzy G., and Terrence Terrell.
Here’s the additional episode announcement:
CBS GIVES FULL-SEASON ORDER TO NEW COMEDY “B POSITIVE” FROM CHUCK LORRE AND MARCO PENNETTE FOR THE 2020-2021 BROADCAST SEASON
CBS has given a full-season order to freshman comedy B POSITIVE for the 2020-2021 broadcast season.
B POSITIVE, from award-winning executive producer Chuck Lorre and creator Marco Pennette, stars Emmy Award nominee Thomas Middleditch and Tony Award winner Annaleigh Ashford in a humorous and life-affirming series about Drew (Middleditch), a therapist and newly divorced dad who, when he discovers he needs a new kidney, runs into Gina (Ashford), a rough-around-the-edges woman from his past who volunteers hers. Kether Donohue, Sara Rue, Izzy G. and Terrence Terrell also star. The series is inspired by Pennette’s personal experience as a transplant recipient.
B POSITIVE airs Thursdays (8:30-9:00 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network. The series is produced by Chuck Lorre Productions in association with Warner Bros. Television.
What do you think? Have you been enjoying the B Positive TV show on CBS? Are you glad that the network ordered additional episodes? Are you hoping that it will be renewed for a second season?
Jon B’s official music video for ‘They Don’t Know’. Click to listen to Jon B on Spotify:
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———
Lyrics:
Heard about my past
Things I used to do
The games I used to play
The girls that didn’t last
I know what’s on your mind
You think I’m doing wrong
Can I say what is real
You are the only one
When I’m not around
Do you think of me
Or what the jealous ones
Are claiming me to be
You should know by now
That it’s gonna take
A lot of trust from you
For us to make it through
Don’t listen to what people say
They don’t know about you and me
Put it out your mind cause it’s jealousy
They don’t know about this here
Don’t listen to what people say
They don’t know about you and me
Put it out your mind cause it’s jealousy
They don’t know about this here
Vanity Fair has time capsuled Billie Eilish’s responses to the same questions for the last four years and tracked the now-18-year-old star’s swift rise to pop super stardom. From winning five Grammys to adopting her new dog, Shark, see how much Billie’s life has changed in 2020.
Directed & Interviewed by Joe Sabia
Produced by Lily Rhodehamel
Edited by Doug Larsen
Executive Produced by Traci Oshiro
Post Production Manager, Marco Glinbizzi
Recomposition of “Everything I Wanted” by Alfonso Velez
Billie’s First Interview:
Billie’s Second Interview:
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Billie Eilish: Same Interview, The Fourth Year | Vanity Fair