Thursday, December 21, 2006

Finding an Old Friend


Last night as I was watching the 11 o'clock news, I thought about someone I knew when I was a boy, in high school, in college, and then after college for a couple of years.

Her name is Karin Stephan. She is two years younger than I. We both grew up in Berwyn, a Chicago suburb, a few blocks from each other. We attended Morton High School. And then we both attended Northwestern. Sometimes we were in the same literature classes, such as Erich Heller's class on Thomas Mann and Richard Ellmann's class on James Joyce.

Immediately after college, we both lived on the Near North Side of Chicago. I ran into Karin and her boyfriend, a Newsweek reporter, from time to time. In 1966, he was assigned to Newsweek's Paris Bureau, and Karin went with him.

The last time I saw Karin was in 1978. Quite by chance, I phoned her parent's home and Karin answered! She had returned to the States, settling in Boston, and was visiting her parents. She invited me out to see her.

Karin told me she had become a vegetarian. She might have told me about her passion for yoga, but I can't remember. I lost touch with her after that visit.

Until last night.

As I thought about her, I decided to Google her name. Bingo! I found her own web site just like that!

http://www.yogamacro.com/

Karen became a yoga practitioner years ago and has operated a studio in Cambridge, Mass. for a long time. I was delighted to learn this. I took yoga classes for two years at Yoga Works in Santa Monica a few years ago. I know what a great form of exercise yoga is, and I respect Karin for making yoga her life's work.

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Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Skydiving with Rachael Ray



"The easiest way out is through!"

That seems to be Rachael Ray's philosophy.

After watching Rachael Ray and her TV show guest go skydiving for the very first time in the above video, I began thinking about all the times Rachael has brought a smile to my face. I started watching her "30 Minute Meals" show on the Food Network in 2002. She makes cooking seem so easy. Now she also has a morning show on the CBS.

Merry Christmas, Rachael! I wish you the best of everything in 2007!

Saturday, December 02, 2006

For Lionel, Red, Terry, Milt, Cal--and Don



FreeVideoCoding.com

If you are a jazz fan, then as you watch and listen to this video, known as the Fantastic Machine video, I think you'll be able to figure out who Lionel, Red, Terry, Milt, and Cal were. But you might not know who Don was. Just who was he?

For those who are just discovering jazz, or who perhaps are not familiar with it at all, let me just say who Lionel, Red, Terry, Milt, Cal, and Don were.

Lionel is Lionel Hampton, Terry is Terry Gibbs, Red is Red Norvo, Milt is Milt Jackson, Cal is Cal Tjader, and Don is Don DeMicheal. All of them played vibes (and sometimes drums) beautifully.

Don DeMicheal was a good friend of mine in Chicago from 1977 until his untimely death on Feb. 4, 1982 after losing a bout to cancer. He was only 53.

Don DeMichael playing vibes. Click photo to hear Don play.
Don DeMicheal   Photo by Photo Reserve/Paul Narkin
Click photo to hear Don play.

Don was a superb editor and writer, serving as editor of Downbeat, the premier jazz magazine, during the 1960s. Later, Don worked in a similar capacity for trade magazines based in the Chicago area.

In 1969, Don and some of his friends founded the Jazz Institute of Chicago (JIC) to bring jazz fans together. The JIC is still going strong.

In 1977, Don and the JIC Board invited me to become a board member. I accepted, and before long was made treasurer. I served on the board for a few years and enjoyed doing so. I asked corporations such as Beatrice Foods and organizations such as the Illinois Arts Council, the Chicago Council on Fine Arts, and the National Endowment for the Humanities to contribute money to the JIC. They did so generously.

In 1979, I raised $25,000 from these groups for a two-night jazz festival at the Petrillo Music Shell in Grant Park, situated along Chicago's beautiful downtown lakefront. The festival would be free to the public.

Chicago had a new mayor in 1979, Jane M. Byrne. She appointed Karen Conner to be director of the Mayor's Office of Special Events. In July 1979, I sent a proposal to Conner asking the City of Chicago to donate $100,000 to the JIC so we could turn our festival into a week-long festival, which we would call the First Annual Chicago Jazz Festival. Conner phoned me the next day and asked me to stop by her office. I was there in 10 minutes. The outcome was that she liked my proposal and agreed to give us $100,000.

Don and the others on the JIC Programming Committee hustled to book the seven-night festival in a very short time. Karen asked me to make sure that the final night would be a blockbuster. It was, featuring Mel Torme and Benny Goodman, along with a number of outstanding Chicago jazz musicians. At the end of that night, Don thanked me for raising the money for the festival. And Mayor Byrne thanked me for my help. "Let's do it again next year," she said to me as she left the bandshell.

Click photo to see an enlargement.
The 1979 Chicago Jazz Festival
Photo courtesy of Ken Firestone
Click photo to see an enlargement

The following year we had Lionel Hampton and his exciting big band on the final night of the festival. Don and I stood at stage right watching Hamp and his band. Don smiled the entire time, enjoying what was a truly remarkable performance. The tens of thousands of people in the audience were on their feet, cheering and clapping and even dancing in the aisles and on the enormous grassy area surrounding the Petrillo Music Shell. Don was in ecstacy. Hamp had been his hero for years. I'll never forget how happy Don was that night.

Hampton and his band were one of the finest I've ever heard. Hamp was truly a musician's musician. And so was Don DeMicheal!

Don often played vibes with his own group, the Chuck Hedges-Don DeMicheal Swingtet. Chuck was an outstanding clarinetist. The group was patterned after Benny Goodman's septet. Don also played vibes with Deemus, a group led by Barrett Deems, who billed himself as "The World's Fastest Drummer."

Barrett was a dynamite drummer who had played with many jazz greats. For example, in the 1950s, Barrett played drums with Louis Armstrong and traveled the world with him. He also was featured with Armstrong in the Bing Crosby-Grace Kelly film, High Society. I like to watch that film on cable whenever I can just to see and hear Barrett.

Both groups often appeared at Andy's at 11 East Hubbard, just north of the Chicago River and a few doors east of State Street, in the heart of downtown Chicago. Andy's featured live music form 5-7:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, including the two groups Don played in. Andy's drew a good crowd every night but especially on Friday. The regulars included editors, writers and reporters from both the Chicago Sun-Times and the Chicago Tribune, both located within two blocks of Andy's. When I visited Chicago in 2003, Andy's was still going strong, still featuring good Chicago jazz five nights a week!

Don also helped the fledgling Chicago Jazz Archive at the University of Chicago, which was just getting started when Don and I met in 1977. Don quietly and generously donated his own jazz collection and materials to the Archive. Since Don's passing, the Chicago Jazz Archive has acquired many other fine jazz collections. To learn more about it, click here.

Don was a good friend to Chicago's jazz community--and to me. I have missed him very much since his passing.

That's who Don was....

And thanks to the magic of recorded sound and the Internet, you can hear Don play vibes right now. He's in good company. Just click here to do so....

George Spink
Los Angeles
Email Me

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