Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Gidgette DJ Set Playlist 17 April 2013 @ Swing Patrol Fitzroy

Coleslaw - Jesse Stone
My Blue Heaven - Jo Jones
Night Train (Live) - Gordon Webster
Alright, Okay, You Win - Count Basie & Joe Williams
I Diddle - Dinah Washington & Quincy Jones
Swingin' on Nothin' - Tommy Dorsey
School Days - Dizzy Gillepsie
Are You Hep to the Jive? - Cab Calloway
On the Sunny Side of the Street - Dizzy Gillespie & Joe Carroll
Strictly Instrumental - Harry James
Walk 'Em - Buddy Johnson
Let the Good Times Roll - Louis Jordan
Frim Fram Sauce - Louis Armstrong & Ella Fitzgerald
Don't Ever Leave Me Again (Live) - Patsy Cline
I've Heard this Song Before - Helen Forrest and Harry James
Potato Chips - Slim Gaillard
Lipstick & Candy - Julius Larosa
Did You See Jackie Robinson Hit That Ball - Buddy Johnson
The Gal from Joe's - Charlie Barnet
Evenin' - Count Basie
I'm Crazy 'Bout My Baby - Louis Armstrong
It's Tight Like That - Jimmie Noone's Apex Club Orchestra
Shoot the Sherbert to Me Herbert - Tommy Dorsey
Don't Be That Way - Lionel Hampton
Begin the Beguine - Artie Shaw
Nobody But Me - Lou Rawls
Do Your Duty - Tuba Skinny
Walkin' After Midnight (Live) - Patsy Cline
Please Mr Johnson - Buddy Johnson
You Gotta Move - Fred McDowell
Nervous - Willie Dixon & Memphis Slim
Little Red Rooster - Sam Cooke


Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Playlist 16 Jan 2013 @ Swing Patrol Fitzroy

Don't Be That Way - Lionel Hampton
The Gal from Joe's - Charlie Barnet
Evenin' - Count Basie
Posin' - Jimmie Lunceford
Did You See Jackie Robinson Hit That Ball? - Buddy Johnson
Shorty's Got to Go - Lucky Millinder
Wednesday Night Hop - Andy Kirk
Back Bay Shuffle - Artie Shaw
Massachusettes - Jonathan Stout and His Campus Five
Nobody But Me - Lou Rawls
Let The Good Times Roll -Louis Jordan and Hist Tympany Five
I'm Crazy 'Bout My Baby - Louis Armstrong
Ain't Gonna Give Nobody None of My Jelly Roll - Tuba Skinny
Ochi Chornya - Wingy Manone
Shufflin' and Rollin' - Buddy Johnson
Ton O'Rock Bump - The Big 18
Solid as a Rock - Ella Fitzgerald

(Photo courtesy of Noni Healy)

Friday, June 8, 2012

Gidgette Blues/Slow Lindy DJ Set 8 June 2012 Playlist @ Swing Swing Swing Middle Park

Hy-Ah-Su - Duke Ellington
Sugar Rum Cherry (Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy)  - Duke Ellington
You'll Get Them Blues - Buddy Johnson and His Orchestra
Jeeps Blues - Johnny Hodges
Black Coffee - Ella Fitzgerald
I Let a Song Go Out of My Heart - Duke Ellington
Let the Good Times Roll - Louis Jordan and His Tympany Five
Fine Brown Frame - Buddy Johnson and His Orchestra
Blue Drag - Django Reinhardt and Stephane Grappelli
Blues in the Night (vocal Peggy Lee) - Benny Goodman
Moonglow - The Solomon Douglas Swingtet
Do It Again - April Stevens

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Gidgette Swing Patrol North Melbourne DJ Set 31 May 2012 Playlist

Why Don't You Do Right? (vocal Peggy Lee) - Benny Goodman
Tutti Frutti - Slim Gaillard
A-Well-A-Take-Um-A-Joe - Slam Stewart and Slim Gaillard
Nobody But Me - Lou Rawls
Walk 'em - Buddy Johnson and His Orchestra
Don't Come Too Soon - Julia Lee
Shorty's Got to Go - Lucky Millinder
Dinking Wine Spo-Dee-O-Dee Drinking Wine - Lionel Hampton and His Orchestra
AC-Cent-Tchu-Ate the Positive - Johnny Mercer
Corner Pocket 1955 - Count Basie and His Orchestra
I Let a Song Go Out of My Heart - Duke Ellington
Jeeps Blues - Johnny Hodges
Got Your Money (feat. Kelis) - Ol' Dirty Bastard

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Gidgette Swing Patrol North Melbourne DJ Set 29 March 2012 Playlist

The Grabtown Grapple - Roy Eldridge
Undecided - Ella Fitzgerald
Take the 'A' Train - Duke Ellington and His Orchestra
In a Mellow Tone - Duke Ellington
Solid as a Rock - Ella Fitzgerald and Sly Oliver Orchestra
Joshua Fit the Battle of Jericho - Sidney Bachet
Opus No. 1 - Tommy Dorsey
Keep on Churnin' (Till the Butter comes) - Lucky Millinder and His Orchestra
Drinking Wine, Spo-Dee-O-Dee, Drinking Wine - Lionel Hampton and His Orchestra
Jump Session - Slim Gaillard
Harlem Camp Meeting - Cab Calloway
Apollo Jump - Lucky Millinder and His Orchestra
Bossy - Kelis (feat Too $hort)

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Gidgette Swing Patrol North Melbourne DJ Set 2 Feb 2012 Playlist

Let the Good Times Roll - Louis Jordan and His Tympany Five
Jumpin' Jack - Ella Mae Morse
Material Girl - Dick Cheese
Learnin' the Blues - Earl Grant
A-Well-A-Take-Um-A-Joe - Slam Stewart and Slim Gaillard
Bli Blip (live) - Lincoln Jazz Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis
Walk 'Em - Buddy Johnson and His Orchestra
Jersey Bounce - Benny Goodman
Take the 'A' Train - Duke Ellington and His Orchestra
Knock Me a Kiss - Louis Jordan and His Tympany Five
Fine Brown Frame - Buddy Johnson and His Orchestra
Keep on Churnin' (Till the Butter Comes) - Wynonie Harris
Apollo Jump - Lucky Millander and His Orchestra
Send for Me - Earl Grant
Do It Again - April Stevens
St. James Infirmary - Lou Rawls
Bill Bailey (Live at The Crescendo) - Ella Fitzgerald
Like a Virgin - Dick Cheese
The Grabtown Grapple - Ray Eldridge

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Shakespeare's R&J presented by QUT Gardens Theatre Brisbane from 12 to 17 July 2010


Below is a copy of my review published at Briztix.com

Shakespeare’s R&J is a highly physical adaptation of Romeo and Juliet, featuring a cast of four young men set in a Catholic boarding school during the 1950s. Typical of mischievous teenagers in any era, these school boys are initially drawn by the forbidden allure of Romeo and Juliet--a text banned in their school. Progressively they take turns reading and enacting the various roles from the text in hidden corners well away from teacher surveillance. The result is a culturally relevant interpretation of Shakespeare with particularly confronting commentary on gendered role-play and gay marriage. R&J originally ran for 400 performances in New York City and won the prestigious Lucille Lortel Award in 1998 for outstanding achievement in Off-Broadway theatre. Written by American playwright Joe Calarco, and directed by Craig Ilott, this adaptation shortens the original tragedy and weaves a number of Shakespeare’s sonnets into the action, thereby lending a richer texture to this enduring paean to unrestrained love.

What did you like about this performance?
Both Tom Stokes (Romeo) and Ben Gerrard (Juliet) bring authenticity and tenderness to their first exchange at the Capulet’s ball. Here they hold the corporeal nature of their attraction in perfect tension with the quasi-religious, transcendental overtones of their love. The thrill and immediacy of the meeting is brought quickly to climax with their first kiss, reaching poetic consummation with the sonnet’s concluding rhyming couplet: "saints do not move, though grant for prayers' sake; then move not, while my prayer's effect I take." Moments like these deserve celebration. Everyone should experience the music of the interlocking lines of this beautifully crafted sonnet in a live environment.

What didn’t you like about this performance?
It’s easy for directors to become distracted by the challenge of setting a Shakespeare play in a new and more relevant context for today’s audience. Consequently they sometimes forget the most important goal is to provide quality acting that exhibits a sound grasp of dramatic verse. Unfortunately during the first third of R&J there were moments when lines sounded rushed and the rhythm of the verse lost. The ensemble skipped over the natural phrasing of the text, giving the effect of an urgent race to the end of each scene. When pushed along like this the meaning is glossed over while the tempo ticks along at allegretto speed leaving the audience lagging behind. The result is similar to listening to a pianist hammer through a Bach minuet while forgetting to musically breath, only to rest once they reach the double bar line. Surely just as a pianist first uses a slower tempo to work on the more difficult aspects of each line of music, then an actor should work closely on the technique of each line of dialogue before pitching up the tempo in the full flight of performance. In hindsight I think that opening night nerves may have contributed to the problem considering the players sounded more relaxed as the night progressed.

Why should we go and see this show?
It’s helpful when well-meaning friends counsel you on how best to deal with the vicissitudes of life, but as each year passes you might find their advice starts to stale and become predictable. When this happens I think literary heavyweights like Shakespeare, best interpreted by shows like R&J, can step in and give a fresh and innovative perspective on your own life. Want advice for the best way to recover from unrequited love? It’s right there in R&J when Benvolio advises Romeo to “weigh” the vision of Rosaline (Romeo’s love object) “against some other maid”. Such advice suggests clearer judgment of one’s romantic prospects can be better achieved when two women are poised evenly in the “crystal scales” of the mind. That's quite a sophisticated and powerful metaphor for the decision-making process and all the more memorable due to R&J’s ability to creatively convey what is so often thought but rarely so well expressed.


Was there anything remarkable about your experience?

Some of you may be familiar with the various approaches directors have taken when adapting Romeo and Juliet for Australian audiences. Back in 1999 Brisbane’s La Boite Theatre explored issues of racism and reconciliation by casting the Capulet family with indigenous actors and the Montague family with non-indigenous actors. The colonising impulse of Australia has been similarly explored by casting indigenous actors in the role of Caliban, whose intimate knowledge of the land is cruelly exploited by Prospero in The Tempest. Such modern interpretations do effectively shed light on the anxieties surrounding our nation’s shady history, but I personally cannot see why theatre continually feels the need to rescue Shakespeare from the category of boring capital ‘L’ Literature in its original form. To create a distinctive production today you don’t need elaborate conceits in casting and setting to give the text currency. Shakespeare even in its barest form will always be current and will continue to bring what Andrew O’Hagan calls “the news that stays news” well over four centuries after its original conception. After saying that, I must confess that I’ve never seen an interpretation of Shakespeare quite like R&J with its challenging take on an often told story that still manages to retain the spiritual essence of Shakespeare’s original.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Dante's Inferno presented by Zen Zen Zo Physical Theatre at The Old Museum, Brisbane, 6 - 22 May 2010


(Gustave Dore's Avaricious and Prodigal)

What you see below are my responses to some review questions that will be published online at Briztix.com next week. Enjoy!
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Inferno, the first cantica in Dante Alighieri’s The Divine Comedy, has proven to be an overwhelming favourite among generations of artists who have repeatedly appropriated this first part of the poem over the lesser known Purgatorio and Paradiso sections. You just have to view Peter Greenaway’s video project A TV Dante, or the detailed illustrations rendered by Gustave Dore and William Blake, or even the film Dante’s Inferno using hand-drawn paper puppets, to see how this epic has attained and retained its status as a classic today. Now Brisbane audiences have their chance to experience Zen Zen Zo Physical Theatre’s own revision of Hell, Dante’s Inferno: Living Hell, set in the heritage-listed grounds of The Old Museum and running until 22 May.

What did you like about this performance?

One of the strengths of this production is its ability to place the audience in the role of a questing pilgrim. When left alone to roam the conical layers of hell, we have the chance to play protagonist, poet, and narrator, by taking Dante's place in the original text. As a theatre-goer who is used to passively sitting quietly through the duration of a play, I found the experience of wandering between the third (the gluttonous), fourth (the avaricious/spendthrifts), and fifth (the melancholic) circles of hell a welcome change from the confining codes of audience behaviour. The first half of the performance set outside the building recalls the mystery plays popularised in Europe during the Middle Ages which were known to dramatise biblical subjects in a churchyard or marketplace. We are even provided with our own heralds in the form of two joking guides who deliver vernacular synopses of the narrative. Couple this with the various canto prologues printed on banners around the site, and we are left in no doubt about the nature of the errors committed by the wretched souls before us. It’s also worth adding that it seemed entirely appropriate and clever to tie three tormented souls under a large sausage tree marking the circle of gluttony. Equally inventive was the adoption of a leafy arched hedge as the gateway into hell. Both instances demonstrate imaginative and judicious use of the grounds that mark this play as a must-see for Brisbane audiences.

What didn't you like about the performance?

As much as I enjoyed the freedom of taking in the sites of hell outside, I found the various distractions and interruptions (ballet students walking through the middle of performance spaces, flashing beams from cars parking too close to the setting, difficulty in hearing some of the performers) detracted from the experience as a whole. Considering I attended the first preview night, I’m sure these problems will be ironed out as the season progresses. I should also add that the burlesque routine in the circle of lust, exhibiting what can only be described as bawdy zombies, failed not only in its execution, but in its choice of subject over the Francesca and Paolo episode. The sentiment and pathos in this story of two lovers is arguably one of the most celebrated episodes in the Inferno, yet it was overlooked by this production, resulting in an uncomplicated representation of lust that failed to capture the psychological depth explored by Dante in the original. This is just one example among many where I thought the production lacked emotional heft.

Was there anything remarkable about your experience?
Stellar performances from Lia Reutens and Earl Kim during the second half help the company wrest free from the dead hand of Dante and embrace a more relevant interpretation of the lower depths of hell more familiar to a contemporary audience. We first meet the couple sitting in a kitchen. They are expert in the art of self-deception; a situation I’m sure many of us can relate to in this realistic depiction of a living hell. Their dull table talk is thrown into relief by a chorus line belting I’m Through With Love (made famous by Marilyn Monroe) into spatulas instead of microphones. I think this is a good example of how a transition in style from the lofty to the commonplace works well, bringing some levity to the interpretation of an otherwise earnest text. It’s also worth noting the plastic beauty of the actor playing an angel sent to guide us into the second half of the performance. Her serenity was enthralling, and enhanced beautifully by makeup that gave her the quality of well-formed sculpture.

Why should we go and see this show?

The original text of the Inferno is famous for the imaginative variety of its torments at every level of hell, but I think in this production it is the last region in the journey that provides the most thought-provoking and dismal depiction of life. It is a region blinkered by an ideology that affects every member of today’s audience. I know I wasn’t alone in my surprise at how evil manifests itself in this concluding scene. I’m not going to spoil the ending for those yet to attend a performance. Just keep your eyes, ears, and mind open. You’ll discover just how tragically flawed we all are in our irrepressible desire for knowledge, power, and happiness.