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Updated 1:15 PM GMT, Thu May 23, 2013

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Music Articles

This Week Published

Happy Birthday, Richard Wagner!

Wagner turns 200, and the rest of you just shut the hell up about it.

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I first became seriously hooked on Wagner when I was 12 or 13. Everything I’d been listening to up to that point—Beethoven, Tchaikovsky, Brahms—seemed to be little more than building blocks culminating in his final opera, Parsifal, and all the music that came afterward was a falling away. It wasn’t until a few years later that I began hearing about Wagner’s personal views and accidental associations, and you know what? It just didn’t matter. To this day nothing has changed. From all I’ve learned and read about him (including his massive autobiography), Wagner the Man was an insufferable blowhard and a jerk, someone I likely wouldn’t care to spend too much time around. But his monumental, glorious music remains central to me, and always will.

Today marks the 200th anniversary of Wagner’s birth, but you can’t hear anything about it without also hearing that Wagner was an anti-Semite and a friend of Nietzsche’s and a Nazi.

Yes well. OK, those three things seem to be far more important to most people than, say, The Ring Cycle, so let’s take care of these one by one.

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This Week Published

Middle-Aged Guys Honking

Looking back at the great "Bill Harris and Friends."

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Jazz is a music of swagger. A genre based around solos, virtuosity, and technical prowess, its descent (or ascent, if you prefer) into avant-garde hermeticism was, if not inevitable, then at least not all that surprising either. Bird, Dizzy, Coltrane, Miles, Mingus—one-name giants of cool and geniuses of the new.

Not all jazz is new, though. There's a jazz traditionalism as well, though its profile is considerably lower. Trombonist Bill Harris, for example, definitely needs both his names. Even with those, it's likely that few non-aficionados have heard of him, or of his great, blandly titled 1957 album, Bill Harris and Friends.

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Published

Manic Panic and Four Strings, Stretched

This is mix tape no. 6.

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The risk of going to a public place to be alone is that sometimes people mistake my book for a prop and my lack of companion for a desire for companionship. To be fair, a stranger can’t know that in my hands, no book, above all a 1974 copy of Rex Stout’s The Red Box, is ever a prop. But I still cut short my time on my second-favorite bar stool last night. First, my neighbor, having heard me yammering with the French barman, asked me to spell out some French for a text message. Next, she asked me to describe my experience of the oysters. In the matter of the French query, I acquiesced; in the matter of the oysters, I did not. Oysters are my Tardis. I put them in my mouth when I need a shortcut to certain beaches in the Bay Area or in Rhode Island. And, via airplane or bivalve mollusc, I go to those places alone. 

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Published

All Magic, No Tricks

A night with Xenia Rubinos and Marco Buccelli.

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Smashpipe’s editorial offices consist of two bunkers, one in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, the other in Jersey City. (We have yet to break ground on a tunnel to join them—the plan is to piggyback on that fucked-up gas pipeline if it goes through.) Jim Knipfel is blind, and I skew toward hermit. Email suffices for our edit meetings, which mostly amount to stuff like, “Hey, d’you wanna cover that plague of locusts over Israel, or should I?”

But I’ll venture out into the world for the right reason. Like Xenia Rubinos’s record-release show last night at Cameo Gallery, next to my old grocery store in Williamsburg.

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