
I previously posted this story, a few years back, on SteveShark's blog, 'The Good Old Major's Hole'.
At the age of six in Brooklyn Heights, I started taking piano lessons, with Mrs. Giordano, a local middle-aged Italian-American woman, who taught music to children. Mrs. Giordano scared the crap out of me, and I always thought she picked a funny business to go into, as she hated children. The lessons were not private, so every Saturday morning, I was with three other kids: identical twin sisters, and a strange boy whose name was Jacob, who always wore a bow tie. If you looked at Jacob, he became agitated, and would scream at the top of his lungs, “WHAT?”. The twins were named Ava and Grace, they wore the same outfits, and had the same hairstyle. They also played this game where they would switch identities, so when Mrs. Giordano told Ava it was her turn to play, she’d say, “I’m not Ava, I’m Grace” and Grace would follow suit. This usually caused Mrs. Giordano to go red in the face, and curse to herself in Italian.
After six or so years, and several teachers later, I could sight-read sheet music, and play things I heard on the radio by ear. The last of those teachers was Miss Eckert, who was retiring to Florida, and recommend a piano teacher named Mark, whom she described to my mother as “A colorful character”.
So I started taking lessons with Mark, who was an early 60s hipster complete with goatee, he had a very cool apartment, and owned hundreds upon hundreds of records that were scattered all over his apartment. The first time I was around people smoking weed, I recognized the smell from Mark’s apartment, where it always seemed to be lingering in the air, along with Camel cigarettes that he chain-smoked. My Mother thought Mark was a creep, I thought he was dreamy.
Bill Evans records led me to Miles Davis, which led me to Charlie Parker, John Coltrane and Thelonious Monk. One record led to another, so on and so on, all of which led to my lifelong love affair with Jazz.
Years later, in 1968 and 69, during summer breaks from Caltech, my husband Jerry (then boyfriend) and I spent our days on Hermosa Beach in Los Angeles County, surfing, smoking Michoacán, drinking Olympia beer, and dropping “Orange Sunshine”. Our nights were spent in the cocktail lounge of the Casa del Mar hotel in Santa Monica, where I did my lounge act on piano, while Jerry mixed cocktails. Every set I played opened and closed with “Gloria's Step”, the first track on “Sunday at the Village Vanguard”.
Bill Evans’ “The Complete Village Vanguard Recordings” was released as a 3 CD boxed set in 2005. It was recorded on June 25, 1961, and documents each of their five sets from the final day of a summer gig at the Village Vanguard. Its influence has spanned several generations of musicians, and will continue to do so.
The Bill Evans Trio’s rhythm section was Scott LaFaro on bass, who, as you will hear, was a phenomenal bassist and writer, who played with an amazing fluidity, velocity, and melodic inventiveness on his instrument. Tragically, Scott would die in a car accident ten days after this gig. He was just twenty-three-years old. On drums, and equally phenomenal, was Paul Motian, who had a style that challenged your idea of traditional timekeeping, but could lay it down simply and solidly with the best of them. He often blended both approaches within one song, showing that traditional and avant-garde jazz could co-exist. He would continue recording until 2010, and died in 2011 from Myelodysplastic syndrome.
Bill Evans is one of my favorite musicians, and one of the most influential and tragic figures of the post-bop jazz piano. He was known for his highly nuanced touch, the clarity of the feeling content of his music and his reform of the chord voicing system pianists used. Bill recorded over fifty albums as leader, received five Grammy Awards, and played on Miles Davis’ breakthrough album “Kind of Blue”. Bill Evans died on September 15, 1980, at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City. He was 51 years old.
OK kids, to qualify for Bill Evans’ 'The Complete Village Vanguard Recordings', tell us about the favorite teacher you had.



My favorite teacher as a kid was my 5th Grade teacher, Mr. Niebauer. He was the first male teacher I'd ever had, so I admired the fact that he was a very active participant in our PE class. In fact, he flattened me while playing soccer. He also instructed the class that there were "clean" nuclear bombs that might be used to construct a new and bigger Panama Canal. Everybody loved Mr. Niebauer, both kids and parents.
ReplyDeleteMany decades later, he became infamous for murdering his wife and making it look like an accident. There was an episode of "Cold Case Files" about it entitled "Gun Shy": The murder of Abby Niebauer."
You never forget your first favorite teacher.
Wow!
DeleteWow, indeed!
DeleteI had the misfortune to be sent to a snob school, because I was (a) smart(ass). It was like Hogwarts, but lacking the magic. The "masters" wore black gowns and mortar-board hats with tassels, and the Head Boy wore a brocade waistcoat (we all wore three-piece suits) and carried a silver-handled cane. On my first day he gave me threepence and told me to "cut along to the tuck shop" and I had NO IDEA what he was talking about. Two short years later I wrote an essay for my favourite teacher (English class) called "A Psychedelic Trip" and my hair was creeping over my back collar. Fast forward another two years and I was taking acid and in the prestigious most-likely-to-be-expelled group. But my English teacher was a humorous and gentle soul, unique among the sadists, pederasts, hypocritical Christian zealots and superannuated dreamers who taught there, and he remains the only secondary school teacher I remember with affection.
ReplyDeleteEnglish lit teacher in high school, Mike Noonan. Made my love of reading feel cool and normal. Also got me a great job as a night manager at a French Quarter hotel my senior year. Oddly, last I heard about him he had become a huge Maga cultist.
ReplyDeleteIn my junior year of high school, I had a teacher by the name of Miss Buckell, who introduced me to Stochastic and Malliavin calculus (not taught in high school). At the time, I thought I’d go on to be a bookkeeper, or possibly an accountant. Miss Buckell told me I had a future as a mathematician, and also that in the next decade, women would come into positions of power. She also helped with college applications, tutored me on admission interview. This was the start of a long academic journey, and an even longer career in the financial sector. Years later I ran into Miss Buckell, in a Greenwich Village book store, and we made a plan to have dinner. So a week later we met at a cute little bistro, in the village. We had had a really nice dinner, and I couldn't thank her enough for everything she did for me. After dinner, we were walking along a quiet street, and Miss Buckell told me she thought I had turned into a beautiful woman, and then made a pass at me. Awkward…
ReplyDeleteYesterday my younger grandson William took second place in the county math competition. He really likes mathematics & we encourage him, as much as possible.
DeleteGood for William!
DeleteMr. Zumbrunn, History & American Government in high school. Junior year1973, government was insane & history was relevant. (Side note, my graduating class a year later was I believe 25, it was a small parochial school, the local high school was many, many times larger). Mr. Zumbrunn allowed heated discussions in his classes and we flew through the hourlong class, every single day. Lotsa very vocal participation & outrage & attempts at reason, calmly controlled & guided by Mr. Zumbrunn. His job when he wasn't teaching, he was a farmer, (had been for years & continued during his teaching gig & afterwards), he was a low key, but strongly spirited guy willing to listen to the ravings of high school kids during Watergate & the Viet Nam war. Interesting time. Thanks Babs
ReplyDeleteDear Penthouse Readers Forum..........
ReplyDeletepmac started early today.
Delete7 hours ahead of you guys.
Deletepffft. It's 2566 here, and that's the year.
DeleteWe're all roughly in the year, 4.54bn, give or take 50 million years.
DeleteMiss Millington never Mrs. A chubby born in Egypt old school English Teacher who I met again in my forties before she passed away. Inspired me with John Clare and Wordsworth but wanted me to go to Oxford which I thought then and now a thoroughly bad idea so I went to art school and became poor in monetary terms but rich in spirit. Told us stories of camels fed hashish (we had no idea what she on about) so doped for camel races...who knows..
ReplyDeletehttps://youtu.be/6ftvARLrFKE
ReplyDeleteThe only known video of Scott Lafaro playing his Prescott Bass, which was made in 1825 in Concord, New Hampshire by Abraham Prescott. This clip is an excerpt from the April 1958 Bobby Troup 'Stars of Jazz' show featuring the Richie Kamuca Quintet
The Prescott bass was heavily damaged by fire in the accident that took Scotty's life, but was restored by Barrie Kolstein.
One has to wonder what could have been?
DeleteLink
ReplyDeletehttps://we.tl/t-Moj36KtASD
PD Jones was mine. A fine French teacher who introduced us spotty 12 years olds to the wonders of Tolkien. Whilst a stickler for good behaviour in class (not a bad thing) he also would take time off to show using slide shows his adventures with the 6th form group who he would take on a 'field trip' that in part involved a tour of the Stella Artois brewery in Belgium. Sadly he left the school when I was 15 and my French and my aspirations to be a linguist waned with his departure and I never got to enjoy that field trip to the Stella Artois Brewery. Ah C'est La Vie....
ReplyDeleteOne of my favorites, whose name I've forgotten, was our biology teacher in high school. He was a passionate and avid bird watcher and expert. So, whatever he was explaining at any given moment, whenever he heard a bird call outside the classroom he would stop whatever he was doing, hurry to the nearest window and open it, listen intently, then instruct the class: "Hear, hear. This is (fill in name of obscure bird, followed by oscure facts about said bird)...". I had a bunch of "original" teachers, but this one was one of the most original...
ReplyDeleteMy Spanish teacher in High School that agreed to buy me (under-age at the time) a bottle of rum. We didn't share it btw, and she only lasted 1 year as I recall, but she was a hoot!
ReplyDelete-notBob
Mr. McGinnis, public school 9th grade. In early October 1969—back when some teachers like him would chain smoke while conducting class—Mr. McGinnis called me into his office from where he administered the humanities program. As I walked in I spotted Mr. Palladino, a rookie english teacher. Mr. McGinnis directed Mr. Palladino "to support Stephen's curiosity where ever it might lead, and, help him also keep up with his regular studies." His intuition about my restless intellect keyed the only really great school year I enjoyed.
ReplyDeleteTerrific grades got me into private school where I reverted to being bored. Yet, I never have ceased following the leads my curiosity evokes. Thank you JM.
George Gurney. As well as 3 science A levels we were expected to take 2 extra O levels, Use of English and the General paper.
ReplyDeleteGeorge was made head of English after Ralph Nixon Currey
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._N._Currey
retired and spent the next 20 years mentoring local poets, and he took us for these subjects.
Use of English was of no use for me reading program specs, but I like to think it helped me to write them.
The General paper was a thug's introduction to Kulchur.
George taught us how to read the newspaper (remember them?) ( start at the letters page and work outward).
He distributed copies of the Listener - Wikipedia says it went downhill from 1960, but it didn't. Karl Miller was editor.
And he set us an essay "Describe an artist's progress as their work changed over time".
Almost everyone was nonplussed, at which he was nonplussed - "You've all seen those Harold Pinter plays on the telly?" etc.
We hadn't heard of auteurs.
I wrote on Duke Ellington, fortuitously I had an album of his 28-30 Okehs and another RCA from the early 40s.
Other teachers were less memorable - Commie Arthur Brown ribbing me in 64-5 "what's your bloody government doing now?"
The head, Jack Elam, cornering me at 7.30 pm in the kitchen on Nov 22 1963, telling me Kennedy had been shot. (He hated me, but I was the only one around). In retrospect, that was weird.
Missed all this the first time around, but love it. And just for the record, Mrs. Rita Guerin, an old (to me; she was probably 50?) cajun lady who in 1968 let me write a report about the Cuban Revolution and told me to always keep asking questions. None of this was the norm in the Louisiana public education system.
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