Jazz

Pico Canto on Band Edge in May

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Pico Canto, with Mauro and Peter DePasquale, will premiere on BandEdge
Tuesday May 5th & 12th at 11:30pm
Wednesday May 6th & 13th at 12:30pm and 5:30pm
Thursday, May 7th and 14th at 6:30pm
Check out a sample of their performance

Pico Canto is the name of this two piece project focusing on light jazz, ambient, and
sonic visualization. This live performance,captured live at WCCA TV's 8th Annual Art
Attack(April 2009), features a selection of miniatures written by composer/pianist MauroDePasquale and is performed by Mauro DePasquale and Guitarist Peter DePasquale . The miniatures, including one written by Peter DePasquale is a collection of emotionally inspiring works exploring heritage, home, family, and relationships.The group can be reach by contacting mauro[at]sevenangelsmedia.com

BAND EDGE gets ready for a new season

ATTENTION BANDS AND PERFORMING ARTIST:

WCCA TV's live-in-studio music showcase "BAND EDGE" has completed it's fall season and will be resuming a new season in January 2009.

Thank you to the eight local Worcester area groups who have participated for the fall season:
Beatles For Sale, Tall Heights, Dan Lewis, Matt Schwachman, Pueblo Nuevo, Johnny Dollar Experiment, WPI Stage Band, Carmen Spada.

We look forward to another great season showcasing local talent on the music scene. WCCA supports local music and we thank everyone for their support of public access television.

Feel to contact me at any time if you are interested in scheduling to be a part of the show as volunteer crew, or to perform.

Please feel free to share this news with other talented performers as well.

Looking forward to seeing you on WCCA TV 13
Thank you

Mauro DePasquale, WCCA TV 13, "The People's Channel"

Community Media Public Access since 1986

P.S. WCCA TV cameras were also recently at Hanover Theater to video tape legendary Zonkeraz. Look for this on WCCA TV coming soon.

WPI STAGE BAND is first up on WCCA TV's BAND EDGE music special

Tonight, as I write this, I am swinging to sounds of WPI's fantastic stage band under the direction so Rich Falco. This is the first shooting for WCCA's special music series: BAND EDGE.

Groovy cool big band sounds the way nature intended it.
Awesome, we can't wait to get this on cable and on line for you. Yeah Baby! Swing it man!

More on Lennie and the connection to WCCA TV public access

Read what Richard Tabnik has to say about how Bud Powell, influenced Lennie Tristano, in an article he had written titled "On Zen and Jazz". You can understand how a musician, or really any artist, can easily transition into the field story telling, video production or communication. I have stated many times before, that the art of video production, including TV and public access producers, is to communicate. Tabnick offers a powerful and organic perspective on how an artist can communicate through such tools as intuition and feeling.
He writes, "The question of Intuition and Jazz goes back to Lennie Tristano, who based his entire artistic and pedagogical existence on Intuition and Feeling! Even though he went through a lifetime of exhaustive study and practice of music, and recommended it for his students, one of the basic, important, and profound differences in Tristano's scene was that everything had to come from feeling and intuition, not intellect [although he was accused of being intellectual], chops [although his were phenomenal!], theory [although he was a genius of innovative music], or style ["To me, jazz is not a style; jazz is a feeling"]. The idea with getting with something was to stretch out with your feeling and intuition, not "build up your chops". Tabnick continues, "In 1975, Lennie spoke about Bud Powell's influence on him:" Tabnick then gives us Lennies account. "without Bud's example, I don't think I could really have arrived at what I have arrived at in my teaching. I was striving for that, but since I hadn't heard it, it was difficult to get to it. But after I heard Bud, that changed everything. Because it simply meant that if you were really going to portray your feelings, your fingers had to be able to duplicate what you heard and felt. Every note...Every note Bud played..." ( you've got to read more)...
After reading Lennie's words it struck me very clearly why I was attracted to video production. As a life long musician, I was always sharing through music. There is a process of finding and losing yourself in the moment when improvising or performing any music. A transcendence occurs. That also happens most of the time when we produce TV in the right environment. Production task such as interviewing others, designing specific lighting for a set, and editing all come together for the purpose of communicating something. In both the process of production and in the "on Camera" action, the combination of design, process and content including the spoken words, resonate, all together, in a type of harmonic physics, that initiate thoughts that create a dialog and meaning for all involved in the process, including the viewer or listener. Sometimes a multitude of meanings and reactions.For this to work properly it has to be in a nurturing environment. One that is free from negativity, ego, repression, depression, and stress. Just like good Jazz. It helps us transcend ourselves and the rest of the gravity this world binds us to. If only for a moment or a solo passage. Like Jazz it's about playing. As Lennie said "it must be done with everything you have." For a city to have strong and vibrant WCCA TV public access center, it has to ensure the station has it's "chops" (encouragement, funding, support and the freedom to create without burden or bureaucracy). There is no room in the Zen and Jazz experience for those negative elements as I mentioned above. Once the chops are there be prepared for an expansive symphonic (community)groove .

WPI JAZZ Symposium Shares some history on a legendary cat: Lenny Tristano

This weekend tune in to part one of The Lennie Tristano Symposium taped by WCCA TV at WPI on April 15th, 2007.

Lennie Tristano was a fine jazz pianist and also regarded as one of the first to teach the fine art of jazz improvisation. Lenny began his professional career in Chicago in the 1930's and quickly rose to the top in New York City.

Tune in to Part ONE: The Lennie Tristano Symposium on WCCA TV this:
Friday at 9:30pm
Saturday at 10:00am and midnight
Sunday at 7:30pm
Monday at 11:30am

Part TWO will air these same times next weekend, Friday, May 4th-Monday, May 7th.

We thank our WPI partners for giving us an opportunity to video tape and present this cultural event to be seen on WCCA TV 13, "The People's Channel"

Yeah Baby !

Photo: Metronomepic

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