All posts by John Paul Carillo

Three Red Crowns album rerelease

JOY ON FIRE is proud to announce the rerelease of THREE RED CROWNS’ debut album on PROCRASTINATION RECORDS and would like to thank Tommy Hambleton of PROCRASTINATION for putting the album back out into the world.

Three Red Crowns is a group that Anna and I started in 2011.

The group began with a simple three-note riff. I tried to develop the part with an early (the second) incarnation of Joy on Fire, but it wasn’t taking flight as I’d imagined with JoF’s three-piece instrumentation. Thus, the idea of adding a string quartet to the trio was born, and so was a new group.

A rough go at first. I was naïve enough to think there was a string quartet ready and waiting for us at Peabody – the conservatory Anna was attending at the time – raring to go on this new material. And also naïve enough to think this imaginary quartet would be able to pick up the music by ear, sans sheet music.

So this was my introduction to the world of scored music, and it took some time and trial and error to find the right musicians for the group. When we did, we ended up with some very wonderful people, including Domenica Romagni, Ruby Fulton, Martha Morrison, Caleb Johnson, Rob Parrish and Rajni Sharma. When Three Red Crowns was ready to record, Ruby introduced us to Mat Leffler-Schulman at Mobtown Studios, and we have since worked with him on three other albums—two Joy on Fire albums, and the second Three Red Crowns album.

The first Three Red Crowns piece, “Cells and Gates,” was a collaboration between Anna and I, where, as she scored some of the structural ideas I had, she took the harmonic and melodic development much further than I had envisioned. I was enthralled! I learned a lot from seeing and hearing what she did with the development—a lesson that informs my writing, collaborations, and Joy on Fire’s music to this day.

Anna—as many of you reading know—is a composer studying Music Composition at Princeton. Two of her earliest pieces, composed while still at Peabody—“Third Crown” and “In the Right Light”—are on Three Red Crowns’ debut. She has grown as a composer since then, and has developed many new ideas and worked with many instrumentations since, but I still think these pieces are wonderful.

This album also marks our first collaboration with a singer and lyricist—Rajni Sharma—and the piece she sings on, “Second Crown,” which closes with the line “In this light, rebirth” sung in Punjabi (“ਇਸ ਹਲਕੇ ਪੁਨਰ ਜਨਮ ਵਿਚ”), remains one of my favorite collaborations with Anna (she has two very good solos on baritone sax in the piece, and improved the first violin part greatly) to this day.

Though Chris, Joy on Fire’s drummer, wasn’t in JoF at the time, he has played on two Three Red Crowns pieces: “World Systems,” which became a Joy on Fire song, appearing on 2018’s Fire with Fire (featuring Shelly Purdy on vibraphone); and “Spring Song,” as of yet unrecorded.

JoF at the Silo, Glass Reich Riley, and Popsicle

1.

A few weeks ago, I was on Long Island for a Joy on Fire recording session at Bill Hafener’s The Silo studio with Bill—of Black River Republic and Finn & His Rustkickers—engineering the session. Chris and I put in two ten-hour days and got a lot of music done on the first three tracks of an album called Red Wave.

When I first started playing thirty years ago, in a band called Tin River Junction, after my bass playing uncle got me a bass, the body shaped like the Star Trek logo, for my 16th birthday, Bill tolerated this instrument, and even let us rehearse at the studio he had at that time (1990 or so) called Mystery Fez. As you can tell by the name, this was a very cool studio, with a bunch of interesting characters hanging around, including Ted Schreiber.

Mystery Fez sign, photo: Bill Hafener

Ted Schreiber was in our rehearsal room the first time TRJ practiced at Mystery Fez. We did not yet really know Bill—maybe we’d had one short phone conversation with him in order to book the room. We did not know Ted. He was just some large man, kneeling on the floor of the studio, searching under the couch, next to the drum set. As my trio walked into the studio, we laughed, as this guy kneeling on the floor, his ass in the air, did not seem to acknowledge our arrival. King Arthur, TRJ’s drummer (I’d nicknamed him that as he was into some of that Medieval-type kitsch like Monty Python and The Holy Grail, Renaissance Festivals and the band Yes) was the most outgoing of us, and he said, “Hey, what’s up? Or should I say what’s d—?”

Before Art got to the punchline, Ted—speaking to us like he’d known us for years—said, “Hey, fellas, what’s happening! Really glad you guys are at the Fez! I mean, really glad you could make it”—he was still on his hands and knees, but at least now his head was turned to us—“maybe I’ll sit in on a few numbers, or, you know, add some harmonies on the second chorus—the second chorus should always have some variation from the first! like that George Harrison song on—or maybe we can set up a little recording, or”—Drew, I think, had already started to set up his gear by the guitar amp, and was only half listening, but I was stuck in the middle of the room, stunned, my bass and amp hanging from my hands, as I was absolutely mesmerized by this guy’s flow—“or anyway, how about you guys lift this couch for me?”

TRJ looked at each other, laughed, then did as we were asked—though it cut into our rehearsal time—and then, when we had the couch a few inches off the ground, Ted said, “Now move it over there,” and he pointed to the other side of the room, near the PA.

What he’d been looking for under the couch remains a mystery to me to this day.

Mystery Fez studios, R.I.P.

Anyway, Ted and I quickly became very close friends, and as well as playing in a band called Cowpatch with Bill and Chris—Chris, whom I didn’t know yet—Ted had a weekly radio show on WUSB called The Hoedown From Hell, which meant he’d play anything he wanted, whenever he wanted. (It was on Ted’s show where I was introduced to sax/bass/drum trio Morphine, their Cure For Pain album—so important to the idea that helped form Joy on Fire twenty years later.) I’d join him on his show once a month or so, and he’d let me pick a few songs whenever I joined him on the air—anything from Swervedriver, to Girls Against Boys, to King Crimson, to Philip Glass.

2.

It was around this time when I was introduced to Glass’s music. I was taking a class in Postmodernism with a wonderful philosophy professor at SUNY Stony Brook named Hugh Silverman. It was an accident that I was in this class, as when I’d signed up, I’d failed to read the course description (a failure which led me later to fear I would fail the class) and had assumed that it was simply a class in post-WWII art and literature. Throughout the semester, most of us were confused as to what exactly Postmodernity was—and now, well, here we are—but Professor Silverman guided me in the right direction for my first paper.

He wanted me to write an essay comparing the music of Philip Glass and John Cage. As I didn’t know the music of either, I went to a large record store and bought cassettes by each composer. In a Landscape by John Cage and Glass’s 1971 Ensemble recording Music With Changing Parts.

I was on a bus to Albany on a Friday, and the paper was due Monday, and not only had I written nothing—I’d listened to neither record. Sometimes these bus rides to Albany were spent talking to people I’d never see again, and even drinking heavily in the back of the bus with them. But now, I put Music With Changing Parts into my Walkman.

The parts in the music didn’t seem to be changing much, and, looking out the bus window at the rolling Hudson Valley landscape, I drifted off into—

I was awoken—though I wasn’t certain I’d actually slept, but had been more in a trance—and I had absolutely no idea where I was physically. Startled, I looked at, or maybe felt with half shut eyes, the nonhappening around me. Who were these “people”? Why were they all flying through space, yet sitting still like statues? Who was this nonbeing sitting next to me like a monkey? No “bus.” No “Albany.” No rowdy kids in the back drinking Crazy Horse or St. Ides.

At the 25th minute of Music With Changing Parts, after the ensemble slowly grows louder and beats are subtracted, the majority of the players suddenly drop out to reveal Glass’ distinctive Farfisa organs and a reversal of the phrase, and this simply flipped my consciousness upside down. The vitality and propulsion of the organ driven music, paradoxically, considering its mania, is also very relaxing, trance inducing. But that moment on the 1971 recording by The Philip Glass Ensemble is absolutely a jolt from space.

When I arrived at the University of Albany, where I was visiting a friend, I said, “You’ve got to hear this!” and thrust the tape into the player without even waiting for a response. She liked it, though didn’t have the bus experience I’d had—for one thing, we weren’t in a moving vehicle flying down the highway at 90-plus mph—but when I insisted on playing it seventeen more times, with the excuse I had to write a paper about it, she asked me to please not visit her the following weekend.

3.

The day after the session at Silo a few weeks ago, I drove from Bill’s in Shirley forty minutes west to my dad’s in Smithtown, where I spent the day, mostly on the back deck thinking about what had to be done next on Red Wave—and how this version of the group was a result of Ted, five years ago, recommending Chris when we needed a drummer for a NYC show, and how this changed the band and led me back to Bill, with Mystery Fez gone and now at The Silo. I also spent the day reading Words Without Music, Philip Glass’s 2016 memoir, which Anna had bought for me as a present—occasionally taking a break to pour a beer or mess with the cats. There are three or four of them—there used to be more—I can’t keep track. One of them isn’t allowed out of the basement, then there are the two fat ones which look exactly the same—same colors, same fat heads—and one is named Cody and one is named Cory and it is this kind of repetition I am less interested in. Anyway, after a full day of reading, and a couple of glasses of beer—evening was settling in—I felt it was a good time to stop reading about music and listen to some. Before closing the book, I had just gotten to the part where Glass tells the well-known anecdote about getting hired to produce a film score that Ravi Shankar would be composing and performing along with a small ensemble of Western musicians. At the time of getting hired, by a young American filmmaker, living in Paris like Glass was at the time (1965), Glass had never heard Ravi Shankar’s or any Indian music. “When I found out I would be working with Ravi Shankar,” says Glass, “I simply went out and bought a record of his—easy to find in Paris.”

It is here where a very specific memory of buying Music With Changing Parts, thirty years ago, arises: I was at Borders books and music near SUNY Stony Brook, and Professor Silverman had not instructed me specifically on which piece to write on; I remember looking through the vast Glass catalog, intrigued by the covers, like the Warhol-esque cover of The Photographer; but it was the cover—and title—of Music With Changing Parts which made the choice for me; on it, Glass is standing near a window, several pages of the score in his hands, one of them quite crumpled and on which he making a pencil edit, cigarette hanging from his mouth. Though Glass’s music was in the classical section in a store like this, aspects of the cover—the cigarette, the hair, the urgency of his note making—are very rock’n’roll.

A good place to close the book, and listen to his music. In the basement at my dad’s house, there is a small boom box, and some CDs I have left behind. Though one of these isn’t Music With Changing Parts, 1982’s Glassworks—composed to be compatible with the invention of the Walkman, says Glass—is. A beautiful record, and each of the five short pieces has a distinct mood and, within Glass parameters, sense of motion. The only thing that interrupted my listening experience is one of the cats—this one is called Popsicle, can you believe that shit? Popsicle! because it’s orange and white (not because it freezing cold, for better or worse)—jumps on the bed and steps on my face during “Closing,” the last track. I throw the cat off the bed, and look for the next CD.

I step on your face.

Steve Reich’s Music for 18 Musicians, thinking about how for me—via several conversations with artist friends in Manhattan years ago that resulted in a gift—Glass led to Reich. There was a period in my life that every night that I went to sleep at home, I put on Music for 18 Musicians—and experienced it different ways…as background music, listening intently as it transitioned pulse to pulse, falling asleep then waking up startled as the last notes faded away…but the way I experienced it this time was with Popsicle stepping on my face twice during Section IX. I picked the cat up, walked to the furthest corner of the room, and placed it there. “Don’t move!” I said.

I wanted to listen to one more album before hitting the road back home to Princeton, where Anna is a music composition PhD, but I wasn’t sure what. I looked through my CD rack, and was about to put on Lifeforms by Future Sounds of London, when I saw that I had Terry Riley’s original 1967 recording of In C, recorded with students at The University of Buffalo. Three of the Big Four so-called Minimalists! (They all reject the stupid academic term.) It’s, of course, a common way of looking at music via genre: Metallica, Megadeth, Slayer, Anthrax—the big four speed-metal bands! My Bloody Valentine, Ride, Lush, Slowdive—the big four shoegaze bands! Miles Davis, John Coltrane, Charles Mingus, Thelonious Monk—the big four 50s-60s jazz innovators! Jim Morrison, Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Brian Jones—the big four rock gods who died at age 27! A stupid way to look at music, maybe, but, well, there it is. And there it was, that cat, walking back across the room, toward my face. The big four kitty cats at my dad’s house—Cody! Cory! Popsicle! and…and I forget the fourth one’s name. Maybe there’s only three. I don’t know.

Anyway, I put in In C, and it had been a while since I’d heard it. I remembered this being the most joyous of the three albums—almost imagining Dr. Seuss characters banging away at the instruments. And, after a few minutes, I generally felt that way about it again. The opening pulse on this version is a little unsteady—not as tight as the pulse that begins Music for 18 Musicians, and the tuning on some of the wind instruments involved in this particular recording is a little wonky. But at minute twenty-one, the individual cells come together in a way—everything’s cycling and grooving and forming shades and colors!—that made me yell out with joy—!

And then the music was gone. Here, I had an opposite experience to that of the bus to Albany and Music With Changing Parts: I was very aware of the room. Which included Popsicle the Cat, stepping on the top of the CD player, popping open the tray, causing the music to cease as the disc wobbly spun to a stop. “God damnit, what are you doing!” I said to the cat. “I’ll beat you!” It was purring. “Now I have to listen to the wanky wobbly opening again!” I explained to the cat. “That was the good part you just ruined!” The cat, still purring, jumped onto the bed. “I’m going to press play again, and you’re not going to fuck shit up this time!”

As per my lecture, the cat ran under the bed, and then, continuing to run around frantically, hit the cord behind the bed and unplugged the radio.

As I found myself on my hands and knees, trying to plug the radio back into an elusive outlet, I thought of Ted, all those years ago at Mystery Fez, but I realized, maybe there was no connection.

—John Paul Carillo

Bar5 (show announcement and story)

We were headed from Baltimore to New York without a drummer.  We had taken the gig, as it was in a cool spot in Brooklyn, a place called Bar4.  “Maybe we’ll hit Bars 1, 2 and 3 while we’re there,” I said to Anna, but she didn’t like this joke, so I only told it, like, twice.

We were meeting a new drummer the night before the gig, at a rehearsal space in Manhattan, like 22 floors up a skyscraper.  Top Floor Studios, or some horseshit like that. Anyway, Chris–who we’d been introduced to over the phone by old friend, bass wiz, and general music aficionado Ted Schreiber (thanks Ted!)–was waiting for us at the studio.  We’d never met Chris…but he kind of looked familiar.  Maybe he just looked like a drummer.

Two hours later, and we had a pretty wicked set of music ready for Brooklyn!  We were all very excited.  Who was this guy?  An excellent drummer who picked it up quick, and had plenty of ideas and licks.  And there was something familiar about him.

The gig was with a group from New York called Dog Adrift.  After each group’s set, our friend Sherif, sitting at the bar with a pint glass of gin, an aficionado himself, said, “I really dig your new drummer. And the other band was great, too! Who are they?”

“Yeah, Dog Adrift. They’re great. We’ll play with them again.”

Well, that was almost  5 years ago, and we’ve been playing with Chris ever since, have recorded two albums with him, and we’re starting a third this month.

And though we haven’t played with Dog Adrift since, we are going to play with them again: this Wednesday, at The Footlight (or Bar5 for our purposes here) in Ridgewood, NY. (Details here.)

And, as it turns out, we had met once, 20 years ago; Chris and I both grew up in the same town on Long Island.

And we both escaped.

-JP Carillo

Percussion, Allsorts, and Vermont

King Crimson played their first American gig in Vermont, at Goddard college. My first band, Tin River Junction, played its first gig at Goddard also. Unlike Crimson, we didn’t know what we were doing yet. Considering that fact, it went well. But what made the show
memorable for me was a conversation guitarist Drew and I had with a musician from the dub band that was scheduled to go on after us.

We didn’t know what instrument he played yet, so, in this nervous youthful way of starting a conversation, we asked him.

“Guitar,” said Dub Dude.

“Oh,” said Drew, “so do—”

“And I play delay pedal, tremolo pedal, wah pedal, distortion pedal, overdrive pedal,
reverb box…”

Dub Dude went on and on. He went on to list, like, twenty-two pedals that he considered
“instruments” that he “played.”

I remember, when we got out of earshot of this guy, laughing at him. “Man,” I said to Drew, “this guy’s burnt.” Dub Dude was stoned. He was very very high. “Listing his effects as instruments. He’s crazy.”

But that was twenty-five years ago and I’ve come to see things differently.

*

In 1973, King Crimson released Larks’ Tongues in Aspic, arguably their best work. One of the many reasons this album is so wonderful is Jamie Muir, the percussionist who is on this album only and stuck around for like maybe six shows. On the CD release of Larks’ Tongue I have, and I assume on the original LP release as well, Muir is credited with playing over 70 instruments. Each individual piece of percussion is listed. “Hollow Log” is one. “Whip,” I think, is another. “8 x 10 piece of sheet metal” is listed separately from “4 x 6 piece of sheet metal.”

Jamie Muir of King Crimson
Jamie Muir of King Crimson

When I first read these liner notes, I remember bursting out laughing. What a joker! It had to be that British sense of humor, a remnant of the colorful and psychedelic sixties, Monty Pythonesque even. Hollow Log! That’s the one that really got me.

Yet, from listening to the album, and watching Muir perform with Crimson on a video filmed on the set of Beat Club, it makes sense. Live, he moved around the stage fur-clad like a madman on the hunt, picking up individual percussion instruments, then dropping them to move on to the next while he blew a whistle that hung around his neck.

Whether it’s meant as a joke to list all those instruments, or it’s a musicological / philosophical statement – or both, which is the way I see it (the phrase “percussion and allsorts” is what Fripp uses to credit Muir when time and/or space is limited) – I think it’s great. And hilarious. And all those sounds are certainly an important part of the album.

*

Radio Bean, Burlington VT
Radio Bean, Burlington VT
My current band, Joy on Fire, just played Vermont for the first time. Radio Bean, in Burlington. It is now one of my favorite places to play, and I’d like to thank Brittany of Ivamae, who we met when she was on tour in Baltimore, for setting the show up. By the way, I’m John Paul
Carillo, and I play bass, guitar, distortion pedal, delay pedal, wah pedal, overdrive pedal, micro synth…

Chris plays drums, cymbals, congas, djembe, frame drum, temple bell, jingle bells, seed shell shakers, cowbell, claps, vibratone, …

Anna plays alto sax, baritone sax, tenor sax, soprano sax, glockenspiel, claps, piano, synth, tom drum….

—John Paul Carillo

What Kind of Music is This?

Between sets at Fox & Crow in Jersey City, a man sitting at the bar, near the performance area, said, “How would one classify your music?” He looked like a rock’n’roller in his 40s—he had the bowling shirt with a name, maybe his, stitched in red on the pocket—but it turned out he was also into King Crimson and Miles and a lot of our influences.

“Yeah, we’re not sure either,” said Anna, “but we call it ‘punk-jazz fuzz-rock.’”

This dude, a good dude, cool to talk to, didn’t accept our description. “Is it fusion?” he said.

“I’m afraid of the word ‘fusion,’” I said. “It’s gotten wanky. Fusion has gotten wanky since Miles.”

“We don’t want to call it prog,” said Anna.

“Oh, it’s definitely not prog,” said the dude—though, later in the night, the three of us had a long conversation about King Crimson, who may or may not be prog considering one’s
definition.

King Crimson
King Crimson circa 1972

“Call it 70s fusion,” said Kipp. (I’ve decided the name on the shirt is actually his, not just thrift store happenstance. Somehow, introductions were never properly made, or maybe drunkenly forgotten, though we hope to run into him again, possibly as per this writing.)

“But then it sounds like we do Miles and
Mahavishnu and Weather Report covers.”

“Oh, no,” said Kipp. “You don’t have to do covers. Just keep doing what you’re doing! The way you use saxophone, the way she plays, it sounds like an electric guitar, it takes place of the electric guitar. It sounds like she’s using effects, even though she isn’t.”

Anna smiled.

“Right!” I said. “It just sounds, you know, like we do covers if we say—”

“Call it 70s style fusion,” said Kipp.

Later, during our second set, between our tunes ‘China, North Carolina’ and ‘Slayer Jazz,’ Kipp turned to a friend, who had come into Fox & Crow as the set started, “How would you classify this music?” I heard him say.

*

At another venue, in another state—Test Pattern in Winston Salem, NC—the club’s soundman came onto stage after our set, excited by our newest material. “I don’t think ‘punk-jazz fuzz-rock’ does your sound justice,” said Jenkins. “I think you should call it ‘Cinema Rock.’” I like this, but what does it mean?

photo: Roger Piche
photo: Roger Piche

*

A quote often attributed to Miles Davis, though I’ve heard it attributed to others, and it’s probably been invented and reinvented many times: “There are only two kinds of music: weird music and boring music.” No, that’s not the quote. You know the quote.

*

Come see us in Harlem this weekend: Friday, August 4 at Shrine; Saturday August 5 at
Silvana. Both sets 9-10pm.

—John Paul Carillo

Joy on Fire at The Cloud Club (and after (and before))

We had decided to make a few changes in our set list after walking around the courtyard of Boston’s celebrated and magical Cloud Club. Cloud Club Fire EscapeThe spirit of the place had put us in a different mood. The evening’s events were being held outside, and we wanted our music—at least for the opening half of the set—to cohere with the wild, overflowing city garden we’d be playing in front of. As I walked around the brick paths before the night’s music began, I noticed the artistic touches in the garden’s construction—hobby horses stuck onto iron gates covered with ivy; Greco-Roman plaster heads, also covered in ivy; heads carved from coconuts that sprouted flowers; huge spheres of light that appeared, from a distance, to be floating in mid air—and this feeling of delight continued as the evening’s events began. Cloud Club OrbMali, singer/songwriter/pianist for Jaggery, who had organized the show, began the music with a wonderful song for bells and voice she had written especially for the event (ironically, the metaphorical conceit of the piece concerned weather). Three very good short films were shown. Folk artist Josh Cole passed out percussion instruments as he played his set. Valerie Kuhn’s new cello/violin/vocal project Naked Roots Conducive featured the hilarious lines: “When the Demon comes/It’s time to grow up/When the Demon comes/It’s time to shut the fuck up.” As much as I like these lines, and laughed out loud from the back of the courtyard when Val sang them, I blame Val—or thank her, as the case may be—for what happened next.

Joy on Fire was the closing act of the night, and as we were plugging in and tuning up, Mali ran up to us and said, “It’s going to rain! It may start in an hour, or it may start—” and then we felt the first drop.

The decision to move the show inside was pretty swift. Within ten minutes, the show had changed from a garden party to a basement punk rock blowout. The change of vibe required a change of set, and we stomped into our driving opener, “Le Phant.” It worked, and the energy was good. By the time we got to our closer, “Punk Jazz,” the Demon came, and I stopped the song in the middle to yell at everyone because they weren’t dancing. “This is dance music!” By the time we picked it back up, I had shut the fuck up, and most everyone in the room—including the band (excluding the artist who had been and still was painting a picture of us as we played)—was dancing. So we played one more song—untitled but with the working title “Disco Metal”—as the garden-party-turned-punk-house-show-turned-dance-riot was almost complete.

Cloud Club NightWe were on the road by midnight, headed on Interstate 90 back to the Hudson Valley to demo a new tune with engineer Jesse Melito; to the Hudson Valley, where we’d played two shows booked by our friend Corinna Makris only 24 hours before….

-John Paul Carillo

Joy on Fire at the Storied Grounds of Tompkins Square Park

After seven weeks away from our home in Greensboro, North Carolina, Anna and I finally came home in early July. Looking back at all the good gigging and recording and jamming that Anna, Chris, and I did in the Northeast from May to June, the gig that stands out for me is International Make Music Day, June 27, which, for Joy on Fire, and thanks to Corinna Makris, who acquired the permit (this permit plays an important role in the story), took place in Tompkins Square Park, NYC.

As per circumstances—an early morning uncancellation of the gig due to sunshine after a late-night cancellation due to thunderstorms, Chris’s car being in the shop, etc.—we got a late start, and with the gas generator pull-started and roaring and coughing and spewing exhaust and creating a rhythm all its own while powering our amps, we were set up and ready to play by 2:40pm. A crowd had already begun to form, and in this crowd, beside the street punks, weed dealers, families eating ice-cream, and at least one guy on a unicycle, was a man who worked for the NYC Parks Department. He asked if we had a permit. Corinna was ready for him and brandished the permit. “This is only good to three o’clock,” he said. “You’ll have to shut down by three.” We debated this, but he was insistent. It was now 2:45. With wide eyes we looked at each other. This was surely a lot of set-up and all kinds of other work for a fifteen-minute gig. On the other hand, it definitely created a sense of urgency.

We brought this urgency into our playing and blasted into a stomping version of our opening number, “Le Phant.” By the time we were done with our second tune, “The Spider’s House,” the crowd had grown to twice its original size, photos were being snapped, and people were taking videos and dancing—and we had two minutes left to play. We only have one piece that fits this short format, so Anna switched from alto to baritone sax as quickly as she could, and we played “Punk Jazz,” a tune with a head, a solo, and then the head again, and that’s it.

It was now three. The Parks Department Guy was nowhere to be seen. With the crowd’s encouragement (they knew the score) and to their enjoyment, we kept playing. By the time we made it to “Disco Metal,” the last song in our set, Parks Department Guy, with his arms crossed, was once again part of the audience. Though he insisted on cutting us off as per his badge, he seemed to enjoy what he heard, and when it was all over, the members of the crowd dispersing on their ways to the rest of their New York City days, we gave him a CD.

-John Paul Carillo

A unique shape?

Sam Smith just lost his case for copyright infringement because he stole the tune from Tom Petty’s “Won’t Back Down.” But the controversy’s not over, because copyright infringement wasn’t the controversy in the first place. The real controversy is: Why is “Stay With Me” up for a Grammy at all?

Smith can sing, I guess, but the song shape is boring, and the production is mawkish. Jimmy Page, no stranger to lawsuits of this type, and recently sued by the band Spirit for supposedly ripping off the opening of “Stairway to Heaven,” defends himself in these cases by basically saying “My composition has a unique shape.”

Does this idea — a unique shape — even make sense to your average contemporary listener? Probably not, and that’s too bad….

Here’s a short YouTube video I found overlaying both songs for just the first few bars. Enough to show the similarities and the differences. What do you think?