Tuesday, 1 July 2008

TV review: Happy days of vintage TV chefs

After a decade of increasingly intensive TV food - Jamie, Nigella, Gordon, Rick, Peta et al - there's a lovely antidote on Monday night, on Sky's Food channel.

Long before sex was routinely linked with cookery, before anyone even thought of revolutionising school dinners, and at a time when using foul language on the telly or, heaven forfend, in the kitchen would have been unthinkable, there were the original celebrity chefs: Julia Child and Graham Kerr.

In their heyday, people were still getting used to the idea of television, and had never even thought of olive oil, clarified butter or wine with dinner.

These two cooks brought a sort of can-do glamour to ordinary households - and most decadently, you didn't have to have any intention of cooking their food to enjoy the shows.

Watching Nigella's sultry efficiency in her gleaming kitchen, or Jamie's athletic chopping up and slinging about of food can be distinctly unrestful.

You always feel challenged or reproached in some way. Whereas with gushing Graham, and matronly Julia, the experience was undemanding and reassuring, but often inspiring as well.

Food TV reticulates vintage programmes from the pair, either well worth a half hour's pause before the late news.

Julia, you can watch purely for the emphatic way she says butter - "b-wu-ttah!" - which now seems grandly subversive, since in this country it's becoming the saturated fat that dare not speak its name.

She bustles about her kitchen like a bossy chook, her voice a deep, rich cluck, her figure nourished by a lifetime of very good food indeed.

She has what would nowadays be regarded as a terrible television manner and low performance skills. But she is the real deal, and that's what shines through. She is one of the great pioneers of adventurous modern cooking, and to watch Julia is to watch history.

Graham is more akin to the modern showbiz chef. He seemed a bit much in his day, twinkling and gushing, his mouth constantly a moue of rapture, whatever morsel he inserted in it, his cheekbones reaching for the sky. He said you could feel his food in your metatarsals.

I didn't know what metatarsals were, but I was always happy to take his word for it.

You also get a nice frisson of national pride watching him, for Kerr's Galloping Gourmet franchise of TV and cookbooks went global - but only after he had been discovered here, by the infant local telly folk.

And sometimes, as with this Monday, Food TV splices in an episode of our other old cooking heroes, Hudson and Halls.

The impact of these sparkling, bickering chefs on still-conservative late-70s-to-mid-80s New Zealand was immense. It wasn't just the food, though that was daringly exotic.

It was that they were both openly gay. We simply weren't used to seeing openly gay people on the telly. Certainly not to taking them seriously. The nearest we'd got was the obligatory camp character in the odd British comedy.

But these two, though they sent themselves up at times in a gently camp fashion, weren't on for comic relief. They were on because they could cook, and had the personality to demonstrate their techniques with elan. The humour was almost incidental.

David Halls would play up the camp thing a little, shrieking and venturing the odd double-entendre – he was virtuoso on "my nuts" this week - while an unseen studio audience rippled with laughter. But the food was such fun.

This week they tackled offal - "ooh, my kidneys!" - and a revolutionary experience it must have been for audiences of the day, after the traditional New Zealand way with offal: lamb's fry fried to desiccation, and armpit-smelling steak and kidney pie, with kidneys like rubber bullets.

Sliced thinly and fried in butter and oil, the three offal dishes were daringly pink in the middle, served with - a gorgeous retro touch - fried toast triangles and a wedding-cake piping of mashed potatoes around the edge of the plate.

And with it, "a light red" - the ubiquitous old Queen Adelaide shiraz, label artfully turned toward the camera.

Housewives of the day didn't know whether to be more shocked and delighted with the campness, or with the fact that Halls would flick spare rice on to the floor and cheat by whacking things naughtily into the microwave while the fastidious Hudson wasn't looking.

It's possible that the most enjoyable thing about watching these old shows is that they were made before we all became so food- conscious.

The presumption was that we wouldn't be cooking and eating these special, rich dishes every day, but just occasionally - the sane and rational defence Wellington chef Martin Bosley always puts up against the Food Police.

In those days, the Food Police didn't exist. The cooking was social, celebratory and wholesome. And no one wrote spiteful women's magazine articles about Julia's weight or Graham's cholesterol. Those really were innocent, happy days.





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Spectrum Vs Dimitri

Spectrum Vs Dimitri   
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Discography:


N.N   
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The Red Paintings

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Cinema Love EP   
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Whispers In The Night   
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Freedom Star   
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Fats Waller

Fats Waller   
Artist: Fats Waller

   Genre(s): 
Jazz
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Discography:


I Got Rhythm   
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   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 23


Greatest Hits   
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   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 14


Aint Misbehavin   
 Aint Misbehavin

   Year: 1990   
Tracks: 20


Fats Waller - The Early Years Part II (cd2)   
 Fats Waller - The Early Years Part II (cd2)

   Year: 1935   
Tracks: 1


Fats Waller - The Early Years Part II (cd1)   
 Fats Waller - The Early Years Part II (cd1)

   Year: 1935   
Tracks: 1


Breakin' the Ice, Early Years I (cd2)   
 Breakin' the Ice, Early Years I (cd2)

   Year: 1935   
Tracks: 1


Breakin' the Ice, Early Years I (cd1)   
 Breakin' the Ice, Early Years I (cd1)

   Year: 1935   
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Your Feet's Too Big   
 Your Feet's Too Big

   Year:    
Tracks: 14


The Joint is Jumpin' (1929-43 RCA)   
 The Joint is Jumpin' (1929-43 RCA)

   Year:    
Tracks: 1


Classic Jazz Archive (CD1)   
 Classic Jazz Archive (CD1)

   Year:    
Tracks: 24




Not only was Fats Waller one of the greatest pianists jazz has of all time known, he was as well one of its most expansively funny entertainers -- and as so often happens, matchless facet tends to apart the other. His inordinately light-colored and whippy touch belied his ample physical cinch; he could swing as hard as any piano player alive or stagnant in his classic James P. Johnson-derived tread fashion, with a powerful left hand hand delivering the octaves and tenths in a hardworking, rapid, seamless stream. Waller also pioneered the use of the pipe organ and Hammond organ in idle words -- he called the pipe organ the "Deity box" -- adapting his irresistible gumption of swing to the pedals and a disconnected right hand patch making imaginative changes of the registration. As a composer and improviser, his melodic invention seldom flagged, and he contributed fistfuls of joyous yet paradoxically winsome songs like "Honeysuckle Rose," "Ain't Misbehavin,'" "Keepin' Out of Mischief Now," "Risque Turning Grey Over You" and the extraordinary "Jitterbug Waltz" to the malarky repertory.


During his lifetime and later on, though, Fats Waller was best known to the macrocosm for his oversized comic personality and guileful vocals, where he would send off up trashy tunes that Victor Records made him track record with his neat combo, Fats Waller & His Rhythm. Yet on virtually any of his records, whether the strain is an evergreen plant criterion or the most shopworn bit of jingle that a Tin Pan Alley taxi could serve up, you testament try a fetching combination of good knockabout sense of humour, foot-tapping cycle and fantastical piano playing. Today, virtually all of Fats Waller's studio recordings stern be base on RCA's on-again-off-again series The Complete Fats Waller, which commenced on LPs in 1975 and was static in progress during the 1990s.


Lowell Jackson Thomas "Fats" Waller came from a Harlem house where his church Father was a Baptist place preacher man and his mother played piano and organ. Waller took up the forte-piano at age 6, playing in a school orchestra light-emitting diode by Edgar Sampson (of Chick Webb renown). After his mother died when he was 14, Waller stirred into the home of piano player Russell Brooks, where he met and studied with James P. Johnson. Later, Waller also received classical lessons from Carl Bohm and the noted piano player Leopold Godowsky. After making his first record at eld 18 for Okeh in 1922, "Brummagem Blues"/"'Muscle Shoals Blues,"" he backed several blues singers and worked as house pianist and organist at split parties and in flick theaters and clubs. He began to appeal care as a composer during the early and mid-'20s, forming a most fruitful alliance with lyrist Andy Razaf that resulted in three Broadway shows in the late '20s, Keep Shufflin', Load of Coal, and Hot Chocolates.


Waller started qualification records for Victor in 1926; his most significant early records for that label were a series of vivid 1929 solo pianoforte sides of his own compositions like "Handful of Keys" and "Shattering Thirds." After finally sign language an sole Victor contract in 1934, he began the long-running, prolific series of records with His Rhythm, which won him great celebrity and produced several hits, including "Your Feet's Too Big," "The Joint Is Jumpin'" and "I'm Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter." He began to come along in films like Hooray for Love and King of Burlesque in 1935 patch chronic regular appearances on radiocommunication that dated back to 1923. He toured Europe in 1938, made organ recordings in London for HMV, and appeared on one of the number one telecasting broadcasts. He returned to London the following spring to record his to the highest degree extensive composition, "London Suite" for pianissimo and percussion, and ship on an extended continental tour (which, unfortunately, was canceled by fears of impending war with Germany). Well aware of the popularity of big bands in the '30s, Waller tried and true to form his have, simply they were ephemeral.


Into the forties, Waller's touring schedule of the U.S. escalated, he contributed music to another musical, Early to Bed, the photographic film appearances unbroken approaching (including a memorable stretch out of Stormy Weather where he lED an all-star band that included Benny Carter, Slam Stewart and Zutty Singleton), the recordings continued to period, and he continued to eat and boozing in super clayey quantities. Years of exhausting alimony squabbles, plus excess and, no doubtfulness, frustration over non organism taken more seriously as an artist, began to wear the piano player down. Finally, after becoming ill during a gig at the Zanzibar Room in Hollywood in December, 1943, Waller boarded the Santa Fe Chief prepare for the long trip back to New York. He never made it, dying of pneumonia aboard the coach during a catch at Union Station in Kansas City.


Patch every buffoon longs to play Hamlet as per the cliche -- and Waller did ingest so-called serious musical pretensions, longing to follow in George Gershwin's footsteps and write concert music -- it likely was not in the card game anyhow due to the racial barriers of the number one half of the 20th c. Besides, granted the fact that Waller influenced a long agate line of pianists of and after his time, including Count Basie (wHO studied with Fats), Teddy Wilson, Art Tatum, Thelonious Monk, Dave Brubeck and countless others, his shock has been rightfully profound.





R Kelly trial: Day Three

LiveDaily Sessions: Joseph Arthur

Ohio native Joseph Arthur [ tickets ] has English musician Peter Gabriel to thank for the advancement of his musical career. After hearing Arthur's first EP "Cut and Blind" in the mid-1990s and the lyrics to "History" in particular, the "In Your Eyes" crooner felt Arthur would do well on Gabriel's Real World Records label and signed him. Just two years later in 1999, Arthur accepted a Grammy nomination for best artistic packaging for his EP "Vacancy."Arthur has hit the tour trail hard with an array of artists over the last 10 years, including Ben Harper, Gomez, Tracy Chapman, Joan Wasser, and R.E.M. When he's not engaged in musical pursuits, Arthur turns his focus to visual art, including his Brooklyn art gallery, The Museum of Modern Arthur, or MOMAR.Arthur is currently wrapping a UK tour in support of his recently released EP, "Vagabond Skies," before playing July dates on both the East and West coasts.