Showing posts with label The King of In Between. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The King of In Between. Show all posts

Friday, August 10, 2012

Garland Jeffreys Kicks It Out @ Rodeo Bar @ Tonight @ 10pm


GJ by Thomas Pryor
Tonight, I’ll see Garland Jeffreys rocked the house with his full band at The Rodeo Bar on 27th Street and Third Avenue. The guy’s songwriting is an inspiration to me.

His unwavering sprit never fails me. Here’s one example.

In June 1992, I drove my brother, Rory, upstate to a program. Not for the first time. He and I tried hard to become closer as brothers, but we couldn’t make it work. I loved Rory but didn’t know him. At the same point, I was having my own personal problems. I came home to New York City miserable.

The next day, I read Garland Jeffreys was giving a free concert at Summerstage in Central Park. I felt low, I almost didn’t go. But that morning, June 20th was Rory’s birthday and he and I shared affection for Garland’s music and I had never seen Garland live. Early in the show Jeffreys started “The Answer,” from his new album at the time and the words went right through me heading towards Rory, giving me the shivers.


Can't play the victim,
Got to put an end,
To this self-fulling prophecy.
Give it up, and kick it out,
Lift yourself up just like a dancer.



Garland played for two hours. The cops were dancing by the third song. It was a gorgeous day and people whirling around sent the dust on the floor of the space into the air where it stayed for the whole show. I mailed Rory Garland’s new record on cassette the next day.

Tonight's show at Rodeo Bar starts around 10pm.


Coney Island Winter

GJ by Thomas Pryor

GJ plays Jersey by Thomas Pryor


by Amanda Thorpe

Garland at High Line @ Thomas Pryor




Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Good News for Stoops to Nuts & Garland Jeffreys ~ Get The Vote Out!

The next “City Stories: Stoops to Nuts” storytelling show made “Time Out” Magazine’s this week.



Thank you, Cornelia Street Café and “Time Out” for your support!

Our Holiday show is next Tuesday, December 13th @ 6pm @ Cornelia Street Café.

Please come down for a special holiday performance with gifted tellers and marvelous songsmiths: Barbara Aliprantis, Kelly Wallace-Barnhill, Carl Kissin, Mary Lee Kortes, Thomas Pryor, Elizabeth Rowe & Amanda Thorpe. Admission is $7 & that includes one free drink.


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More Good news!



Garland Jeffreys terrific song, “Roller Coaster Town” is nominated as the Coolest Song in the World 2011 on Little Steven’s Underground Garage. If you’ve heard Garland’s new album, “The King of In Between” you know Garland is back, and this song is one of the best on the record.

Please go to the link and vote for “Roller Coaster Town.” Garland’s coming to your town, get ready.

Saturday, October 22, 2011

New York Skyline From Top of One World Trade Center




Made plans weeks ago to tour the World Trade Center construction site. Not feeling too swift was not going to stop me. Biked to the location and met my friends.
We saw everything below ground and skyward from the 73rd floor of One World Trade Center. At times it was surreal, then it turned majestic. Especially, when we climbed to the crow's nest with the wrap around view of New York's Skyline. Thank you, Garland Jeffreys for writing this beautiful song. Here's a peek. More coming during the week.

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Garland & Savannah Jeffreys "Let's Play Two!"




Imagine its’ 60 years ago, you are a ballplayer on the Brooklyn Dodgers. You're one game out of first place on the last day of the season. 
You’re in Ebbets Field playing a double header with your arch-rivals the New York Giants. If you win both games, you are going to the World Series against the hated Yankees.
Now imagine you are the veteran Brooklyn pitcher who’s seen and done everything, twice.  The manager has mixed feelings about letting you pitch today but you will hurl the second game if the phenom rookie pitcher shuts the Giants down in the first game.
The rookie pitches a dandy four hitter, leading you to a pitching duel with Hoyt Wilhelm’s knuckle ball. You not only win the second game, you do it with a walk-off double in the bottom of the ninth.
Friday night at High Line Ballroom, Savannah Jeffreys, the phenom rookie rocked the first half of the double-header. Brooklyn won 6-1.
Walking in from the bullpen, Garland Jeffreys took the mound for game two and shut the Giants down 1-0 with 12 strikeouts and zero walks. 
Manager, Claire Jeffreys, said, “I consider myself the luckiest Jeffreys on the face of the earth.”
Friday night I was sick with strep throat but got myself down to High Line for Savannah & Garland’s show. Slept all day Saturday, but it was worth it.
Savannah Jeffreys has young Carol King’s confidence both in voice and in her terrific piano playing. Garland is Garland. His shows, music and storytelling always kill me. He leaves his heart and soul on stage. If you love Springsteen, see Garland live.  Their talent muscle is cut from the same cloth.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Alchemy Hour With Garland Jeffreys


Alchemy hour is the magical time of the day when the ocean waves swell perfectly for surfing.

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Yesterday, I had two alchemy hours. Early evening, I visited Alchemy Hour, a beach inspired boutique located at 101 Baker Street in Maplewood, New Jersey. My friend, Janean Harvey, practically grew up on the shore. Alchemy Hour merges her eclectic artistic skills with her love for cozy and vintage clothing. Janean collaborating with her equally talented mom, Helen, has created a coastal cool space. The store is brilliant and if you’re in or near Maplewood, hang ten!

Skateaway.

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After touring the store, I headed to Garland Jeffreys benefit for the The Community Food Bank of New Jersey in South Orange. My second alchemy hour. Garland with his long time friend and musical partner, the magnificent Alan Freedman on guitar, sang, played, laughed and told stories for a long spell. Listening to one of my musical heroes perform his catalogue in this intimate setting knocked me out. We were close enough to play catch.

Garland’s on a roll. He has a hit single, “Coney Island Winter,” and a brand new album, “The King of In Between,” that’s received universal rave reviews including a knock out appraisal from the The New Yorker.

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“Watch the skies!” Garland is coming to your town.

Yesterday, I hit two home runs. I visited a talented young lady’s art/business space and soaked up the passion and love she’s devoted to her new store. Afterwards, a wise man who’s travelled many roads picked up a guitar and entranced a crowd. Every time I see Garland perform I leave wonderfully tired with a shit-ass grin on my face.

Hi Folks, the next City Stories: Stoops to Nuts storytelling show at Cornelia Street Cafe this Tues @ Sept 13th @ 6pm.
Our artists: Leslie Goshko, Jim Hawkins, Bernie Libster, Jessie Murphy, Thomas Pryor & Debby Schwartz.
Admission: $ 7 including one free drink, a good deal and you'll leave with a smile.
Hope to see you there! be well, Tommy

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Tuesday, May 3, 2011

The King of In Between ~ Garland Jeffreys



Saturday night in Chelsea, I saw one of my musical heroes, Garland Jeffreys perform at the Highline Ballroom. Garland opened with "Coney Island Winter," then ripped through his terrific new album "The King of In Between," interspersed with a dozen gems, including "35 Millimeter Dreams,""Spanish Town," Hail, Hail, Rock & Roll," and blew the place away with "96 Tears" as an encore. Lots of dancing in the aisles.

The new tunes have the spirit and strength of Garland's songwriting on"Ghost Writer," "Escape Artist," & "Don't Call Me Buckwheat." It was a pleasantly exhausting night.






















Thursday, April 21, 2011

Garland Jeffreys, New York Storyteller ~ Loves His Town

photo by Danny Clinch


“Twenty two stops to the city, twenty two stops…” Garland Jeffreys voice kicks in joining the drum’s anthem beat on “Coney Island Winter,” his terrific new single from his forthcoming album “The King of In Between,” a lament and love letter to New York City. (Release date: June 7th through Luna Park Records).

This week, I wrote about my musical hero, Garland Jeffreys, in my "City Stories: Stoops to Nuts," column in Our Town and the West Side Spirit.

When I was 8, I saw Mickey Mantle in the RKO movie house on 86th Street. The Yankees were promoting "Safe At Home," a silly film made right after the 1961 record home run year. Before the movie started, the whole team filed into the theatre and lined up on the right aisle. I was positioned perfectly with my father. Elston Howard, I could've touched and Mantle right next to him I could've reached with my sneaker. Howard saw my face with my mouth open looking at Mantle, Ellie leaned over and whispered, "Say hi, kid, he won't bite." I remained in my trance. Howard and my father laughed, and a moment later the Yankees marched up to the stage took a bow and left the place through a fire exit.

I swore if I ever met another one of my heroes, I'd start talking and not stop. This wouldn't be very productive if I intended on writing about it, so I used one of my childhood tricks to shut up, I put my whole fist in my mouth and let Garland talk. This was difficult but rewarding. We hung out in a cafe for an hour. No surprise, he is a nice fellow.

Brooklyn born, Manhattan native, Garland Jeffreys, is a New York City storyteller who uses the medium of music to lay his story down. His introspective autobiographical songs effectively use New York as a character. Listen to “New York Skyline,” “Ghost Writer,” or “Wild in The Street.” You cannot separate him from the city or the city from who he is. Even when the city is not mentioned by name you sense it in the words and tone of the characters he paints in his songs.

Jeffreys’s cultural background is black, white, and Puerto Rican. He grew up (22 subway stops from the city) in Sheepshead Bay in a multi-ethnic neighborhood where his was the only family of color in his local Catholic church. This racial diversity underlines and at times punctuates his music. Over coffee last week in a First Avenue cafe, he told me, “Growing up in that multi-national neighborhood in a large and loving extended family was a blessing. It readied me for the world. I’ve always mixed well with people.” In the restaurant, I saw evidence of this when he warmly greeted the wait staff with waves and a smile. Easy to see why Garland counts Bruce Springsteen and Lou Reeds as close friends.

Garland is married to Claire Jeffreys, a writer and his business manager. Their talented daughter, Savannah, 14, pens her own music. Being there for his family is the central reason Garland’s been out of the musical limelight for several years. “I did not want to be on the road all the time; I wanted to watch my daughter grow up.” He also wondered whether or not he should re-engage with the business of making music. After a long period of retreat, he came to see that in the end, performing is the most important facet of his musical identity, and little by little the performing led to a desire to get back to writing new material.

Though prejudice wasn’t flagrant in my family, the subtleties were there mostly fed by fear of the unknown. Hearing Garland’s stories, seeing the city through his eyes, visualizing his “Racial Repertoire,” gave me a desire to engage other cultures and consider the race issue from both sides. This readied me when I went to work for city government and comfortably adjusted to the cultural diversity there.

In June 1992, I drove my brother, Rory, upstate to a rehab program. Not for the first time. He and I tried hard to become closer as brothers, but we couldn’t make it work. I loved Rory but didn’t know him. At the same point, I was having my own personal problems and about to change jobs. I came home to New York City miserable. The next day, I read Garland Jeffreys was giving a free concert at Summerstage in Central Park. I felt low, I almost didn’t go.

Garland played for two hours. The cops were dancing by the third song. It was a gorgeous day and people whirling around sent the dust on the floor of the space into the air where it stayed. I wrote my first story when I was 49, eight years ago. The seed to write the story was planted in Central Park at that show.

Garland Jeffreys & the Coney Island Playboys headline the Highline Ballroom next Saturday, April 30th. Tickets are available. His live performances are legend, don’t miss it.