Thursday, December 21, 2006

IMAGINE!

Imagine
Your best year yet
Imagine
the possibilities.

Season's Greetings
and a Happy New Year!

JOB ANNOUNCEMENT


JOB ANNOUNCEMENT
THE FOLLOWING POSITION IS AVAILABLE

PERCUSSION INSTRUMENT REPAIRER needed in Oakland. Repairs tunes & maintains percussion instruments. 2 yrs/exp. Reqd. verifiable job ref.; 8am-4pm M-F; $14.74/hr.

THIS NOTICE IS BEING POSTED BECAUSE AN APPLICATION FOR PERMANENT LABOR CERTIFICATION HAS BEEN FILED FOR PERCUSSION INSTRUMENT REPAIRER ANY PERSON MAY RPOVIDE DOCUMENTARY EVIDENCE BEARING ON THIS APPLICATION TO THE:

Certifying Officer
Employment & Training Administration
Division of Foreign Labor Certification
700 North Pearl St. Suit 510
Dallas, TX 75201

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

HISTORIC CALYPSO AT ITS VERY BEST



There was no more cosmopolitan island in the world than Trinidad. Once under Spanish rule, it became a British colony. African, Spanish, French, British, American, even east Indian influences coalesced into the music.

Then came New Orleans jazz. And then came some of the most insightful social commentary found in any music anywhere. Ever. It was an intoxicating musical cocktail that sometimes reached the mainland (as when Rum And Coca Cola became a hit or when Harry Belafonte popularized the music), but the REAL calypso music was rarely heard outside the islands or the Trinidadian enclaves of New York or London.

Now Bear Family transports you back to Port of Spain, Trinidad during Carnival in 1938, 1939, and 1940...http://www.bear-family.de/tabel1/product/bcd16623_e.htm

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

VANDEN'S PAN PASSION HEADLINES CRABFEED


The Vanden Pan Passion steel drum band will be part of a Music Program during a crabfeed on January 19, at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Catholic Church on Dover Ave in Fairfield.

The menu will include: Fresh Crab or 1/2 a roasted chicken, Fresh Pasta, Oven-Baked Garlic Bread, and Handmade Garden Salad, dessert & No-host bar. Vanden's Jazz bands are also included in the live musical entertainment.

The cost is just $35 per person. There will be raffles, silent auctions and a 50/50 raffle too. Please contact me immediately by email or phone to reserve your tickets: Leslie Smith 707-446-7677 or cell 707-365-9942.

Monday, December 04, 2006

ARNOLD DUPREY - THINKER, CREATOR, MAN, DEPARTED

Arnold Duprey, avid panman and former Bay Area resident, left us on Saturday. What a loss of a great thinker, music player, composer, arranger !

A native of Trinidad and Tobago, Arnold was also a competent soccer player, earning the sobriquet of "Samba Man" for his clever and resourceful approach to the game. He was a strong believer in "no man cyar run faster than the ball" and also "better to let the opposition come and take the ball off your foot than to make a stupid pass and give it to them".

Arnold was exceptionally strong in musical harmony. He would apply chords to a tune and almost give you a sound theoretical explanation of why he uses this chord instead of another workable one.

Despite all this seemingly theoretical machination, Arnold would never lose sight of the fact, as he explained to us over the years, that.. "music is not chords, music is colour".In conversation and discussion about the affairs of the world..be it politics, economics, global warming, North-American supra-nationalism, neo-colonialism (Caribbean style,) Arnold was never to be found wanting, or not 'au courant'.

His knowledge and insightfulness were impeccable and a pleasure to witness.Dumb me, I should have stayed closer to him to help me with my music ..I have been around some very good and some brilliant musicians in my day..but few have better demonstrated, despite all theirknowledge, that music is still an art form..and there are more instances of chords in the wrong places than wrong chords.

Arnold was a joy to be around and we have all learned from him. He will be missed.

RIP

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

PHIL HAWKINS' Pan Combo: 8 Saucy Pan Jazz Tunes


PAN COMBO is another classic creation by Phil Hawkins, the author of PAN RHYTHM and CARIBBEAN JAZZ ENSEMBLE. PAN COMBO is a book of original music for steelpan.

There are eight tunes that vary in style and difficulty (Calypso, reggae, cha cha, rhumba, soca, samba and funk). The book comes with leadsheet arrangements of every tune that include the melody and chord symbols as well as a separate chart for drummers. Some of the tunes also offer a separate bass chart.

In addition, there is a play-along CD featuring Phil Hawkins on Pan, and a group of world-class studio musicians (some of Andy Narell's former side men) playing the exact arrangements featured in the book. The CD includes a rhythm section of piano, guitar, bass, drums and percussion. The play-along version of each tune contains no melody and is perfect for practice or performance as a backing track.

Finally, the book offers performance notes that highlight important concepts for pan players, bassists, drummers and percussionists. Also included are form and style notes as well as drum and percussion transcriptions to make sure your rhythm section sounds great.

Can you believe this? Did he cover everything or what? This guy left no stone unturned in making sure you sound as masterful as the best pan players in the business.

Available now at Kakesa.com!

Monday, October 30, 2006

Panhandlers with John Santos, Sunday Nov. 19, 2pm



Hello pan enthusiast!

As you might notice, we have officially completed our transition to our new web site and email addresses, so we're happily 100%CSM! Many thanks to band alum Paul Manno for helping with all the hassle, and please update any bookmarks to http://www.csmsteeldrums.com.

We are thrilled to welcome renowned Afro-latin percussion performer, educator, and producer John Santos as our featuredguest artist at the CSM Theater on Sunday, November 19, at 2:00 PM.

Take a look at http://www.johnsantos.com, and you'll be as excited as we are! Here are the details:
When:Sunday Nov. 19, 2:00 PM (doors open 1:30 PM)
Where:College of San Mateo Theater (Bldg 3) 1700 West Hillsdale Blvd., San Mateo
How Much:$5 General, at the door, or in advance: check to "CSM Steel Drum Band" PO Box 6442, San Mateo, CA 94403

Hope to see you there!

CSM Panhandlers

Patrick Arnold returns as Pan Trinbago president

T&T Guardian, 30th October 2006, by Sean NeroPatrick

Arnold has returned as president of Pan Trinbago, despite a “vicious” election campaign against his leadership style. Speaking yesterday after the results were announced, Arnold said: “My first order of business is to undertake damage control.

My opponents have done the organisation a grave injustice by the method of their campaigning. This was not a general election. They treated it as such. They hurt the nation’s panmen and the panmen returned the favour.”

At the organisation’s annual general meeting and tri-annual conference at the ballroom of the Crowne Plaza hotel yesterday, panmen overwhelmingly showed their confidence in Arnold’s brand of leadership by giving him another term.

He beat his former vice-president Keith Byer by a margin of 182 to 54 votes. Yesterday’s victory for Arnold has created history as he now becomes the longest serving leader of Pan Trinbago, having been at the post for four consecutive terms.

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

Network, Celebrate, Listen to Steel Jam tunes, & Sail the Bay


Bay Area BusinessWoman Networking Event & 14th Anniversary Celebration!

Join more than 100 women who will gather to network, build alliances, meet new friends, and make valuable contacts at this informal event hosted by the Bay Area's only periodical for local women entrepreneurs.

Music provided by Mary Spalding and Steel Jam (6-7 PM).

Since 1993, Bay Area BusinessWoman has reflected and served a powerful, supportive, and involved community of highly active women and offers resources, value, and benefits for those looking for news and information not found elsewhere -- all with a fresh perspective -- in print, online, and face-to-face.

The fee is $25 in advance ($20 for BABW Members) and $30 at the door. Call the Bay Area Business Woman office at (510) 654-7557. Be sure to bring plenty of business cards!

Date: Thursday, October 19
Time:6:00pm to 9:00pm
Location: OCSC Sailing School, One Spinnaker Way, Berkeley Marina

Parking:Free parking on site

Sailing: If you wish to be teamed up for a short sail in San Francisco Bay, arrive by 4pm and wear tennis shoes with non-marking soles. You will be geared up by OCSC. Please call our office to reserve your spot. No sailing experience necessary, OCSC will provide your captain and crew!

Monday, October 16, 2006

VANDEN HIGH'S PAN PASSION


Check out Vanden High School (Fairfield/Vacaville) Pan Passion. The class is steadily growing since it started in 2004. The group is planning "a taste of the Caribbean" in Feb/mar as a fundraiser. Food,music, dancing etc. inside at a local church.

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

NEW PANNIST LOOKING FOR A BAND

My name is Lisa Edwards and I am currently a first year student at Haas School of Business, University of California Berkeley.

I played steelpan for eight years as a teenager and most recently I practiced over the summer while in Trinidad.

I would like to join a steelband in the Bay Area because I love playing. Is there an opportunity to join your band and if not, can you give me contact names for individual/steelband members who play?

Thank you

Lisa Edwards
lisa_edwards@haas.berkeley.edu

SILICON VALLEY BUZZIN' AGAIN

USA Today 9/12/06

Silicon Valley and the San Francisco Bay Area, the world's technology hub, is starting to buzz again for the first time since the dot-com bust. The Valley's infamous start-up community is coming back, thanks to Dabble and its contemporaries.

New powerhouses such as Google, eBay and Yahoo are driving growth and hiring workers. Stalwarts such as Hewlett-Packard and Oracle are reporting stronger sales and posting higher stock prices.

Evidence of an uptick is everywhere. The amount of venture capital invested in Internet companies has jumped almost 75% since hitting bottom in 2003. The Valley unemployment rate has dropped to 5%, down from 9.3% during the darkest days. The median home price is $700,000 and rising. Party invitations are going out — and the buffets once again include shrimp.

It's a welcome change after five tough years of layoffs, bankruptcies and empty office parks.

Friday, September 08, 2006

MICHELLE HAWKINS TRIO AT BLEU GINGER

Who: Michelle Hawkins Trio featuring Ed Johnson, guitar and Phil Hawkins,drums/percussion

What: Jazz, Samba, Bossa NovaWhen: Sat., Sept. 9, 7-10pmWhy: Great Music, Great Food

Where: Bleu Ginger

Directions - Under the about us link on the bleu ginger website Bleu GingerRestaurant & Lounge there is a map, which is actually the best way to figureout how to get there.101, take 237 east (toward Milpitas). As you drive on 237 there will beCalaveras. Blvd. exit (take that exit). As you drive on Calaveras you will come to a fork in the road (stay to the left) and then turn right at S. AbelRd. Keep a close lookout after you come to the fork in the road, the rightturn for South Abel is hard to see. The right turn on S. Abel will be at thefirst light after the fork in the Rd.

Bleu Ginger is located at:90 South Abel Rd.Milpitas, Ca(408) 719-9998

To get a preview: Audio Clip 1 , Audio Clip 2

See you there,

Michelle

Tuesday, September 05, 2006

Pan Tuner Leroy Williams in Oakland

Pan Tuner Lery Williams will be in Oakland Sept. 5-7. If you need to get your pans tuned or blended you can reach him at 510 677 5240.

Saturday, September 02, 2006

BRAND NEW MAPPO LEAD, CASE AND STAND FOR SALE


Brand new Mappo 'C" Lead with case, adjustable/collapsible tripod chrome stand, mallets and instruction book; all for just $1250 total. Call Harry Best 510 222 1123, to check it out personally. Super deal!

PAN TUNER RESIDENT IN BAY AREA


Pan players in the Bay Area will be delighted to know that we now have a highly skilled pan tuner resident in the Bay Area. His name is Joe Kelly, a former apprentice with Panyard, Inc. Joe has been in the Bay Area for about a year, and has set up shop in South Francisco. He works with California Percussion and has g big plans which include opening a shop/store in downtown SF. For your tuning needs, Joe can be reached at 415 672 3846

Wednesday, August 16, 2006

Steeljam does Calypso Twist

Steel Jam
performs at the Grand Opening of
Calypso Twist
(a brand new store filled with bright, colorful, and whimsical home accessories, gifts, furniture, and original art)

Fri., Aug. 18, 5-8 PM* and Sat., Aug. 19, 12-3 PM*

1357 N. Main St., Walnut Creek, CA 94596, www.calypsotwist.com.

Come on by, do some shopping, and have a listen!

(*Performance times changed since a previous postcard mailing

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

ANDY NARELL AND SAKESHO AT PEARL'S SF


Andy Narell makes his annual trek back home to the Bay Area, this time with his dynamic jazz quartet Sakesho. They will perform live at Jazz at Pearls, 256 Columbus Ave. (Pacific), San Francisco. Friday, Saturday, Sunday, August 18-20. Shows at 8pm and 10pm. Don't miss this one!!!!

Thursday, July 20, 2006

Phil Hawkins at Agenda Lounge


Here's another opportunity to hear Phil
and the group "live". We'll be playing cuts
from the cd and unveiling some brand new
tunes.

This performance features:
Phil Hawkins - steelpans, percussion
Nelson Braxton - bass
Dave Flores - drums
Michelle Hawkins - flute, vocals
This Saturday

7:30-9:45pm
FREE w/DINNER

Agenda Lounge
399 S. 1st Street
San Jose, CA 95113
club info: 408.380.3042
www.agendalounge.com

Come out, have a drink, hear some music
and get your own copy of the new cd "H2O"
(downloads available online at: www.itunes.com)

Thanks for the support!
Phil

cds available at:
www.pnotemusic.com

Wednesday, May 31, 2006

STEELJAM AT THE ZOO


STEEL JAM performs:

--Friday, June 2, 5:30-8:00 PM, at “ZooFest for Kids” at the San Francisco Zoo.

Parents, children, grandparents, and friends are invited to attend the Zoo’s most popular annual family fundraiser. Have your face painted, witness wild animal feedings, enjoy a wide array of delicious treats and, of course, listen to Steel Jam tunes --all while supporting the Zoo.

For directions and/or questions regarding ticket prices, email tjiskav@sfzoo.org.

Hope you can join Steel Jam for a fun evening at the Zoo!

Thursday, May 18, 2006

ANDY NARELL: CORRECTING CRAIG COPETAS



An open letter to Craig Copetas by Andy Narellposted May 18, 2006

Dear Recipient - The following is a letter I wrote to Craig Copetas in response to his article in the Bloomberg News. Please feel free to pass this on or publish it.
All the best
Andy Narell

Dear Craig:
I finally saw a copy of your Bloomberg News article last week ('Shell Disowns Oil Drums as Panmen Gather for Soccer World Cup'). I have to say that I was appalled when I read it, and not only because you attributed a quote to me that was so inaccurate that I can only suppose that you made it up.

As Terry Joseph of the Trinidad Express accurately summed up in his letter to you, the entire article is misleading, and "appoints to Shell Oil an outrageously exaggerated role in the creation of the steelpan." I wonder why. I think my 'quote' is a perfect of illustration of the point I'd like to make.

Here goes - "According to American jazz musician Andy Narrell(sic), Shell oil-barrel pans made between 1946 and 1967 are as renowned and desirable as the Cremonese violins of Antonio Stradivari, Nicolo Amati and Giuseppe Guarneri. Even the barrels made today are in high demand among pan players."

Wow. In fact what transpired was, you asked me if there was any particular oil company's drums that made the best steelpans, and I explained very clearly that to my knowledge there was no connection between any oil company's drums and the quality of a steelpan, that the critical factor is the skill of the tuner, that tuners search out certain qualities in the barrels and that they come from a variety of sources, and that to my knowledge none of the oil companies have ever taken an interest in developing a barrel that would be better suited to making steelpans.

I also remember telling you that if you were trying to establish a link between the oil companies and the creation of the steelpan that you were barking up the wrong tree. I suspect that your research bore that out, which is why you had to go to such extremes trying to establish a connection between Shell barrels and good pans, like attributing this outrageous quote to me. Or by interviewing people like William Rosales, who supervises the manufacture of barrels at Shell.

Obviously he has spent zero time trying to develop a better barrel for the making of steelpans, as evidenced by the quote "Let me state for the record that our used drums are disposed of properly and that Shell health and safety regulations prevent the use of empty drums for anything but Shell oil products." And yet you closed your article with another quote from this guy - "I know we make the best musical oil drums in the world."

By the way, who but an ignoramus on the subject of steelpans would refer to these instruments as 'musical oil drums'? How about this one, Craig? "A few miles up the road in Port of Spain, beneath the shade of the big breadfruit tree at 147 Tragarete Road, a Shell executive in 1946 made history's first steel drum from an empty barrel of tractor lubricant bearing the company's distinctive clamshell insignia."

A Shell executive invented the steelpan? Did I hear you right? Pray tell, what was the name of this Shell executive? Later in the piece you bolster this lie with another fiction: "Sixty years ago, Shell bankrolled the invention of the modern pan drum." This of course is backed up by nothing, but as you say, "Shell executives in Trinidad suspect the company's documentation for both (the pan and its inventor - Ellie Mannette) was lost when the government nationalized the oil industry in 1974," so anything's possible if we follow your line of research.

Just to clear my own conscience again, I'd like to remind you that I told you that Shell, like many other companies, signed on to sponsoring a steelband (The Invaders) in the 1950's, and had no direct involvement with the invention of the instrument. But that was just me talking after all. You obviously have more reliable sources.

How about the story of 'the barracuda'? According to you, 'Mannette named the world's first 55-gallon Shell drum "the barracuda." It was last seen in August 1946, stuck in the high branches of the breadfruit tree. "The big kids beat me up and stole barracuda because it made a better sound than their drums,'' Mannette says. "They threw it up in that tree and I wasn't going up there for it.'' Now it happens that I have also heard Ellie tell the story of 'the barracuda'.

In fact I recorded him telling it and it was subsequently transcribed by Peter Blood and published in the Trinidad Express. So I find it really offensive that you would distort the point of the story, saying first of all that he named the 'world's first 55-gallon Shell drum "the barracuda".' Was it the first 55-gallon Shell oil barrel (I hardly think so), or are you again trying to bolster your story by implying that the first pan was made from a Shell oil drum?

This is another of your baseless imaginings, but I suppose if a Shell Oil executive invented the pan as you say, it stands to reason. Or is your point that this pan was of superior quality because it was made from a Shell barrel? You're wreaking such havoc on the actual events I can't be sure what your point is. Besides the fact that you're misquoting Ellie to suit your version of the story, you missed the whole point of his anecdote.

In the early years of the steelbands (before Shell and all those other wonderful companies got involved as sponsors), the bands were like gangs. They were extremely competitive and there was quite of bit of fighting between them. So Ellie had made a pan that sounded so beautiful he called it 'the barracuda' and a rival band attacked his band, stole it and put it up in a tree in their neighborhood and dared him to come and get it if he wanted it.

It's a great little story, revealing so much of what it was like to be a panman in those days, but somehow in your hands it becomes another anecdote about Shell barrels. I could go on and on, but I suspect you get my point by now. I also suspect that you think that you can get away with this kind of shoddy 'journalism,' pick up your check and move on to the next subject, that nobody reading your piece cares that much about steel drums anyway.

It's an article for a business magazine after all. Well I've got news for you. You hurt a lot of people with this crap you wrote, and it got reprinted in a lot of newspapers. Ellie Mannette has dedicated more than 60 years of his life to the development of this instrument. I myself have been playing pan for 45 years and my entire working life has been devoted to playing, composing for, and teaching this instrument.

Your libelous and misleading piece has done us both harm, not to mention the legions of others not quoted in your piece who have equally devoted their lives to this artform. There was a beautiful and fascinating story there for you to research, and had you been on a genuine quest for that story you could have written about how Ellie, Spree Simon, Bertie Marshall, Neville Jules, Tony Williams and the others created the instruments that make up the steelband, about how the greatest acoustic musical invention of the 20th century was born in Trinidad, created from oil barrels by a bunch of young guys who had nothing more to work with than hammers and imagination.

Instead you decided to write a piece about Shell Oil, and you ran roughshod over the real story. I'm sorry I spoke with you and got implicated in this folly. I do want you to know that I intend to circulate this letter as widely as possible.

If nothing else, the interested folk in the pan community will know that I responded to your outrageous lies. Sincerely, Andy NarellP.S.: For those of you who want to read the piece to which I refer in this letter, the link is:http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=email_us&refer=culture&sid=aLgt3I23Kbck

Thursday, April 20, 2006

STEEL JAM AT OAKLAND ZOO


Steel Jam performs at the Oakland Zoo Spring Health Fair 2006
“Active Lives, Healthy Bodies”
Sat., Apr. 29, 10-2 PM


Tour the Zoo and enjoy a variety of health-related activities:
·Health screenings
·Live music (Steel Jam from 10-2 PM)
·Brief talks from physician ambassadors
·Demonstrations on healthy cooking from Chef Leslie James
·Games and crafts for children
·Educational stations set up around the Zoo
· Botanical walking tours

Join us for this fun and healthy day at the Zoo! For more information, call
510-632-9525 or visit the Zoo’s website at http://www.oaklandzoo.org/.

Tuesday, April 18, 2006

CSM PANHANDLERS HOUSE WARMING


Hello pan enthusiast!

May we present, the CSM Panhandlers!
We're still working on changing our domain name so that our emailaddress will reflect it, but the big news is that the Panhandlers have a shiny new home!

We've pulled up stakes and officially made the trek across the bay to our new digs at the College of San Mateo. Like new brides, we've filed the name-changepaperwork at the county courthouse, gotten new driver's licenses, are still trying to get used to writing our new signatures on our checks..

So, in order to thank CSM for their generous hospitality, to introduce ourselves to our new neighbors, and last but certainlynot least, to express our gratitude to our long-time supporters, we invite one and all to a 100% FREE concert at our new beautiful home auditorium a week from this Sunday.

This ticket price (again, $0) should offset the cost of hopping in the biggest, gas-guzzlingest car you can find, and loading it up with everyone you know for a lovely Sunday afternoon filled with free music. And roti (unfortunately not free, but still delicious) from Ma's Caribbean Restaurant!

We're excited to have as our guests Bay Area sax legend and great friend of the band Danny Bittker, and the 1st-8th grade steel drum band from the Nueva School in Hillsborough.*

Sunday, April 23, 2:00 PM* FREE!* College of San Mateo Theater (Bldg. 3)* 1700 West Hillsdale Blvd., San Mateo

Hope to see you there!- Panhandlers

Friday, March 31, 2006

CSM PANHANDLERS AT CARNAVAL 2006 KING/QUEEN SHOW


The CSM Panhandlers will be performing a jump up set at this exciting competition to select the Carnaval San Francisco 2006 King and Queen. The King and Queen will reign over the 28th Annual Carnaval Parade and Festival, to be held on Memorial Day Weekend, Saturday and Sunday, May 27 to May 28, 2006.

The event takes place at Sweet's Ballroom, Oakland1933 Broadway, Oakland, and starts at 8pm.

TOM MILLER AT OXFORD


Caribbean swings into Oxford

OXFORD — Musicians know, “Sometimes you find your instrument, and sometimes your instrument finds you.”

When Tom Miller was an undergraduate percussion major at the University of Akron, he’d barely heard of a steel drum when the school began one of the first such programs in the Midwest.

Now he’s “one of the most significant composers of steel band music today,” according to Chris Tanner, director of the Miami University Steel Band.
Today and Saturday, Miller will join the M.U. ensemble for its spring concert series and a celebration of the band’s new compact disc, “Simple Pleasures.”

“I did not plan to devote my career to the steel drum when I graduated,” Miller said. “But after I graduated, I thought it was a good time to explore the music scene on the West Coast.”
He moved to Los Angeles, and in addition to working with symphonies and playing the drum kit for bands, Miller fell into a circle of Caribbean musicians.

“I thought it was just another tool to be marketable in a big city,” he said.
But because of his education, he soon found himself doing a lot of session work for television and film.

“There were some amazing Caribbean players,” he said, “but they all played by rote and in the sessions, they needed someone who could read music.”
The pans started taking up so much of his time that he got more serious about it, eventually making several trips to Trinidad to learn from the musicians there, to give him some street credibility.

“It kind of snuck up on me, but I finally decided to pursue the steel drums as my career,” he said.
Among the things he learned from the Trinidad trips was not only to play by ear, but also to pick up on the unique rhythms of genuine Caribbean playing.

“There’s a different feel, a different swing,” he said. “Some of the intricacies of that I wasn’t getting here because I wasn’t immersed in the Caribbean culture.”
During his three-day residency at Miami, he will impart some of those street smarts to the band there, what he calls “one of the premiere ensembles in the U.S.”

Tanner said that the band will play selections from “Simple Pleasures,” the band’s third compact disc and the first one to exclusively feature original music, including two Miller compositions and three Tanner compositions.

“For the first time, we recorded right here on campus,” Tanner said. “The technology has come so far that we don’t have to go to a recording studio. We recorded it in our practice room and saved ourselves a lot of money.”

Concerts will take place in Hall Auditorium, Oxford Campus, 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday.
Admission is $7, $5 for Miami students, and all seats are reserved. Tickets for the event are available at the MU Box Office, (513) 529-3200.

Friday, March 24, 2006

PHIL HAWKINS RELEASES NEW CD H2O! PHABULOUS!

My wife once said to me indignantly: “Can’t you play something else? It’s Andy, Andy, Andy…” Well she’ll be happy to know there is something else now: “It’s Phil, Phil, Phil…Hawkins, that is.”

Phil just dropped his new CD entitled H2O and already it’s lighting up memories of the early glory days of Andy Narell’s evolution in the San Francisco Bay Area. Andy’s absence from the Bay has been felt, but his disciples are blossoming and the panjazz is alive again in the Bay.

H2O is a mostly instrumental album that showcases Hawkins’ incredible talents as a composer and steel pan player. His extensive background as a jazz drummer is reflected in the interactive nature of the music. Hawkins’ arrangements seamlessly merge his passion for improvisation with a genuine respect for traditional Caribbean, Brazilian and Afro-Cuban grooves.

Andy’s influence on Phil’s music is evident but that’s only as the originator of that style I like to call the ‘BayPan’ sound that is present in the music of Bay Area pannists such as Pan Ramajay’s Tom Miller, and Derek Smith.


But, enough about Andy. What Phil has done in H2O is brought his own sweetness and originality to that genre. Phil is prolific, and his music is exquisite. Here’s what the music critics are saying about Phil and H2O:

“[Phil Hawkins’] music is incredible; it's imaginative, deep, fun, well arranged, and a fascinating blend of musical cultures. And . . . his band burns!”
Greg Murai - Faculty, The Jazz School, Berkeley, CA

"A cool mixture of caribbean, jazz and latin music in which Hawkins' steelpans star."
Rhonda Holman - The Eagle

"Hawkins' soloing is fabulous and worthy of note."
Lisa Rogers - Percussive Notes Magazine

In addition to his talents as a pan player, Phil is also a composer, publisher and educator. Originally from Topeka, Kansas, he earned a Bachelor's and Master's degrees in music at Whichita State University.

He currently teaches World Music and MIDI and Digital Audio courses at Mission College in Santa Clara, CA. Phil's publishing company P. Note sells his compositions for steel band and several books on rhythm and pan.

Phil is currently working on putting together a full pan program for the South Bay.

Get H2O now!

Available at these sites: http://www.pnotemusic.com/, www.kakesa.com, www.panramajay.com

Monday, March 13, 2006

New Mappo 'C' Lead Chromed For Sale


Brand new, built and tuned by Desmond 'Mappo' Richardson, one of the most gifted builders and tuners of steel drums from Trinidad & Tobago.

The sound is awesome! Comes with FREE case, mallets and an instructional booklet for beginners.

This price tag is generous for the quality of this pan.

This is a standard, professional instrument tuned in A440. It is 23 inches in diameter with a 7-inch skirt length and beautiful chrome finish.

If you'd like to see it and check it out, call 510 222 1123.

Saturday, February 25, 2006

HARRY BEST & SHABANG! IN RIO VISTA


Harry Best and Shabang1 entertain residents and guests at the Trilogy Development in Rio Vista, Saturday Feb. 25. Check our calendar at SHABANG.US for upcoming public performances.

STEEL JAM IN HILLSBOROUGH


Steel Jam performs this Sat., Feb. 25 & Sun., Feb. 26…

--1:30-4:30 PM, Open House at 225 Roblar Avenue, Hillsborough
Steel Jam entertains potential home buyers as they view this beautiful property!

Monday, February 20, 2006

MARY BURNLEY LEAVING FOR OREGON


Not sure which is more newsworthy but here goes: Mary Burnley, pannist and bassist with the Soca Sisters is leaving the Bay Area for Oregon, and she has a lovely set of Panyard cello pans (three-pan configuration) with cases, covers, stands, mallets, and stand bag for sale.

She is open to any reasonable offer. She can be reached at 510 684 8999 or by email: socasisters@comcast.net.

Mary has been a part of the local pan scene for almost 20 years. We will miss you Mary!
Hope the 'Sisters' find another fine woman to complete the trio.

Saturday, February 18, 2006

Orinda Pan Progress

L-R: Debbie henson, Sandy Lendall, Yvonne Lefort, Mike Bernhardt and Dick Davis at the Winter Pan class in Orinda's Community Center. The class is taught by Harry Best.

Monday, January 30, 2006

Walnut Creek Pan class in session

Diablo Demons get Hot working on 'Evil Ways' in a winter class session at Walnut Creek's Civic Arts Center Shadelands campus. Class runs every Wednesday, 7:30-8:30pm. Class is taught by Harry Best. Beginners welcome.

Sunday, January 01, 2006

Pan, Coconuts Make New Year Right


We had a great gig down in Noyo Harbor at the Wharf . The power was out and the owner thought he would have to cancell, but being a steel band has it's advantages, like not needing electricity,, also dinners went off without a hitch because the kitchen runs on propane, they rented a generator for some lights in the kitchen and bar area,, and the coconuts rocked the house untill 1;00 am by candle light.

The place was packed, i dont think it could have been better if we'd had power, maybe the vocals suffered a little without microphones, but i don't think any one noticed. We hit the 12;00 down beat with Auld lang syne and half way through switched to a faster salsa version,, followed up by Shake Sonora, what a great way to end 2005 and start 2006.

Cheers and happy new year every body,,,,,,,,Hang Pan

Kevin and Coconuts.