Tarmac Meditations

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Sunny Side of the Street

October 11, 2010 By longrun Leave a Comment

Gates of Eden

Took the camera with me on a short run. Passed these gates and stopped. What was it? The quiet behind the gates, the sense of promise in the sunrise reflected? Maybe it was the fading of the garden  as winter approaches. It seemed worthwhile to stop a moment and wonder.

Filed Under: Photography Tagged With: morning, road trip

Tarmac Meditations #27: Be Here Now

October 11, 2010 By longrun Leave a Comment

July 24, 2010

Another day another run…

longer today, a little stronger.

Felt like the old days when everything was up in the air,

when “the truth was found to be lies”

and all a guy could do was put down the phone, lace up and head out.

Footfall and breath, gateway to silence

in the ghost-like slide time between then and now.


Times passes by so fast there

 

July 28, 2010

Ran yesterday. Worked out. Same today. Consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds said someone who wasn’t a runner and/or someone with too many summer clothes that no longer fit (perfectly). Just sayin’…


July 31, 2010

Worked out on Monday. Ran. Worked out on Tuesday. Ran. After noon. Worked out this morning. Ran. Finished before 6am. Got on a scale for the first time in two years. ‘Nuff said. Be here now. Ram Dass said that.



Photo Credit

“Time Passes By So Fast There” LeonidasGR @ Flickr.com. Creative Commons. Some Rights Reserved.

Filed Under: Running

Still Hard Times

October 10, 2010 By longrun 1 Comment

Must have seemed like it would go on forever, whatever it was. Seems like it still might do that but not in the way man intended. Somethings simply go back to nature in their own time.

Filed Under: Photography Tagged With: Highway 101, Lilliwaup

Time

October 9, 2010 By longrun Leave a Comment

Time and tide? What was this place? Why does it sit unused when in many other places it would be prime real estate-on the corner, parking in the back, high ceiling, view of the water. Might have been a restaurant, maybe – hell, I don’t know. There was no one around to ask when I took the photograph. It feels like waiting to me; something that once was, now waiting to become what it will be when  the elements align and someone new brings the story of their own journey into the empty space.

Filed Under: Photography Tagged With: dreaming, Highway 101, Lilliwaup

Jammin The Blues

August 30, 2010 By longrun 3 Comments

“The blues, to me, is like, being very sad, very sick…or in the church, being very happy. There’s two kinds of blues: there’s happy blues, and there’s sad blues. I don’t think I ever sing the same way twice. I don’t think I ever sing the same tempo. One night, it’s a little bit slow, the next night, it’s a little bit brighter – it’s according to how I feel. I don’t know – the blues is sort of a mixed-up thing. You just have to feel it. Anything I do sing, it’s part of my life.” – Billie Holliday

Jammin’ the Blues is a 1944 short film in which several prominent jazz musicians got together for a rare filmed jam session. It featured Lester Young, Red Callender, Harry Edison, Marlowe Morris, Sid Catlett, Barney Kessel, Jo Jones, John Simmons, Illinois Jacquet, Marie Bryant, Archie Savage and Garland Finney.

The film, quite simply, looks like Jazz itself.

Smoke curling from the cigarettes, to the ceilings of dark rooms, the simplicity and purity of the music endures, it speaks for itself, to anyone who will listen. What it says and the why of it are for each listener to discern, because as much as each player brings his life to the instrument and the music, so too each listener. A communion of sorts, a moment in the dark becomes a path to a light of recognition; of pain and loss and above all else, of enduring, surviving, carrying on, of love.

The movie was directed by still photographer Gjon Mili, He was the first to use electronic flash and stroboscopic light to create photographs that had more than scientific interest. “Time could truly be made to stand still. Texture could be retained despite sudden violent movement.” he once said.

The film, shot by his friend Robert Burk, employs these techniques to enhance the music. Norman Granz was the technical producer for the session as he was for so much of what has become the music we know as jazz.

href='http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2v_Y3Pbiims

Filed Under: Tarmac Meditations

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