Look who’s walking on the moon

In Kodungallur and Latur and Dibrugarh, they don’t know of Van Halen or U2, Beyonce or Bobby McFerrin, Bob Dylan or John McLaughlin, John Denver or Kid Rock. Heck, they don’t even know the Beatles.

But they know Michael Jackson. And they know he is dead.

It was the day we were afraid to wait for. It was the day we thought would never come. Or if it did, that it would go away without bothering us.

It was the day the music died.

It was the day the Internet almost died.

It was the day that has completely washed away the tears that are being wept for Farrah Fawcett.

Hacks have been ready with MJ’s obit for nearly a decade. Which explains why the ones you read in The New York Times and The Washington Post are so meaty. All they needed to add was a paragraph on the day and time of his death, and whisk up a soapy ending.

Around the world, MTV and radio stations have not stopped playing MJ since the news of his death. Even in death, it is a festival like never before for the pop icon who blurred the boundaries of everything society has struggled to define demographically – gender, colour, religion, age, crime, morality…

He was perhaps the most hunted celebrity of all time – in fact he demonstrated, with his life, the glory and the anguish of celebrity. He was condemned to enjoy no private moments – his life was the original Truman Show.

But, because he is gone, we shall not remember MJ for his foibles – for the black skin turned white by willful vitiligo, for the prosthetic nose that slipped off during an interview with one of many media vampires, for his uncomfortable marriages and his alleged paedophilia, or for his escapades around Bahrain in a burqa. Those shenanigans will soon be forgotten, for MJ was a rarity among celebrities – he was the soul of innocence, a child all the way. As NYT put it, he was “the Peter Pan of pop music.” It is only a matter of technicality that he died at 50.

And, most of all, we will remember him for his music. And for being a performer without parallel or peer in mediated history. Proof, apart from everything else in his life, lies in the musical legacy he leaves behind – ten albums, of which six were bestsellers from the moment they hit the shelves.

Many a child growing up in the 1980s has attempted the moonwalk, or the patented anti-gravity lean he used in the music video for Smooth Criminal, and blanched at the urban legend that Jackson broke a few ribs just dancing. And many of us, now with more grey hair showing than Jackson ever did, may still feel a hot flash of adolescent adrenalin coursing through our tired veins when we listen to Thriller, or Bad, or Beat It.

As with the great legends of music who never die, Michael Jackson shall live on.

MJ can never be mourned, only celebrated. May he go in grace.

And we, for our part, shall remember the time when we fell in love.

Fête de la Musique 2009 – Friday, June 19

Fete de la Musique, celebrated every year by Alliance Francaise, is a great get-together for Bangalore musicians. We got some of our best opportunities here, especially in the late 1990s, when we were a band with more teething troubles than teeth.

This year, the festivities are spread over the weekend, and we have a fantastic slot on an evening otherwise reserved for classical music. This is the second episode of our Jazz Yuppies Double Bill, after that fantastic evening at B Flat. And, yes, Mister Nate Linkon and his sax will join us.

Friday, June 19. 9 pm onwards.

Rendez-vous du vendredi soir!

ThermalAndAQuarterly: This month’s question

If you haven’t received the latest issue of ThermalAndAQuarterly, our no-spam newsletter, view it here.

In every issue, we carry a sort of quiz question under ‘That Day This Morning’. This month’s question: Which TAAQ song opens by celebrating a little bird that is becoming increasingly rare in Bangalore?

Jazz Yuppies – Double Bill with the saxy Nate Linkon

Our good friend Nate Linkon (he of the smokin sax) is breezing by just in time to play a sensational double bill with Thermal And A Quarter. We will be reheating some microwaveable goodies and performing some smoking new ones at the Jazz Yuppies Reunion Tour with Nate.

Happy World “Birthday”

Happy World “BirthDay”
- My problem is with remembering birthdays
- My problem is with expressing genuine happiness in it being someones birthday.
Its kind of a weird thing, making that birthday wish phone call, even to the best of friends. Its one of those eeeeeyho type things, and theres so much relief once you are done with [...]

Posted in: Uncategorized by rajeev 1 Comment

Happy World Birthday, Mr Rajagopal

Rajeev celebrates World Environment Day by adding a new year to his impressive portfolio of World Birthdays. Join us in wishing him many more.

And if you really want to make him happy, make him rich!

Love you mushily, Old Man. And may you always keep the beat.

London Diary – Great Scotts!

The stars coordinated my good fortune to attend this gig at the legendary Ronnie Scotts. Thanks to a certain saxophonist who once graced our sound: the good Nate Linkon who’d caught his idol with the same quartet in Frankfurt and had blocked two tickets at the legendary Ronnie Scotts in Soho, London.

Guitars, gurus and fireflies in the rain

Long trek. 500-buck tickets. Rain. Famous names, but fresh contexts. A few hundred denizens of our fair city added all that up and found some (sum?) reason to make it to Fireflies to watch the Guitar Gurus play. Happy to say I was one of those, for it was some gig!