Please visit my sites Queer Music Heritage and OutRadio

Sunday, December 1, 2013

The NAMES Quilt: How to Find an Individual Panel


When you look at the NAMES Quilt in a larger perspective, it is a stunning contribution to our history, and just my talking about it or sending you to some internet links cannot remotely touch the impact, personal and global, of seeing it in person. I saw the entire display in Washington DC in 1988, and...here's the personal...I could not tear myself away from the block of panels that included one for my then-recently departed partner. I sat there for hours.



I've often visited the website of the NAMES Quilt and while it's a wonderful effort, I was left wanting to see larger images of the individual panels. On that site it's difficult to read any but the largest writing on them. In 2012 a project by Microsoft was announced, as a different website set up like a google earth approach. You can see the entire "field" of thousands and thousands of blocks....


And then zoom in on a much closer view....


And finally, zoom closer to the image shown at the top of this page. It's for some of the customers of the Houston bar Mary's Naturally.

What was missing from the Microsoft display is any search ability, but there IS a way to find a particular panel. It's a bit tedious, but it IS possible. It uses BOTH websites and I am sharing the instructions in this blog entry.


First go to the NAMES Project site, to their search page



And, for example, find the matches for "Mary's Naturally" (there are three relevant ones). One of them is block #134. Now visit the Microsoft site


At the Microsoft site there are 103 blocks in a row, so the Mary's #134 would be in row 2.

Row 2 begins with #104, count over to #134, about a third of the way over. Yes, this gets quite tedious if you want something in the vast middle, but the point is, it's doable.


In the Mary's block above, the blue areas are hard to read, but the names are: Rod Ezio, David Oleson, Bill Warren, Dennis Dunwoody, Rusty Virgen, Garry Christofoletti, Joe Bob Law and Shorty Harris.

One more example, Michael McAdory, who died in 1984, was a driving force in Houston in those early years of the crisis in AIDS education and he helped found the KS/AIDS Foundation. An AIDS residence center was named after him, McAdory House. From the NAMES site I found his panel in block 226, and on the map navigated to find it.


Oh, yeah, in 2007 I did a Queer Music Heritage show on "Songs About AIDS." There are many aspects of the AIDS crisis I wanted to cover, the emotional areas of grief, anger, sympathy, the political and social approaches, some of the musical history, and a variety of genres, including musicals and choruses. And you can get a taste of it all in this three-hour show.



Let me indulge in my own personal AIDS memorial. Of course I've experienced the loss of many more friends than shown below, but I want to honor those closest to me, including my partner Wes, who died in 1988.



Monday, November 18, 2013

Matt Fishel Does "Oh, Santa!"


JD: Hello, my name is JD Doyle and I am addicted to the music of Matt Fishel.
Everyone: Hello, JD.

Okay, no, it's not an addiction meeting, but I freely admit I AM addicted to Matt's music, and have been for many years. I've been playing him on my shows for several years now, and in the last couple he began releasing singles from what would become his (terrific) debut album...they all made my personal hit parade and when I knew he was working on that album I got him to promise me the very first interview about it, which you can hear on my April 2013 OutRadio Show. That CD is called "Not Thinking Straight."

But this blog entry is not about that album, but about his special Xmas Single, and again, well, I think it's wonderful. It's a cover of Mariah Carey's "Oh, Santa!" and he wraps around it his usual perfect power pop arrangement, and of course, her lyrics now become (gasp) male-on-male ones...love, Love!





Sunday, November 17, 2013

Garry Novikoff Likes Men



Garry Novikoff likes men, there, I've said it.....or, actually HE said it, and sings it a lot in his new video. Check it out here...



He has other fun songs in his bag of tricks...ask him about "Friend for Christmas," which I'm playing on my December Queer Xmas Music Special (available around December 1st). And I spotted a couple celebrity cameos in the video, like Richard Barone...(as the cruisy guy, which may be typecasting)



 and Tym Moss...celebrating in the crowd scene.





Friday, November 1, 2013

The Vinyl Closet Sings Pink, Black & Blues


I love the genesis of this project, and the resulting CD....and I'm pleased that one of the folks involved, Brett Lock, shared it with me....he wrote me:

I'd like to tell you about an album by 'The Vinyl Closet' which is a re-recording in a modern style of blues songs with LGBT themes.

A brief background of how we came to record this: My musical partner, Ted Brown, and I started off being invited to do a talk for the Gay & Lesbian Humanist Association in the UK on the subject of LGBT representation in early popular music. We played some recording of Bessie Smith and Kokomo Arnold and others, and - to make the talk more lively, since I play guitar and Ted sings - we decided to perform a few of the songs as a novelty. What we found was that people remarked that the old recordings were a little hard to follow because they were so crackly and predated hi-fi recording. The audience preferred it when we performed the songs, so we found ourselves adding more songs to our repertoire and phasing out the playing of the recordings.


The talk soon metamorphosed into a show which we were invited to do around London. It was a natural step from that to record our modern versions with the help of a few other musicians we knew.

The result is here: "Pink, Black & Blues"




Now, as a music historian this is Right down my street, as I've featured many of these songs on a show I did in October 2007, called "Queer Blues." I got a kick out of hearing what they did with so many old blues songs that I admire so much, like Bessie Jackson's "BD Women." (I have to chime in that in the image below I'm fairly sure that's Ethel Waters, and not the song's originator, Bessie Jackson)





But I can do better than just letting you hear one song....if you go to their site
You can not only sample all the songs on the album, but hear a podcast where they present the music, much like the evening events that spawned the album.

And you can buy downloads at their Bandcamp site:
http://thevinylcloset.bandcamp.com/album/pink-black-blues#



****************************
Okay, I'm taking a side trip on this post, but it IS related. Brett Lock also shared with me that he was in a South African band in the late 1990's called One Large Banana, and their 1997 EP included a song he wrote for his then-boyfriend, now-husband, a song called "Cry." Brett says the straight lead singer had no problem with singing the same-sex lyrics of the song.





Thursday, October 24, 2013

Florenze Tempest - Male Impersonator



A drag king of 1912, sort of.

In the early decades of the last century, when people had pianos in their parlors, sheet music was one of the ways music was brought home, and regarding sales, nothing much has changed...performers were used to sell the goods. So their images often appeared on the sheet music covers to attract attention. One of the specialty areas of my collection is sheet music featuring female and male impersonators, and I have just about an equal number of both displayed on my site.

This week I got a new piece of sheet music by a male impersonator, so I want to share it, and it's by one of the most well-known, Florenze Tempest. She and her sister started out on the stage quite young, as a duo, Tempest & Sunshine, with Tempest always playing the boy roles. Under the stage name Florenze Tempest she flourished from around 1910 through the end of that decade, performing in musicals with the appropriate sheet music being sold. I am sharing the five different pieces I own. In the one above, my new acquisition, "I Want a Boy to Love Me" (1912), this plea is done in male clothing. And below "I Love the Ladies" was done just the same, though I think the audience was in on the joke.










Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Nathan Leigh Jones is "Crying Out For Love"


Okay, not sure how I missed the premier of the video "Crying Out For Love" by Aussie singer Nathan Leigh Jones last July, but I want to make amends. The song is from his 2011 CD "Sooner or Later" and they did that song's video in a big way, at a marriage equality rally in Sydney. The lyrics get to the point...and, here's the video.

“Every man and every woman
Black or white or any shade between
Straight or gay, it doesn’t matter
Any faith we do or don’t believe
The one thing that we can’t deny is
Everybody’s crying out for love…”



The entire album is pop heaven, and you can also find plenty of live videos on Youtube to amuse you, and here are some other links...


NLJ Website                  Article on the Video





Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Levi Kreis Releases LGBT Charity EP





My current OutRadio show for September features a special hour-long interview with Levi Kreis, and his interviews are always a delight, this is our fifth one. And I've just done a blog post plugging the show five days ago....But got some very cool news about a special release. And I don't usually just grab from a press release, but it covers it so well:


So, you can get this very cool song X8, at the Bandcamp page, and I love that site as it allows you to contribute more than the asking price, a nice thing for people to do, for this charity. The song features UK rapper QBoy, and this is a great combo.


And, yeah, I'm not above using sexy photos of our guys to keep your attention just a bit longer. If sex sells, this is a good time...:)