Archive for January, 2006

Dowggie Woof! c”,)

Saturday, January 28th, 2006

Kung hei fat choy! c",)

It’s my year this year. It’s the year of The Dog. And I’m the dowggie.

So… woof! c",)

My Solo cd is now sold out. =)

Well… three copies remain in Mag:Net Katipunan. Only problem is, Mag:Net Katipunan seems to have misplaced those three copies. Sigh. =)

Five hundred copies in two months. Not bad. =)

Especially for a jazz album. =)

I figure that the main reason for being blessed thus is: our intent was to share the gift, share the love.

Seek ye first indeed. =)

Of course, the timing of the whole thing also contributed a lot to sales. Christmas season and all.

That my father, the legendary Krip Yuson, and I are an unbeatable tandem also has a lot to do with it.

Yeah… None of this would have been possible without my Dad and his godlike powers. He he he. =)

Eh, my Dad’s a great man, eh. He he he. =)

Confucius say, "He who ha hee ha, hee ha."

=D

Onward and upward. =)

Woof. c",)

Tungkol po sa Jazz Festival 2006

Sunday, January 22nd, 2006

Meron po akong isang pangalang nakaligtaang banggitin. Pangalan po ng isa pang taong nakasalimuha ko sa entablado kagabi… si Senyor Joel Galang. Mahal ko po kayo’t labis ko pong ikinagalak kayong katugtog.
   
  Lab yu. c",)

Aya Yuson <ayuson@yahoo.com> wrote:
  Kagabi po, may isang naganap na jazz festival. Ang petsa po noo’y ika-21 ng Enero, taong 2001. Sa Harbor View, CCP complex, po naganap. =)
   
  Sa aking pananaw, maganda ang pangyayari kagabi. Habang totoo pong hindi nagwagi sa larangan ng salapi, wari ko po’y namayani ang diwa ng pag-ibig.
   
  Panalo. =)
   
  Ngunit meron din naman pong mga bagay-bagay na pwede po sanang nagawan ng mas mainam na pamamaraan. Ang isa na po roo’y ang mas magandang pagdaloy ng agos ng mga pangyayari. Marami-rami rin po ang mga taong mga naguluhan sa mga oras at lugar na tutugtugan. At sana rin po’y nagkaroon ng mas maraming mga salumpuwet/silya’t lamesa sa harapan ng kabilang entablado… ‘yung entabladong tablado. He he he. =)

  Datapwat ‘yan po ay mga bagay na sa pananaw ko po’y pwede pang linisin, sa pananaw ko rin po’y sa huling pagkwekwenta, powtah… Panalo, mga kapatid! =)
   
  Panalo!
   
  Koyang, isa kang maestro sa ‘king pananaw. At mahal na mahal ko po kayo. Alam niyo naman po siguro ‘yan. =)
   
  Sandra, naaninag ko ‘yung paghihirap mo nung ika-20 ng Enero. Sumasaludo po ako. =)
   
  Kapatid na Johnny Alegre Affinity… este… Johnny Alegre lang pala… ang ganda ng ginawa mo sa set ng Affinity, brad. Maganda. =) Maganda ang paglikha. Maganda ang pagutugtog. Ganda ng tunog mo. Kintab din ng noo mo, tulad ko. Yab yu, kapatid. Mwah. =)
   
  Kapatid na Lakshmi, nagandahan po ako sa ginawa mong mag-isang pagtugtog ng bajo de arco (bass solo). Sa totoo lang po, habang ‘di ko po masyado kursunada ang pagsasasakay sa instrumento, nais ko rin pong sabihin sa ‘yong ikinagalak ko pong marinig ang bass solo mo kagabi. Yab yu, kapatid. =)
   
  Sa mga nakatugtog ko po kagabi — Kat Agarrado, Allen Umali, Relli de Guzman (tama ba apelyido?), Nikki Cabardo, Dave Harder, Richie Quirino, Butch Silverio, Deo Arellano, Emcy Corteza, MIkah Azurin, Ron Eisenstein, Myra "Skarlet" Romero, Ron Nethercutt — labis ko pong ikinagalak ang makatugtog kayo. Mahal na mahal na mahal ko po kayo. At siguro nama’y alam niyo naman ‘yan. Yab yu. Mwah. =)
   
  Sa isang mang-aawit na kadeadmahan ko kagabi… mahal ko rin po kayo. Nawa’y kapayapaan at pagkakaibigan ang mamagitan sa ‘tin. Oks ang pag-awit mo. Pinakinggan ko. Maganda. (nahanap mo ang susi at nahuli mo ang tamang panahon sa pagpasok… he he he) =)
   
   
  Sa lahat ng mga narinig, naramdaman at nakita kong mga taong nag-alay ng pag-ibig sa kapwa’t sa Musika, mahal ko po kayo.
   
  Panalo po kayo. Panalo po tayo. Panalo tayong lahat. =)
   
  Muli kong sasabihin… datapwa’t hindi nagwagi sa salapi, sa wari ko po’y namayani ang pag-ibig kagabi. At sa pananaw ko po’y ‘yon na ‘yon.
   
  Raaaaaaaaaaakkkk ‘en Rrrroooooooollll!!!
   
  … ay, teka…
   
  jazz nga pala ‘ko….
   
  Pag-ibig at tawanan,
   
  Aya c",)

From The Philippine Star

Saturday, January 14th, 2006

Part parody, part catharsis
PLAYBACK By Tinnie P. Esguerra
The Philippine Star 01/15/2006

Some get their kicks from champagne. Some get a kick from cocaine. But jazz guitarist Aya Yuson gets a kick from Coltrane, as well as all things sacred and profane.

It’s that same reverence for the jazz idiom (coupled with a healthy dose of irony and wry humor) that shines in his recently-released all-instrumental album, aptly called Solo.

Part parody, part catharsis, Solo glistens like a polished gem – taking off from where Joe Pass, Wes Montgomery, Tuck Andress and other jazz guitar titans left off.

With a handful of traditional jazz standards as his medium, Aya does a high-wire act as he deftly navigates through knuckle-busting changes while simultaneously juggling single-note runs, piano-like chord voicings and walking bass lines over a steady groove.

But listen more closely, and you’re bound to hear snatches of familiar melodies all cleverly injected in good taste. Aya’s penchant for the crazy and the absurd echoes throughout the CD’s 11 tracks. Who else would have the gall to deconstruct such immortal favorites as Autumn Leaves or Summertime by throwing in some musical quotes from Mr. Suave, Mission Impossible, Enter Sandman, Living La Vida Loca or even Stairway to Heaven, or actually create a full etude out of the familiar Selecta jingle?

But Aya gets away with it and makes the whole romp one refreshingly swingin’ affair.

It’s a work that’s been long overdue, conceived even prior to his tenure with the ground-breaking WDOUJI (Witch Doctors of Underground Jazz Improvisation) quartet, and further crystallized and refined in solo settings and transitory duos (including the short-lived Strange Fruit) before he joined the JazzPhil Ensemble late last year.

"My basic concept for this CD was to take the most mediocre tunes and through jazz alchemy, make them worth listening to," he explains, with the same levity and eloquence that permeates his playing. "There’s no such thing as a kitschy tune, but there is such a thing as a kitschy musician. So, I set out to prove it. The second reason was that it was meant as a Valentine’s gift for someone, but that relationship didn’t work out either. Because of that, it’s actually the most heartfelt thing I’ve ever laid down on tape, so to speak."

To date, the reviews from the jazz community and the jazz guitar mafia have been good. "The most flattering reaction so far (not to toot my own horn), was from Agnes Arellano – who is Mishka Adams’ mom," he recounts. "She said, "Wow! It’s like Bill Evans, but on guitar!" When I heard that, I was extremely flattered."

The resemblance was not coincidental. A rabid Bill Evans fan, Aya best describes himself as "a piano player playing a guitar," which explains his fondness for pianistic voicings or contrapuntal ideas. "Everytime I hear an idea," he explains, "I try to harmonize it as a piano player would, which means a lot of minor seconds, stretch fingerings, cluster voicings and fourth voicings. That’s why I really prefer listening more to piano and horn players, instead of guitar players."

Ironically, it took only a few hours to record all the tracks. "It was all a spur-of-the-moment thing," Aya elaborates. "It was done in (session drummer) Boyet Aquino’s room. When I recorded this album, his studio wasn’t up yet. But he had a computer in his room. I just dropped by his place. He asked me to lay down a few tracks, and after that, I asked him if I could record my own stuff."

All tracks were played on his custom-made archtop, patterned after a Gibson Johnny Smith model and modified with a Kent Armstrong pickup. "The first five tracks have no plug-ins whatsoever. No preamp, no nothing, just straight to the computer," he adds. "The remaining tracks had a bit of reverb, delay and compression."

Aya initially toyed with the title: "QUEER EYE FOR THE JAZZ GUY." "But my dad (STAR Lifestyle columnist and distinguished literary giant Krip Yuson) didn’t want to," he laments. "He was the one who funded the project. He thought that people might get the wrong idea. But for the people who know me, it’s obvious that it’s just a joke."

Going solo guitar-wise may be a piece of cake for Aya, but dealing with an independent release has its own concomitant issues. "It’s currently available at Magnet, Katipunan, but I’m planning to consign at Conspiracy, ‘70s Bistro and at BigSkyMind," he enthuses. "I kinda enjoy flying under the radar in a sense. When you do that, you’re not subject to greed or temptation, as much as you would if you were a record slave.

One of my mottos has always been: the essence of business is making a profit, but the essence of music is sharing the bounty."

"Can I be controversial?," he pleads. "I’ve been saying this for years, and I’d like to see this in print. The masses are NOT baduy. Record company executives are baduy.

Radio executives are baduy. The only reason why people consume crass commercial crud is that it’s being force-fed to them. I don’t agree with the theory that the market is buyer-driven. That is a fallacy. The music industry is totally seller-driven, and it’s driven by greed."

But how does one demystify such an esoteric discipline as jazz anyway?

"The most I can hope for is that people will respond to something heartfelt," Aya intones. "I think one of the great myths of jazz is that you have to understand it to appreciate it. I disagree. Yes, it can be cerebral, but you don’t have to understand the music intellectually to appreciate it. It’s supposed to hit you in the gut."

2006

Sunday, January 1st, 2006

May this be a year of mastery.

I turn 33 in four months. A good year for crucifixion, perhaps?

Ahhh… to be a happy animal or a suffering god? =)

May I drink whatever cup is given.

Master?

Yes, master?

Be calm, master.

Yes, master.

Woof. c",)