CURRENTS: Writings by Jessica Williams / rss

Table of Contents

  1. About Currents: my brain on xhtml
  2. The Jazz Cartels: Trouble! I sent it away but it returned after a five-year run in cyberspace
  3. We're in a post-idea vortex: quick! somebody have an original thought beside "no new taxes"
  4. Now's the time: we could conceivably end up like the poor Dodo bird
  5. Beginnings: there can be no happiness without freedom
  6. My research into hypothyroidism treatment: porcine thyroid, and the dreaded filler Avicel
  7. Make a thing, take risks: it's not important what others think of it... just make it, splat
  8. Touch and where it leads: my next CD and what it means for me and my freedom
  9. The End of Money: we're slaves to it. Even the super-rich are enslaved by it. Time to end it
  10. Time to say "ENOUGH": as our planet and our hopes wither, it's time to balance yin and yang
  11. An article by Vandana Shiva: about our never-ending war against the Earth
  12. Just for fun: photos from fans and friends
  13. The Circle: an advanced crash-course in making music and why I do it still
  14. The Eleventh Hour: I need more than two years to live
  15. Aspiring to Oneness: seeking the source of power to change the world
  16. Disassembling the piano: I'm full of opinions and other combustibles... for example, I believe that pianos have too many strings, or at least I did when I wrote this article
  17. Choosing to buy a 7'6" Yamaha Conservatory Grand: it is already changing my life. For the better
  18. How I and my piano have bonded: a sort of diary/love story, I guess
  19. Approaching the piano: How to sit, how to breathe, how to eat, how to get free at the keyboard...an on-going treatise
  20. More Glenn Gould: sitting so low and climbing so very high and speaking to me, through technology, across an abyss of time ... leading me, changing me, teaching me
  21. Mary Lou Williams: her advice to me is one more good reason I'm still here. As women musicians we never forget her legacy and must always revere her profound impact on our art
  22. Mel Brooks has a nice face: British researchers theorize on what Jesus really looked like
  23. The New America: this can not stand
  24. Playing for all the right reasons: Some critics still say Dexter played too many cliches and that his time was bad. Well, I was there, critics. Dexter made us ALL swoon
  25. Miles: "Teo, play that... once... let me hear that once... Teo... Teo..."
  26. Monk: The Monk runs deep
  27. The Monk Runs Deeper: no one deserves another tribute more than he, and I'm just the one to do it ...liner notes to Deep Monk, a release of mine, out now
  28. Doing Jersey with Philly Joe: Philly Joe Jones was royalty, and I was very young, very out there, and very lucky to somehow wind up in his band
  29. My three nights with Tony Williams: playing with Tony changed my life - one of the greatest musicians of all time, and a drummer too!
  30. Life as Contest: all of us famous (sic) musicians live in castles with moats, get $100,000 per performance. This, and other various hallucinations
  31. Songs for a New Century: an important, crystal-clear, transparent album for me and for you and for our collective hopes and dreams
  32. A Musician for all Seasons: What Dr Billy Taylor means to me: my own musical tribute to him
  33. A poem from Andre: a great honor for me
  34. Presenting a wonderful video of Erroll Garner: When I am BLUE, you will find me at this page
  35. Eulogy for Leroy Vinnegar: my tribute to a great musician and exemplary friend, my esteemed associate
  36. Eddie Marshall: such a great drummer
  37. My trio at Yoshi's in Oakland, CA. I always love playing with Ray Drummond and Victor Lewis
  38. Long live Elvin Jones: without him, Chasin the Trane or Vigil or A Love Supreme would not exist. The greatest drummer in the world has left us, but also he left us a legacy
  39. Doing the hang with Dexter Gordon: at 6'5" he was more than a giant in stature. He changed all of us that knew him, all of us that heard him play. He was the Sophisticated Gentleman
  40. Coltrane's light: his A Love Supreme still sustains me after all these years. His words light my path, and his playing lifts my spirit and cleanses my soul
  41. Hypothyroidism, a walk in the dark: feeling dead-tired, old beyond your years? Hair falling out? No appetite but gaining weight? Ears ringing? You may just be playing with a bad drummer, watching too much CNN, or you could have one very serious disease
  42. Ayn Rand: an unhappy soul revealed, as her popularity soars
  43. Marion Hayden: wow, can she play
  44. 60 - The Best Birthday Ever: I've never had a b-day like this! And I have a very special and significant reason to celebrate, and I hope you read this, as it might impact your life too
  45. Crossroads: a beginning or an ending
  46. The Grace of my life: why now? Because I'm ready
  47. I'm Thankful: my web site, my friends around the world, my music, and my future
  48. The exploding chicken style of jazz music: invented and patented by Berklee™
  49. Hope, a dream, and Aiko: the beginning of a new way towards making crystal-clear art, a way of cleaning bugs off of the windshield of the soul
  50. What life is: and there's actually some mystery to all this?
  51. My view: good music should change your life upon hearing it
  52. Another Lifetime: goodbye, 20th Century, and a poem for Keith Jarrett
  53. Trying to Help: how does a mere thousandaire help save the planet?
  54. A Dream I Had: what can I say? We all have aspirations. I used to want to play at the Village Vanguard
  55. The Next Big Step: big ideas start as nebulous concepts and focus into powerful agents of change. Is your music as relevant as you want to believe it is?
  56. Kurt Vonnegut Jr: I know everyone has to graduate. To die. But why him? Why anybody, as he would say
  57. Puppy Days: the colors are getting vibrant. I'm in a cartoon and I like it
  58. People ask me: answers to oft-asked questions. And more about that word gig ... and I use the word word loosely
  59. Jazz: just a word?: it's not about others defining us... it's about us defining ourselves...
  60. Sparks on the dog: those sparks and blue flames may be the universe trying to tell you something
  61. After the JazzTimes "Before and After Test": why it doesn't matter how you play, only how politically correct you are. No apologies. I'm a Mac Gurl, and I don't do Windows
  62. Doug Ramsey: a fine critic, writer, and good guy. I somehow survive the dreaded JazzTimes "Before and After" test...
  63. I'm in a dream: It's my dream and I designed it
  64. Digital Portraits: some Photoshop images that worked out, and a few real keepers
  65. Drawings of mine: rescued by the Wayback Machine, in pen and ink, and not the digital kind, either
  66. My poetry: the creation of a poem can still be an act of defiance, of irreverence, of hope, of protest: it can also be an act of pure incompetence...
  67. More poems: more recent poems, including one I really like for Elvin Jones. As one gets older, one's poetry grows simpler and more direct. And isn't it hard to believe that there are those that at one time made their livings writing poetry...
  68. Jazz is NOT dead: it's not even sick. It's just growing up. I think I was trying to convince myself of something here
  69. Fantasia: letting my Conservatory training sing through me in a language not jazz, not classical, but mine alone
  70. Ali For President: back when we were in love with Muhammad Ali... ok, I was in love with him
  71. Wake Up: there are ways out of the trap
  72. Raw facts, Raw Feelings: women under Islam suffer unimaginable tortures daily, while "feminists" in the West remain largely silent... this is a war against women
  73. Jessica, why don't you come here and play?: I would if I could. The music business doesn't quite work that way. I wish I could...
  74. Forgiveness and Freedom: Once you realize that your life is sacred and blessed and beyond the judgment of other human beings, you've come awake...
  75. The Leroy Vinnegar Room: my words, painted in florid script, all over the walls in a hotel room in Oregon. Who knew?
  76. The Three Rules of Everything: here they are again, for me and for you
  77. Available to the moment: most instrumentalists aren't available to themselves, the moment, or the audience, much less the Music
  78. Learning by Doing: not all places are the same, but each can teach you something
  79. Illness as teacher: Keith Jarrett inspired this article. It's about feeling bad, and playing piano, and not playing, and growing wiser, and healing
  80. The Garden: one day we're in heaven and the next day we're on hold, waiting to talk to tech support in India
  81. Art by Tuv, Nerdrum, Matta: and a few pieces by me
  82. Our attention: we take on the power and the tone of the things that we try desperately to avoid
  83. God is such a big word: in my hands, in the galaxies, like grains of sand
  84. If you want Paradise: Never serve false masters
  85. Following the Silence: listening closely to silence, the notes start to form out of nothingness. Another attempt to express the inexpressible, and how we can stop making Music and instead let it make itself
  86. Following the lines: they're there to tell us the truth, which way to go, what to do, and when. Mr Trudell knows it. I know it too
  87. If only: we could accept that we are all one
  88. Todd Barkan: it only took 30 years to figure out
  89. i me mine: about selfishness, selflessness, and the balance we seek
  90. Ten Things: Ten of the most valuable things you have
  91. Great moments in Pianistic History: well, I thought it was funny
  92. Web Tips: you don't have to be a super-coder to enjoy the web
  93. Resting up: that's what I'm doing
  94. Stream of Consciousness #1: why didn't I think of this sooner, I can write anything I want to... anything at all... and not worry about being even vaguely coherent
  95. Stream of Consciousness #2: it's obviously a good idea, so I do it again
  96. Where's my sun? Where's my health food? or, how many ways can you prepare dirt and rocks?
  97. Calm Mind: the Dalai Lama is just like you and I. That's what makes his message so important right now
  98. Intimacy: there's different kinds. Maybe the most salient feature of this age is the lack of it. We are measured not by our capacity to fill the world with love but by our ability to fill the bank with money
  99. My Work: I know about my Music and my Truth. The things that I don't know (and these things would fill a LaCie 500 Gigabyte super-drive) I'll leave to the know-it-alls
  100. As close as I get to a "mission statement": it works for me
  101. Build your own web site: the one most positive a musician can do besides play their instrument
  102. The light, the dark: some children fear the dark, and obviously most grownups fear the light
  103. A few recent awards from JazzTimes: it's wonderful to read wonderful things about yourself in the 'zines. And CD of the year? Not to mention TWO in one year? But why was I not notified?
  104. Like Minds: saxophonist Sarah Manning and I talked today
  105. My new band: it doesn't get much better...
  106. Epidemic of Dishonesty: just when you think you've balanced your books: SOP!
  107. What's good, what's not: if we're not entering the dark ages, we've at least entered the dim ones
  108. Watson: dog, familiar, ally, survivor, super-hero, teacher, sentient being, courageous spirit. To me he's all that and more
  109. A Little Dog: There is no value in anything if there is no love. The grieving, the epiphany, and the beginning of inspiration. My friend is dead, and I'm not the same. I'm in pain, but I'm better for knowing him
  110. A NEW Little Dog: Meet Ruby. I think that dogs are pretty amazing, and much more advanced than us in some ways. Well, at least more advanced than me
  111. Truth and Lies: I had written this piece, and then removed it from this site, only to find it posted on someone else's site. It's the article that won't go away. So I brought it back home
  112. Women Musicians: a compilation. There's less and less of us, so we can't quit now. If you're not on this list but should be, let me know
  113. Music for powerful times: for our lives, unto our deaths, this is OUR MUSIC. We give it freely to the world to promote and foster harmony and freedom and peace
  114. A friend writes a book: contributions to the sacred feminine (so rare in yang, patriarchal culture and philosophy) from authoress Linda Underhill
  115. Jazz and codes of conduct: we play this Music in the shadow of giants. All ghouls who feed on the souls and the gifts of others, read this
  116. My favorite things: Saps at Sea by Laurel and Hardy. John Coltrane playing Too Young to go Steady, or Miles Davis playing It Never Entered my Mind
  117. The emotional plague: WR's theories were so controversial that he has been virtually eradicated from Western culture. He must've been on to something big
  118. Battle of the mini-titans: they might think it's hip to put other people down. It just makes them look little. And if they read this, they'll surely know who they are
  119. About playing, about being: it's pure will and absolute purpose without the arrogance of ego. It's Bruce Lee walking on the ceiling. With ego, you fall on your head
  120. About challenges, gifts: existentialists, take note. When we question ourselves we break the trance of the true reality, the one that goes on when we sleep, when we eat, when we simply do anything at all without trying
  121. Love in the Age of Flu: a short complaint about flu and why it's no fun anymore
  122. About performing: since grand pianos always open to the right, your right side is the side that audiences will always see. So this is the side of your face that will break out before a concert. This has no bearing on pianos, but seems to be a universal law, like gravity
  123. We the Living: jazz is not always healthy for me. I know it. I complain too much, so other people know it too. But I won't eat food I dislike and I won't play music that makes me ill. Now I stop complaining and start making the new stuff, the stuff I love. It's all about getting back to the garden
  124. The Rebirth of America: this is the land I love, and how that love affects what I do and how I do it
  125. Senior discounts, Fujitsu 100 Cold, Dead Fingers, more: I am more than a 12-minute experience. It takes me at least 15 minutes to say hello properly and find the soft pedal
  126. Links-i-like: building web sites, css mania
  127. Links-i-like reloaded: music sites, record labels (be very afraid), lots of music resources
  128. Jessica reviews Jessica: this gives one an opportunity to experience Sartre's nausea without actually reading Sartre. This is probably a good thing. I review three of my own performances and get good grades
  129. Things to do, tunes to play: bandstand amnesia no more. A list
  130. Things we would rather forget need to be remembered, for our own sake and for the sake of future generations. Especially now. The Holocaust through one person's eyes - a discourse by Elie Wiesel - don't let anyone tell you it didn't happen, or that it can't happen again
  131. Taking responsibility for the Music: some MORE things I'm not supposed to say
  132. We've been thinking: how nice it would be to have our country back
  133. Age: how you can stay clean in your dotage
  134. The Dragon Lady is Back!: why working at the most famous jazz club in the world might not be such a good idea
  135. Belief: better believe in yourself. You're cooler than you think
  136. I Have a Dream: the great speech of Rev Martin Luther King, worthy of frequent listenings
  137. Old News is better than bad news. Basically, a potpourri of writings that have been de-blogged and are now consigned to the morgue
  138. About CURRENTS: is it a blog? What's a blog? Who cares?
  139. Legal, copyright: boring but true