Happy New Year 2008!
Channel Frederator Blog
I hope everyone has a great 2008!
-Floyd Bishop
Sean McCracken’s Birdworld
Stephen M. Levinson’s Blog
My good man Sean McCracken showed me a video of his called Birdworld yesterday. It’s a 50 second short, from start to finish created in 10 hours. It’s an interesting idea I think can be taken beyond these 50 seconds.
Watch Birdworld!
The video was created and submitted for an animation festival/contest, so please take a gander…..followingwitha5starratingandputtingsomenicecommentsinthecommentbox… *exhale*…if you please of coarse! It would be greatly appreciated if you do.
Enjoy!
Hank Jones > Groovin’ High
Kathleen Loves Music
Hank Jones
Groovin’ High
Produced by Fred Seibert
1. Algo Bueno
2. Anthropology
3. Sippin’ at Bells
4. Blue Monk
5. Groovin’ High
6. I Mean You
7. Jackie-Ing
Hank Jones: Piano
Sam Jones: Bass
Mickey Roker: Drums
Thad Jones: Cornet
Charlie Rouse: Tenor Saxophone
As soon as we saw the incredible reaction to our first release with Hank Jones, Bop Redux , in 1977 it was clear to Muse Records’ founder Joe Fields and me we needed to record a sequel. Hank’s absence from the scene for 25 years (in the CBS Orchestra) had only made him better, and the yearning for the emotion and craft of originators of bebop was burning a hole in the hearts of 70s jazz fans. We moved recording from my base at CI Recording in Manhattan (the former Mercury Records studios) to Rudy Van Gelder’s in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, the most famous studio for jazz in the world.
The moment of discord with Hank came when I insisted he replace his choice of drummers (Billy Hart) with a more bop era specific pick (Mickey Roker could take the booking), in keeping with the tunes, and my interest in “authenticity.” (I still think that I was right, though in retrospect, I can’t believe I overrode the ultimate musician, HJ. I would never do it today.)
The moment of discord with the record company came when I casually mentioned Dizzy Gillespie had stopped by to groove on the session (Hank performed two of Dizzy’s tunes on the date).
“Why didn’t you have him play?!” Joe demanded. “He’d double the sales of the album.”
“Dizzy didn’t have a horn, only a Jew’s harp,” I protested.
“So?!!!”
Joe was right.
…..
Credits
Muse Records MR 5169
Hank Jones
Groovin’ High
Hank Jones: Piano, Sam Jones: Bass, Mickey Roker: Drums, Thad Jones: Cornet, Charlie Rouse: Tenor Saxophone
Produced by Fred Seibert
Engineered by Rudy VanGelder, VanGelder Studios, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey
January 25, 1978
Original Release 1979, Cover Photograph by Carol Friedman, Cover Design by Ron Warwell
Muse Records Discography
LINER NOTES
From the 1997 reissue:
There are certain artists who are in complete command of their powers. They take the less obvious route, stunning you with nuance, suggestion and subtlety rather than relying on flash. The great English actor Paul Scofield comes to mind, so does the painter Mark Rothko. So, too, does Hank Jones.
Adjectives such as “elegant” and “immaculate” always pop up when Hank’s playing is discussed. Possessed of as much technique as any of the other gians of modern jazz piano, Hank has always dispensed it with restraint. When other pianists cite their favorite players, Hank Jones is always on everyone’s short list.
Because the songs on the two albums contained herein draw on the bebop tradition, they’re especially easy to listen to together. But in reality any two Hank Jones records go well together. Simply stated, he’s one of the ones.
Keep A Light In The Window
Joel Dorn
Spring ‘97
…..
Copyrights and masters owned by their respective owners. I’m posting many of my out-of-print record productions from the 1970s. If any of them are re-released, or the copyright owners object, I’ll delete the posts.
The Meth Minute 39 Fan Made Trailer!
Dan Meth’s Blog
check out this awesome fanmade trailer for The Meth Minute 39 by Youtuber inzaderfighter.
Thanks inzaderfighter!
-Jeaux Janovsky
Classic Nickelodeon Promos
Channel Frederator Blog
While doing some research on short subject animation, I found these promos on YouTube.
Does anyone know who did the stop motion ones with the Eskimo on the dinner platter?
-Floyd Bishop
The Struggle, A Channel Frederator Featured Film!
Channel Frederator Blog
We’ve all had days like this. With The Struggle, Frank Forte reminds us about the spirit of the human condition. We follow a poor guy who gets knocked around by life. Like Rocky, if he wereJerry Lewis.
I first heard of Frank Forte through his artwork and stories in the comics industry, when I was working for my mentor in the comics field, The Most Dangerous Man In Comics: Hart Fisher of Boneyard Press. It was always fun to see what of Frank’s Hart would publish next…
1) You got your career started in Comics Frank. How long were you in the Comics game, and when and how did you break into the animation field?
I had a small one pager published in Cerebus Weekly. It was a contest Dave Sim was having. Years later I got published with Cry For Dawn. I talked with Joe Monks about self-publishing and he gave me the inspiration to start my own company Studio Insidio, where we published four issues of From Beyonde, a horror anthology. After that I did some short horror tales for CFD, before going back into self-publishing with Asylum Press. We’ve got some great boks coming out this year: Warlash:Dark Noir, Undead Evil, The Asylum of Horrors, DTOX, Steve Mannion’s THE BOMB and maybe a few others.
1a)How long have you been animating?
I’ve worked in animation since 1997. I did some 2D work in interactive, before moving to L.A. to work in feature and broadcast. I’ve worked on L’il Pimp (Revolution Studios), Kid Notorious (Comedy Central), HIHI Puffy Ami Yumi; The Mr. Men Show (Renegade Animation), I’ve done various commercials for KA-CHEW. I also worked on the new BEWITCHED movie. We re-did the classic animated intro for the TV show at Toonacious. I did some animation and clean-up for that.
2) Where did you get the inspiration for The Struggle?
It was just something I was thinking about for years. It’s a take on life and how you just keep hitting obstacles no matter what you are doing. And no matter how far you get, more keep coming. You can’t get away from them. A loy of people can really relate to the short.
3) What has been your biggest struggle in life?
Waking up in the morning is tough. Trying to get my comics published has always been a challenge. Trying to get my partner, Gene McGuckin, to do some new 2D animation for The Cletus and Floyd Show. That’s tough. Trying to advance in my professional life. That’s what the film The Struggle is about.
4) How long did it take you to produce and animate The Struggle, from start to finish?
It was hand drawn on a Wacom tablet in Flash. I reused the run cycles, but I wanted a rough pencil test type look. I used stock sound effects for most of it. I would say all in all about two weeks total. That’s with retakes, and adding sound, editorial, etc. Then I submitted to film festivals to get some exposure. It was an official selection at The Boston Cinema Census, The Staten Island International Film Festival, The Comicon International Film Festival, and The Big Bear International Film Festival.
5) What are you working on Currently, and what’s next for you Frank?
I am currently working on my next short film entitled “The Alphabet”. It’s going to be a bit more refined. It will have more slapstick. More impacts and hits to the head. All in good fun. I am also updating my GOON CARTOONS channel on You Tube. http://www.youtube.com/GoonCartoons. I working on a bunch of shorts, but I am also posting the process; pencil tests, storyboards, animatics etc. Gene McGuckin and I are almost done with the Cletus and Floyd short. Besides that I run my publishing house Asylum Press. I am gong to put out four books this year. And I recently got into the apparel business. www.atomicmadhouse.com. Check it out.
6) Where can we find your films on the web?
http://www.youtube.com/GoonCartoons
http://www.youtube.com/asylumpress
www.frankforte.com
www.asylumpress.com
www.warlash.com
Thanks for taking the time to answer a few questions Frank! We’ll keep our eyes peeled for more of your work!
Cheers!
To learn more about my comic book Past, Click Here.
-Jeaux Janovsky
Dougal and The Rat, A Channel Frederator Featured Film!
Channel Frederator Blog
Our pals at Club Cocoanut Animation show us that smoking, in some cases, may be good for your health with their short, Dougal & The Rat. Dougal’s a mouse that would make Mickey Mouse hang his head in shame and cancer and Channel Frederator sat down to talk with him in another exclusive installment of Channel Frederator’s In-Depth Interview.
![]()
1) Dougal, thanks for being a guest on the Fredblogs. We are very excited to have an exclusive interview with you. Was this your first lead acting role?
Yeah, but acting’s just a fancy word for bullshitting… I learned how to do that out on the streets…
How was it working on a ClubCocoanuts feature film?
The food was good, but the director was kind of a moron.
2) Who are some of your Heroes in the Mice Actor World?
Mickey?
Don’t get me started on that freak. He’s the Micheal Jackson of the performing mouse world. How many face lifts has that poncey old hack had by now? I don’t think he even had irises until the mid-50’s… Fah!
Minnie?
I have to say she was pretty hot back in the 30’s — but stuck up. And now she’s as bad as “Mr. Bigshot Mouse” with the plastic surgery — Yikes!
Jerry?
I’m a big fan of a lot of Jerry’s work, but it depends on the director…
He had a way with a frying pan though…
Mighty?
Well of course I’m a fan, but I could do without the singing.
Stuart Little?
Honestly? Kinda creepy. More like a very tiny human in a mouse suit…
Ratatouille?
Besides the fact that Remy is a rat and not a mouse, I loved the movie. Of course when they had me read the script, I suggested that they call the film “Mousse”… but they saw it going another way so I backed out.
But really, the rat did pretty good.
For a rat.
3) What is your favorite type of Cheese?
Never met a cheese I didn’t like.
Which one do you indulge in the most?
The one that’s in front of me.
Is there any cheese you stay away from?
Fromage D’Mousetrap-bait
4) Did you use a stuntman in this film for the smoking scene, or was that all you?
Nah, that was me! I smoke a nice cigar or cigarette butt each and every day… Light’em up kiddies! I got’cher role model right here!
5) What’s next on the plate for you Dougal? Where will the road to stardom take you next?
I know that Club Cocoanut is working on more stories about me and my friends and family, and I’m a — whatcha call it — consultant on the project. Yeah, that’s it.
I don’t know what it means but they seem to have plenty of food around so I guess I’ll chill…
Thanks for taking the time to answer these. I appreciate it.
No problem. And one more thing for the viewers out there… It’s pronounced “DOOG-al” not “DUG-all”. Next person that calls me “dug-all” is asking for it…
Thanks Dougal! We look forward to seeing more of you and ClubCocoanut Animation!
-Jeaux Janovsky
Jaki Byard > Family Man
Kathleen Loves Music
Jaki Byard
Family Man
Produced by Frederick Seibert
Click the titles to play.
1. Just Rollin’ Along
2. Mood Indigo/Chelsea Bridge
3. L.H. Gatewalk Rag
4. Ballad to Louise
Excerpts from Family Suite
5. Prelude No.16
6. Gaeta
7. Garr
8. Emil
9. John Arthur
Jaki Byard: piano, tenor saxophone, alto saxophone
Major Holley: bass, tuba, Fender bass
Warren Smith: drums, tympani, vibraphone
J.R. Mitchell: drums
…..
Jaki Byard was one of my great heroes and inspirations when I started listening to jazz in earnest in the early 70s. “Eclectic” was the word that best described him since he recorded in styles directly linked to stride, swing, bop and the avant-garde, all with authenticity and enthusiasm. When Muse Records’ owner Joe Fields asked me to suggest a suitable recording project Jaki immediately came to mind.
–Fred Seibert
…..
Muse Records MR 5173
Jaki Byard
Family Man
Produced by Frederick Seibert
Engineered by Chuck Irwin & Elvin Campbell, CI Recording (110 W57th Street, NYC)
April 28 & May 1, 1978
Muse Records Discography
…..
Liner notes by Fred Bouchard:
Jaki Byard - pianist, composer, family man. Family man? Yes, indeed.
Whatever paradoxes and inconsistencies may surround Byard’s career, his roles as husband and father have been steady, certain, and rewarding. The family center has a sure, clear light that has burned through Byard’s life with love and commitment for over thirty years. It has brought peace and solace to a career that has been less than meteoric and well-rewarded, often because of its own exigencies (Byard cut short travels with Maynard Ferguson and Charles Mingus preferring, like his old compeer, drummer Alan Dawson, to work at home.) It has also provided a well-spring of inspiration for a whole area of Byard compositions named in honor of family members.
Byard’s unique musical genius made him at home with Willie “The Lion” as with Eric Dolphy, allowed him to draw from Ives and Ellington, “Fats” and “Bird,” Nat Cole and Art Tatum. He is a musician of no school, whose genius, like Whitman’s encompasses multitudes, spans generations, and expresses uncompromising romanticism. A rare individual, on his instrument and in life, Byard perceives and digs, quite naturally, the diversity of personality in those around him, and frequently celebrates it in composition. Byard has thus expressed his affection and appreciation for his family, and extended family: “Diane’s Melody” for his second daughter (Serge Chaloff, Capitol); “Ode to Charlie Parker” (Dolphy/Carter, Prestige); “Darryl” for his eldest grandson (a trombone whoop-up for his big band of New England Conservatory students, The Apollo Stompers); “To Bob Vatel of Paris” and “Blues for Jennie” for a couple of Wallerphiles; “Tribute to Jimmy Slide” for a wonderful Boston-bred tap-dancer (Byard Solo, Muse MR 5007).
Byard has said recently of his recorded output: “All my sessions are records of my attempts to document music as it is, through its different ages. These are my portraits of musical and personal history.” If Jaki Byard is a portrait painter, this then could be called his Family Album, as it contains five sections of The Family Suite and a piece to his wife.
The Familiy Suite is a series of sketches of several members of the Byard family. Here Byard shows us only the first and latest wall of the portrait gallery. Chronologically arranged with a misty, ancestral introduction, portraits of his and his wife Louise’s mothers’ families, and those of his youngest grandchildren. When Byard’s grandchildren have kiddies, he’ll add an ell, or maybe mural the ceiling.
Jaki adds some verbal highlights to the portraits, which seem to emerge from all but the opening track.
“Just Rollin’ Along”: Tight snare rolls and Major Holley’s unique jaw-and-saw kick in this easy-going pacesetter. “I used this as a theme,” says Jaki, “when my quarter with Joe Farrell played at Lennie’s-on-the-Turnpike, up in Peabody, Massachusetts back in 1964. It has never been recorded full-length before, and a lot of people asked m to do it.” The rollicking block chords and willing tremolos that Byard strikes might make some want to count his fingers.
“Mood Indigo/Chelsea Bridge”: “Dedicate this one,” asks Jaki, “to the Fellows who gave me the Duke Ellington Fellowship award at Yale in 1977. For this album I felt like doing a cross-section of my own tunes, but I wanted to include this medley as a tribute to Duke and his alter ego, Billy Strayhorn. Ellington was one of my greatest inspirations, socially and harmonically. He’d ignore mistakes band members made, and make people feel generally very comfortable in his presence. He was also steeped in the knowledge of impressionistic music.” Jaki’s blood affinity for Duke comes out with this deft, lush pairing, played with great feeling. Ellington himself was aware of it; he called in Jaki to cover piano during his final illness.
“L.H. Gatewalk Rag”: Major Jolley unbags his tuba for this lighthearted rag that runs on different speeds and colors. Jaki gives programmatic background: “I wrote this in 1975 for the Springfield Symphony at the request of their conductor, Robert Gutter. They were doing some movie themes, and they planned a surprise for the audience halfway through the concert. The orchestra went into a stride, see, and they showed a short of Laurel and Hardy playing clarinet and French Horn. They asked me for some ragtime, but instead of taking an old one, I composed a new one, orchestration and all.” The cackles halfway herald the arrivals of the villains for the rent!
“Ballad for Louise”: This thoughtful study is one of many compositions Byard has dedicated to his wife, Louise (Romano) of Everett, Massachusetts. Warren Smith plays the melody tenderly on vibes, with Byard’s oblique obbligato on huffy tenor, then goes it solo and closes with a slick glissando. The mood created is a very different one, for example, than the jolly, extroverted one that Byard’s New England Conservatory student band, The Apollo Stompers, achieves on another piece to Louise, “One Note To My Wife.” This ode to prayerlike gratitude is footnoted by Jaki: “Any interracial marriage is hard for society to accept, but ours was and has been accepted by our families for thirty years. To me this is one of the greatest acts of God.”
“Prelude #16″ (Time Machine): Byard rarely dabbles with electronics, but here he laces his alto sax with metallic echo, which he plays in unison with piano while Holley boys high harmonics. The effect is eerie and drifting; “It’s a time machine,” explains Jaki, “that goes way back beyond the life of our families, back to all our family, Adam and Eve.”
“Gaeta”: Gorgeous swags of arpeggios pass by in a stately 3/8 as Byard celebrates the splendor of the impressionistic era surrounding Louise’s Italian family. Gaeta is her mother’s maiden name.
“Garr”: A stately, modal 6/8, still impressionistic but with some bluesy fair and a good deal of vigor draws for us Byard’s own mother, herself a pianist, nee Garr. J.R. Mitchell, a drummer whom Byard knew in Boston, until recently a teaching colleague for Jaki’s at Northeastern just down the block on Huntington Ave from NEC and now filling the drum chair of the New York Branch of the Apollo Stompers, provides tasty-cross rhythms.
Here we skip Jaki’s generations and that of his three children, Denise, Diane and Jerald.
“Emil”: Pounding tympani and slashing cymbal introduce Emil as a compelling soul.
FB: Is he wild and wooly?
JB: Damn right!
FB: He carries on a conversation readily, asks a lot of questions
JB: yeah, he’s learning piano at present, and he talks a lot.
Pounding latinesque block chords and octave runs well and fade.
“John Arthur”: A funky, whimsical kid. Good-natured stride. Monkey-see, monkey-do. “We call him Tagalong,” says Jaki. “He’s the youngest, and he tries to keep up with everyone.” As regards kids faced with this kind of music, Byard avers, “They love it. They’re exposed to the contemporary stuff and they’re in tune with those lyrics, but rhythmically, this is where they’re at. This is what they’ll listen to longer than anything else.”
…..
Copyrights and masters owned by their respective owners. I’m posting many of my out-of-print record productions from the 1970s. If any of them are re-released, or the copyright owners object, I’ll delete the posts.





![Family Man [back liner]](http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3559/3368909036_252dc52e74_m.jpg)
![[large][black] FReDERATOR badge](http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3502/3317571331_e33068a3c8_m.jpg)










