JSngry Posted September 11, 2008 Report Posted September 11, 2008 http://classicshowbiz.blogspot.com/2008/09...allen-1956.html bottommost clip Quote
Free For All Posted September 11, 2008 Report Posted September 11, 2008 Very cool, Jim. What a sweetheart! Interesting to see her so young and with little grasp of the language. I've had the opportunity to cross paths with her several times over the years and she is still a sweet lady. Playing her charts though, now THAT'S a bitch! Would have liked to hear her throw down w/Steve Allen! Quote
Rooster_Ties Posted September 11, 2008 Report Posted September 11, 2008 ...an "oxidental" orchestra?? Quote
Christiern Posted September 11, 2008 Report Posted September 11, 2008 They don't make them sweeter than Toshiko, and ditto for Lew. I have to wonder if Steve Allen was as uninformed as he appeared to be—after all, Oscar Peterson was involved in getting Toshiko to the U.S. and that was not a secret. Thanks for that link, Jim. BTW. Did anyone notice that Dorothy Kilgallen was credited as Kilgaren? Quote
blajay Posted September 11, 2008 Report Posted September 11, 2008 Yeah, she's like an entirely different person from when I saw her earlier this year. She was adorable! The funny thing is she was more "lively" in person at her current age, kicking around under the piano like Monk and playing up a storm on "Un Poco Loco." Quote
JSngry Posted September 11, 2008 Author Report Posted September 11, 2008 What a sweetheart! Interesting to see her so young... It's not often that I see that much resemblance between her & Monday, but there, I do. Quote
JSngry Posted September 11, 2008 Author Report Posted September 11, 2008 ...an "oxidental" orchestra?? " Occidental" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occidental Quote
ValerieB Posted September 11, 2008 Report Posted September 11, 2008 . . . Oscar Peterson was involved in getting Toshiko to the U.S. . . . i'm proud to say that my father was as well, along with Larry Berk at the then Schillinger House, now Berklee in Boston. Quote
BruceH Posted September 11, 2008 Report Posted September 11, 2008 ...the "lively" arts?? From an old book by Gilbert Seldes, a collection of essays in which he argued that the popular or "low" arts could be as deserving of critical attention as the old "high" arts. The seven were: Comic strips, Movies, Musical Comedy, Vaudeville, Radio, Popular Music, and Dance. I think the book was written just a little too early to include television. I used to have a copy; probably still do, banging around here somewhere. Quote
hepcat1950 Posted September 11, 2008 Report Posted September 11, 2008 Very interesting to watch. Only four years later this shy little lady took the lead in a quartet she founded with her teacher at Berklee and then husband Charlie Mariano. Quote
Christiern Posted September 11, 2008 Report Posted September 11, 2008 She remains shy—charmingly so—but Toshiko does not let that get in the way of her creativity, which—as we all know—is considerable. I think her albums will prove to be more enduring than many albums that received better distribution and promotion. Quote
Big Wheel Posted September 11, 2008 Report Posted September 11, 2008 ...the "lively" arts?? From an old book by Gilbert Seldes, a collection of essays in which he argued that the popular or "low" arts could be as deserving of critical attention as the old "high" arts. The seven were: Comic strips, Movies, Musical Comedy, Vaudeville, Radio, Popular Music, and Dance. I think the book was written just a little too early to include television. I used to have a copy; probably still do, banging around here somewhere. Also, a TV show. This is where "The Sound of Jazz" video/album comes from. Quote
ValerieB Posted September 11, 2008 Report Posted September 11, 2008 (edited) She remains shy—charmingly so—but Toshiko does not let that get in the way of her creativity, which—as we all know—is considerable. interesting, as i haven't seen her as shy for many, many decades. in fact, i see her as fierce and passionate. she still has an "Asian demeanor," for lack of a better way to describe it, and very polite but certainly not shy. in fact, i'd say she has more of a "tiger in her tank" than shyness!! just my personal opinion though, fwiw. Edited September 11, 2008 by ValerieB Quote
CJ Shearn Posted September 13, 2008 Report Posted September 13, 2008 wow, good stuff. Yes I can see the resemblance to Michiru here Quote
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