jazz in the bookshop

Come and see us

Donate

You can help support
Bird & Beckett's cultural programming! Read more

Post Topics

Post Tags

Follow Us

Press & Reviews

RSS New in the shop

  • AMERARCANA 2012: A Bird & Beckett Review - $15.00
    The Third Annual, featuring the words of Bill Berkson, Justin Desmangles, Joanne Kyger, Rodrigo Lira (translated by Rodrigo Olavarría & Thomas Rothe), Duncan McNaughton, Jackson Meazle, David Meltzer, Sarah Menefee, Jason Morris, Jeffrey Joe Nelson, Erik Noonan, Cedar Sigo, Will Skinker, Tisa Walden & the editor Nicholas James Whittington, with artwo […]
  • The Cuban Drumbeat, by Piero Gleijesis - $15.00
    In waging a long war against oppression and misery in the third world, Castro's Cuba sent more troops into battle on foreign soil in defense of besieged populations than all but the U.S., Russia and a few Western European countries. Gleijeses wonders what's next for a post-Castro Cuba. […]
  • Two Underdogs and a Cat, by Slavenka Drakulic - $17.00
    Drakulic, well known to readers of The Nation, the New York Times and the New York Review of Books, ponders the fate of the communist idea through three stories: "An Interview with The Oldest Dog in Bucharest," "A Guided Tour of the Museum of Communism" and "A Cat Keeper in Warsaw" […]
  1. Friday at Bird & Beckett – Jimmy Ryan + Daisy Rockwell

    April 9, 2012 by Eric

    Samuel BeckettHappy Birthday, Sam!

    April 13 is Samuel Beckett’s putative birthday– so this Friday, let’s toast the great man and his good works! 

    Scott Baker & Val Fachman, fond thespian interpreters of his words and fresh back from Paris, will hold forth at the break between jazz sets this evening to share a few of Sam’s poems in his original French and his own English translations of same!  Guinness & Jamesons the drinks of choice!

    Friday, April 13, 5:30 pm to 8:00 pm

    Jimmy Ryan Quintet

    Jazz in the Bookshop Every Friday!

    Drummer Jimmy Ryan at Bird & BeckettHenry Hung (trumpet), Danny Grewen (trombone), Scott Foster (guitar), Bishu Chatterjee (bass) & Jimmy Ryan (drums).  Jimmy Ryan got his start in L.A. in the ’50s, got to San Francisco in the early ’60s, and has been a key member of the Bird & Beckett Friday night jazz series since the beginning, as has guitarist Scott Foster.

    This fine quintet features bassist Bishu Chatterjee alternating month-to-month with Charles Thomas, plus, with Henry and Danny, two terrific young front-line players on the local scene.

     Aprés le jazz…  Friday, April 13, 8:30 pm

    Daisy Rockwell's "The Little Book of Terror"The Little Book
    of Terror

    Author Daisy Rockwell in Person

    WEST COAST RELEASEDaisy Rockwell paints under the takhallus, or alias, Lapata (pronounced ‘laapataa’), which is Urdu for “missing,” or “absconded,” as in “my luggage is missing,” or “the bandits have absconded.” She posts her paintings regularly to Flickr, and writes for the blog Chapati Mystery. She has shown her work in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Washington, DC, Waterloo, Ontario, and Lenox and North Adams, Massachusetts. Her essays on literature and art have appeared in Bookslut, Caravan and The Sunday Guardian (New Delhi).

    Rockwell grew up in a family of artists in western Massachusetts, some whose work adorns the surfaces of chinaware and brightens up the waiting rooms of dentists’ offices (think Norman), and others whose artistic output has found more select audiences (think Rockwells you don’t know). From 1992-2006, Lapata made a detour into Academia, from which she emerged with a PhD in South Asian literature, a book on Upendranath Ashk and a mild case of depression. Nonetheless, she sometimes still teaches Hindi.

    Rockwell’s new book of paintings and essays on the Global War on Terror, The Little Book of Terror, debuted in February 2012 from Foxhead Books.

     

    John ColtraneSunday, April 15

    Two Coltrane events

    2:30-4:00 pm:
    Panel Discussion

    4:30-6:30 pm
    Which Way West? Concert

    When Bar Walkers Preach:
    Considering Coltrane

    2:30 pm – Drs. Anthony Brown, Tommy Lee Lott, Herman Gray

    Presentations and a discussion by contributors to the book John Coltrane and Black America’s Quest for Freedom (Leonard Brown, ed.; Oxford University Press 2010).  Coltrane, the man; Coltrane, the icon; and Coltrane, the musician have been endlessly considered by experts and laypersons alike — but this collection of essays is notable as it takes an intent look at Coltrane from the perspectives of a dozen African American scholars and musicians. 

    Tommy Lee Lott (SJSU professor in Philosophy, author of The Invention of Race: Black Culture and the Politics of Representation and a Glen Park denizen) will discuss his essay, “When Bar Walkers Preach: John Coltrane and the Crisis of the Black Intellectual;” Herman Gray (UCSC professor in Sociology) presents his essay “John Coltrane and the Practice of Freedom;” and Anthony Brown (percussionist, composer and arranger; leader of the Asian American Orchestra; musicologist) discusses Coltrane’s music.  Dr. Brown will continue his explication during the trio performance following (starting at 4:30).

    4:30 pm – Anthony Brown Trio
    with poets Genny Lim
    & devorah major

    feat. Masaru Koga on saxes & shakuhachi

    Anthony Brown and Mas Koga roam freely but with purpose through the titanic catalog of John Coltrane’s music.  Along the way, they’ll illustrate some of the great saxophonist’s myriad aspects, and will give a sense of Coltrane’s unequaled contributions to music and to the African American spiritual quest — whether as a consequence of an intuitive thirst for expression or stemming from a rigorous search for freedom and spiritual truth.  Former San Francisco Poet Laureate devorah major and poet Genny Lim will join the trio to read poems about and inspired by Coltrane.

     

    Monday, April 16 – 7:00 pm

    Poets Jeanne Powell & Nancy Keane
    followed by an open mic

    POETS! First & Third Monday of each month, hosted by Jerry Ferraz

    Jeanne Powell’s collections of poetry include My Own Silence and Word Dancing.  A much admired poet and cultural critic, Jeanne has made a significant impact on the San Francisco poetry scene by hosting a long-running spoken word series — “Celebration of the Word” — which took place weekly in San Francisco for ten years, and by publishing numerous local and more far-flung poets as well under her imprint, Meridien PressWorks.  Her “Living Treasures”  project was a particularly valuable effort, that brought out the books of four poets over age 70.  Read more on Jeanne at http://redroom.com/member/jeanne-powell.

    Nancy Keane — poet, publisher, artist and proprietor of one of the truly great and storied watering holes in San Francisco — hosts a legendary reading series, Poetry at the 33, each month at her bar, Keane’s 3300 Club, located in the heart of the Mission district.  In the photo below, that’s Nancy in the purple blouse, standing amidst her lovely crowd of convivial patrons.  Check the bar’s website at http://3300club.com.

    Nancy keane at her 3300 Club bar, San Francisco

  2. Jazzy Easter Weekend

    April 3, 2012 by Eric

    Coming up in April at Bird & Beckett

     

    which way west?
    Sunday concert series
    always 4:30-6:30 pm

    Joel Forrester on April 8th (Easter Sunday)

    April 8:  Joel Forrester:  He’s a jazz cat through & through and he’s coming out west on an Easter weekend swing from NYC to play a little solo piano accompaniment for a Buster Keaton silent and some classic cartoons on Saturday down Saratoga way.  Then, he’ll grace us with a couple of sets on Sunday…

    When in New York, you can often catch Joel at a lovely brunch gig out at the northern tip of Manhattan at the Indian Roads Cafe, or Sunday mornings at Grace Gospel Church in the South Bronx.  Mondays when he’s in town, it’s the Brandy Library in Tribeca, an experience unlike any other…  Sometimes it’s Cleopatra’s Needle on the Upper West Side or the Gershwin Hotel on 27th Ave. or the Manhattan Inn out in Greenpoint in Brooklyn…  He does get around a bit… the French say he’s the world’s foremost accompanist for silent films… lucky Saratogans!

    He’s also renowned for his work with the Microscopic Septet and for composing the “Fresh Air” theme you hear before all those Terry Gross interviews on WHYY!

    We’re always happy when Joel comes out to play.

    Read a little more about Joel here, we think you’ll find it most enlightening…

     

    John ColtraneOn Sunday, April 15th,
    a John Coltrane date with
    the Anthony Brown Trio

    The remarkable young reed player Masaru Koga joins master percussionist/composer/musicologist Anthony Brown to explore the music of John Coltrane.

    The two sets of trio music start at 4:30, following a 2:30-4:00 pm panel discussion by Drs. Tommy Lee Lott, Herman Gray and Anthony Brown, all contributors to the recent book John Coltrane and Black America’s Quest for Freedom (Oxford University Press).

     

    April 13:  Jimmy Ryan Quintet + Daisy Rockwell’s Little Book of Terror