David Adler

30
Jul

Give us your poor…

My Philadelphia Weekly story on Matt Davis touched on City of Arrivals, Davis’s reverie on the immigrant experience in Philadelphia. With that fresh in mind I came across this story in the Inquirer, about Bintou Soumare and her husband, Amissi Ndikumasabo (above), Malian immigrants who opened a clothing store in North Philly, saving up money in the hope of bringing their

Read more

28
Jul

On Sonic Liberation Front

My review of Sonic Liberation Front (with Shot x Shot and the SEA Trio), in today’s Inquirer.

26
Jul

Quagmire reality check

In the midst of the Obama-McCain sparring over Iraq this past week, George Packer provides a useful reminder: “The Shiite-led government has been trying to get American forces out of the way for at least two years.” Maliki’s endorsement of the Obama timetable is not some bolt from the blue, and it has everything to do with Iraq’s internal politics,

Read more

25
Jul

Johnny Griffin R.I.P.

And just after I mentioned him in my Ronnie Mathews post. All I can say is: Wes Montgomery’s Full House and Thelonious Monk’s Misterioso. Some of the scariest, most perfectly realized tenor sax playing ever. Thankfully I caught him at the Vanguard in the early ’00s, with Michael Weiss on piano. I seem to remember “Just One of Those Things”

Read more

24
Jul

Questions

“Will we extend our hand to the people in the forgotten corners of this world who yearn for lives marked by dignity and opportunity; by security and justice? Will we lift the child in Bangladesh from poverty, shelter the refugee in Chad, and banish the scourge of AIDS in our time? “Will we stand for the human rights of the

Read more

22
Jul

Matt Davis and Aerial Photograph

My cover story on guitarist Matt Davis and his incredible Aerial Photograph project, in the current edition of Philadelphia Weekly.

22
Jul

Know your enemy

And über-fashionable leftist author Naomi Klein does not, according to Jonathan Chait’s dismantling of The Shock Doctrine: Klein’s relentless materialism is not the only thing driving her to see conservatives merely as corporate puppets. She pays shockingly (but, given her premises, unsurprisingly) little attention to right-wing ideas. She recognizes that neoconservatism sits at the heart of the Iraq war project, but she

Read more

21
Jul

On Ronnie Mathews

In the better-late-than-never department, I have to double back and say a brief word about the recent death of pianist Ronnie Mathews. Because when I entered the New School jazz program in 1987, Mathews was the first teacher I had. It was a jazz harmony course, and my memory of it is hazy (I turned 40 this year, folks). But

Read more