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Volume 21 Issue 1 - September 2015

Paul Ennis's annual TIFF TIPS (27 festival films of potential particular musical interest); Wu Man, Yo-Yo Ma and Jeffrey Beecher on the Silk Road; David Jaeger on CBC Radio Music in the days it was committed to commissioning; the LISTENING ROOM continues to grow on line; DISCoveries is back, bigger than ever; and Mary Lou Fallis says Trinity-St. Paul's is Just the Spot (especially this coming Sept 25!).

Paul Ennis's annual TIFF TIPS (27 festival films of potential particular musical interest); Wu Man, Yo-Yo Ma and Jeffrey Beecher on the Silk Road; David Jaeger on CBC Radio Music in the days it was committed to commissioning; the LISTENING ROOM continues to grow on line; DISCoveries is back, bigger than ever; and Mary Lou Fallis says Trinity-St. Paul's is Just the Spot (especially this coming Sept 25!).

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Bill Beard:<br />

Shooting for<br />

Pleasure<br />

ORI DAGAN<br />

Researching the subject of this month’s column, I found myself<br />

on the website of the late Herman Leonard, jazz photography<br />

master and pioneer, whose work provides a crystal clear window<br />

to the smoke-filled Greenwich Village of jazz’s golden age. To name<br />

a few examples, Leonard’s soulful stills of Ellington, Parker, Davis<br />

and Holiday provide definitive glimpses into each artist’s personality,<br />

one magical moment at a time. Google him and you will discover a<br />

remarkable career in which this man immortalized everyone from Art<br />

Blakey to Zoot Sims. Herman Leonard’s priceless prints are collector’s<br />

items that sell for top dollar, which is cool considering that some were<br />

shot for free in exchange for the price of admission.<br />

Which brings me to my interview with Bill Beard, local shutterbug<br />

with a real good eye and a heart to match. His knees are not so good –<br />

as we sit to speak at a local Timmy’s he is readying himself for surgery,<br />

and disappointed to be missing out on live jazz until he heals up. For<br />

Beard photography is a serious hobby which provides both pleasure<br />

for himself, and a service to the community.<br />

“I was senior project manager in IT for a large bank, but I’d always<br />

been photography-minded,” he says. “I was taking city stuff, abstract,<br />

some nature. No musicians.”<br />

All this changed around the time of his retirement, when his<br />

St. Philip’s Anglican Church<br />

●<br />

A Month of Jazz Masters<br />

Sunday, <strong>September</strong> 13, 4:00 PM<br />

St. Philip’s Jazz Vespers Anglican with the Mark Church Eisenman Quartet | Etobicoke<br />

25 St. Mark Phillips Eisenman Road (piano), (near with Royal Mike Murley York (saxophone), + Dixon)<br />

416-247-5181 • stphilips.net • free will offering<br />

Barry Elmes (drums) and Pat Collins (bass).<br />

Sunday, <strong>September</strong> 20, 4:00 PM<br />

Jazz Vespers with the Diana Panton Trio<br />

Diana Panton (vocals) with Reg Schwager (guitar)<br />

and Neil Swainson (bass).<br />

Sunday, <strong>September</strong> 27, 4:00 PM<br />

Jazz Vespers with the Roberto Occhipinti Quartet<br />

St. Philip’s Roberto Anglican Occhipinti Church (bass) with Hilario Duran (piano),<br />

Luis Denis (saxophone), and Mark Kelso (drums)<br />

●<br />

Beat by Beat | Jazz Stories<br />

Sunday, October 4, 4:00 PM<br />

Jazz Vespers with the Bernie Senensky Quartet<br />

Bernie Senensky (piano) with Bill McBirnie (flute),<br />

Terry Clarke (drums) and Steve Wallace (bass).<br />

St. Philip’s Anglican Church | Etobicoke<br />

25 St. Phillips Road (near Royal York + Dixon)<br />

416-247-5181 • stphilips.net • free will offering<br />

Alex Pangman<br />

brother, a big jazz fan, brought him out to see local jazz group Red Hot<br />

Ramble, a unique local quintet that performs music inspired by New<br />

Orleans. Beard brought his camera along and began taking photos<br />

of the band; before long he became a regular fan and their official<br />

photographer.<br />

“I took their pictures and got to know them, kept shooting, then<br />

I branched out into all sorts of other things. One of the great things<br />

about doing this is that I’ve become friends with a lot of these musicians.<br />

I remember one night a few months back we were at the Old<br />

Mill to see Joe Sealy, and then I said I was going to The Rex, so a whole<br />

bunch of these singers and players all joined me. There I was hanging<br />

out with these amazing artists and staying out late at night…felt like I<br />

was living the life! I certainly never spent nights like this when I was<br />

in the corporate world.”<br />

Just how did Beard initially begin to hone his craft?<br />

“The best thing that I ever did was join a photography club – the<br />

Toronto Guild of Photographic Art, as it was called then, back in 2004.<br />

Being surrounded by all these amazing photographers, I learned a lot<br />

from them, and before you know it they asked me to come along and<br />

shoot with them. Me! With them! I couldn’t believe it. I guess it’s kind<br />

of like when a musician is asked to sit in with a great band. I loved it<br />

and I learned a lot.”<br />

Nowadays he greatly enjoys volunteering with JAZZ.FM91.<br />

“It’s the greatest gig for someone who’s retired. I get to go to all their<br />

shows, meet the artists and photograph them. I’ve learned about so<br />

many different types of jazz!”<br />

On the challenges of photographing this music:<br />

“The biggest one for a photographer is the low light in most clubs,<br />

so once you have the right equipment you can get past that. It’s also<br />

very important to know the person you’re photographing and the<br />

special things they do on stage, so you have to watch for a while, then<br />

you photograph them. Everyone has their own special way of singing<br />

or playing an instrument and you want to capture their uniqueness.<br />

Featuring some of Toronto’s best jazz musicians<br />

with a brief reflection by Jazz Vespers Clergy<br />

<strong>September</strong> 20, 4:30 pm<br />

A TRIBUTE TO ART BLAKEY by Brian Barlow<br />

Perry White (saxophone), Alex Brown (trumpet)<br />

Robi Botos (piano), Scott Alexander (bass), Brian Barlow (drums)<br />

October 4, 4:30 pm AMANDA TOSSOFF QUARTET<br />

Chris Gale (saxophone), Jon Maharaj (bass), Brian Barlow (drums),<br />

Amanda Tosoff (piano)<br />

Christ Church Deer Park, 1570 Yonge St. 416-920-5<strong>21</strong>1<br />

(north of St. Clair at Heath St.)<br />

www.thereslifehere.org Admission is free; donations are welcome.<br />

BILL BEARD<br />

48 | Sept 1 - Oct 7, <strong>2015</strong> thewholenote.com

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