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Lucia Micarelli.

Lucia Micarelli.

By  Paul Goldfinger, Editor  @Blogfinger

In the HBO series Tremé, one of the main characters is a young woman named Annie Talarico who plays the violin, and when we meet her, she is playing  on the streets of New Orlean’s French Quarter with her boyfriend on keyboards.  People are dropping dollar bills into a hat which lies on the ground.  As we get to know her better, we find out that she is a remarkable and versatile musician, and we get to follow her career over time.  We begin to appreciate her musical and artistic challenges, her relationships, and her focused principles. We keep tabs on her story line during 4 seasons over 3 years.

The interesting back story is that she is actually Lucia Micarelli,  a concert violinist and an actress in real life. She is from New York City, of Italian and Korean heritage, and has attended Juilliard and the Manhattan School of Music.  She has performed with Jethro Tull and Josh Groban.

Her 2004 album “Music From a Farther Room” is very eclectic with selections from  classic original pieces and even a jazz standard “My Funny Valentine” by Rodgers and Hart from the 1937 musical Babes in Arms.   The song has been featured on over 1,300 albums by 600 artists.

 

Here is Lucia Micarelli with “My Funny Valentine.”  (NOTE.  The man who wrote the lyrics to this song in 1943, Lorenz Hart, is featured in a marvelous movie on Netflix called Blue Moon.:). Here is a link–

 

Blue Moon

 

“My Funny Valentine”

 

Alone again, naturally

Valentines Day. 2015. One man. Sanibel Island,Bailey Road Beach. Near the Causeway. Paul Goldfinger photo ©.

Valentine’s Day. 2015. . Sanibel Island, Bailey Road Beach. Near the Causeway.   One man alone.    Paul Goldfinger photo.   Click to enlarge.

 

GILBERT O’SULLIVAN

 

 

 

Paul Goldfinger. Sunday, Sundown, Winter.    Central Park South, NYC. Click to enlarge. 

 

THE HARPTONES   (A 50’s New York City Doo Wop group.  Remembered by Cousin Brucie who has a Saturday night show on 770 am.)

 

 

 

 

Cathedral Paris

Paul Goldfinger

 

GORDON TURK    Recorded in Ocean Grove. “Cantilene”

 

Broad Street. Red Bank, NJ. Birthplace of Count Basie

Broad Street. Red Bank, NJ. Birthplace of Count Basie. By Paul Goldfinger .  Reposted on Blogfinger.net. Click once

 

SOUNDTRACK: “It Had to be You.”      The Count Basie Orchestra.

 

New Orleans. Basin Street. Paul Goldfinger photo. Click once to enlarge.

 

THE BAND:  Bobby Charles

 

Asbury Park. Paul Goldfinger photo. 2007.  Casino to the left.

 

 

MAX RAABE at Carnegie Hall.

 

West side apartment building.  1970’s. Paul Goldfinger ©. Tri-X Collection

 

Guys and  Dolls was the  story of a bunch of New York characters—-gangsters and gamblers and the babes who hung out with them, including Adelaide,  based on the stories of Damon Runyon in the ’20’s and ’30’s.  The first production was on Broadway in 1950.   Later, in 1955,  there was a movie with, believe it or not, Marlon Brando singing and dancing, along with Frank Sinatra.  There were 14 marvelous songs by Frank Loesser.

This one, “The Oldest Established,” is performed early in the first act featuring Nathan, Nicely, Benny and the guys trying to organize a crap game. It’s going to be in the Biltmore Garage, because the back of the police station and the local school were out. But they needed to pay $1,000.00 for the venue.

“If we only had a lousy little grand, we would be a millionaire.”

 

 

 

 

 

Puerto Rican Day Parade, Manhattan, 1963 by Joel Meyerowitz

By    published

“The image “Puerto Rican Day Parade, Manhattan, New York City 1963″  speaks to perception, timing, and confidence – qualities that have defined great street photography since its earliest days.

“I used the parades as a way to overcome my shyness. Because the people in the crowd were absorbed by the passing show in the street, I could slip in under their gaze like a plane flying too low to be picked up on radar,” Meyerowitz remembers. “They were about the heat of the moment.”

Meyerowitz’s photo captures the  spirit of this exuberant parade.. Amid the parade’s bustle, he remained invisible – responding instinctively to what he describes as a flood of impressions.

Paul Goldfinger, Editor, Blogfinger.net:
Someone might look at this award winning photo and think of it as merely a snapshot.  But experienced critics at Leica knowingly find that there is a great deal more at play here.

Digital Camera World says, “The photograph shows four impeccably dressed women gathered in a Fifth Avenue doorway, touching up their makeup. It’s a scene overflowing with life, color, and the unspoken choreography of the street – the kind Meyerowitz has spent a lifetime mastering.”

I like street photography, and this image  speaks to me….my photo years were formed in the sixities in New York, so I can relate to this winning image, and you can see that this award is about much more than just a street scene.  My preference is for black and white, but I do enjoy this famous photograph, with an award being given over 60 years later.

I’m not a fan of photograph awards because there are so many varieties of photographic art, and beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

Here is one of my color photos from around 1980. It won an international award and was published. It is of school kids in Guadalajara

 

Paul Goldfinger award winner.

The music is a mariachi selection from Jalisco:

Relaxin in Micanopy, Alachua  County, Florida, near Gainesville. Paul Goldfinger photo.  Click once.

 

KARRIN ALLYSON:    “Robert Frost”

 

Overlooking the James River. April 15, 2016. By Paul Goldfinger ©.

Richmond, Virginia.   Overlooking the James River. April 15, 2016. By Paul Goldfinger ©.  Click to enlarge this image.

 

 

BILL FRISELL —-guitarist and arranger  (Lyrics by  Johnny Mercer, a composer of the South—from Savannah)

 

 

 

 

 

Paul Goldfinger viewing the snow trucked over by Fletcher Lake, south OG. 2/10/26

 

BRIAN WILSON:

 

Stokes in Snowland….

Stokes-land, NJ. Paul Goldfinger in Ocean Grove. 2/10/26.  USA.

 

ROD STEWART: