Christmas in June: Found out today there’s a very high chance I’ll soon be able to replace the Win2K server that runs the J-School with an Xserve. Possibly dual. I’m floating on this news. Getting very tired of the tools I want to use not working properly with Windows (e.g. the bad netpbm port to Windows just hung up my attempt to get Gallery installed, and the search engine I want to deploy is only free if you aren’t serving from Windows), and even more tired of Windows consuming itself. It’s appropriate for rock stars to choke on their own vomit — it isn’t appropriate for operating systems. The Xserve will integrate with our systems much more smoothly, and I’ll be able to sleep better at night (like Miles has nothing to do with that :). The conversion should be a great summer project … as if I had a shortage of summer projects.
Silly Hans
Hydrogen Springs a Leak
Hydrogen fuel cells may not be the faultless fuel panacea we’ve dreamed them to be. As it turns out, mass hydrogen production will result inevitably in a lot of runaway gas which will damage the ozone and create “enigmatic ‘noctilucent clouds’ that would shine at night far above the planet’s surface.”
Now we have to decide whether we prefer greenhouse gases from fossil fuels or sunburns from depleted ozone. All that glitters is not gaseous. Or something disappointing like that.
matthewsperry.org
Registered and set up matthewsperry.org on birdhouse hosting. Posted the call for witnesses and info on the upcoming memorial concert. The concert info has also gone out on PR Newswire and is all over the net — here it is on Yahoo!
Update: the site is now pretty much designed and is off and running. Ideally this will become the locus of all new info / events related to Matthew.
Final Cut Pro 4
Attended a demo co-sponsored by Apple on Final Cut Pro 4 yesterday — we’re mostly interested in it for its bundled audio editing application, which may mean an affordable way out of the OS9 quagmire (we can’t upgrade the lab to OS X because we need Pro Tools free, which only runs in OS 9 and won’t run in Classic — considering dumping Pro Tools altogether). The demo had impressive moments, but also a lot of cheese, and overall nothing compelling enough to us to warrant the upgrade. We’re thrown back on other possibilities – switching to Bias Peak, or just having students dual boot the machines (an eventuality we had hoped to avoid).
Anyway. When we got in the car to head to the event, coworker handed me a map he had printed out and it pointed to… Powell and Vallejo in Emeryville — the exact intersection where Matthew was killed. “Why do you have this?” I asked. “That’s where the event is.” And it dawned on me that of all the places in the Bay Area where this event could have been held, it was being thrown 100 feet from where Matthew was killed. Coincidences mounted. Only ~25 people inside, but one of them was an old friend A and I had sort of lost touch with. Strange afternoon.
Telemarketing and the Categorical Imperative
My patience for telemarketing grows shorter with every call. Billboard advertising may ruin my view of the world, but calling me at home to sell me a product steals my time and invades my privacy. Realizing I’ve trapped an unsuspecting rat, I sometimes use the opportunity to engage the caller in a discussion of Kant’s Categorical Imperative.
Me: You know what would really work for me? How about you give me your home phone number and I’ll call you there at my convenience. I am, after all, the customer.
Them: Well sir, this will only take a minute, and…
Me: I wonder what it would be like if every business in the Yellow Pages called people in their homes to sell them their products. The home phone would become unusable. Do you really intend that every business should do what you’re doing right now? Do you understand that this form of marketing, if performed by all vendors, would literally make home life unlivable for the very customers you’re trying to reach?
Act so that the maxim [determining motive of the will] may be capable of becoming a universal law for all rational beings.
Them: [stone silence]
Me: Telemarketing is immoral.
And thereabouts the caller generally gives up on me. But this morning, as I took an unsolicited call from MCI with a towel wrapped around my waist, the telemarketer responded with this:
Them: Sir, it’s the American way.
I was dumbfounded. I should have responded by asking what part of “Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” telemarketing came under. Instead I lost my head and just started yelling at him. I don’t know what. Something about how can he sleep at night, etc. It was kind of nuts. Amy got worried for me, wondered what I was doing to my blood pressure. I suppose she’s right, but damn it felt good. Cathartic.
Matthew Sperry Memorial Concert
Phillip Greenlief sends along the following:
Matthew Sperry Memorial Concert
Thursday, June 19th, 8pm
21 Grand – 449 B 23rd Street, Oakland, CA
(510) 444-7263
21Grand@21Grand.org
One of the Bay Area’s brightest musical lights, bassist Matthew Sperry, was struck down in a fatal accident by a truck while riding his bicycle to work. Many members of the SF Bay Area New Music Scene have aligned to present a concert to raise funds for Matthew’s wife Stacia, and Lila, their adorable two year girl.
Admission is sliding scale, $5 – $50, no one turned away for lack of funds.
Matthew moved to the SF Bay Area a few years ago from Seattle. He was most recently featured in the Victoria Theater’s production of “Hedwig and the Angry Inch”. He has recorded with Tom Waits, David Byrne, and a host of musicans from the SF Bay Area New Music scene. For a complete bio, go to: http://www.oneroom.org/mattsperry/resume.html
The following musicians will play to pay homage to our dear friend.
(in alphabetical order)
Ashley Adams
Aaron Bennett
Angela Coon – Jenya Chernoff – John Shiurba
Philip Gelb
Phillip Greenlief
Vinny Golia
Morgan Guberman – Andrew Voigt
Brett Larner
Scott Looney
Moe!
Dan Plonsey’s Daniel Popsicle
Scott Rosenberg
Dave Slusser – Ron Thompson duo
Damon Smith
Matt Sperry Trio (Gino Robair, Matt Ingalls, Tim Perkis, John Shiurba)
Christopher Williams
Francis Wong
Please help us spread the word about this important event in our musical community. Leap Frog, Matthew’s former employer, will be setting up a fund for donations. We will keep you updated about this in the coming weeks.
I am at your service, should you have any further questions.
Peace,
Phillip Greenlief
c/o Evander Music
PO Box 22158
Oakland, CA 94623-9991
(510) 652-7914
pgsaxo@pacbell.net
www.evandermusic.com
Matthew’s Memorial Service
Matthew’s memorial service was held at the Chapel of the Chimes in Oakland yesterday.
We should all live our lives such that the people around us are inspired to throw such a remembrance when we pass. I have never been to a memorial like this — great musicians from all over the country came to play things they had played with Matt before, to improvise, to speak, to remember, to pray. Parents, siblings, friends voiced their feelings. Stacia spoke courageously. The cast of Hedwig played two songs from the show, which left everyone with Kleenex in hand. Little Lila was hoisted on shoulders to see friends and family clapping to Klezmer music. I held small sleeping Miles in my arms and felt so grateful for his existence, our relationship. Friends showed their love for one another. We all cried, and started to move through the wall toward acceptance of Matthew’s loss. At the end of the service, we saw Stacia smiling a bit – the first time in days, so gratifying.
The existence of the chapel blew many of us away – as if a big chunk of old Europe had landed in the middle of Oakland, virtually hidden. Of course, if I had made it to one of Matthew’s performances inside the chapel, its beauty would not have come as such a surprise — he played there twice, with ensembles scattered throughout its Borges-ian labyrinths, where tall banks of urns are interspersed with indoor gardens, sculptures, excerpts from texts of various religions. Dappled sunlight, ferns, total serenity. At the time, it seemed Matthew was playing all over the place, there would be lots of chances. Don’t let chances pass you by, they may not come again.
Matthew loved the idea of urns shaped like books — the bookends of one’s life – and some of his ashes will be stored in a set. More ashes will go to water.
Later, to Stacia’s cousins’ house to sit Shiva (Matthew and Stacia are Jewish, many of us there were not), continue the remembrance, eat good food. Handed out sound board recordings from the SF Hedwig cast performance. Showed Stacia a picture of Matthew in Pensacola 1988 with Grecian Formula 69, looking so much younger (because he was) (Matthew is on the right). Stacia laughed and commented that his knees looked knobbly.
Now that the memorial is past and well-wishers begin to clear out, the hard part begins for Stacia and Lila – how to support themselves, pay mortgage, raise a girl without a father, fund Lila’s education, and so on. A recurring memorial concert is planned to help raise funds for the family, and friends will be pulling together to do what we can.
Farewell Matthew – we love you and miss you. But as Matthew’s brother put it yesterday:
You are vibration, you are music.
The Cord That Spun its Own Top
Matthew would have wanted us to go hear some good bass. Our long-time hero Mike Watt was in SF to finish off his “the cord that spun its own top” tour at Bottom of the Hill. Went with Will, Mike, Roger, Chris, Josh (xian and Jeremy also there). No words for this show — bass, drums, organ trio, but this was no Jimmy Smith, no MMW — organ such a perfect foil to Watt’s bass, rhythms unlike anything I’ve ever experienced, but totally rocking in a maritime punk sort of way. Difficult to describe, but utterly satisfying.
Matthew told me once he actually had mixed feelings about Watt’s playing, and I guess I can understand why, from Matt’s perspective, although he did dig a lot of Watt’s thing — just not all of it. At the same time, Matthew was nothing if not totally open minded, happy to be turned on to new experiences, happy to see people stretching out into new territories. I think he would have really enjoyed the evening — it sure felt like he was with us. We hoisted a glass or two in his honor.
As the band approached the stage for the encore, I snagged Watt and told him quickly about Matthew Sperry, Bay Area bassist hit by a car while on bike and killed two days ago. Watt took stage and dedicated the encore to Matthew, so everything that came next was for him. It was hard to know whether to focus my attention on the music or on the memory of Matt, so I danced instead. The encore consisted of a (for lack of a better description) Hawkwind-style driving space jam segued into The Minutemen’s “This Ain’t No Picnic,” morphed into The Stooges’ “Little Doll,” which finally evolved into an inspiring rant on getting real, connecting with people, making your own art, etc. In a low voice, Watt intoned:
Go to the source. Cut the strings. No Old Navy. No Gap. No American Idol. Make your own life. People living together. Start a band. Make your own fun.
Later, as Watt was busy signing posters, we came up to the stage and told him a bit more about Matthew, told him how much the encore had meant to us. Watt said he was a bicyclist himself. Seemed genuinely moved. Pressed his palms together and made a small namaste bow. Signed a poster for us:
bass and bikes,
Mike Watt
Matthew Sperry
All of the Matthew-related posts have been moved to matthewsperry.org, which was set up just after his death. All further memorial information on Matthew will be posted there. If you are looking for the original announcement with the hundreds of amazing comments remembering Matthew, it now lives here (and is still accepting new comments).

