Jon Crispin's Notebook

Long Beach (LGB)

Posted in airlines, airports, Transportation, Travel by joncrispin on 28/05/2015

Flew to California last night.  I love the Long Beach airport.  You can disembark through the front or the back of the plane and walk to the terminal on the tarmac. Very old school.

A Saturday Post

Posted in Asylums, Family, Graveyards, History, Jon Crispin, Travel, Willard Asylum, Willard Suitcases by joncrispin on 30/03/2013

Here’s a bunch of random stuff.

On our last day in New Orleans we took the trolley out to the Garden District.  I was very happy to walk under The Pearl neon sign and see that it was turned on this time.

I have always liked wandering around graveyards and the Lafayette Cemetery was near to the trolley.

There is a great bookstore nearby and I was finally able to find a copy of Maira Kalman’s “And The Pursuit of Happiness”.  I have been looking for a while now, and was so happy to find it.  She sent me the nicest email about the Willard Suitcases and I was eager to see this book, as I really like her work.  I especially like that she mentions the numbered graves at Gettysburg since they are so much like the ones at the Willard cemetery.

We flew back very late into BWI and this is what I saw out the window as we flew over DC.

I had a great shoot on Wednesday with another amazing writer.  Poets & Writers asked me to photograph Neil Gaiman and he is the nicest guy.  I can not post any shots until the story runs sometime this summer, but I will as soon as I can.

And finally, we drive Peter to DC tomorrow to help him find a place to live and get him settled.  The usual melancholy has been creeping in and so I have been listening to a lot of Percy Grainger.  I have always been so taken with his music.  I seem to recall as a boy listening to a CBC program with my dad that used this piece as a theme.  Here’s another that I especially like.  The thing for me about Grainger is that there  is an element of sadness in his music in spite of the light-hearted feeling of the tunes.  He was a pretty out there fellow and the one quote of his that I think of often is him talking about his work.  When speaking of his use of harmony, he said “My efforts even in those young days, were to wrench the listener’s heart with my chords.  It is the contrast between the sweet and the harsh…that is heart-rending…And the worth of my music will never be guessed, or its value to mankind felt, until the approach to my music is consciously undertaken as a ‘pilgrimage to sorrows.'”

Yaz

Posted in Art, History, People, Sport, Travel by joncrispin on 01/07/2011

Yaz

Cris and I flew to California last night.  JetBlue is the only airline with direct flights from Logan to Long Beach, and it was a nice flight.  It was pleasant to see this life-sized Yaz at the gate.  Only in Boston, I guess.  To get to the airport, you drive through the Ted Williams tunnel and then just before you get on the plane you are reminded again about how big a role the Sox play in New England’s identity.    I didn’t see Paul Revere anywhere, but Sam Adams was in all the bars.

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