Paul on tour

Thursday, December 28, 2006

And So It Ends




And so it is over-this marvelous, year-long adventure. Now we are back in good ol' North America recovering from Christmas.
We had some of the best experiences we've ever had on the trip-now it's back to this version of normal life. Thanks to all
of you out there for following us! Best wishes for 2007 to all!

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

Zach plays the pandeiro with our hotel's great samba band


This was when we arrived a month ago-Zach now runs to wherever they are playing around the pool and dances and
bangs the pandeiro when offered. The 3-piece band is smoking hot-I should know their names and I promise I will soon.

Monday, November 06, 2006

Bella's Halloween Pumpkins








Bella did these mainly herself on the computer from a program emailed us by Karen Ewart.
Arty pumpkins...

Rio Fun






Here's some pool shots. The mountain in the back is to the west of us-the ocean is south of us.

More Rio pix





Yes, Cynthia and I recommend Rio. Definitely come here and miss Sao Paulo.
Picture 1: Cynthia and the kids in the Botanical Gardens. There are trees there dating back to the 18th century.
Picture 2: Samba dancers at the Premiere party.
Picture 3: Dad (me, Paul Hanson, SALTIMBANCO saxophonist) with Zach, Bella. Geremie (son of Marc Sohier, bassist and
bandleader of SALTIMBANCO band) is next to me in the pool.
Picture 4: Samba band at the Premiere party. It was a very loud and very funky samba band. The roots of Brazilian samba
are from Angola in Africa where I heard it was called Simba (?) I saw this on a BBC program about Brazilian-African connections.
Unlike in North America-African slaves were allowed to keep a lot of their religious and cultural heritage when they were brought over.
I hope someone who was at the SALTIMBANCO Halloween party has some pix of Cynthia and I and the kids..send them my way. It was great to go to a party for Cynthia as she really wanted to go to the Premiere party.

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

Concert Shots





Hello again. Brad Fernihough is our head physiologist on SALTIMBANCO. He is
also a budding professional photographer-and he was nice enough to let me use
some of his shots of my duo concert with Caito back in Sao Paulo. Here is a sampling of his work. That concert was a lot of fun and it's great to see it reflected here-although we look serious we're having serious fun! His site will be www.bradfernihoughphotography.com and I think it will be operational soon.

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Bella and Zach at the welcome party in RIO




I'm adding these pix after a great day of swimming pools, playground next to the swimming pool, drinks, food, walking around,
and enjoying the sun and sea.

RIO: WOW! NOW THAT'S MORE LIKE IT!!!



Nothing will ever prepare you for the experience of seeing the natural beauty of this place. You don't see it driving thru
the suburbs up thru the huge favelas and poverty as you come in from the west. You won't see it as you are driving in bumper
to bumper traffic underneath a freeway at rush hour next to properties where they have barbed wire and broken glass embedded in the fences for protection. You won't see it in a traffic jam stuck inside 4 tunnels on the way to your hotel.
But-when you finally, finally arrive at one of the famous beaches here-you will see it for sure, no doubt. The light, the sea
breeze air, the carioca lifestyles that you see out your window, the water, the sand, the mountains right next to the water, the jungle, the clouds-it's all there. THIS is why Brazil is famous. Not only that-our hotel is off the hook, incredibly comfortable,
great for the kids, familiar but not home at all-although I could make myself at home here quite easily, THIS is our reward
for SURVIVING SAO PAULO for 3 months. 3 swimming pools (one for the kids), an actual PLAYGROUND 20 feet from the pool,
a bar IN THE POOL, room service, 5 restaurants, a mall downstairs, and shuttle service between the hotel and beaches and
shopping malls. And they welcomed us with music and capirinhas (somewhat like a Margarita but better and stronger-capirinhas are I think the national drink). I can't think of a more opposite feeling than being in Sao Paulo. I must say
that all the people I met in Sao Paulo are really nice and fun to be around. The arts, business-it's all there. But living there
sucks in terms of getting around and breathing.
A comparison chart:

SAO PAULO:
Choking and coughing due to constant traffic smog, rivers that are open sewers.
RIO:
Air is sea air straight off the Atlantic-also plenty of Atlantic coast rain forest around. Air is wonderful.
SAO PAULO:
Hotel is a business hotel and very stiff. They take your plate away before you are finished because of their
ultra-strict training. Nothing to do for kids-except a ball pit on Saturdays next to the freeway next to the sewer river.
High-speed internet is not high-speed; still costs $15 a day.
RIO:
Hotel is the bomb. Next to the beach, 3 swimming pools, relaxed efficient staff, mall downstairs, A PLAYGROUND (first one
I've seen in Brazil that I can recognize as a playground), 40% on room service and all food. They have expensive high-speed
but you can also choose dial-up for free and it works just as good as the high-speed in Sao Paulo!
SAO PAULO:
Traffic, traffic, rain, rain, traffic, gunshots, the smell of shit. Kid parks are all hyped-up crazy places with 10,000 kids in them.
RIO:
I'm sure there's going to be traffic and gunshots in some parts of this town. No doubt it's very dangerous. We
saw a lot of severe poverty on the way in. It's just that the geography prevents us from having to live in sections
where we should hear gunshots and have to deal with traffic literally all the time. I'm sure some of the time it will be bad.
But the air and the scenery is just so much better than having to stare out your window at a vacant lot next to a freeway next to a sewer river while your kids can't go anywhere because there's no place to go. Kids will have plenty to do without having to go to a kiddie funny farm of an amusement park.
I'll let you all know how things progress-so far so very good to be here. The pictures were taken right out on our
patio outside our rooms at the Rio Intercontinental.

Road to Rio


Finally we're leaving Sao Paulo and taking what will turn out to be a 7-hour bus ride with Cirque members to Rio.
Here's a few pix from the trip. The scenery was very green and I would say subtropical with a hint of California as we dropped in elevation from about 1000 meters to sea level. At one point about an hour out we started a series of switchbacks-this is where I snapped this shot.

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

At the mall amusement park


Here's Zach, Cynthia and Bella riding the merry-go-round.

Great Concert with Caito Marcondes



It was so, so very nice to get back to my 'bassoon roots' on this tour. As this blog is linked somewhat to my www.jazzbassoon.com site there hasn't been much discussion of that instrument here. In 1998-a really long time
ago it seems-I was working on a new age bassoon album with violinist Tracy Silverman of Turtle Island and Jim Brickman fame.
At Tracy's house I met Caito. He was there playing with Tracy on something and there was a jam one night at the house. Cynthia came along and somewhere we have a photo of me playing a drum and Cynthia playing a shaker or something. I had a mustache and goatee-it was THAT long ago back in the 90's. Caito and I really wanted to get another chance to play-in 2000 I almost went down to Brazil to do just that but I got called to tour with Bela Fleck. So-we finally got the chance to do a set
of mainly original music that Caito wrote-but we also improvised some tunes as well. It was a great evening that really meant something to me and Caito-that we could get together because of my gig with Cirque and share some special sounds. Some
Cirque people came down and really made it even more special. We did this on my off day Monday Oct 2nd. I wish we could play some more-we're talking about Rio this fall and then the US this year. Caito sings, plays drums and xylophone all at the same time. And he's got a great sense of humor too. Our Cirque physiologist Brad Ferinhough took some really awesome pictures that may end up here soon. He's really an incredible photographer and I'm looking forward to seeing a sample here.

Clubland for the band




The SALTIMBANCO band played another club gig Oct 1st after an entire week of the show. Our guitarist Benoit
got everything together (including chord charts!) and me, Armen, Serge and Marc all had a fun time. I couldn't last
the whole night because I was to play a special duo concert with Brazilian percussionist Caito Marcondes the next night.
But when I was there I crammed the horn on the mic and just let loose with appropriately loud horn funk/blues sounds.



Hi there! There's not too much to do for the kids-as you might remember from the last blog update.
One of the only outdoor places they can play is right next to the Hyatt at this pretty neat Japanese garden. There's
a few lawns, some small bridges over streams with fish in them, nice designs of rocks and plants. It's worked for
awhile. Zach really just likes to run up and down the metal ramp leading to the place. He also likes picking up pieces
of broken granite molding and throwing them into the water. I taught him how to throw rocks into the stream and he
can't stop throwing EVERYTHING into the water. But we've had a little post-breakfast fun here.

Saturday, September 23, 2006

Long Run in Sao Paulo


Hi everyone-finally a new posting!
We are about 4 weeks away from getting out of this concrete jungle. Cynthia and the kids are here and I am SO HAPPY to
be back all together as a family. They are getting into the routine here. Unfortunately-there's not so much for them to do here
as this is really a crime and poverty spot and we don't want to take too many chances. Nothing says we're not Brazilian more
than having three natural redheads in a family. The general gut feeling we have here is that things are just not quite as safe as
you'd want it to be to go around everywhere in town with small kids. Just the other day someone from Cirque witnessed a gunfight between two cars in traffic as they were coming back from downtown at noon. We aren't in a bad area but there's really not much to do besides go to the mall or go to site. Or stay at the hotel. It's just not a beautiful town like Buenos Aires-it's really a huge city with an incredible amount of economic disparity between incredibly rich (and lighter-skinned) "beautiful" people and INCREDIBLY poor (and usually darker-skinned) people living on a dollar a day who live in favelas made out of tin, cardboard
and scrap wood. There really is two Brazils and you can see the contrast everywhere. And there's some interesting decisions made by the authorities here that would surprise anyone. For example-on Father's Day here in Sao Paulo-they let criminal fathers out of prison because they have assessed that this is more SAFE than keeping them in. Apparently a lot of these criminals have connections to more criminals on the outside and hell can ensue. Everyone here is really ready to go on to Rio
after being here since late July. There's a social scene for some and some incredible music and culture but it's such a smoggy and crowded city with such bad smells and traffic that people are really ready for something else.
We are trying to work ourselves out of a pickle. When I got my family visas-they had to have proof that they were traveling-and they could not be traveling for more than a 3-month stay. It was told to me that when they got here they could extend their visa (and they are) and also change their ticket. Well-guess what. The airline we used to get down here was Continental.
I tried to change their tickets so that they could stay til the end of the tour and we could all go home together (Zach is a handful on a 20-hour flight). They told me that because I'm changing the ticket from a 3-month ticket to a 4-month ticket
I have to be put into a different ticket class and that the change would cost me $980 a ticket PLUS $150 for just changing the date. That comes to nearly $2300 (!?!) to stay an extra 8 DAYS! This sucks and the Cirque travel and lodging guy is trying
to pull a solution. Cynthia has been through hell more than once this year trying to keep our wild bear cub of a kid Zach from
tearing up the plane on a 18-hour jaunt South and North. Stay tuned.
Although the tone of this latest post is not too positive-we have had a great time just getting into the routine we have.
Breakfast in the hotel is fabulous and free-and there's a beautiful japanese garden right outside the hotel that the kids can play in and be with their friends from the circus. The pools are great here and the spa is wonderful-so is the gym. Just being in a routine all together for awhile is really nice. We have gone around a little bit and will some more. But we'd really love to
get to Rio as we are right on the beach and that will be great.

Two interesting glimpses into SALTIMBANCO



We've been selling out here every show and there's been a lot of press. It usually doesn't involve me-although there was TV cameras and a crew filming for some Brazilian show that got some footage of Bella offering the woman interviewer a doll while
Zach, Cynthia and I were in the background (and I was in makeup and costume). I'm posting some URLs from a site
called YouTube that involve this show. One is a TV interview of our show with our media woman Pasqual. Another is something that was taken back in Argentina showing an act that isn't in the show but was in a special cabaret performance of non-SALTIMANCO stuff in Buenos Aires. NOTE: after posting this I see that there doesn't appear to be URLs but instead blue boxes
of question marks. Press on THOSE and you will get to the YouTube videos.

Party for Geremie




There was a birthday party for our music director's son Geremie. I took a few shots of the scene.
In the second shot you can see Geremie underneath his mom Linda (who was an acrobat on this show) as
they look at cutting the cake. Zach is processing all the hubbub.The first is a shot including Bella,
her friends Alena and Cleo. And the last is more of Zach getting ornery.

At Caito's house


This is a shot of me sitting with Miguel while Caito is in the back fixing some Brazilian barbeque. I'm sorry not to have more
shots of Caito as he is really an amazing Brazilian musician, composer and percussionist. And a great host. We are doing a duo
gig Oct. 2nd at a small theatre here in Sao Paulo. I was really, really tired and sick this day so we took it easy. Caito, his wife Regina and son Miguel were incredibly gracious hosts; I had to sleep there a bit while my kids were all over the place while our hosts were so supportive and happy to have us. I really wish I had more time to work out more stuff with Caito. He's performed
with just about everyone in the Brazilian jazz and pop scene: Milton Nascimento, Toninho Horta, Egberto Gismonti, Hermeto Pasqual, Rita Lee, Turtle Island String Quartet, John Scofield. He's also a great writer-I'm playing something he wrote for me on his new album. It's so difficult when I'm playing 10 shows a week and getting really, really exhausted to do something along the lines of what I was doing creatively before I joined this show. But we will do our best when we can.

Zach in the bidet


Zach is fascinated by water and toilet-like appliances. The first thing he did in his new home (Room 310, Grand Hyatt, Sao Paulo) was to run to the bathroom and look for something to turn on. The easiest and most accessible was the bidet (god, I hope that's the right spelling). I hope you all know what a bidet is so I won't explain it. Anyway-Zach hauls ass into the bathroom, sees the bidet and all the faucets attached to it. He turns on all the knob handles and water shoots up into his face
and onto the ceiling. These shots are from a later period where he's reached a certain satisfaction with the thing. We also turned off the water supply as well.

Zach likes the bidet