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  • The man time forgot

    Lancaster Newspapers, PA
    May 28 2006

    The man time forgot
    Leon Redbone opens Gretna jazz season

    By Michael Long
    Sunday News

    Published: May 27, 2006 11:12 PM EST

    LANCASTER COUNTY, PA - Leon Redbone could manage little more than
    weary whispers as he spoke into the telephone, his signature mellow
    baritone reduced to barely audible scratches of sound.

    Clearly, Redbone was not a well man. `I'm doing so-so,' he said. `I'm
    worn out, I guess.'

    But not from touring. Of late, Redbone has taken his sunshine jazz
    and throwback blues act on the road just one week a month, and when
    he takes the stage June 9 at Mount Gretna, it will be his first
    scheduled performance in nearly two months.

    No, it wasn't the rigors of life as an entertainer that had Redbone
    seriously ailing for, he claims, the first time. The problem was
    something less tangible.

    `Perhaps it's just my general sensation of being overwhelmed by the
    complete nonsense that goes on today. It's beginning to wear on me.'

    Onstage, Redbone hearkens back to a different age, with his largely
    pre-World War II material and standard uniform of white suit, Panama
    hat and dark sunglasses. His offstage persona appears to be
    strikingly similar.

    Redbone considers himself a `bizarre extension' of someone who
    performed in a musical age sometime between the mid-19th and early
    20th centuries, when the roots of blues and jazz were still taking
    hold around the campfires and on the porches of America.

    What is nostalgia for some is a way of life for Redbone. Talking to
    him, you get the sense he sincerely wishes he could go back to a time
    far removed from today. The present, it seems, drags him down.

    `When I do get connected to the realities of today, it's
    disappointing, depressing and annoying. Every aspect of it,' Redbone
    said.

    Get him going, and Redbone can kvetch like an old man, which, by some
    estimates, he is.

    While speculation and conjecture place Redbone a little past
    retirement age, no one knows for sure his exact age because he
    obsessively guards the details of his personal life.

    He first appeared in Toronto in the mid-1970s as a man of about 30.
    He may or may not be Canadian. Popular mythology holds he was born in
    Cyprus in 1949 to Armenian parents and given the name Dickran
    Gobalian.

    Rebone is now believed to live somewhere in Pennsylvania with Beryl
    Handler, who has produced some of his albums and is his supposed
    wife.

    It could all be true, or it could all be a carefully orchestrated
    ruse; no one knows because Redbone resists talking about his own past
    almost as vehemently as he resists participating in the present.

    `I have great difficulties because I have absolutely no liking (for
    this time). As much as I like some of the technological advancements,
    I really don't feel any affection for the time and the place.

    `So I try not to get too involved with the present, as much as I can.
    I try not to get too involved with the mind set of today. In some
    ways, I'm living in my own time.'

    Redbone does feel comfortable connecting to the here and now for that
    short time he's onstage. Performing, he said, has calmative
    properties.

    `It's like taking a pill: You get some relief.'

    - - -

    All jazz concerts in the 2006 Music at Gretna series will be held at
    Mount Gretna Playhouse, off Route 117 in Mount Gretna. Performances
    begin at 8 p.m. unless otherwise noted. The following is a schedule
    of performers:

    June 10 - New Black Eagle Jazz Band

    June 11 - Jazz Worship Service featuring New Black Eagle Jazz Band,
    11 a.m.

    July 22 - Progressive Jazz: An Evening with Patricia Barber

    Aug. 12 - Brian Lynch and Eddie Palmieri, trumpet and piano
    Sept. 2 - Bill Charlap, piano
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