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T. Schools ~ ~ ~ A
chance meeting at a mini folk fest In NE Mpls over a found object on
the ground. A guitar pick laying on the ground without the motion of
music drew an impulse to pick it up as a
momento of this day of music. Which led to the wandering seeker of a
lost pick - - Timothy Schools. We talked for a few minutes, he gave me
a CD and met up the following day. This
be a Sunday afternoon at a NE Mpls cafe with a cup of coffee and
a barking dog in the distance. From Maine, he moved to Chicago where he
did restoration work and got to know many of the artists and musicians.
For about 20 years from the 1980's onward his passion for art, the
artists and musicians he met brought forth a number of portraits and
scenes. Which would include many of the black artist and jazz musicians
along with many others he would meet. This would lead to his music
venture with Derek Frigo along with working with Joey Molland. Tim
Schools elaborated with a smooth flowing voice of passion and genuine
appreciation for all the good fortune that has come his way and all
that is to follow as the Tim Schools experience continues.
Tim with Steve and Karen of Gallery 13
Have a listen to the song 'How Do I Live'© 2003
Dial up
High Speed
The T. Schools Experience
Vocals - Tim Schools
Guitar and bass - Derek Frigo
Drums - Vik Foxx
Coverage by P~Kramer
Oct. 2005 Photos by P~Kramer
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Tim Schools Elaborates :
Three years ago I drove up here to see the musician Joey Molland. To do his
portrait. I filmed it. . . Joey Molland , he played with the band
'Badfinger'. . . he played some of the hit songs that as kids my
brothers and I adored. Then, I took the film documentation back to
Chicago and showed it to my backer. He also knew the band. He heard me
singing on it. Because, at one point when Joey was playing the riffs
from some of the songs, I asked to handle one of the guitars and show
him a little something that I had made. He liked it very much and my
backer said that I need to record and start playing.
Thats
how I came up here - - because of Joey. I didn't really get into the
city much at first. Then, all of a sudden . . . I was in mourning . . . my wife
died . . . my guitarist friend died . . . about a year and a half ago
within a three week period. So, the music on the CD 'The T. Schools
Experience' . . . I was not ready for anyone to hear it. So I was
working around Joey doing paintings and doing my acoustic
renditions and he was helping me out with some magical notes. So I've
been doing these acoustic renditions for about the last two years as I
travel to Chicago, Tampa and back here to the Twin Cities. Playing open
mics and having fun. Now, just recently I've been really interested in
starting to . . . I really want people to start hearing this. I'm
really glad I made this album. With Derek Frigo which was extra special
for me. . . then he died soon after we made the album. Derek is the son
of the great jazz violinest - - Johnny Frigo.
Johnny would play at my art shows. I often had the top jazz
musicians. . . so like Jon Wever, Johnny Frigo and Howard Levy
would play at my art shows. . . like, in Chicago and set it up my own
way such as the restaurant 'The Black Bird' where I would have my
paintings set up and have these musicians playing . . . a really nice
senario. When I came up here. . . well, I eventually met Steve of
Gallery 13. He's a really positive art dealer. I never really liked
being envolved with Art Galleries. . . I always sold everything on my
own.
I've had really solid experiences my whole life. Been around
greatness everywhere I've gone. Hopping from one stone to the next. In
this techno world I feel. . . what I have is so primitive and strongly
founded. Everything I've done, I've pruned and really taken care of it.
I know its solid. I've been an artist for a long time and treat my
music like my paintings. I started in Maine and then things really took
off in Chicago where I did restoration work. I did this painting in
1987 'A Picnic' and I was at the house of Robert Biggs, the University
of Chicago, doing some restoration work. He saw my work and I showed up
at the house. . . I was young, about 22 yet looked 15. . . not what
they expected. But, I have a certain craftsmanship in my blood as my
family were restorers. So, this painting here 'A Picnic'. . . the
reason the faces turned out dark was because I didn't have very many
paints and I was a naive painter. I wasn't schooled as such but loved
to paint. Robert Biggs and Clarence Anderson saw the painting and said
it looked like a black family in a Renoir setting. I thought beautiful
and they bought it. Before I knew it, the Chicago Tribune was writing
'Schools creates racial harmony'. It was a total mistake making the
faces dark. . . yet beautiful and a wildfire of interest and buyers
came my way. I had a deep appreciation for the black artist and
culture. .
. so like for five years in Chicago I got to hang out with alot
of great black artist who were not really known. Like from the 1930's
and 1940's . . . I was making portraits of them and they sold . . . I
would ask buyers why they want to buy these paintings from me a then 25
year old white guy when there are so many great black painters. They
were not often aware of those artists. . . and, I got to hang out with
many of them and do their portraits. . . some have since died.
Life has allowed me to cross the paths of so many legends. . .
the unkown, because of the times were not appriaciated. . . and also a
number of music and art legends from the 1960's and 1970's. My uncle
use to open for Johnny Cash so I have a really love for music. An
artist friend told me never to do music. . . and that I'm meant to be a
great painter. I've always had high goals. . . I think when you're a
little kid your life is right there. I believe that thing about the
first years of your life. They stay with you. . . my sister was born
after me and she had a broken arm and a collapsed lung. A Catholic
family with three brothers and then she was born. So my family was
flipping out over having a girl. When she was born and in critical
condition, I was a year and a half old and all the attention went to
her. I was like flipping out cause my mother was like Mary Poppins. I
set the house on fire and doing things that was to smart for a one and
half year old boy. I needed attention so bad that I think I became
really sharp at figuring out how to get it. . . and then at some point
my mother began to orchestrate a win win environment for me around the
house with my brothers as a remedy for the period of extreme lack of
attention. . . so I began growing up with a sense that I could be good
at anything. . . and ever since all my dreams and goals have come true.
- - Continued below

Related Web Links
www.timschools.com
www.johnnyfrigo.com www.enuffznuff.com
www.joeymolland.com
www.gallery13.com
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