Jean-Pierre Melville: Who does that for anyone?
The ruins of Studio Jenner, June 30th, 1967.
"... Yet [Jean-Pierre] Melville did not merely lift the name, he made it his own. In his 13 films, Melville created an austere, sombre aesthetic: even his colour films appear to be in black and white. His protagonists, whether resistants, gangsters or priests, are solitary ‘men without women’, in the words of Volker Schlöndorff, who worked as his assistant in the early 1960s. Driven by duty, they move inexorably towards their fate, which is often death. Paris is usually their home, and it’s depicted as if it were always night, a city of slick cabarets, backroom poker games and garages where you can get a makeover for a newly stolen car – or a gun. In their fleeting appearances, even the city’s monuments acquire a desolate air. In the words of the director Philippe Labro, Melville’s films are suffused with ‘solitude, violence, mystery, a passion for risk and the aftertaste of the unpredictable and the inevitable’. Melville was a loner and a curmudgeon, with more than a touch of Bartleby. ..."
London Review of Books
[PDF] One Hundred Years Of Jean-Pierre Melville
Cinemois by Jean Pierre Melville
Guardian - Jean-Pierre Melville: cinematic poet of the lowlife and criminal
Movie Poster of the Week: Jean-Pierre Melville in Posters
W - Magnet of Doom, Surrender to the Void, Criterion ($), YouTube: L'aîné des Ferchaux
2015 January: Le Cercle Rouge (1970), 2017 June: Jean-Pierre Melville’s Cinema of Resistance, 2017 November: Un Flic (1972), 2018 November: Two Men in Manhattan (1959)
The Dancing Devils of Djibouti - Groupe RTD (2020)
"In comparison to its neighbors on the Horn of Africa -- Ethiopia, Eritrea, and Somalia -- or those on the nearby Arabian Peninsula, the Republic of Djibouti is small. With under a million people spread out over 9,000 square miles, it is perhaps best known by outsiders for the foreign military bases strategically located at its eponymous capital city, a port located just where the Gulf of Aden meets the Red Sea. Less prominent in the international mindset is a sense of the oft-overlooked local music scene. This unfamiliarity has a post-colonial aspect that overlaps with the roadblocks imposed upon the music industries by the authoritarian national government, which has long kept a tight grip on recording albums for extranational export. Djibouti gained its independence in 1977 after nearly a century of French occupation as French Somaliland. No album has been recorded in Djibouti for circulation outside of the state thus far until now. ..."
Groupe RTD Showcase Intercontinental Flows on 'The Dancing Devils of Djibouti' (Audio)
bandcamp (Audio)
amazon
YouTube: Asma Omar - Buuraha U Dheer (The Highest Mountains)
1903 Tour de France
"The 1903 Tour de France was the first cycling race set up and sponsored by the newspaper L'Auto, ancestor of the current daily, L'Équipe. It ran from 1 to 19 July in six stages over 2,428 km (1,509 mi), and was won by Maurice Garin. The race was invented to boost the circulation of L'Auto, after its circulation started to plummet from competition with the long-standing Le Vélo. Originally scheduled to start in June, the race was postponed one month, and the prize money was increased, after a disappointing level of applications from competitors. The 1903 Tour de France was the first stage road race, and compared to modern Grand Tours, it had relatively few stages, but each was much longer than those raced today. The cyclists did not have to compete in all six stages, although this was necessary to qualify for the general classification. ..."
Wikipedia
1903 Tour de France
YouTube: Can We Ride And Survive A Stage Of The 1903 Tour de France?, Grand Départ de Montgeron 1903, Tour de France 1903 départ devant le café “Au Réveil Matin” à Montgeron
2008 July: Tour de France 2008, 2009 July: Tour de France 2009, 2010 July: Tour de France 2010, 2011 July: Tour de France 2011, 2012 July: 2012 Tour de France, 2015 July: 2015 Tour de France, 2015 July: Tour de France 2015: Team Time Trial Win Bolsters American’s Shot at Podium, 2015 July: Tour de France: Chris Froome completes historic British win, 2016 July: 2016 Tour de France, 2017 July: 2017 Tour de France, 2018 May: 2018 Giro d'Italia, 2019 July: 2018 Tour de France, 2019 June: 2019 Tour de France
The brick beauty of a 1902 East Side power plant
"Walk along the East River Greenway on the Upper East Side—the breezy riverside path beside the FDR Drive—and you’ll pass hospital buildings, apartment residences, and parks. But a remnant of a different New York appears as you approach 74th Street. It’s a dirty red brick and stone fortress, a massive edifice with enormous Romanesque arched windows, the rare building that comes off as hulking and massive while also graceful and elegant. This citadel could be a former factory or armory. But it’s actually a power plant—something of a companion to a similar power station built across Manhattan at roughly the same time on 11th Avenue and 59th Street. ..."
Ephemeral New York
East River, 1934 - Jara Henry Valenta
The Color that Changed the Course of Art
Still Life, 17th century, Paul Liegeois.
"True blue, royal blue, ultramarine: During the Renaissance, these were all names for the most prized of all pigments, lazurite, derived from the semiprecious mineral lapis lazuli. Mined and processed since the sixth century almost exclusively in Afghanistan, and imported to European markets through Venice, it was worth more than five times its weight in gold. It was used sparingly, often reserved for the richest patrons by the most prosperous artists. Look at this sumptuous still life, for example, painted in mid-17th-century Paris by Paul Liegeois, featuring his signature royal blue drapery. He achieved the effect with thin glazes of ultramarine oil paint applied over a layer that was highlighted with white lead. When light penetrates the thin blue glaze, the white reflects it back, intensifying a deep blue hue. ..."
the iris
The Seine at Charenton, 1874, Jean-Baptiste Armand Guillaumin.
RIO / Avant-Prog
"One the one hand, the acute humour and the artistic imprint of the great Frank Zappa and on the other hand the ideology of rock-in-opposition (RIO) that imbued many bands with the philosophy of artistic expression unharnessed by trends or grey suits’ orders, are two factors that rendered avant-prog as the most pure prog subgenre of the 80s and triumphed over plenty musical works. The genealogical tree of the main British representatives of RIO, namely the great Henry Cow, supplied us with new groups and personal careers that we are about to talk. First and most important is Art Bears, the band of Fred Frith and Chris Cutler who after releasing two splendid albums, delivered in 1981 their third and also their last LP The World As It Is Today. The song titles hint a direct attack to capitalism (consider The Song Of Investment Capital Overseas, The Song Of The Monopolists, Freedom, Democracy) and with regard to music the listener is immersed in experimental, dark, avant-garde uncompromising stuff, spiked with plentiful jazz elements. ..."
Progressive rock in the 80s (Video)
RIO/AVANT-PROG: A Progressive Rock Sub-genre
allmusic
Astor Piazzolla - Quinteto Tango Nuevo - live in Utrecht (1984)
"The iconic concerto in Utrecht, October, 27th, 1984, when the master of the bandoneon Astor Piazzolla performed on his artistic pinnacle, with his Quinteto Tango Nuevo; completed by Fernando Suárez Paz (violin), Pablo Ziegler (piano), Oscar Lopez Ruiz (guitar), and Hector Console (bass). Recorded for a live audience in the Vredenburg Music Hall, Utrecht, Netherlands. ..."
YouTube: Astor Piazzolla - Quinteto Tango Nuevo (1984) 10 videos
008 March: Astor Piazzolla, 2010 September: Astor Piazzolla Remixed, 2011 February: Adios Nonino, 2011 April: Milonga del angel, 2014 May: Live at The Montreal Jazz Festival (1986), 2015 June: Libertango (1972), 2019 December: The Rough Dancer and the Cyclical Night (1989)
2018 Infinity Award: Applied — Alexandra Bell
"Alexandra Bell is a multidisciplinary artist who investigates the complexities of narrative, information consumption, and perception. Utilizing various media, she deconstructs language and imagery to explore the tension between marginal experiences and dominant histories. Through investigative research, she considers the ways media frameworks construct memory and inform discursive practices around race, politics, and culture. In her current series, Counternarratives, Bell edits New York Times articles, altering headlines, changing images, and redacting text to reveal oppressive patterns in news reportage and society at large. Her work has been exhibited at MoMA PS1, We Buy Gold, Koenig & Clinton Gallery, the Nathan Cummings Foundation, Atlanta Contemporary, and Usdan Gallery. Bell holds a BA in interdisciplinary studies in the humanities from the University of Chicago and an MS in journalism from Columbia University. She lives and works in Brooklyn, New York."
YouTube: 2018 Infinity Award: Applied — Alexandra Bell 8:50
Alexandra Bell: Public Work
W - Alexandra Bell
The Swish Machine: 70 Step Basketball Trickshot
"The Swish Machine is a 70-step, yard-size trick shot that starts and ends with basketball hoops. Between them, sports equipment, toys, tools, yard gear, and household goods create a wide variety of outdoor chain reactions that took a month to build and another month to successfully work. And it took a little over 100 times for each step to finally come together as planned. YouTuber Creezy created and captured it all in one rather astounding continuous take, despite the elements (wind!) and any traditional Rube Goldberg Machine fails. ..."
The Swish Machine, a 70-step basketball trick shot Rube Goldberg Machine
YouTube: The Swish Machine: 70 Step Basketball Trickshot
Duke Ellington: Bundle of Blues (1933), Symphony in Black: A Rhapsody of Negro Life (1935), Black & Tan (1929)
"Edward 'Duke' Ellington with his bandmembers always dressed so simply & elegantly, never falling victims to the hipness of passing fashion & going for the classic. For the one-reel Bundle of Blues (1933) they have a stage setting that is as streamlined & tasteful as as their physical baring. Ellington's was the orchestra that represented the height of good taste in image as well as sound. As the film begins we're hearing 'Lightnin' which blends right into 'Rockin' in Rhythm' which includes a Joe Nanton trumbone solo, followed in quick order by an instrumentalizing 'Stormy Weather' which Duke calls 'a haunting melody.' It's a great song performed by great musicians. Then, stepping out from a curtain, Ivie Anderson appears, to provide the purist of pure interpretation to the lyrics. Most of us know Lena's version best & think of it as her song, but Ivie Anderson was one of the greatest blues singers of her generation. ..."
Weird Wild Realm, Weird Wild Realm - 1
W - Symphony in Black, W - Black and Tan (film)
Discogs
YouTube: Bundle Of Blues, Symphony In Black - A Rhapsody of Negro Life, Black & Tan
2011 November: Duke Ellington - "It Don't Mean a Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)", 1943, 2011 September: "Take the A Train" - Duke Ellington, 2015 January: Home Movies of Duke Ellington Playing Baseball (And How Baseball Coined the Word “Jazz”), 2017 November: Secret Music: On Duke Ellington’s The Queen’s Suite.
Feedback Light as a Fjærlett
"This beautiful instrument from Norway feeds back through spring reverb, and then lets the player adjust the audio with a 10-band graphic equalizer. It was created by Kristoffer Gard Osen, who is based in Oslo. The resulting sounds range from ethereal drones to industrial clanging, and the drones have a metallic vibe while the clanging has a rich resonance. Which is to say, this instrument isn’t about either/or; it’s about the varieties of sound in between. The name of the instrument is Fjærlett, which apparently is Norwegian for feather, or feathery. Which is to say, as Osen has noted, 'You have to play it as light as a feather.' While this video serves as a product announcement by a small, one-person company, I’m sharing it based on the beauty of the sounds made during the performance. Video originally posted a youtube.com. More on the Fjærlett at tilde-elektriske.com."
disquiet (Video)
FJÆRLETT: Spring reverb audio feedback instrument of the gods (Video)
Cryptanalysis
Close-up of the rotors in a Fialka cipher machine
"Cryptanalysis (from the Greek kryptós, 'hidden', and analýein, 'to loosen' or 'to untie') is the study of analyzing information systems in order to study the hidden aspects of the systems. Cryptanalysis is used to breach cryptographic security systems and gain access to the contents of encrypted messages, even if the cryptographic key is unknown. In addition to mathematical analysis of cryptographic algorithms, cryptanalysis includes the study of side-channel attacks that do not target weaknesses in the cryptographic algorithms themselves, but instead exploit weaknesses in their implementation. ... Cryptanalysis has coevolved together with cryptography, and the contest can be traced through the history of cryptography—new ciphers being designed to replace old broken designs, and new cryptanalytic techniques invented to crack the improved schemes. In practice, they are viewed as two sides of the same coin: secure cryptography requires design against possible cryptanalysis. ..."
Wikipedia, W - History of cryptography
W - Martin and Mitchell defection, W - List of cryptographers
Glenn’s Computer Museum
YouTube: What is Cryptography - Introduction to Cryptography - Lesson 1, Introduction to Cryptographic Keys and Certificates, Cryptography Lesson #1 - Block Ciphers
(Left) William Martin and Bernon Mitchell (Center) tell Moscow press why they defected
2015 April: The Imitation Game (2014), 2016 August: Cryptography - Neal Stephenson (1999)
The Italian Cafe Where New Yorkers Sample La Dolce Vita
Al Pacino coming out of the original Caffé Dante in 2010, with the owner, Mario Flotta Sr., inside at the espresso machine.
"You don’t need to have been born in New York, or even to have lived here very long, to be a real New Yorker. All it takes is a certain passion for this improbable, impossible, mythic city — especially when it’s hurting. Since the pandemic hit, Linden Pride and Nathalie Hudson, the Australian owners of Dante, the acclaimed cafe and cocktail bar on Macdougal Street, have sent roughly 4,000 meals to help feed hard-pressed staff at New York hospitals, all of them paid for by Dante itself with the help of contributions from its patrons. ... Finally, by 2013, they were married and settled in the West Village, and in 2015, they bought the old Caffé Dante — a long-cherished Italian coffeehouse that dates to 1915. ..."
NY Times
Caffé Dante
The bar at Dante has a black oak top and matching stools. In the foreground are the banquettes where Italian ladies once met for afternoon coffee.
Bad Diet & Bad Hair Destroy Human Civilization - Aline Kominsky-Crumb and R. Crumb
NYBooks...
2008 August: Robert Crumb, 2010 October: Comics No. 1, 2011 October: Pioneers of Country Music Trading Cards, 2012 August: R. Crumb: The Complete Record Cover Collection, 2015 May: R. Crumb Describes How He Dropped LSD in the 60s & Instantly Discovered His Artistic Style, 2015 June: Heroes of the Blues Boxed Trading Card Set by R. Crumb, 2018 March: Aline Kominsky-Crumb, 2019 March:R. Crumb’s Portraits of Aline and Others, 2020 January: Survey: Robert Crumb & 78 rpm records
15 Essential Black Liberation Jazz Tracks
In the 1960s and ’70s, jazz musicians including Sun Ra, seen here performing at South Street Seaport, created music that tapped into black consciousness.
"In the late 1960s, as black Americans fought for equal rights, music started to reflect their calls to action. Nina Simone wondered what real freedom felt like, and James Brown encouraged black people to proudly proclaim their race. Jazz musicians including Ornette Coleman, Sun Ra and John Coltrane also sought transcendence with their art, and through shrieking horns and deconstructed rhythms, they set forth a new wave of energy music. ..."
NY Times (Video)
Pan Afrikan People’s Arkestra, ‘The Call’ (1978)
Can’t Look Away: Musicians, Writers, and More Reflect on 30 Years of Uncle Tupelo’s ‘No Depression’
"On June 21, 1990, alt-country pioneers Uncle Tupelo (Jay Farrar, Jeff Tweedy, and Mike Heidorn) released their iconic debut album, No Depression. Over the years, the record has been critically hailed as a significant musical mile marker for both its celebration of what came before it (the band was as comfortable tipping its hat to The Carter Family and Lead Belly as it was to The Replacements and The Ramones), as well as for what came after it (in the aftermath of Uncle Tupelo’s breakup, Farrar went on to form Son Volt and Tweedy started Wilco). As part of our celebration of the 30th anniversary of this genre-coalescing touchstone (our interview with Tweedy and Farrar can be found here), we talked to artists, producers, journalists, and other music industry players to get their memories and insights on this iconic roots music touchstone. ..."
No Depression
W - Uncle Tupelo
YouTube: Lounge Ax, Chicago Il. 11/8/92 1:14:46,
2011 July: Uncle Tupelo, 2012 December: No Depression, 2013 August: March 16–20, 1992, 2014 January: Still Feel Gone - Uncle Tupelo (1991), 2015 June: There Was a Time: The History of Uncle Tupelo
Printing Techniques: Mimeo
"If the letterpress represents the magazine or book as high art, the mimeograph machine epitomizes lo-fi production. The master of the mimeograph machine must first of all be a master of the stencil. The stencil is a floppy wax sheet backed by carbon paper and a stiff card, bound together at the top. Text and illustrations were either typed into the stencil with a typewriter or cut with a stylus. In Recollections of My Life as a Woman, Diane Di Prima remembered the frustrations of the stenciling process. … Floating Bear embodied this element to the fullest. In terms of format, the Bear was no frills. The layout is simple. It is all typewritten text with no illustrations. ..."
RealityStudio
RealityStudio: The Great Mimeograph Revolution
Poems in Street, Coffeehouse, and Print—The Mid-1960s
W - Mimeo Revolution
2014 April: A Secret Location on the Lower East Side
The roots album that never got made
"The Saamaka Maroons of Suriname are descendants of people who had been enslaved in West and Central Africa and carried across the Atlantic before running away from plantation slavery at the turn of the eighteenth century. By the middle of the twentieth, about a third belonged to mainline Christian denominations. The rest didn’t, and a more or less easy peace had grown up between the two groups as Christians incorporated an ever-growing variety of older beliefs and practices into their daily lives. When, in the 1970s and 1980s, Rastafarianism made its first inroads into Saamaka society, pushback was fierce. 'They were worse than Christians,' one non-Christian Saamaka man later recalled: Rastas brought with them a unitary new god from parts unknown, they didn’t keep their hair neat in braids and twists, they didn’t hunt game, and rather than raise crops to eat, they planted a mind-altering drug to smoke and sell. Rastas were chased out of village after village. ..."
Africa is a Country (Video)
Suriname History Background (Video)
W - History of Suriname
What the White Horse Tavern meant in the 1950s
"The rough edges are long gone from the White Horse Tavern, the corner bar at Hudson and West 11th Streets that’s been serving drinks (not always under that name) since 1880. Originally this dark, old school bar (above, in 1961) catered to longshoremen and locals. Today, it’s spiffed up for a sidewalk cafe kind of crowd. But for a moment in time in the 1950s, this saloon with the white horse heads in the windows became a place for writers. These writers, mostly young men, gathered in the wood-paneled back room to talk books, culture, and politics with others from across the political spectrum. The White Horse’s postwar literary crowd were drawn to Dylan Thomas (right), the Welsh poet who became a regular, reportedly because it reminded him of the bars in Wales. ..."
Ephemeral New York
2014 December: White Horse Tavern, 2019 June: The Wonderful World of the White Horse
Pain and Glory - Pedro Almodóvar (2019)
"Every so often in Pedro Almodóvar’s sublime 'Pain and Glory,' Salvador Mallo (Antonio Banderas) closes his eyes and drifts away. A celebrated Spanish filmmaker, Salvador has lost his bearings. He’s gravely depressed, and his body seems to have permanently surrendered to his maladies, to his bad back, migraines, asthma and fits of terrifying, mysterious choking. When a friend offers him some heroin to smoke, Salvador readily lights up and disappears. His nagging pains suddenly give way to images from his childhood, idylls that brighten the screen like beacons in a fog. A story of memory and creation, youth and its loss, 'Pain and Glory' circles around the idea of art as self-creation. ..."
NY Times - ‘Pain and Glory’ Review: Almodóvar’s Dazzling Art of Self-Creation (Video)
W - Pain and Glory
Guardian - Pain and Glory – bittersweet perfection from Pedro Almodóvar (Video)
amazon
YouTube: Pain and Glory
Dreaming On Bob Dylan’s Mythic ‘Basement Tapes’
"... The Basement Tapes are a myth. They’re one of those stories that serious music fans, the type of fan that most people would call a collector, and others might call crazy, get lost in. As the myth has been told and retold since the late ‘60s, Bob Dylan, then one of the greatest, if not the greatest, rock stars in the world, had a motorcycle accident. After recovering from his accident in the seclusion of an 11-room house in upstate New York, Dylan called up his band, a handful of musicians who had been known as The Hawks when they backed Canadian rockabilly singer Ronnie Hawkins, and they joined him, soon renting houses not far from where Dylan was residing, one of which came to be known as Big Pink. Over the summer, in the basement of Big Pink, they recorded over 100 tracks, including some new Bob Dylan compositions that remain some of his best. ..."
Days of the Crazy-Wild (Video)
Guardian - Bob Dylan’s back pages: the truth behind the Basement Tapes
2014 December: Jeff Bridges narrates Bob Dylan's road to Big Pink and 'Basement Tapes'
Young Rembrandt
Rembrandt, Self-portrait wearing a soft cap, c. 1633
"The Young Rembrandt exhibition charts the astonishing transformation of the Dutch master Rembrandt. Spanning the years 1624 to 1634, it traces how a young and unremarkable artist from Leiden became the superstar of 17th-century Amsterdam and one of the greatest artists of all time. Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn, simply known as Rembrandt, was born in 1606. There was nothing particularly promising about his work when he qualified as a painter around 1624/5. But during the subsequent decade – working in painting, printmaking and drawing – he was relentless in his efforts to improve. By looking over Rembrandt’s shoulder as he learns from his mistakes and as he experiments with new techniques and subjects, we can follow the steps by which he established himself as an extraordinary talent. ..."
Ashmolean Museum (Video)
Map of Leiden adapted from Pieter Bast, Lugduni, 1600
2020 February: Rembrandt's J'Accuse - Peter Greenaway (2008), 2020 April: Dutch Golden Age Art Wasn’t All About White People. Here’s the Proof.
A Brief History of the Policing of Black Music
"Billie Holiday died handcuffed to her hospital bed because her drug addiction had been criminalized. A Black FBI informant posed as a suitor, hunted her, fell in love with her even, and turned her in for heroin possession, not for hurting anyone, or violence, or for singing too beautiful and true a song but because she was self-medicating against the siege of being a famous Black woman in America, a woman who carried the weight of the nation’s entire soul in her music. For as long as Black music has been popular, crossover, coveted by white listeners and dissected by white critics, it has also been criminalized by white police at all levels of law enforcement. A micro-archive of the criminalization of Black music and police presence within the music, focused on jazz music and improvised forms, shows why we now cry and chant unapologetically for abolition. ..."
LitHub (Video)
Billie Holiday: A Complex Woman, A Jazz Legend (Video)
Independent - Billie Holiday: The wild lady of jazz who adored England (Video)
2010 April: Billie Holiday, 2014 December: "Strange Fruit" (1939), 2014 November: A Harlem Throwback to the Era of Billie Holiday, 2015 February: The Hunting of Billie Holiday, 2015 June: "Fine and Mellow" (1957), 2016 December: Banned From New York City – Live 1948 to 1957
Casting Out
The anchor rope at the bow of the Marilyn Jean IV.
"Growing up in Sheepshead Bay, I was fascinated by the small group of men who fished in the waters off the southern tip of Brooklyn. I would often see their boats docked at the piers and wondered what it was like out on the open water. I live in Clinton Hill now, but when I return to my old neighborhood, I still see those fishermen. So on a recent Saturday, I purchased a ticket to ride aboard the Marilyn Jean IV, a 70-foot boat that takes passengers out on twice-daily fishing trips in the Atlantic. We cast off from the bay and set out on the ocean. The din of the city fell away; Brooklyn turned into a mere speck on the horizon. These are the images of an afternoon aboard the boat. ..."
BKLYNR (August 15, 2013)
15 Things to Know About Sheepshead Bay
forgotten new york
W - Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn
Making a Garden That Welcomes the Birds
A young rose-breasted grosbeak spent part of a summer afternoon on a leaf in the back garden.
"In this most isolated of springs, birds have kept me company. I’ve watched their mating games and turf wars, listened to their serenades and tagged along as they shopped for just the right piece of garden real estate (as long as I was very quiet; no kibitzing, Margaret). Some even let me meet their newborns when the big moment came. All the things I cannot do with my people so much lately, we’ve been doing as usual; the birds remained in my bubble all along. I cannot imagine life without the 70 or so species that visit or reside in the garden each year. As I often say (and write): The birds taught me to garden — or at least to do it smarter. ..."
NY Times
NY Times: The Birds Are Not on Lockdown, and More People Are Watching Them
[PDF] Creating a Garden for Birds
The adult male scarlet tanager is a medium-size songbird with glaring crimson feathers and jet-black wings.
2008 September: Birds, 2008 June: Bird Songs, 2017 April: Of a Feather, 2017 June: Bird Sounds, 2017 July: Beautifully Designed Tiny Houses... For Birds, 2019 September: The Crisis for Birds Is a Crisis for Us All, 2019 March: She Invented a Board Game With Scientific Integrity. It’s Taking Off., 2019 June: Where Birds Meet Art . . . After Dark, 2019 September: The Crisis for Birds Is a Crisis for Us All, 2019 October: A Quest to Protect the World's Last Silent Places
Dance Time, across the Diaspora
"My father, at cocktail parties, liked to get children dancing. We’d be in the backyard flinging ourselves at and off things: tire swings, tree branches, each other. He’d wander out, beer or scotch in hand. 'What is this?' he’d ask in a loud voice. 'The annual Foolishness International board meeting?' I’d fill with a pleasant warmth. My father would toss one or two of us over his shoulders. He’d run. We’d chase him to the patio or the living room—wherever the stereo system was. 'Dance time!' he’d say. He’d teach us moves. Sometimes he’d even do a little choreography. We’d show off, get sweaty. Shy children my father would take by the hand. He’d coax and twirl them until they loosened. I was shy, but not when dancing with him. ..."
The Paris Review (Video)
Smithsonian: How a Tightknit Community of Ghanaians Has Spiced Up the Bronx
New York may be the largest enclave of the Ghanaian diaspora.
Four Corners Public Arts Project in Newark, NJ with: Manuel Acevedo, Gera Luz, Layqa Nuna Yawar, Kelley Prevard, Rorshach Art Collective, Armisey Smith, Jo-el Lopez, Sue Daly, Gabe Ribeiro & More
"Named for the historical Downtown Newark district in which the mural project is located, the Four Corners Public Arts initiative has brought over a dozen alluring murals to Treat Place and Beaver Street in Downtown Newark — a short work from Newark Penn Station. Referencing the neighborhood and its distinct history, the artworks were conceived and painted largely by local artists. The mural featured above, a tribute to the late neighborhood legend, Jerry Gant a.k.a 2 Nasty Nas, was painted by Newark-native Manuel Acevedo. Several more murals sponsored by Four Corners Public Arts — an ongoing collaboration between the City via Invest Newark, the Newark Downtown District (NDD), Newark Arts and local property owners RBH Group and Paramount Assets — follow: ..."
Street Art NYC
Urban Legends Honors Black Music Month With Weekly Live Streaming Events
"Urban Legends have announced a month-long celebration of Black Music Month that includes live DJ sets, new mini-documentaries about James Brown, new episodes of the docu-series Through the Lens, and new releases of re-mixes of classic songs. Urban Legends, a division of UMe, Universal Music Group’s global catalogue company, celebrates and curates a catalogue of some of its most powerful and influential artists and music spanning R&B, soul, hip-hop, rap, blues, reggae genres and more. ..."
udiscover (Video)
allmusic (Audio)
amazom: Soul Pride: The Instrumentals 1960-1969
YouTube: Soul Pride: The Instrumentals 1960-1969 36 videos
Stephen Dedalus
"Stephen Dedalus is James Joyce's literary alter ego, appearing as the protagonist and antihero[1] of his first, semi-autobiographical novel of artistic existence A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1916) and an important character in Joyce's 1922 novel Ulysses. In Stephen Hero, an early version of what became Portrait, Stephen's surname is spelled 'Daedalus' in more precise allusion to Daedalus, the architect in Greek myth who was contracted by King Minos to build the Labyrinth in which he would imprison his wife's son the Minotaur. Buck Mulligan makes reference to the mythological namesake in Ulysses, telling Stephen, 'Your absurd name, an ancient Greek!' In revising the mammoth Stephen Hero into the considerably more compact Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, Joyce shortened the name to 'Dedalus'. ..."
Wikipedia
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man: An Introduction
2011 March: Passages from James Joyce's "Finnegans Wake" (1965-67), 2010 March: Ulysses Seen, 2013 February: ULYSSES “SEEN” is moving to Dublin!, 2013: Dubliners, 2014 May: The Dead (1987 film), 2014 May: “Have I Ever Left It?” by Mark O'Connell, 2014 July: Digital Dubliners, 2014 September: Read "Ulysses Seen", A Graphic Novel Adaptation of James Joyce’s Classic, 2015 January: The Mapping Dubliners Project, 2015 February: Davy Byrne’s, 2016 January: Port and Docks, 2016 February: Hear James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake Read Unabridged & Set to Music By 17 Different Artists, 2016 April: Nassau Street, 2016 May: Stephen’s Green, 2016 October: A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1916), 2016 November: Skerries, 2017 January: Walking Ulysses | Joyce's Dublin Today, 2018 October: Bloomsday Explained, 2020 March: Ireland’s Voices
As Baseball Teeters, Rob Manfred’s Words Ring Hollow
Fenway Park in Boston. Even if M.L.B. games are played this year, it will most likely be without fans. That has complicated negotiations between the players and team owners.
"Bud Selig presided over a canceled World Series, which would seem to be about as bad as it gets for a baseball commissioner’s legacy. Yet his successor, Rob Manfred, may sink even lower. Manfred just might cancel the entire 2020 season. On the draft broadcast last week, Manfred said with absolute certainty — '100 percent' — that there would be a Major League Baseball season this year. On Monday, he told ESPN he was 'not confident' there would be a season at all, because of the acrimony with the players’ union. 'It’s just a disaster for our game, absolutely no question about it,' Manfred added. 'It shouldn’t be happening.' ..."
NY Times
NY Times: M.L.B. Owners and Players Stumble Toward an Outcome Neither Wants
NY Times: As Money Squabbles Delay M.L.B., Many Workers ‘Just Get Steam-Rolled’
NY Times: Opinion - What Life Without Baseball Looks Like
NY Times: Minor League Baseball’s Opposition to Overhaul Softens in Pandemic
Craig Baker, who sells food and drinks at Rumble Ponies baseball games, in the empty stadium.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)