2017 March: Paris Commune 1871
Remembering the Commune
How Bob Marley Came to Make Exodus, His Transcendent Album, After Surviving an Assassination Attempt in 1976
2010 November: Bob Marley and the Wailers, 2011 May: Bob Marley & the Wailers Live 1973 - 1975, 2011 July: Tuff Gong Studios 1980, 2012 March: Bob Marley: Live in Santa Barbara, 2012 August: Marley, 2013 March: Bob Marley & The Wailers - Live Forever: The Stanley Theatre, Pittsburgh, PA, 2016 February: "I Shot the Sheriff" / "Stir It Up" - Bob Marley and the Wailers (1973), 2020 February: Best Bob Marley Songs: 20 Essential Legend-Defining Tracks
A blue morning in front of the new Penn Station
Ten Months After George Floyd’s Death, Minneapolis Residents Are at War Over Policing
Sonny Rollins - Our Man In Jazz (1962)
2012 September: The Singular Sound of Sonny Rollins, 2012 December: Village Vanguard, 2015 September: Rollins Plays for Bird (1957), 2016 February: Saxophone Colossus (1956), 2016 May: Plus 4 (1956), 2017 June: Inside Sonny Rollins’s Jazz Archive, Headed Home to Harlem, 2018 April: Tenor Madness (1956), 2017 May: Moving Out (1954), 2018 November: The Bridge (1962), 2019 March: Newk's Time (1959), May 2019: Freedom Suite (1958)
Ridley Scott’s ‘Blade Runner’: A Game-Changing Science-Fiction Classic
2017 November: Blade Runner (1982)
Meet the Forgotten Female Artist Behind the World’s Most Popular Tarot Deck (1909)
JAZZ ON FILM … The Films of Marcello Mastroianni
Wanderer In The Colorful Fields - Jeannine Schulz (2021)
2021 February: Jeannine Schulz’s “Rooms and Surfaces I”
The Water on Mars Vanished. This Might Be Where It Went.
Krish Raghav - Redemption Songs
Why “Houston Street” is pronounced that way
2014 October: Houston Street
Sumer Is Icumen In: The Pagan Sound Of British And Irish Folk 1966-75
Greet Spring With a Visit to a Public Garden Image
“Last year, the pandemic shut the gates of many public gardens just as spring was on its way: According to a survey by the American Public Gardens Association, only about 4 percent of public gardens remained fully open as of March 30, 2020. Once public gardens began to reopen months later, they became places of natural respite for visitors, perhaps even more so than in the past. Making up for last year’s lost spring, these seven gardens around the country expect to be particularly glorious this year, offering a range of beloved spring flowers, traditional botanical collections and experiential outdoor spaces. At any garden changing conditions can make ephemeral blooms difficult to pin down, so plan on checking with the garden for updates (find more online at publicgardens.org), as well as for new protocols such as advance reservations, schedules, open areas and mask requirements. ...”
The Downtown Book: The New York Art Scene 1974-1984
'We've Lost the Line!': Radio Traffic Reveals Police Under Siege at Capitol
2021 February: 77 days: Trump’s campaign to subvert the election, 2021 February: A Small Group of Militants’ Outsize Role in the Capitol Attack, 2021 March: Police Shrugged Off the Proud Boys, Until They Attacked the Capitol
Various – Funky Nassau - The Compass Point Story 1980-1986
Russian Interference in 2020 Included Influencing Trump Associates, Report Says
“President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia authorized extensive efforts to hurt the candidacy of Joseph R. Biden Jr. during the election last year, including by mounting covert operations to influence people close to President Donald J. Trump, according to a declassified intelligence report released on Tuesday. The report did not name those people but seemed to refer to the work of Mr. Trump’s former personal lawyer Rudolph W. Giuliani, who relentlessly pushed accusations of corruption about Mr. Biden and his family involving Ukraine. ...”
Manet: Three Paintings from the Norton Simon Museum
Imagining Nora Barnacle’s Love Letters to James Joyce Image
“The fact is no one should be able to read the intimate words that anyone writes to their partner—those outpourings are composed for two people only: the lover and the loved. But when you’re writing a novel about Nora Barnacle and James Joyce, and the letters are published and are, well, just there, they become impossible to ignore. Whenever I told anyone I was writing a bio-fictional novel about Nora and Joyce, they would remark, with glow-eyed glee, ‘Oh, no doubt you’ll include the letters.’ And, yes, I have included them. But not quite as you might think. ...”
2011 March: Passages from James Joyce's "Finnegans Wake" (1965-67), 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, 2020 June: Stephen Dedalus, 2020 November: The Homeric Parallel in Ulysses: Joyce, Nabokov, and Homer in Maps, 2021 January: The Socialism of James Joyce
The Story Behind the Iconic Bass-Smashing Photo on the Clash’s London Calling
N.C.A.A. Tournament Brackets: A Guide to the Madness
“Chaos is coming. A promise of every March but one since 1939 — that the N.C.A.A. basketball tournaments will thrill, infuriate, delight and fuel delusions of every sort — is about to have its pandemic-era test. But no one really doubts that the tournaments, assuming they happen as planned, will conjure up the full range of emotions that can make college basketball fans a proudly obsessive lot. No matter your level of fandom, here’s what you need to know about filling out your brackets, how the tournament will operate, where to watch the games, and more. ...”
Best Alt.Country Musicians: 10 Essential Artists
Tracing Berenice Abbott’s steps in today’s Bowery
Police Shrugged Off the Proud Boys, Until They Attacked the Capitol
“A protester was burning an American flag outside the 2016 Republican convention in Cleveland when Joseph Biggs rushed to attack. Jumping a police line, he ripped the man’s shirt off and ‘started pounding,’ he boasted that night in an online video. But the local police charged the flag burner with assaulting Mr. Biggs. The city later paid $225,000 to settle accusations that the police had falsified their reports out of sympathy with Mr. Biggs, who went on to become a leader of the far-right Proud Boys. Two years later, in Portland, Ore., something similar occurred. A Proud Boy named Ethan Nordean was caught on video pushing his way through a crowd of counterprotesters, punching one of them, then slamming him to the ground, unconscious. Once again, the police charged only the other man in the skirmish, accusing him of swinging a baton at Mr. Nordean. ...”
***NY Times: The Officers Danced at a Black Lives Matter Rally. Then They Stormed the Capitol. (Audio)
2021 February: 77 days: Trump’s campaign to subvert the election, 2021 February: A Small Group of Militants’ Outsize Role in the Capitol Attack
Guedra Guedra: Vexillology review – splicing Moroccan culture with sub-bass
SoundCloud (Audio)
The Misfits - written by Arthur Miller, directed by John Huston (1961)
“John Huston’s The Misfits is a studious, daring vision of American life depicting the same type of protagonists that always appealed to the great filmmaker—people who could be easily called losers, but whose streak of idealism and hopefulness, in the midst of their isolating displacement, makes them attractive and quite easily relatable for the audience. The status of this 1961 drama gained an additional burst by the fact that it was the last film Clark Gable and Marilyn Monroe ever worked on, but its value hardly lies in trivialities like this. The main strengths of Huston’s celebrated film can be found in superb acting by Monroe, Gable, Montgomery Clift and Thelma Ritter, as well as Arthur Miller’s genuinely inspired script and director of photography Russell Metty’s astonishing black-and-white visuals. In its production phase, the film basically had to go through hell. ...” John Huston’s ‘The Misfits’ stands tall as a pearl of the sixties which isn’t going to fade into public oblivion any time soon (Video)