Semiotext(e) SF (1989)


"For more than a decade Semiotext(e), the most consistently unpredictable intellectual journal in America, has published (once every year or so) out of a liberated zone in Philosophy Hall, Columbia University. Over the last couple of years Autonomedia, a highly competent cell of America's anarchic independent guerrilla press, has operated out of Brooklyn, N.Y., publishing new European political theory. Together Semiotext(e) and Autonomedia have put out an anthology of new science fiction. Edited by Peter Lamborn Wilson (with an assist from Rudy Rucker), the anthology is designed with a mind to print work too experimental and/or radical to get published by mainstream SF outlets, a useful goal and one Wilson, a shaker and mover of the alternative press scene, is uniquely qualified to pull off. The main problem with the anthology, for all its virtues, is that other distracting concerns undermine Wilson's best efforts. One is the concern with jamming in 'big names', the other is the controversiality criterion Wilson makes so much of in his selections. ..."
Street Tech
Socialist Jazz
Space Canon
W - Semiotext(e) SF
amazon

Orientalism - Edward W. Said (1978)


The Snake Charmer, Jean-Léon Gérôme (1880)
Wikipedia - "Orientalism is a 1978 book by Edward W. Said, about the cultural representations that are the bases of Orientalism, defined as the West's patronizing representations of 'The East'—the societies and peoples who inhabit the places of Asia, North Africa, and the Middle East. According to Said, orientalism (the Western scholarship about the Eastern World) is inextricably tied to the imperialist societies who produced it, which makes much Orientalist work inherently political and servile to power. According to Said, in the Middle East, the social, economic, and cultural practices of the ruling Arab élites indicate they are imperial satraps who have internalized the romanticized 'Arab Culture' created by French, British and, later, American Orientalists; the examples include critical analyses of the colonial literature of Joseph Conrad, which conflates a people, a time, and a place into a narrative of incident and adventure in an exotic land. The critical application of post-structuralism in the scholarship of Orientalism influenced the development of literary theory, cultural criticism, and the field of Middle Eastern studies, especially regarding how academics practice their intellectual enquiry when examining, describing, and explaining the Middle East. The scope of Said's scholarship established Orientalism as a foundation text in the field of post-colonial culture studies, which examines the denotations and connotations of Orientalism, and the history of a country's post-colonial period. ..."
Wikipedia
W - Orientalism
Counterpunch: Orientalism by Edward Said (August 5, 2003)
The Atlantic: The Roots of Muslim Rage
NYBooks: Orientalism: An Exchange, Edward W. Said and Oleg Grabar, reply by Bernard Lewis
Guardian - The 100 best nonfiction books: No 8 – Orientalism by Edward Said (1978)
New Yorker: A French Novelist Confronts Orientalism
Guardian: Compass by Mathias Énard review – a dreamlike study of Orientalism
NY Times: A Prize-Winning French Novel About the Western Obsession With the East
[PDF] Chapter 1 of Orientalism
amazon: Orientalism - Edward W. Said, Compass - Mathias Énard
YouTube: Edward Said On Orientalism 40:13, Orientalism: How the West views the rest of the world

Convulsionists of Tangier (1837–38), Eugène Delacroix

Léon Cogniet - L’Expédition d’Egypte Sous les Ordres de Bonaparte (1835)

King's Death Gave Birth to Hip-Hop


"... Ostensibly, Raekwon’s words foreshadow the coming song, or reflect on the four minutes of bluesy, foot-stomping brilliance that just unfolded in 'Rosa Parks.' But they also serve as a guiding ethos for hip-hop, which was enjoying a banner year in 1998. Danger. Style. Funky beats and aural violence. Spines tingled from provocation, not the least of which was mine, then a 10-year-old boy listening to a hip-hop album with intent for the first time. ... The answer can be found in the nascence of hip-hop. The question of the birth of hip-hop is a contentious one—as are all questions concerning the geneses of art forms—and full of rich debate on cultural touchstones, waves of influences, geography, visual art and dance, and stories of intrepid pioneers. Most of these debates locate the distinct emergence of the form in the mid-to-late-’70s. But a closer look reveals that the seeds of the art were sown by and during the civil-rights movement. ..."
The Atlantic (Spotify)
Spotify
W - Rosa Parks

Sneakers Jazz Band - Live at White Crow (2016)


"In March 1984, some of Vermont’s most talented jazz musicians began meeting every Tuesday night at a Winooski watering hole called Sneakers. The place was small and the pay wasn’t great, but they showed up anyway. For these musicians, it was an opportunity to sharpen their chops and play with some of the most accomplished jazz musicians in the area. These guys played in more lucrative bands the rest of the time, but Tuesday night at Sneakers was the night to play the music they wanted to play. The roster of musicians sometimes included nationally-known jazz artists who were touring in the area. Their presence, along with the skills of the regular players, contributed to the feeling that Tuesday night at Sneakers was something special. ..."
Club Metronome
Seven Days: Sneakers Jazz Band Reunite
‘For the love of the music’ Sneakers Jazz Band celebrates release of 1989 recording
amazon, Spotify
Sneakers Bistro - Winooski VT

Toronto, a City Full of Public Art Exhibitions - Douglas Coupland


"In the summer of 1979, I drove from Vancouver to Toronto with my best friend Mike. It was the year Toronto eclipsed Montréal to become Canada’s most populous city, and just as Mike and I were driving into Toronto’s city limits, highway workers were installing a new welcome sign with Toronto’s new population tally. If this had been 25 years later, I would have had a smartphone to capture the moment, but it was 1979, so all it can ever remain is a charming memory. Population: roughly 2.8 million versus Montréal’s 1.7 million. Nine years later, I was working in Toronto in October of 1988, and the city was experiencing a very mild Indian summer. On Halloween night, I attended a friend’s party dressed as an ironic ghost: a bedsheet with two holes cut out for the eyes. ..."
New Yorker

A Quiet Passion - Terence Davies (2016)


"New England in the mid-19th century was a literary hothouse, overgrown with wild and exotic talents. That Emily Dickinson was among the most dazzling of these is not disputable, but to say that she was obscure in her own time would exaggerate her celebrity. A handful of her poems appeared in print while she was alive (she died in 1886, at 55), but she preferred private rituals of publication, carefully writing out her verses and sewing them into booklets. Though she had no interest in fame, Dickinson was anything but an amateur scribbler, approaching her craft with unstinting discipline and tackling mighty themes of death, time and eternity. She remains a paradoxical writer: vividly present on the page but at the same time persistently elusive. The more familiar you are with her work, the stranger she becomes. An admirer can be forgiven for approaching 'A Quiet Passion,' Terence Davies’s new movie about Dickinson’s life, with trepidation. ..."
NY Times: ‘A Quiet Passion’ Poetically Captures Emily Dickinson (Video)
New Yorker: A Masterly Emily Dickinson Movie
W - A Quiet Passion
W - Emily Dickinson, W - List of Emily Dickinson poems
YouTube: A QUIET PASSION Trailer | Festival 2016

Joe Bataan - Salsoul (1994)


"Classic, essential latin funk album from salsa superstar Joe Bataan - one of the most prominant of the new wave of young 1960s artists to mix latin and soul and RnB sounds together. This early 1970s album is his masterpiece and exemplifies all that was great about the funky fusion albums of that era. Super Latin-Funk album from 1973 by Joe Bataan one of the first recorded for the Cayre Brothers who then developed the Salsoul label. Includes the killer funky instrumentals ‘Aftershower Funk’ and ‘Latin Strut’. ‘Johnny’ is an uptempo vocal Latin Soul track that has a funky backdrop, and ‘Fin’ is a pure Latin dance floor groove. Bonus cuts incl the original Mono single versions and his original cut of ‘Continental Square Dance’. ..."
Holland Tunnel Dive
Discogs
amazon
YouTube: Latin Strut, Mujer Mia., When Sunny Gets Blue, Continental Square Dance, Johnny

Underground and Alternative Magazines from the ’70s and ’80s That Capture NYC’s Downtown Art World


"If you wanted to find out the real deal behind the fashion, culture, nightlife, music, art, and film happening in New York City during the 1970s, ‘80s, and ‘90s, there was only one place to turn. Alternative and indie publications of the time like Paper Mag, New York Rocker, and Art-Rite captured the diverse intersection of art and life — and the covers of these magazines were just as exciting as the contents within. The biggest art stars and personalities made the headlines, including John Waters, Andy Warhol, Debbie Harry, and Yoko Ono — but no wave artists and punks were printed right alongside them, like Beth B and Richard Hell. Gallery 98, the online space for 98 Bowery, chronicles New York City’s downtown art world with an amazing collection of periodicals. 98 Bowery founder and curator Marc H. Miller was kind enough to let us dig through his online collection and share the best of the best. ..."
flavorwire

RIP, Cecil Taylor (1929-2018)


"My favorite Cecil Taylor story is secondhand. I used to see him play at the Knitting Factory in the late 1980s when I was fortunate to live a few blocks away. I would often sit in the audience with Irving Stone and his wife, Stephanie. (It’s after Stone that John Zorn named the venue he founded, the Stone.) Taylor was late to a show one night, and Stone told of an epic late appearance by Taylor decades earlier. Taylor had been booked on a boat that would tool around Manhattan while jazz musicians played for a willingly captive audience. Taylor, who was often late for shows, Stone said, was warned not to be late because the ship’s schedule was unforgiving. The night of Taylor’s performance arrived, as did the boat. The audience boarded, along with other scheduled musicians. But no Taylor. They waited briefly, but the schedule had to be kept, and the boat left the dock. And then, of course, arrived Cecil Taylor, running to the end of the dock, unable to reach the boat, his eager audience stranded aboard, watching his figure fade in the distance. Judging by how late he was to the Knitting Factory that night, Taylor had never learned his lesson, though of course his audience, me included, was going nowhere. We waited. He arrived, and blew our minds. I reviewed a massive Cecil Taylor box set many years ago, and I mentioned to a friend what I’d been working on, and he asked, teasingly, if I had managed to do so without using the word 'cluster.' Cecil Taylor is the musician most synonymous with the word 'cluster' (often employed by critics to describe his playing), except perhaps for Roedelius, Moebius, Plank, and Eno — and, as someone reminded me on Twitter, Cowell. ... RIP, pianist, improviser, genius Cecil Taylor (b. 1929). By Marc Weidenbau"
disquiet
New Yorker: The Revolutionary Genius of Cecil Taylor By Richard Brody (Audio)
W - Cecil Taylor
NY Times: Cecil Taylor, Pianist Who Defied Jazz Orthodoxy, Is Dead at 89 (Video)
Free-Jazz Pioneer Cecil Taylor Has Died At 89 (Video)
Cecil Taylor - Perfect Sound Forever
Cecil Taylor, free jazz pioneer, dies age 89 (Video)
YouTube: Les grandes répétitions, Rare - Cecil Taylor at the Village Gate 1965, Unit Structures (1966) full album, Conquistador! (full)

Baklava


Wikipedia - "Baklava (/ˈbɑːkləvɑː/, /bɑːkləˈvɑː/, or /bəˈklɑːvə/; [bɑːklɑvɑː]) is a rich, sweet dessert pastry made of layers of filo filled with chopped nuts and sweetened and held together with syrup or honey. It is characteristic of the cuisines of the Levant, the Caucasus, Balkans, Maghreb, and of Central and West Asia. ... Although the history of baklava is not well documented, its current form was probably developed in the imperial kitchens of the Topkapı Palace in Istanbul. The Sultan presented trays of baklava to the Janissaries every 15th of the month of Ramadan in a ceremonial procession called the Baklava Alayı. There are three proposals for the pre-Ottoman roots of baklava: the Roman placenta cake, as developed through Byzantine cuisine, the Central Asian Turkic tradition of layered breads, or the Persian lauzinaq. The oldest (2nd century BCE) recipe that resembles a similar dessert is the honey covered baked layered-dough dessert placenta of Roman times, which Patrick Faas identifies as the origin of baklava: 'The Greeks and the Turks still argue over which dishes were originally Greek and which Turkish.' ..."
Wikipedia
Epicurious: Baklava
AllRecipes: Baklava

Corona Is Queens’ Cultural Smorgasbord


Get off the 7 train at 103rd Street to find yourself in the heart of Corona.
"The neighborhood now called Corona was originally christened 'West Flushing' in the mid 1800s, after a new Long Island Rail Road line opened between the then-farmland towns of Elmhurst and Flushing. In 1868 a real estate developer named Thomas Waite Howard suggested the neighborhood be renamed 'Corona,' since it was the crown jewel of Queens County. While some theorized that he took the name from an emblem used by a local development company, corona fittingly means 'crown' in Italian and Spanish, languages that later became common in the neighborhood. Italians settled the neighborhood in the early twentieth century, but residents are now mostly more recent arrivals from Mexico, Ecuador, and the Dominican Republic. Early buildings from the neighborhood still stand, including intact Victorian houses and churches from the late 1800s, which now often share block space with multifamily brick houses, Latino grocery stores, meat markets, and flower shops. ..."
Voice
W - Corona
History of Corona, Queens

John Ashbery: They Know What They Wanted, Poems & Collages


"They Knew What They Wanted, edited by Mark Polizzotti and out with Rizzoli this week, places a lifetime of John Ashbery’s collages in conversation with his poems. The book selects poetry that either references the visual arts or uses collage as a compositional method, such as the ‘The Painter’, from his first book, Some Trees (1956), the pantoum ‘Hotel Lautréamont’ (1992) and the fragmentary ‘37 Haiku’ (1984) (‘Old-fashioned shadows hanging down, that difficulty in love too soon’). The collages share many traits with Ashbery’s poems: the collision of literal and figurative meanings, and of high and low culture, hilarious mise-en-scène, the intrusion of the comic on the sentimental and emphasis on games and formal playfulness. The best of Ashbery’s collages date from the early 1970s, when he made a body of work from postcards in the company of artist and poet Joe Brainard and poet James Schuyler, including one called ‘Diffusion of Knowledge’ (1972) that shows Captain America and some other sinewy superhero looking inappropriately triumphant while blocking our view of the Smithsonian Institution. ..."
Frieze: Stuck on You, John Ashbery
Rizzoli

ESCIF, BLU, SAM3, More Join “SenseMurs” as Activists Protecting “La Punta”


BLU. SenseMurs. La Punta, Valencia, Spain, March 2018.
"Street Artist Escif organized with other artists to fight the commercial development of seaside land in Valencia last month. With the help of other socially responsible artists including Aryz, BLU, Borondo, Escif, Anaïs Florin, Hyuro, Luzinterruptus, Daniel Muñoz 'SAN', Sam3 and Elías Taño, Escif and local organizers are publicly pushing a message that shows the local council what it means when citizens are engaged. According to the organizers La Punta is a hamlet of orchards and gardens located in the south of the city of Valencia where more than 15 years ago the 'Logistics Activities Zone' (ZAL) project of the Port of Valencia decided to chase hundreds of people out of this land to give to developers as a new port initiative. ..."
Brooklyn Street Art

Escif. SenseMurs. La Punta, Valencia, Spain, March 2018.

The ISIS Files


Mosul, 2017. Paperwork littered the remains of ISIS’ bombed-out Ministry of Agriculture.
"MOSUL, Iraq — Weeks after the militants seized the city, as fighters roamed the streets and religious extremists rewrote the laws, an order rang out from the loudspeakers of local mosques. Public servants, the speakers blared, were to report to their former offices. To make sure every government worker got the message, the militants followed up with phone calls to supervisors. When one tried to beg off, citing a back injury, he was told: 'If you don’t show up, we’ll come and break your back ourselves.' The phone call reached Muhammad Nasser Hamoud, a 19-year veteran of the Iraqi Directorate of Agriculture, behind the locked gate of his home, where he was hiding with his family. Terrified but unsure what else to do, he and his colleagues trudged back to their six-story office complex decorated with posters of seed hybrids. They arrived to find chairs lined up in neat rows, as if for a lecture. The commander who strode in sat facing the room, his leg splayed out so that everyone could see the pistol holstered to his thigh. For a moment, the only sounds were the hurried prayers of the civil servants mumbling under their breath. Their fears proved unfounded. ..."
NY Times
NY Times: Extreme Brutality and Detailed Record-Keeping
NY Times: Caliphate (Audio)
YouTube: Breaking News - The ISIS Way: Extreme Brutality and Detailed Record-Keeping

How Far ISIS Spread Across Iraq and Syria and Where It’s Still Holding On

2014 August: The Islamic State, 2014 September: How ISIS Works, 2015 February: The Political Scene: The Evolution of Islamic Extremism, 2015 May: Zakaria: How ISIS shook the world, 2015 August: ISIS Blows Up Ancient Temple at Syria’s Palmyra Ruins, 2015 November: Times Insider: Reporting Europe's Refugee Crisis, 2015 November: Three Teams of Coordinated Attackers Carried Out Assault on Paris, Officials Say; Hollande Blames ISIS, 2015 November: The French Emergency, 2015 December: A Brief History of ISIS, 2015 December: U.S. Seeks to Avoid Ground War Welcomed by Islamic State, 2016 January: Ramadi, Reclaimed by Iraq, Is in Ruins After ISIS Fight, 2016 February: Syrian Officer Gave a View of War. ISIS Came, and Silence Followed., 2016 March: Brussels Survivors Say Blasts Instantly Evoked Paris Attacks, 2016 April: America Can’t Do Much About ISIS, 2016 June: What the Islamic State Has Won and Lost, 2016 July: ISIS: The Cornened Beast, 2016 October: Archaeological Victims of ISIS Rise Again, as Replicas in Rome, 2016 December: Battle Over Aleppo Is Over, Russia Says, as Evacuation Deal Reached, 2017 January: Eternal Sites: From Bamiyan to Palmyra, 2017 February: Tour a City Torn in Half by ISIS, 2017 March: Engulfed in Battle, Mosul Civilians Run for Their Lives, 2017 May: Aleppo After the Fall, 2017 July: Iraqi forces declare victory over Islamic State in Mosul after grueling battle, 2017 July: The Living and the Dead, 2017 October: ISIS Fighters, Having Pledged to Fight or Die, Surrender en Masse

Discogs Mix 69 – Styles In Black


"Based in America’s Pacific Northwest, producer Styles in Black combines the warm nostalgia of lo-fi Hip Hop with bass-heavy, tribal-influenced rhythms. With a wide range of musical styles and collaborations with artists around the globe, his productions range from Chillhop to Trap, Reggae, R&B, and Funk. With two albums on Philos Records and features on outlets such as Chill-Masters, Indie Shuffle, and Stereofox, Styles in Black has steadily crafted a signature sound that is tropical, nostalgic, and exotic. This Styles in Black mix is exclusive to Discogs and takes listeners on a journey across a diverse set of regional sounds. ..."
Disogs (Audio)

Universal Sounds of America (1995)


"Universal Sounds of America features music from radical Afro-American Jazz musicians in the USA in the 1970's. At a time when commercial jazz music was revolving around whether it would sound good in an Elevator at low volume, a number of Jazz musicians were seeking different musical paths. Self Determination, Creative Development, Community and Education were more important to these musicians than economic wealth, fame and stardom. Artists such as The Art Ensemble of Chicago and Sun Ra developed around communal groups. The Art Ensemble, for instance , came out of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM) founded in 1965 by Muhal Richard Abrams in Chicago. ..."
Universal Sounds of America
Discogs (Video)
amazon
allmusic (Audio)

Martin Luther King Jr.’s ‘Letter From Birmingham Jail’


"In April 1963, King was jailed in Birmingham, Alabama, after he defied a state court’s injunction and led a march of black protesters without a permit, urging an Easter boycott of white-owned stores. A statement published in The Birmingham News, written by eight moderate white clergymen, criticized the march and other demonstrations. This prompted King to write a lengthy response, begun in the margins of the newspaper. He smuggled it out with the help of his lawyer, and the nearly 7,000 words were transcribed. The eloquent call for 'constructive, nonviolent tension' to force an end to unjust laws became a landmark document of the civil-rights movement. The letter was printed in part or in full by several publications, including the New York Post, Liberation magazine, The New Leader, and The Christian Century. The Atlantic published it in the August 1963 issue, under the headline 'The Negro Is Your Brother.' ...”
The Atlantic
W - Letter from Birmingham Jail
The Atlantic: The Riots That Followed the Assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.
W - Assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.

2008 January: Martin Luther King Jr., Martin Luther King Jr. - 1, 2013 August: The March at 50 , 2015 January: Freedom Journey 1965: Photographs of the Selma to Montgomery March by Stephen Somerstein, 2015 February: Spider Martin’s Photographs of the Selma March Get a Broader View, 2015 March: Revisiting Selma, 2015 December: Atlanta: Darker Than Blue, 2016 February: Unpublished Black History, 2018 January: The Evolution of Dr. King, 2018 January: Restoring King

Signs of a French Spring


Rail workers from the Force Ouvrière union on strike in Paris today.
"It’s not just the railroads. From college campuses to supermarkets and airport terminals, unrest is simmering across France. Against the backdrop of the national public railway strike — a highly symbolic struggle that, by all indications, promises to be long and intense — students and workers in other sectors are taking actions of their own. This isn’t the first significant unrest under President Emmanuel Macron — his labor reforms last year were opposed by strikes and days of action — but the current wave is broader in scope. A weekend strike at France’s largest employer, supermarket Carrefour, was followed by strikes on the trains and at airports at the start of this week that have severely impacted transport in the country — and now a burgeoning student movement is joining in support. ..."
Jacobin

2017 February: France, Without a Struggle, Is at a Loss, 2017 April: France Rebels, 2017 April: How the Election Split France, 2017 May: As French Elections Nears, So Does a Step Into the Unknown, 2017 May: The Fertile Ground of French Communism

Do Flashbacks Work in Literature?


Max Ferguson: Time (oil painting), 2006
"Every few days, working on my new novel, my thoughts flash back to something Colm Tóibín said at the Hay-on-Wye literary festival nine months ago: that flashbacks are infuriating. Speaking at an event to celebrate the two hundredth anniversary of Jane Austen’s death, Tóibín said Austen was marvelous because she was able to convey character and plot in the most satisfying way without the 'clumsiness' of the flashback. Today, on the other hand, we have to hear how a character’s parents and even grandparents met and married. Writers skip back and forth in time filling in the gaps in their shaky stories. It is dull and incompetent. Is Tóibín right? I worry, as I prepare to put together a flashback myself. Is there no merit or sense in the device? Didn’t Joyce use it? And Faulkner? Or David Lodge, for that matter? Or John Updike? Or going back before Austen, Laurence Sterne? ..."
NYBooks

Smile Millennium Edition (Bootleg) - Beach Boys


"An impossible dream has become reality. Smile, the great lost Beach Boys album, finally received an official release on Capitol Records in 2011. The musical jigsaw that Brian Wilson couldn’t quite piece together in 1967, has, thanks to the wonders of digital editing, been assembled 44 years behind schedule. It may only be a version of Smile – using the 2004 album Brian Wilson Presents Smile as a template – but that’s good enough for Wilson. ... Pet Sounds (1966) had been a symphonic, heart-tugging album about adolescent love and the coming of age. The intention with Smile – briefly called 'Dumb Angel', a title soon jettisoned – was to explore America’s landscape and history in a theatrical (but also cinematic) style, executed in a spirit of gaiety and fun. ... 'We wanted to try something different with music,' says Brian today. 'We wanted to do something a little more advanced. We wanted to try and top Pet Sounds.' Wilson and his lyricist Van Dyke Parks conceived Smile as a journey across America from east to west; a movie in widescreen Surreal-O-Vision, featuring pioneers and frontiers, cantinas and log cabins, railroads and 'waves of wheat'. ..."
Uncut (Video)
YouTube: Surf's Up (Bootleg, From "SMiLE (Millennium Edition)", Heroes & Villians (Barnyard Suite) [Smile Millennium Edition, Bootleg]
YouTube: Surf's Up (Brian Wilson solo, Autumn 1967), 'Surf's Up' -Brian Wilson's Piano Demo Master Take and Finished Song
YouTube: Brian Wilson and Van Dyke Parks talk about SMILE

2010 July: Pet Sounds, 2013 October: The Pet Sounds Sessions, 2016 July: Enter Brian Wilson’s Creative Process While Making The Beach Boys’ Pet Sounds 50 Years Ago: A Fly-on-the Wall View, 2017 May: "Caroline, No" - Brian Wilson and Tony Asher (1966)
2012 July: Van Dyke Parks, 2015 December: Moonlighting: Live at the Ash Grove (1998), 2016 November: Song Cycle (1967), 2017 March: Jump! (1984), 2017 April: Orange Crate Art - Brian Wilson and Van Dyke Parks (1995)

Fountain of Youth


The Fountain of Youth, 1546 painting by Lucas Cranach the Elder
Wikipedia - "The Fountain of Youth is a spring that supposedly restores the youth of anyone who drinks or bathes in its waters. Tales of such a fountain have been recounted across the world for thousands of years, appearing in writings by Herodotus (5th century BC), the Alexander romance (3rd century AD), and the stories of Prester John (early Crusades, 11th/12th centuries AD). Stories of similar waters were also evidently prominent among the indigenous peoples of the Caribbean during the Age of Exploration (early 16th century), who spoke of the restorative powers of the water in the mythical land of Bimini. The legend became particularly prominent in the 16th century, when it was attached to the Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de León, first Governor of Puerto Rico. According to an apocryphal combination of New World and Eurasian elements, Ponce de León was searching for the Fountain of Youth when he traveled to what is now Florida in 1513, but this is a myth. The legend says that Ponce de León was told by Native Americans that the Fountain of Youth was in Bimini and it could restore youth to anyone. ..."
Wikipedia
W - The Fountain of Youth (Cranach)
W - Lucas Cranach the Elder

The Fountain of Youth (detail)

Studio Caroline: The Parisian Laboratory of African Pop


"Paris in the ’80s was arguably one of the largest global hubs for African music, playing host to musicians from across the African diaspora and generating an enormous volume of releases that few other cities could rival at the time. The situation came about early in the decade, through a perfect storm of affordable studio spaces, newly relaxed broadcasting laws that saw a flourishing of commercial and community radio stations and a record-hungry public with the necessary disposal income to fuel the musical output. At the end of the ’70s, producers and musicians from across the diaspora were setting up shop in the city, selling records from across Europe and Africa as well as the lucrative 'DOM/TOM' market – the French territories of Guadeloupe, Martinique, Guyana and Réunion where many African artists would also tour. Although the broad term 'African music' overgeneralises what is evidently the product of many countries that are culturally, economically, linguistically and musically distinct, the meetings and collaborations of musicians and players from countries like Congo, Cameroon, Cote d’Ivoire and Senegal led to the development of a geographically specific aesthetic emanating from Paris – pulling in influences, techniques and styles from across Africa, the Caribbean and America to create a kind of Pan-African pop music that resonated far beyond the city itself. ..."
Red Bull Music Academy Daily (Video)

The Letters of Sylvia Plath, Volume I: 1940-1956


"The arrival of the collected letters of Sylvia Plath – this is only volume one; a second will follow next year – provides something of an object lesson in the weird desperation involved in what we might call heritage publishing. Of course we understand that Faber (and in the US, Harper) is thrilled to have this long-dead poetic genius on its list; such pride isn’t misplaced. But whether this means that every word Plath ever wrote, up to and including her scholarship applications, is of interest to anyone other than truffling biographers and PhD students is another matter altogether. Lugging around this rusty anchor of a book – it runs to more than 1,400 pages – what I felt mostly was exasperation. The notion that Plath’s every utterance is sacred would be dumb even if she ranked with Keats or Waugh as one of the truly great letter writers. The fact that she clearly doesn’t – the majority of those in this volume, written to her mother, Aurelia, are marked by their quotidian sameyness – only makes it seem the more vacuous. ..."
Guardian
New Yorker: The Letters of Sylvia Plath and the Transformation of a Poet’s Voice
NY Times: Sylvia Plath’s Letters Reveal a Writer Split in Two
amazon

2008 February: Sylvia Plath, 2011 May: "Daddy" (Video), 2017 July: Ariel (1965)

Atlantic Blues: Chicago (1986)


"Chess is arguably the first label for blues, but behemoth Atlantic has enough of the stuff -- albeit a bit past its prime -- to still warrant a multi-disc box. This separately sold part of that package takes in some of the giants from the Illinois epicenter of urban blues. Two of the best, Howlin' Wolf and Muddy Waters, as well as latter-day Windy City queen Koko Taylor, are featured on cuts taped live at the 1972 Ann Arbor Blues Festival. Back in the studio, the mighty tandem of Buddy Guy and Junior Wells mixes it up with Dr. John and Eric Clapton, while Southern blues scion Duane Allman contributes fine slide work to a couple of top-notch Otis Rush performances. Freddie King's three numbers, featuring honking sax star King Curtis and the arrangements of soul great Donny Hathaway, take the prize, though. Not a good primer, maybe, but a solid blues roundup all the same."
allmusic
Discogs
YouTube: Atlantic Blues Chicago 1:14:30

Meet the Straphanger Who Talked Back to Those Damn Fiverr Ads


"You have seen the ads — oh, God, have you seen them. Ever since the cheap-ass labor provision company Fiverr ('Freelance Services Marketplace for the Lean Entrepreneur') started plastering New York City subway cars with its 'In Doers We Trust' ad campaign early last year, straphangers have been complaining about their Tony Robbins-on-meth taglines: If 'Thinking big is still just thinking,' does that mean Fiverr — whose business model is built on having freelancers post tasks they’re willing to do for as little as $5 — wants us all to leap into self-starterdom before we look? Is 'Sleep deprivation is your drug of choice' an attempt to compliment hard workers, or a call to work yourself to death? It all felt like, as Jia Tolentino wrote for the New Yorker, being hit each morning with a firehose of jargon 'through which the essentially cannibalistic nature of the gig economy is dressed up as an aesthetic.' Sometime in the last few days, one subway rider decided to strike back using the oldest of urban protest tools: the magic marker. ..."
Voice
New Yorker: The Gig Economy Celebrates Working Yourself to Death
Here’s an Ad That Should Inspire Entrepreneurs Everywhere to Get Their Act Together (Video)

What We Can Learn from Neruda’s Poetry of Resistance


"When I first embarked on writing a biography of Pablo Neruda over a decade ago, I wanted to explore the political power of poetry and its capacity to inspire social change. Neruda’s social verse was an integral part of the humanity he expressed; even without pen in hand, he boldly inserted himself into direct action. I happened to finish the book—Neruda: The Poet’s Calling—at the end of Trump’s first hundred days in office. As a result, the questions that I’d been exploring for years suddenly took on new urgency. As resistance increasingly becomes the operative word in our current political reality, what can one of the most important and iconic resistance poets of the past century offer us? What might he give us as we continue to shape the next chapter in our own cultural story? Some answers, or at least perspectives, can be found in the vivid details of Neruda’s life and work. Neruda’s legacy was directly shaped by the historical events in which he played a part. ..."
The Paris Review

February 2009: Pablo Neruda, 2011 November: 100 Love Sonnets, 2015 November: The Body Politic: The battle over Pablo Neruda’s corpse, 2015 December: In Chile, Where Pablo Neruda Lived and Loved, 2016 May: Windows that Open Inward - Pablo Neruda. Milton Rogovin, Photographing.

Stitt Meets Brother Jack - Sonny Stitt (1962)


"In honor of the upcoming listening party at Baby's On Fire, this week's featured album art is a Sonny Stitt cover. On Prestige 7244, Stitt Meets Brother Jack (1962), Don Schlitten is given both photography and design credits. ... Schlitten is most often discussed in jazz history as a producer, record label founder, and otherwise jazz industry entrepreneur. For Prestige 7244, Stitt Meets Brother Jack (1962), Schlitten situates Sonny Stitt mid-note and focused-gaze awash in a field of salmon complemented by gold and white type. ... Indeed Levin's notes go on to mention the comparison to Bird, but Stitt is responsible for composing many of the tracks on the album, and he is accompanied by a soulful and energetic ensemble that includes Jack McDuff on the organ; Eddie Diehl on guitar; Art Taylor on drums; Ray Barretto on conga; and together they create a unique albeit steady sound. Sonny Stitt is surely an underrated jazz great and both aesthetic treatments by Schlitten here are fitting portrayals of his cool character."
The Entrepreneur's Color Tint
W - Stitt Meets Brother Jack
Discogs
YouTube: Stitt Meets Brother Jack [Full Album] 38:32

Twin Peaks VR Lets You Live Inside A Dream


"The Red Room has been a beloved setting in fanmade Twin Peaks VR experiments for years, and that’s exactly how this project started too. But Orly Rodriguez is quickly expanding his virtual reality experience called The Archivist: VR to include other iconic locations, such as the RR Diner, the Roadhouse and the Twin Peaks Sheriff’s Department. Jam with Carl at the Fat Trout Trailer Park or ask Jeffries about Judy. You can even hang out with the woodsmen above the convenience store or, if you step over the bodies of Sam and Tracey on the penthouse floor, you can inspect the inside of the glass box in New York. ..."
Twin Peaks VR Lets You Live Inside A Dream (Video)
An Echo Of Owls: watching repeats of Twin Peaks eleven years later

2008 September: Twin Peaks, 2010 March: Twin Peaks: How Laura Palmer's death marked the rebirth of TV drama, 2011 October: Twin Peaks: The Last Days, 2014 October: Welcome to Twin Peaks, 2015 June: David Lynch: ‘I’ve always loved Laura Palmer’, 2015 July: Twin Peaks Maps, 2016 May: Hear the Music of David Lynch’s Twin Peaks Played..., September: Twin Peaks Tarot Cards For The Magician Who Longs To See Through The Darkness Of Future Past, 2014 September: David Lynch: The Unified Field, 2014 December: David Lynch’s Bad Thoughts - J. Hoberman, 2015 March: Lumière and Company (1995), 2015 April: David Lynch Creates a Very Surreal Plug for Transcendental Meditation, 2015 December: What Is “Lynchian”?, 2017 March: Anatomy of a Fascinating Disaster: Fire Walk With Me, 2017 April: Trading Card Set of the Week – Twin Peaks (Star Pics, 1991), 2017 April: Your Complete Guide to Rewatching "Twin Peaks", 2018 February: Twin Peaks: The Return, or What Isn’t Cinema?

The Imitation Of A Memory: Pizzi Cannella On Painting, Poetry, And The New School Of Rome


Veduta, 2018, mixed media on canvas,
"In a vitrine in the far corner of the gallery, a black and white photograph presents a man apparently deep in thought. Pierro Pizzi Cannella sits hunched over in an office chair, just a hint of white beard poking out from the shadow of his black hoodie like some reaper wracked with concern for the dead, his shadow cast against two canvases, on the wall of his studio in Rome. The same two paintings can be found here on the walls of Partners & Mucciaccia in Mayfair. In each one, an antique metal garden chair, one blackened, as if rotting, the other fading, almost crumbling into dust. Each chair is placed beside a table in matching style. They have the appearance, somehow, of a memory or a dream, caught slowly evanescing into the dense swathes of paint that fill the backdrop of the painting. ..."
The Quietus
Piero Pizzi Cannella

Veduta o paesaggio, 2012

Culture of Quebec


Wikipedia - "The Culture of Quebec emerged over the last few hundred years, resulting predominantly from the shared history of the French-speaking North Americans majority in Quebec. It is noteworthy in the Western World; Quebec is the only region in North America with a French-speaking majority, as well as one of only two provinces in Canada where French is a constitutionally-recognized official language. ... As of 2006, 79% of all Quebecers list French as their mother tongue; since French is the official language in the province, up to 95% of all residents speak French. History made Quebec a meeting place for cultures, where people from around the world experience America, but in the main from the point of view of a linguistic minority surrounded by the larger English-speaking culture. ... The Encyclopædia Britannica describes contemporary Quebec culture as a post-1960s phenomenon resulting from the Quiet Revolution, an essentially homogeneous socially liberal counter-culture phenomenon supported and financed by both of Quebec's major political parties, who differ essentially not in a right-vs-left continuum but a federalist-vs-sovereignty/separatist continuum. ..."
Wikipedia

2009 August: Quebec City, 2015 October: History of the Acadians, 2016 September: Keeping the Student Strike Alive

Macao - Josef von Sternberg and Nicholas Ray (1952)


Wikipedia - "Macao is a 1952 black-and-white film noir adventure directed by Josef von Sternberg and Nicholas Ray. Producer Howard Hughes fired director von Sternberg during filming and hired Nicholas Ray to finish it. The drama features Robert Mitchum, Jane Russell, William Bendix, and Gloria Grahame. Three strangers arrive at the port of Macao on the same ship: Nick Cochran (Robert Mitchum), a cynical-but-honest ex-serviceman, Julie Benson (Jane Russell), an equally cynical, sultry night club singer, and Lawrence Trumble (William Bendix), a traveling salesman who deals in both silk stockings and contraband. ..."
Wikipedia
Not Coming
MUBI: Macao - Trailer
YouTube: Jane Russell - One for My Baby

Baseball Loves the Long Ball. But for How Long?


"Imagine teleporting into a baseball video game. That, John Mozeliak said, is how he felt watching college hitters on a recent visit to a Division I program. All the data that might appear on the screen of a virtual game was available, in real time, during batting practice. ... Give elite athletes an incentive to play a certain way — and the tools to show them how — and this is what you get: a convergence of talent and technology that has rapidly turned baseball into a test of power at the plate and on the mound. Hitters seek home runs and pitchers hunt strikeouts, and both statistics reached unprecedented levels last season: 6,105 homers and 40,104 strikeouts. But as a new season dawns, many baseball people wonder where the game evolves from here. It is not a question of if things will change, they say, only when and how. ..."
NY Times
NY Times - A.L. Preview: Watch Out, the Houston Astros Got Better
NY Times - N.L. Preview: Cubs Mix Michelangelo and Theo Epstein’s ‘More Stuff’
FiveThirtyEight: Your Guide To The 2018 American League
FiveThirtyEight: Your Guide To The 2018 National League
FiveThirtyEight: How Our MLB Predictions Work
FiveThirtyEight: The Complete History Of MLB
NY Times: Aaron Judge Is Baseball’s Most Powerful Hitter (Audio)
The Ringer: The Ringer Staff’s 2018 MLB Season Predictions (Video)
The Ringer: The Casual Fan’s Cheat Sheet for the 2018 MLB Season (Video)
W - 2018 Major League Baseball season

The young sluggers Jose Altuve and Carlos Correa have thrived with the Astros.