P'town


"Provincetown /ˈprɒvɪnsˌtn/ is a New England town located at the extreme tip of Cape Cod in Barnstable County, Massachusetts, in the United States. A small coastal resort town with a year-round population of just under 3,000, Provincetown has a summer population of as high as 60,000. Often called 'P-town' or 'P'town', the town is known for its beaches, harbor, artists, tourist industry, and its status as a vacation destination for the LGBT+ community. ... For nearly all of Provincetown's recorded history, life has revolved around the waterfront − especially the waterfront on its southern shore − which offers a naturally deep harbor with easy and safe boat access, plus natural protection from the wind and waves. An additional element of Provincetown's geography tremendously influenced the manner in which the town evolved: the town was physically isolated, being at the hard-to-reach tip of a long, narrow peninsula. ..."
Wikipedia
Provincetown: Cape Cod’s Most Popular Destination (Video)
Things to do in a day in Provincetown (Video)
YouTube: Provincetown: An eccentric's sanctuary

2018 January: Fine Arts Work Center

Spiritual Jazz Volume 11: SteepleChase (2020)


"Jazzman is releasing the eleventh instalment in its Spiritual Jazz compilation series, focusing on music from Copenhagen-based imprint SteepleChase. SteepleChase founder Nils Winther began by recording recording visiting Americans when they performed at jazz club Café Montmartre, later establishing the imprint in 1972 after encouragement from Jackie McLean, who would be the first artist to release on the label. With a particular focus on American artists who relocated to Europe, SteepleChase put out releases from the likes of Horace Parlan, Chet Baker, Dexter Gordon, Jackie McLean and Stan Getz. ..."
Jazzman announces new Spiritual Jazz compilation featuring SteepleChase (Video)
Jazzman Records dives into the vaults of SteepleChase on latest Spiritual Jazz compilation (Audio)
Discogs (Video)
YouTube: Spiritual Jazz 11: SteepleChase (Full Album, 2020)

Mary Lou Willliams

Debatable: Are we slipping into fascism?


"In a tweet on Thursday morning, President Trump floated the very bad idea of delaying the presidential election. (He does not have the legal authority to do so, though that doesn’t mean there are no reasons for concern — more on those here.) Within hours, the president’s statement was being condemned, by conservatives and progressives alike, as fascism. It’s a word that’s been appearing with increasing frequency recently, including in The Times. But what does fascism actually mean? To what extent can American politics, present and past, be described as fascist? And is it even a useful word anymore? Here’s what people are saying. ..."
NY Times (Video)

Frontispiece of Book II of Boethius' 'De Consolatione Philosophiae'


"The frontispiece to Book II of Boethius’ ‘On the Consolation of Philosophy’ is a beautiful example for French manuscript illumination in the fifteenth century. The finely painted miniature shows the philosopher Boethius in a pink robe listening to instructions from the female figure, the personification of Philosophy. To the right Fortune turns a wheel on which are four figures, kings and other aristocrats, symbolising the capricious nature of Fate. Read more about this manuscript cutting in our Search the Collection pages..."
Wallace Collection
W - The Consolation of Philosophy

Inside the Battle for Downtown Portland


"Scenes of billowing tear gas, burning fires and federal agents in riot gear have made Portland a national flash point and spurred debate over the authority of the federal government to respond to protests. As negotiations continue over when the agents will leave the city, here’s a look at how many recent nights of protest and confrontation have unfolded. The clashes with federal officers were largely confined to a two-block stretch of downtown Portland. The mood tended to follow a predictable pattern, with large, peaceful gatherings in the evening turning to chaos later at night. The map below shows the general extent of major downtown protests. ..."
NY Times

2020 July: Portland Protest Tactics: Umbrellas, Pool Noodles and Fire

Place depicted in Van Gogh's final painting found with help of postcard


"The exact location from where Vincent van Gogh is likely to have painted his final masterpiece, perhaps just hours before his death, has been pinpointed with the help of a postcard. The scene in Tree Roots, a painting of trunks and roots growing on a hillside near the French village of Auvers-sur-Oise near Paris, was first spotted on a card dating from 1900 to 1910 by Wouter van der Veen, the scientific director of the Institut Van Gogh. Following a comparative study of the painting, the postcard and the current condition of the hillside, researchers at the Van Gogh Museum and Bert Maes, a dendrologist specialising in historical vegetation, concluded that it was “highly plausible” that the place where Van Gogh made his final brushstrokes had been unearthed. ..."
Guardian
NY Times: A Clue to van Gogh’s Final Days Is Found in His Last Painting

2010 March: Van Gogh Museum, 2010 May: Why preserve Van Gogh's palette?, 2012 April: Van Gogh Up Close, 2015 May: Van Gogh and Nature, 2016 January: Van Gogh's Bedrooms, 2016 November: Wheat Fields - Van Gogh series, 2019 April: At Eternity’s Gate - Julian Schnabel (2018), 2020 April: The Parsonage Garden at Nuenen (1884)

Fela Kuti - He Miss Road (1975)


"He Miss Road was produced by none other than Ginger Baker, who was a semi-regular jamming partner of Fela Kuti's as well as a close friend. And the tunes Fela wrote for this platter are wild, cosmic, sexy as hell, and deeply saturated in funk à la James Brown. The B-3 solo at the beginning of the title track is simply a device for inviting the band in. The B-3 is way up in the mix, supercharged. The echo effects Baker used on the organ and the horns add a nice touch and create a different textural quality, one that is spacious, to be sure, but still rooted in the shamanic repetition as the riff goes on forever no matter what instruments enter or leave the mix. The vocals show up midway through as everything gets tense and explodes. ... This is one of Fela's cookers, an album from his most creative period, and it reigns among the best in his extensive catalog."
allmusic (Audio)
Discogs (Video)
amazom
YouTube: He Miss Road (Full Album)

Cooking with D. H. Lawrence - Valerie Stivers


I crusted the gamekeeper’s “simple chop” with mushrooms—not what Lawrence intended but I’ve made the recipe (from his fellow Briton Mary Berry) half a dozen times since.
"Few people could have been more off-grid than the English writer D. H. Lawrence (1885–1930) during his sojourn at a cabin eighteen miles northwest of Taos, New Mexico, where he and his wife, Frieda, lived without electricity, kept chickens, built an outdoor oven, made adobe bricks and 'a meat safe to hang from a tree branch,' evicted nests of rats, and traveled two miles on horseback for their milk and mail, their butter and eggs. The time Lawrence spent at this place—called 'punishingly remote' by the biographer John Worthen in D. H. Lawrence: The Life of an Outsider—was relatively short, a span of months in 1924 and 1925, but he considered it home, and after his death, Frieda returned there to live until she died in 1956. ..."
The Paris Review

Screaming Target - Big Youth (1973)


"Achieving his first success on wax with 'S 90 Skank' for producer Keith Hudson in 1972, Big Youth recorded Screaming Target, his debut full-length, one year later for Gussie Clarke. That album, along with a handful of 45s from the period, was largely responsible for bringing the DJ art form forward after U-Roy's innovations. Here, in place of hip, jive-derived phrases, listeners find Big Youth ruminating on themes that exemplified the new consciousness of the 1970s. The set-opening title track, for instance, finds the DJ promoting literacy and general positivity, Youth-style, over K.C. White's 'No No No.' Similarly, he chants down slavery and calls for equal pay for equal work on 'Honesty.' ... "
allmusic (Audio)
W - Screaming Target
Discogs (Video)
amazon
YouTube: Be Careful - Higher Light Remix, Screaming Target 1972 01 Screaming Target

A Half-Century After Wallace, Trump Echoes the Politics of Division


George C. Wallace, Governor of Alabama
"The nation’s cities were in flames amid protests against racial injustice and the fiery presidential candidate vowed to use force. He would authorize the police to 'knock somebody in the head' and 'call out 30,000 troops and equip them with two-foot-long bayonets and station them every few feet apart.' The moment was 1968 and the 'law and order' candidate was George C. Wallace, the former governor of Alabama running on a third-party ticket. Fifty-two years later, in another moment of social unrest, the 'law and order' candidate is already in the Oval Office and the politics of division and race ring through the generations as President Trump tries to do what Wallace could not. ..."
NY Times (Video)

Mr. Trump after security forces cleared protesters from Lafayette Square on June 1. The president has recently portrayed the nation’s cities as hotbeds of chaos.

A Step-By-Step Walk Through ‘Just Kids’ and Patti Smith’s New York


St. Mark's Church
"... In the process of telling the story of her life, Smith also vividly captured a very specific moment in time in a very specific New York City. The unadorned, detailed prose paints vivid pictures of the streets and the subways, the people and the places that resound with the reader whether or not you are from that era. It’s the kind of book that can make you homesick for somewhere you never lived. It’s also a chronicle of the faded, the forgotten and the missing places in the city. Unsurprisingly, most of the places mentioned in Just Kids are gone (CBGB’s, Max’s Kansas City); others exist in some physical form, even if the spiritual facet of the location has been obliterated (Chelsea Hotel, Scribner’s Books). And a few, like Electric Lady Studios and St. Mark’s Church, are still with us and still fulfill their original mission. ..."
Voice

586 Fifth Avenue, where Scribner's has left an imprint

In the 1990s, Feminism Found a New Ally: Computers


"... Once the forum opened, thousands of conference-goers trekked across the mud each day and waited patiently for their turn at one of the 200 machines donated by Apple and Hewlett-Packard.They were greeted by Farwell’s all-female team, whose warmth and efficiency demonstrated their mastery of new technology and comfort in using it. When something went wrong with a machine or a server, they fixed the problem. When a visitor had trouble sending a message to a loved one or finding a document from the conference, a member of the team taught her how to do it for herself. Navigating computers at this time was a specialized skill set, and onlookers marveled at such technological prowess. ..."
LitHub

Sun Ra: ‘I’m Everything and Nothing’


Sun Ra Space II, New York City, 1978
"Let me tell you a story about a boy. He was born on May 22, 1914, in Birmingham, Alabama. His mother, Ida Blount, was a waitress. Her favorite performer was a vaudeville stage magician named Black Herman, who did all manner of tricks: levitation, rabbit conjure, escape. The highlight of his act was a ghastly, blasphemous miracle: he would get buried alive in 'Black Herman’s Private Graveyard,; then be exhumed three days later to make a triumphant return to the stage. Ida admired Black Herman so much that she named her son after him. With such a bold, phantasmagoric performer for a namesake, it’s perhaps no surprise that young Herman Poole Blount became a musical prodigy. By age twelve, he was sight-reading piano music and composing his own. As a teenager, he could reproduce from memory the big-band concerts that came through Birmingham, led by greats like Duke Ellington and Fats Waller. While attending the segregated Industrial High School, Herman joined a handful of jazz and R&B bands, including one led by his biology teacher, Ethel Harper. ..."
NYBooks

Sun Ra Space I, New York City, 1978

Transit chimes by chord interval


"One of the first things I notice when I travel to a new city is the announcements on the public transit system, particularly the chimes and bells that signal doors are closing. Apparently I’m not the only person who’s interested in 'doors closing announcements' as I found compilations galore that have racked up millions of views (???) down a weird YouTube rabbit hole. Now that I’m not traveling anywhere in the near future, it was fun to watch these videos from different cities and listen to the subway chimes, something mundane to those who live there but can be surprising for those who’ve never been. ..."
Medium (Video)

Tokyo Metro

Three Missions Head for Mars


A topographical map of Mars shows the locations for past and future missions.
"The summer of 2020 will see three spacecraft launch toward the Red Planet, each one with distinct objectives. Next year, Earth invades Mars. Launch opportunities to Mars only happen once every 26 months, and during the next window — which spans this July and August —three spacecraft are set to begin their journeys. If everything goes well, in early 2021 they’ll deliver two orbiters, a lander, and two rovers to Mars, joining the six orbiters, one lander, and one rover that already operate there. Robotic spacecraft have orbited Mars continuously since 1997. The numerous missions have produced global maps of albedo, topography, and composition, finding evidence for abundant shallow subsurface ice and a distant past of longterm environments suitable for life. ..."
Sky & Telescope

Perseverance will carry 23 cameras, including seven specifically for scientific purposes, and a sample-caching system, which will package and lay aside samples for a later mission to pick up and carry home. ...

Interview: Steinski


"Steve Stein never seemed like the most likely candidate to become a hip-hop legend. By the time he discovered the early New York rap scene at the turn of the 1980s, he was almost 30 years old. He was also white, Jewish and in steady employment as an advertising executive. Yet during the mid-to-late 1980s, Stein would pioneer hip-hop’s cut-and-paste culture, first alongside friend (and fellow advertising worker) Douglas DiFranco and then later as a solo artist. As Double Dee and Steinski, the pair produced a series of seminal – and highly illegal – mash-ups, known as “Lessons,” which included breakbeats, scratches and vocal samples from a dizzying array of records. ..."
Red Bull Music Academy (Video)
Outtakes: Steinski
YouTube: Double Dee & Steinski - Lesson 1 & 2 & 3 (OLD SCHOOL MASTERMIXES), Lesson 2 James (Brown Mix) TOMMY BOY RECORDS 1985, lesson 3, Lesson 1_The Payoff Mix

2009 February: Double Dee and Steinski, 2016 March: What Does It All Mean? 1983-2006 Retrospective

The Theater Where Ella Fitzgerald Got Her Start


"On Nov. 21, 1934, Ella Jane Fitzgerald appeared at the Apollo. It was the Harlem theater’s first amateur night, and Fitzgerald was just 17. Her friends had dared her. ... She had originally entered the show to dance, but after watching the Edwards Sisters’ dazzling tap-dancing act from the wings, she told him, 'I said there’s no way I’m going out there and try to dance.' As she stood awaiting her cue, the M.C. told her, 'Just do something.' In a raggedy dress and workman’s boots, Fitzgerald, who was then homeless and living on the streets of Harlem, looked out at the 1,500-seat theater with its glittering chandeliers and glamorous crowd. ..."
NY Times

The Savoy Ballroom in 1940.

The Sopranos (season 2)


Wikipedia -"The second season of The Sopranos aired on HBO from January 16 to April 9, 2000. The second season was released on DVD in region 1 on November 6, 2001. The story of the season focuses on Tony's growing mistrust of one of his closest friends Big Pussy Bonpensiero, who is revealed to be an FBI informant. Dr. Melfi continues meeting with Tony despite her growing disgust of his actions and contemplates the nature of their relationship. Tony's sister Janice also returns to New Jersey, and their collectively strained relationship with their mother Livia and each other continues. Meadow is accepted into college, but her personal life intersects with Tony's crime life for the first time. Former boss Jackie Aprile's brother Richie is released from prison and causes trouble for Tony and his business. ..."
W - The Sopranos (season 2)
W - Junior Soprano, W - Christopher Moltisanti, W - Janice Soprano
RecapGuide
The Sopranos: 10 Best Episodes Of Season 2, According To IMDB
Top 5 Episodes: The Sopranos – Season 2 (Video)
The Closing Credits Song For Every Episode of The Sopranos (Season 2) (Video)
YouTube: The Sopranos and Food: Season 2, "What the F@#% do you know about respect?" scene, Season 2 Trailer # 2, Garbage truck scene, Richie Meets Tony and Talks To Christopher, Soprano's Big Pussy road to death, Richie moves on Tony/Bobby in awe of Junior

How George Clinton Made Funk a World View


"In the mid-seventies, George Clinton and his band Funkadelic were working on a new song, 'Get Off Your Ass and Jam,' at a studio in Los Angeles. At the time, Funkadelic was basically a psychedelic-rock band that took apart soul ballads, and its heavy, sprawling jams felt like an endurance test. If you made it through them, then you tasted true freedom. The musicians were taking a break when, according to Clinton, a white kid wandered into the session—probably 'a smack addict,' as he recalled in his memoir, from 2014, 'Brothas Be, Yo Like George, Ain’t That Funkin’ Kinda Hard on You?' The kid asked if they would give him twenty-five dollars for a guitar solo. Clinton was sufficiently bemused to agree. He played 'like he was possessed,' Clinton wrote. ..."
New Yorker
The Atlantic: The Funkadelic Album That Predicted the Future

2009 January: George Clinton, 2010 December: Mothership Connection - Houston 1976, 2011 October: Funkadelic - One Nation Under A Groove, 2011 October: "Do Fries Go With That Shake?", 2012 August: Tales Of Dr. Funkenstein – The Story Of George Clinton & Parliament/Funkadelic, 2015 July: Playing The (Baker's) Dozens: George Clinton's Favourite Albums, 2015 August: Chocolate City (1975), 2016 February: Maggot Brain - Funkadelic (1971), 2016 June: P-Funk All Stars - Urban Dancefloor Guerillas (1983), 2017 March: Up for the Down Stroke - Parliament (1974), 2017 May: P-Funk mythology, 2019 September: Tear the Roof Off the Sucker: An Introduction to Parliament Funkadelic, 2019 December: Cosmic Slop - Funkadelic (1973)

The Edge of the Map


Olaus Magnus, Carta marina (detail), 1539.
"In the collections of Seton Hall University in South Orange, New Jersey, there’s a round ceramic disk, about the size and shape of a cobblestone, with the barest image of a face on it. Two eyes in a mushroom-shaped head, a mouth opened in a howl or scream of some kind. Radiocarbon dating puts its age at about seven hundred years old, which would make it one of the earliest known images of the Jersey Devil. The Lenape knew it as Mësingw, a spirit being vital to preserving the balance of the forest. Mësingw ('Living Solid Face,' 'Masked Being,' or 'Keeper of the Game'), according to Herbert C. Kraft, who devoted his life to researching and documenting Lenape culture, was of prime importance to the Lenape. ..."
The Paris Review

Welcome to the Great Indoors: Museums Beckon in the Berkshires


In Blane De St. Croix’s ecologically minded show, a huge sheet of Styrofoam suggests melting permafrost and worn rock formations.
"WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Museums that seemed on the brink of reopening in New York are staying shut after Gov. Andrew Cuomo modified the state’s reopening plan last week. In California, arts institutions that had briefly reopened have had to padlock their doors once again. As the coronavirus epidemic continues to intensify across the country, museums have had to recalibrate their plans for renewed engagement. Remember when you thought your 'first' museum visit would feel like a payoff as the pandemic abated? Here in the Berkshires, after four months when the only museums I saw were on my phone screen, I went to two: the Clark Art Institute in Williamstown, and the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art in neighboring North Adams. ..."
NY Times

2018 April: Betting on the Berkshires

The Freetown Tapes 2006-2016


"In 2006, blind Kondi (thumb piano) player Sorie Kondi was surviving by busking on the streets of Freetown, Sierra Leone, abandoned by relatives who had fled the rebel takeover of the city in the late ‘90s. His sound was marked by his electrified Kondi, run through a small distorted amplifier that he carried on his back. Since then, he has recorded and finished five albums, culminating in ‘Without Money No Family’, which caught the ear of US producer / DJ Chief Boima (also of Sierra Leonean descent) after chancing upon a YouTube link. The two joined forces as Kondi Band, combining Sorie's traditionalist performances with Boima's globally-informed electronic production. ..."
bandcamp (Audio)
The Freetown Tapes: A Mixtape From Sierra Leone's Thumb Piano Master Sorie Kondi & Chief Boima

David Smith


“Untitled,” 1963. Spray enamel on paper. 14 x 19”
"... American sculptor David Smith produced a distinctive body of work using commercial aerosol paint almost immediately upon its invention in the mid-nineteen-fifties. Wielding the spray can with the assurance of a welder's torch and the immediacy of a paintbrush, Smith combined the sensations of sculpting, painting, and drawing. In these works on paper and canvas the artist freely explored the interplay of mass and weightless form. David Smith: Sprays, curated by Candida Smith, the artist's daughter, and Peter Stevens, Director of the David Smith Estate, is the first in depth exhibition of the artist's Sprays in nearly thirty years. The exhibition includes more than seventy works on paper and canvas dating from 1958 to 1964, many of which have not been exhibited before and three related sculptures. ..."
Gugosian
David Smith: Sprays (Video)
Brooklyn Rail: David Smith Cubes and Anarchy
The Estate of David Smith
W - David Smith
YouTube: DAVID SMITH: Sprays at Gagosian Gallery, Madison Avenue

Sprays, created in HWVR picturing David Smith’s Quixote Don, 1958-1959, White Egg with Pink, 1958, Untitled, 1962 and Untitled, 1959

How John Steinbeck’s Final Novel Grappled With Immigration and Morality


"There’s a very good reason that readers return again and again to John Steinbeck’s fiction when it comes to its handling of class in America. Steinbeck wrote about economic desperation far better than most, and approached some of his fiction with an eye towards the grander systems that left many impoverished. Steinbeck’s name has also served as shorthand for a kind of socially-aware fiction. But while Steinbeck’s work often grappled with class and poverty, one novel from his late period grappled with questions of immigration—and did so in ways that resonate uncomfortably with Trump-era America. That novel is 1961’s The Winter of Our Discontent. ..."
LitHub
John Steinbeck's 5 Most Iconic Works

2012 July: East of Eden, 2019 January: Tortilla Flat (1935)

How Ornette Coleman Freed Jazz with His Theory of Harmolodics


"The term free jazz may have existed before Ornette Coleman’s The Shape of Jazz to Come arrived in 1959. Yet, however innovative the modal experiments of Coltrane or Davis, jazz still adhered to its most fundamental formulas before Coleman. 'Conventional jazz harmony is religiously chord-based,' writes Josephine Livingstone at New Republic, 'with soloists improvising within each key like balls pinging through a pinball machine. Coleman, in contrast, imagined harmony, melody, and rhythm as equal constituents.' This philosophy, jazz critic Martin Williams wrote upon hearing Coleman’s debut, was necessary to free jazz from its formal constraints. ..."
Open Culture (Video)

2019 July: Complete Science Fiction Sessions (2000), 2020 July: How Ornette Coleman Shaped the Jazz World: An Introduction to His Irreverent Sound

Various — ‘Nigeria 70: No Wahala: Highlife, Afro​-​Funk & Juju 1973​-​1987’


"The U.K.'s Strut label is well-known among music fiends for its fine compilations, unusual yet savvy collaborations, and provocative new releases. ... In addition, they have released countless collections of rare disco, funk, Afrobeat, African pop, and steamy reggae from the catacombs of history. Among the label's accomplishments are the Nigeria 70 comps that began release in 2001; they are chock-full of stunning cross-pollinations of funk, jazz, rock, soul, and traditional African musics. Nigeria 70: No Wahala (Highlife, Afro-Funk & Juju 1973-1987) is the fourth volume in the series and the first in more than eight years. It is one of the more provocative and satisfying entries in the collection. Compiled by Duncan Brooker with copious notes and interviews by Quinton Scott, this set collects 12 fine specimens of West African groove music, seamlessly sequenced. ..."
allmusic (Audio)
Discogs (Video)
amazon
YouTube: Nigeria 70: No Wahala: Highlife, Afro​-​Funk & Juju 1973​-​1987 1:12:22

Portland Protest Tactics: Umbrellas, Pool Noodles and Fire


Federal forces and protesters clashed near the federal courthouse in Portland, Ore., early Wednesday.
"PORTLAND, Ore. — Shields were made of pool noodles, umbrellas and sleds. The body armor was pieced together with bicycle helmets and football pads. The weapons included water bottles and cigarette lighters. Facing federal forces who came to Portland to subdue them, many of the city’s protesters have taken to the streets this week with items scrounged from home. Then they have assembled at the federal courthouse each night with sometimes starkly different visions of how to put their tools to use. In 55 consecutive nights of protest in Portland, no two have been alike. The protests began on May 29, after the killing of George Floyd in police custody in Minneapolis. ..."
NY Times (Video)
***NY Times: Federal Officers Hit Portland Mayor With Tear Gas (Video)
NY Times: Chaotic Scenes in Portland as Backlash to Federal Deployment Grows (Video)
NY Times: A Navy Veteran Had a Question for the Feds in Portland. They Beat Him in Response. (Video)
NY Times: From Antifa to Mothers in Helmets, Diverse Elements Fuel Portland Protests (Video)

Chaotic scenes continued to play out in Portland, Ore., early Wednesday amid the growing backlash to the presence of camouflaged federal agents.

The Great Migration - Baltimore Magazine


"Jacob Logan saw an opportunity. It was 1945, and Cherry Hill was finally being developed to alleviate housing shortages for the Black veterans and World War II defense workers that had flooded into Baltimore. After years of delays because of white backlash at other proposed sites, the Cherry Hill project—the first suburban-style planned community for African Americans, and perhaps most conspicuous example of residential segregation by design ever in the United States—went up quickly once it got the go-ahead. Families rushed into the new rowhouses and apartment buildings before basic infrastructure, such as a school, shopping center, or grocery store, were even in place. Originally from the rural South, Logan worked at the Bethlehem-Fairfield docks, having come to Baltimore during the war to build Liberty ships. Despite a fifth-grade education, he’d also managed to save and invest in a small corner grocery in a nearby Black section of South Baltimore by the time construction in Cherry Hill began. ..."
Baltimore Magazine

Map of The Great Migration

Army of Shadows - Jean-Pierre Melville (1969)


Lino Ventura plays Philippe Gerbier, immediate commander of a French Resistance group whose leader is largely unknown among the ranks.
"The most personal film by the underworld poet Jean-Pierre Melville, who had participated in the French Resistance himself, this tragic masterpiece, based on a novel by Joseph Kessel, recounts the struggles and sacrifices of those who fought in the Resistance. Lino Ventura, Paul Meurisse, Jean-Pierre Cassel, and the incomparable Simone Signoret star as intrepid underground fighters who must grapple with their conception of honor in their battle against Hitler’s regime. Long underappreciated in France and unseen in the United States, the atmospheric and gripping thriller Army of Shadows is now widely recognized as the summit of Melville’s career, channeling the exquisite minimalism of his gangster films to create an unsparing tale of defiance in the face of seemingly insurmountable odds."
Criterion (Video)
W - Army of Shadows
Roger Ebert: Existential Resistance
NY Times: 'Army of Shadows' Takes a Hard Look at a Horrible and Marvelous Time (April 2006)
YouTube: Army of Shadows - Trailer

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), 2020 June: Jean-Pierre Melville: Who does that for anyone?

Bernadette Mayer - Memory


"'Look at very small things with your eyes / & stay warm,' wrote Bernadette Mayer, addressing herself in the 1968 poem 'The Way to Keep Going in Antarctica.' 'Nothing outside can cure you but everything’s outside,' she continues. For the past five decades, Mayer, the author of more than 30 volumes, has marked herself as a cataloguer par excellence of everyday life, attuned to the rhythms of the world and her position as an artist in it. Steeped in the conceptualism of the 1970s, her early work eschewed the boundaries of genre and form to capture life’s grand moments and its minute details. In 1971, then age 26, she set out to synthesize such experiences in an artistic investigation of memory by recording the world as she lived it over the course of a single month. ..."
The Nation: An Emotional Science Project - Bernadette Mayer’s Memory.
Everyday Life, Revisited—with Bernadette Mayer’s Memory
Locus Solus: The New York School of Poets - Bernadette Mayer’s “Memory” as an “Everyday-Life Project”
Brooklyn Rail - On Memory : Bernadette Mayer with Phillip Griffith
ARTFORUM - Interviews, Bernadette Mayer (Video)
amazon

2008 December: Bernadette Mayer, 2016 June: Thirteen poems by Bernadette Mayer, 2019 June: The Poetry Project’s Half-Century of Dissent

Best Reggae Producers: 10 Pioneers Of Jamaica’s Musical Legacy


King Tubby
"The best reggae producers pioneered new sounds and recording techniques. They also ensured that Jamaica was recognized as a country capable of creating worldwide stars. From helping to sow the seeds of hip-hop to ushering in the 'version,' or creating utterly unique music that couldn’t have been made by anyone else, in any other place, the best reggae producers deserve to be held up alongside any other sonic innovators in musical history. Here are the best reggae producers of all time. Think we’ve left someone off the list? Let us know in the comments section." Duke Reid, Coxsone Dodd, Dandy Livingstone, Lee “Scratch” Perry, King Tubby, King Jammy, Harry Mudie, Leslie Kong, Keith Hudson, Rupie Edwards.
udiscover (Video)

Lee “Scratch” Perry